Don Nicholson

Don Nicholson

Nicholson during an interview on ABC's Wide World of Sports beside "Eliminator I" in 1966
Nationality American
Born May 28, 1927[1]
Halltown, Missouri[1]
Died January 24, 2006
National Hot Rod Association Pro Stock
Years active late 1940s 2001+
Best finish 1st in 1977
Awards
18th on NHRA's Top 50 Drivers (2001)
International Drag Racing Hall of Fame
Motorsports Hall of Fame of America (1998)

Don Nicholson (May 28, 1927 - January 24, 2006) was an American drag racer from Georgia.[2] He raced in the 1960s and '70s when there were few national events. The National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) estimates he won 90 percent of his match races.[3] As of 2002, he held the record for the most number of categories in which he reached a final round (won or took second at an event): Funny Car, Pro Stock, Super Stock, Competition Eliminator, Stock, and Street.[3] He was nicknamed "Dyno Don" after he was one of the first drivers to use a chassis dynamometer on his cars in the late 1950s, a skill that he learned while working as a line mechanic at a Chevrolet car dealer.[4]

Racing career

Nicholson was born at Halltown, Missouri but was raised at Pasadena, California.[1] While in high school, he joined the United States Navy which wiped out his many speeding tickets.[1] Nicholson began racing in jalopies on oval tracks in the late 1940s before moving to the dry lakes at the Bonneville and El Mirage.[3][4] He was already an experienced driver when drag strips began opening in Southern California.[3] During the 1950s, Nicholson was a manager at Service Chevrolet.[1] Nicholson got his nickname "Dyno Don" by being the first person to be trained on Service's dynamometer (dyno).[1] In 1961, Nally Chevrolet lured Nicholson to move his family to Georgia by giving him his own dyno shop and race car.[1]

Drag racing

Nicholson became nationally known to drag racing fans when he won the Stock class at NHRA's first Winternationals in 1961 with a 12-second pass.[4] The win helped his business in Southern California, and gave him access to factory developed Chevrolet vehicles and special racing parts.[4] He repeated as the 1962 Winternationals winner. He received lucrative offers from promoters in the Southeastern United States, so moved to Atlanta to compete in match races.[3] Chevrolet and the other American car manufacturers decided to drop their factory backing in 1963 and his vehicle became uncompetitive.[4] He switched to a Mercury Comet for 1964 in the A/Factory Experimental (A/FX) division.[4] He won over 90 percent of match races he entered that year.[3] That year he made the first 10-second pass in a doorslammer,[3] as well as being the first driver to lift the front wheels when he shifted gears.[3]

Funny Car

In 1965, Dodge and Plymouth teams moved their front and rear wheels forward, giving them greater traction. These new "Funny Cars" were not allowed in NHRA meets. Ford disallowed their factory-supported Ford and Mercury teams competing against these new Mopar Funny Cars. Nicholson was concerned about losing his match racing income since his car was outclassed. That August, he converted his car to a Funny Car, adding nitromethane fuel, switching to fuel injection, and changing the wheelbase. Several weeks later he defeated the Ramcharger Dodge, the top Mopar entry, with a 9.30 second pass at 150 mph (240 km/h).[3]

Mercury commissioned a new tube chassis Comet for 1966. The Logghe Bros.-built car featured a one piece flip-top body.[3] Nicholson's car, dubbed "Eliminator I", was rarely defeated that season.[3] It clocked the first 7-second e.t. in Funny Car at Michigan in the second half of 1966.[3] The only driver capable of defeating Eliminator I was Nicholson's teammate Eddie Schartman.[3] Nicholson was so dominant, critics predicted the demise of the new Funny Car "craze".[4] Nicholson enjoyed another highly successful year in Eliminator II in 1967 until other teams started adding superchargers late in the year.[3] As he competed in his 7.3 second e.t. Cougar in 1968, Nicholson was becoming concerned about engine fires caused by blower explosions.[3]

Super Stock/Pro Stock

After the 1968 season, Nicholson started match racing with Sox & Martin, Bill Jenkins, and Dick Landy.[3] These Super Stock cars were a throwback to the A/FX cars these teams had run in the mid-1960s. The 2,300 lb (1,000 kg) four-speed carburated cars raced heads-up (instead of handicapped like the NHRA did).[3]

"The Funny Cars had just gotten too out of hand," said Nicholson. "They no longer resembled what Detroit was trying to sell. Chrysler already had backed out of Funny Car racing in 1967 when they had Sox & Martin and Landy start their Super Stock clinics. We just wanted to get our original fans back."[3]

Nicholson converted a Jerry Harvey 1966 A/FX Ford Mustang to Super Stock, and used the car to win Street in A/Modified Production at the 1969 Springnationals.[3] The popularity of the 9 second heads-up racers lead to NHRA forming Pro Stock in 1970.[3] Nicholson prepared at Ford Maverick for the Winternationals in seven days, but did not win. The car was dominant on the match racing circuit, winning 45 straight rounds.[3] Nicholson's Maverick earned Ford's first NHRA Pro Stock win at the 1971 Summernationals.[3] He switched to a 351 Cleveland-powered Pinto for 1972. He started the 1973 season by winning three consecutive national events at the American Hot Rod Association (AHRA) Winternationals, NHRA Winternationals, and NHRA Gatornationals.[3] Nicholson finished second at the 1974 U.S. Nationals and 1976 Summernats.[3]

1977 Pro Stock championship

Nicholson ran mainly regional match races most years.[2] He decided to compete in the complete NHRA Nationals tour in 1977. He won the Gatornationals, Springnationals, and U.S. Nationals to win the 1977 Winston championship. His most famous race of the season was one he did not win.[3] His chief rival was 1976 champion Larry Lombardo, who drove for Bill Jenkins. At that time, season championships were decided by a combination of regional and national events. Nicholson attended a divisional event Lombardo needed to win. "We qualified low on purpose so that we could race Larry early in eliminations," said Nicholson. "I beat him in the first round and kept him from earning a lot of points he otherwise would have earned."[3] Lombardo ended up third in the season points, and Nicholson beat Bob Glidden by 1400 points to win the championship.[3]

Later career

Nicholson made another championship run in 1979, finishing third.[2] He continued to race a Pro Stock Ford until 1980.[3] Nicholson made a comeback in 1984 in an Oldsmobile.[3] He returned in 1988 in the nostalgia tour in a version of 1962 Chevrolet Bel Air, which he was still campaigning in 2001.[3] He also made some appearances in a Pro Stock Truck in 1998 and 1999.[2]

Death

Nicholson's health deteriorated over his last few years. He died from Alzheimer's disease on January 24, 2006 in Southern California at age 78.[4] He was survived by his daughter Cindy Christie, grandson Christopher Christie and granddaughter Candace Christie.[1]

Awards

Nicholson was listed 18th on NHRA's Top 50 Drivers in 2001.[3] Nicholson was awarded the Funny Car Driver of the Year in 1967. He received the Car Craft All-star Drag Racing Team Ollie Award in 1977. In 1997 he was honored as the grand marshal of the California Hot Rod Reunion.[3]

He has been inducted in several halls of fame. He was inducted in the International Drag Racing Hall of Fame,[3] and the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1998.[4]

References

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