Re: Critical Mass - Blind Man's Bluff = SPLIT THREAD
After I returned to Indianapolis in early 1972, I went shopping for a team to work with, and one day I was milling around at A.J.Watson's race shop, and he received a phone call saying that Clint Brawner had been involved in an accident, and was hurt bad. Apparently something had fallen off a truck right in front of him on the freeway, and he couldn't avoid it. A.J. said that someone had to go to Phoenix and "save Clint". There was several of us hanging around, but before I knew it, I was on an airplane heading for Phoenix! I had never been on a 747, and I was amazed at the size of this aircraft, so I thought this was a pretty cool deal, although I was wondering what was in store for me at Clint's shop. This was during the first week of April, and whatever needed to be done to his race cars would have to be finished quick, because they had to be at Indianapolis by May 3rd or so. I don't remember who picked me up at the airport and took me to Brawner's shop, everything was happening so fast it seems like a blur. I was in for quite a surprise, there were two Indy cars, completely disassembled, and some parts were out for plating, and there were also at least three 4 cam Indy Turbo-Ford engines that were all apart. The cars were "Brawner Hawks", and I had never even seen one of these "up close and personal", let alone scattered around in pieces. I was going to need to "familiarize" myself real quick, as Mickey Thompson would say. I knew I needed help, so I called my old buddy from the Dockery days, Gordon Cole, because he lived in Phoenix, and would never back down for a challenge like this. Indy 1972 was going to be quite an experience!
After I returned to Indianapolis in early 1972, I went shopping for a team to work with, and one day I was milling around at A.J.Watson's race shop, and he received a phone call saying that Clint Brawner had been involved in an accident, and was hurt bad. Apparently something had fallen off a truck right in front of him on the freeway, and he couldn't avoid it. A.J. said that someone had to go to Phoenix and "save Clint". There was several of us hanging around, but before I knew it, I was on an airplane heading for Phoenix! I had never been on a 747, and I was amazed at the size of this aircraft, so I thought this was a pretty cool deal, although I was wondering what was in store for me at Clint's shop. This was during the first week of April, and whatever needed to be done to his race cars would have to be finished quick, because they had to be at Indianapolis by May 3rd or so. I don't remember who picked me up at the airport and took me to Brawner's shop, everything was happening so fast it seems like a blur. I was in for quite a surprise, there were two Indy cars, completely disassembled, and some parts were out for plating, and there were also at least three 4 cam Indy Turbo-Ford engines that were all apart. The cars were "Brawner Hawks", and I had never even seen one of these "up close and personal", let alone scattered around in pieces. I was going to need to "familiarize" myself real quick, as Mickey Thompson would say. I knew I needed help, so I called my old buddy from the Dockery days, Gordon Cole, because he lived in Phoenix, and would never back down for a challenge like this. Indy 1972 was going to be quite an experience!
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