|
|
|||
THE HERBERTS, or The Potential Ramifications of Trading a Trumpet For a Motor-Scooter by Christopher "James Joyce" Martin |
||||
If you’ve been around drag racing for any time at all, you know that the Herbert family runs the drag racing gamut. Chet hit the dragstrip the day Santa Ana opened (July 3, 1950), his younger sister Doris did in fact make Drag News the first great drag racing newspaper, and, of course, son Doug has acquitted himself admirably, winning the IHRA championship, five NHRA national events, and making himself the subject of the worst starting line explosion in the sport’s history this year at the Winston Finals. Our Large Editor immortalized him in the pages of Sports Illustrated’s century in review history on Nov. 29 with an explosion shot that looked like a pipe bomb in a Euro trash disco. Drag racing has certainly produced its share of familial dynasties. The Andersons, the Austins, the Dixons, the Dunns, the Kalittas, the Pedregons, the Powells, the Smiths ... hell, look at the Winston Top Fuel champ, Tony Schumacher, son of 1973 AHRA Funny Car champ and if-not-already-soon-to-be Hall of Fame Funny Car resident, Don Schumacher, but the Herberts are a special clique. The Jock Ewing of this clan could be saddled with the label of genius, and that can be embarrassing to a degree, especially if the compliment is from a writer who can’t tell a camshaft from a crankshaft. In Chet Herbert’s case, that qualification suggests a torpedoed story, but Herbert is one of the sport’s pioneers and truly great cam grinders in history. Not only that, he is one of its greatest visionary innovators.
Historical evidence is abundant in that regard. Herbert, who was born in Glenbar, Ariz. and raised in Los Angeles, terrorized the streets in the mid-1940s with a highly competitive Harley-Davidson motorcycle. In 1948, Herbert was put in a wheelchair with polio, obviously parking his butt as a driver, but his mechanical lust was hardly abated. While at one of the first races at Santa Ana, his driver (he can’t remember who) broke the track bike record of 101-mph with a 103-mph shot. And it got better from there. In 1950, his rider, Al Keys, went 121.62-mph, which was one of the fastest speeds by anything at Santa Ana or elsewhere. Later that year, his rider, Ted Irio, powered Herbert’s "Beast" (as he called it) to a new track record of 129.49 mph. (Motorcycles were the equal of the dragster in the early 1950s as guys like Herbert, Tommy Auger, Lloyd Krant, Keys, Pat Pressetti, Mike Ward and Bud Hare many times would set top speed of the meet on two wheels.) Herbert’s Harley experiences proved to be highly educational and paved the way for a breakthrough in drag racing technology.
|
||||
Copyright 1999-2001, Drag Racing Online and Racing Net Source |