Showing posts with label KS Racing Enterprises. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KS Racing Enterprises. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2019


Twilight of the Hanford Motor Speedway

Part five - the end of the first superspeedway west of the Mississippi



The years of 1967 and 1968 represented the high-water mark in the history the Hanford Motor Speedway, as the 1-1/2-mile paved tri-oval hosted three USAC (United States Auto Club) National Championship races promoted by JC Agajanian which were wildly successful with crowds of over 15,000 reported for each event.  

However, there was trouble on the horizon The state of the art 2-1/2-mile oval Ontario Motor Speedway was under construction 200 miles to the south of Hanford, and USAC’s continued its direction towards corporate partnerships with new road course racing venues.
There were financial problems for the track operator, KS Racing Enterprises Inc. which was locked in an ongoing battle with the track owner B.L. Marchbanks over the contract terms. The disagreement over distribution of the proceeds from advance ticket sales was further exacerbated when KS Racing Enterprises fell behind on rental payments. 

Kalmon “Kal” Simon the President of KS had also lost a lawsuit filed by a Fresno paving company over non-payment for paving work completed at the site during 1967 and 1968.   At the same time, Marchbanks was in negotiations for the sale of Hanford Motor Speedway with American Raceways Inc. (ARI) the owner of the new Michigan International Speedway. ARI controlled by developer Lawrence LoPatin had bought Atlanta Raceway and was in the process of building the Texas World Speedway, but talks on the sale of Hanford progressed in fits and starts.  

The 25-race 1969 USAC schedule originally included two dates for Hanford – the ‘California 200’ scheduled for Sunday April 13, and the ‘California 250’ slated for October 19. That Hanford held onto two dates was a testament to JC Agajanian’s prestige with the other USAC board members, as USAC officials remained deeply unhappy with the primitive conditions at Hanford which used temporary grandstands, concession stands and restrooms. Additionally, in response to new car owners and drivers, USAC required promoters to guarantee higher purses, at least $30,000 against 40% of the ticket receipts in the case of Hanford.   

In January 1969 JC Agajanian announced that the 1-1/2-mile paved tri-oval would host an open-competition supermodified and caged sprint car race on Sunday afternoon February 9.   This event was a follow-up to the success of a pair of ‘Open-Competition Supermodified and Caged Sprint Car 100-mile Championship’ held in the fall of 1968 at the California State Fairgrounds mile dirt track and Agajanian’s Ascot Park half-mile dirt track. Agajanian stated that he expected average lap speeds of over 140 MPH during the event sanctioned by the California Racing Association (CRA) which carried a purse of $10,000.

Among the 100 entries for the 33-car open competition 100-mile race on the “the fastest racing track in the West” included Northern California midget racer Hank Butcher in John Driver’s “Flying Wing” sprint car, the 1963 and 1968 CRA champion Bob Hogle, and Ned Spath in Carl Alleman’s Chevrolet-powered rear engine Huffaker ex-Indianapolis car. Out of state entries came from drivers in New York, Ohio, North Dakota and Iowa, with former Indianapolis drivers Wayne Weiler and Colby Scroggin also scheduled to appear. 

Johnny Parsons, Junior, son of the 1950 Indianapolis champion emerged with the pole position after qualifying on Sunday morning with a lap of 141.546 miles per hour (MPH) in an older converted Indianapolis roadster.  Parsons led the race’s first 16 laps, but dropped out with mechanical problems. Hogle in the Offenhauser-powered Morales “Tamale Wagon” who had started in the 12th position, inherited the lead after mid-race leader Walter Reiff dropped out. With Hanford favorite Frank Secrist in second place, Hogle made his mandatory pit stop five laps from the end of the 67-lap race, which handed the lead to Secrist, who had not yet made his required stop.

Secrist who had started from the 16th position brought his car into the pit area with three laps to go, but instead of adding just a few gallons of fuel his crew nearly filled the car’s tail tank. As Secrist lost valuable time, Hogle regained the lead then won the 67-lap race and the $2,500 first-place check with Secrist second half a lap behind. 18 of the 33 starters finished the race, with Dieter Mundweiler of New York in third place in his roadster. Promoter Agajanian had to be disappointed with the crowd of only 5,500 fans for his ‘CRA Open-Competition Supermodified and Caged Sprint Car Sweepstakes.’

For the third annual “California 200’ JC Agajanian dropped ticket prices to $10 for a grandstand seat close to the starting line and $8 for all the other reserved grandstand seats, with $6 general admission tickets available at the gate the day of the race.  He also added a “lead in” event with a 100-lap USAC midget race the night before at the Kearney Bowl in Fresno, an hour’s drive from Hanford Speedway. Some of the lesser-known drivers advertised as last-minute entries for the ‘California 200’ included Leon “Jigger” Siriois, sprint car racers Larry Dickson and Sammy Session and Hungarian-Canadian driver George Fejer in his own Chinook creation.  

Mario Andretti, in the first year of his contract with STP Oil Treatment and car owner Andy Granatelli, qualified for the pole position in the Brawner Hawk III with a speed of 160.115 MPH. Once again, the Joe Hunt Magneto Special a front engine upright dirt car made the starting field after Bakersfield’s George Snider replaced the original driver Greg Weld.   The 23rd qualifier was Ned Spath in the Alleman Chevrolet powered Huffaker that had competed in the open competition caged sprint race the month on the same track.

Only 25 cars started the race, as the cars entered for Sam Sessions, Larry Dickson, Denny Zimmerman, Bobby Johns, George Fejer and Ronnie Bucknum did not appear, and the Seidelman dirt car driven by midget champion Tommy Copp and Wilbur ‘Wib’ Spaulding’s Lotus both broke in practice, leaving the field one car short.  Even worse for the race promoter, only 12,075 fans reportedly passed the turnstiles; as USAC officials had predicted, without permanent seating and sanitation facilities, attendance figures continued to drop.

Andretti went to the lead at the drop of the green flag and led until lap 70 when he dropped in to make his pit stop. His teammate, Art Pollard in the STP Gerhardt Offenhauser was already in his pit stall and while the crew toiled, Pollard’s car caught fire. The uniforms of three mechanics on Pollard’s crew, Edward “Red” Stainton, Ed Stratton and Grant King caught fire, and Stainton backpedaled away from the fire and into the path of Andretti’s passing car.

After Stainton was struck, USAC officials immediately threw the red flag to stop the race while safety crew extinguished the fire and tended to the injured crewmembers.  Stainton with second degree burns and “critical head injuries” and Stratton and King, with second degree burns, were loaded into the two ambulances on site and transported to Fresno Community Hospital.

With no ambulance on site, the race remained stopped for close to ninety minutes until one of the ambulances returned. The race resumed with Andretti still in the lead, as apparently his car had sustained no damage, and Mario led the rest of the race to claim the victory, his first of nine race wins during the 1969 season. Lloyd Ruby in the ‘Wynn's Spit-Fire Special’ finished second one lap behind Andretti with Gordon Johncock and Johnny Rutherford third and fourth on the same lap as Ruby.  Attrition had been high as only eleven cars were still on course at the finish. No one knew it that day, but fans had witnessed the last race at Hanford Motor Speedway.

In victory lane with a check for $6,900 the winner’s portion of the $30,000 purse, Andretti admitted that Stainton’s injuries “certainly colors the rest of the day.”  King and Stratton were treated and released after treatment of their burns, while Stainton underwent emergency surgery later Sunday night in Fresno, but he passed away from his injuries on Tuesday April 15, 1969 at age 38 and was laid to rest in his hometown of Sanger California.  

Over the months that followed the 1969 ‘California 200,’ negotiations with ARI officials for the sale of Hanford Motor Speedway stalled, then collapsed in early September. Within days of the news of ARI’s withdrawal, USAC Director of Competition Henry Banks reportedly sent a letter to KS Racing Enterprises Inc which stated that Hanford’s seating and sanitation facilities were substandard and had to be upgraded.

USAC also demanded that that the paddock area behind the hot pit area be paved, and Banks’ directive stated that if these improvements were not made, Hanford and Agajanian would forfeit the October 19, 1969 race date. Kal Simon President of KS Racing Enterprises freely admitted that the company “did not have the resources to make the improvements” but reminded listeners that “there was not enough time to make the improvements anyway.”  

USAC subsequently canceled the ‘California 250’ date, however, according to Agajanian, Banks and the USAC board agreed to hold open the spring and fall Indianapolis car dates on the 1970 USAC schedule and would grant him an additional sanction for a stock car date in 1970, provided the facility improvements were completed in time.

Although there was some public outcry that USAC was unfairly punishing Hanford, Deke Houlgate in his syndicated “Motorsports Today” column that appeared in many in California newspapers noted that the Hanford paddock area “comes in two conditions, a quagmire if it has rained or a dust bowl if it hasn’t.” Houlgate also observed that “sanitation, as many Hanford fans will attest, is slightly superior to what is found five miles from the nearest dirt road in the Mohave Desert.”         

 In mid-December 1969, Al Auger’s column in the Hayward Daily Review newspaper reported that Kal Simon, the Hanford track president, announced plans to build a roofed 25,000 seat grandstand “early next year.” Other planned improvements included “black-topping of the pit area, new ticket and entrance booths, press box and parking improvements,” but the article made no mention of any planned sanitary improvements. Promoter JC Agajanian was quoted by Auger that with the Labor Day 1970 500-mile race scheduled at the new Ontario Motor Speedway, “it would be only natural to have a follow-up race at Hanford.” Auger wrote that “this is the main reason for the face-lifting,” which ignored USAC’s September 1970 directive.  

The planned roofed grandstand and the other improvements at Hanford obviously never came to fruition, and instead of a race at Hanford Agajanian promoted a new September date race on the 1970 USAC schedule on the State Fairgrounds mile dirt track in Sedalia Missouri. Though Hanford Speedway sat idle during 1970 significant events occurred behind the scenes and in late August 1970, Jay Kuhne identified as a vice-president and treasurer of Hanford Motor Speedway Inc (HMSI) began to tour the state to promote a stock offering to redevelop the Hanford track.

The traveling presentation road show, complete with artists renderings of the new grandstand and pit area visited Bakersfield, Fresno, Visalia, Upland, Newport Beach, Oakland, Sacramento and San Diego. Kuhne announced that the group planned “to organize the new company with an initial capitalization of $750,000 that would enable us to acquire the existing track free and clear to build a new 25,000 (uncovered) grandstand comparable in spectator comfort to OMS to create new garage and pit facilities layout access roads parking and landscaping “to make it truly and auto racing showcase.”  The new company offered “investment units” of $2,500 each that consisted of 25 shares of $100 par value each to be sold to a maximum of 300 California residents through a syndicate of investment brokers throughout California. 

Along with Kuhne, an investment analyst, other officers of HMSI formed on April 24, 1970 with an office in the Wilshire financial district included Robert Carlin, Los Angeles attorney that specialized in oil and gas law as President, with Patrick Cooney an oil and gas machinery importer as a vice-president and Secretary and Agajanian listed as a vice-president and manager of racing. Kuhne claimed that the USAC board had “tentatively sanctioned” a September 1971 300-mile race “in alignment with Ontario Motor Speedway (OMS)” with promises of a 300-mile USAC stock car race.   Agajanian also suggested that the track could host a 250-mile American Motorcycle Association (AMA) race as at the time Agajanian promoted many AMA events in California.

Kuhn stated in an October 1 article published in Bakersfield California that “we have already reached one-third of our goal and we hope to have the entire issue subscribed before Nov 1.”  An article later in October revealed that sales had reached 40% of the $750,000 goal and a press release listed other members of the Hanford Motor Speedway Inc board that included Bobby Unser, Agajanian, and David Lockton and Chuck Barnes of the Sports Headliners talent agency, with the latter pair members of the Ontario board of directors so their inclusion was identified as part of “planned financial alignment” with OMS.

The 1971 USAC championship racing schedule which was released on Thursday December 12, 1970 listed two dates for Hanford Motor Speedway, with the “Hanford 150’ on March 14, and a “tentative” October 10 date for the ‘Hanford 200.’  An ominous article in January 1971 written by Jim Bryant in the Ontario Daily Report identified Hanford as the possible “first casualty of the Southern California race slate” as the author mused that the area was over-saturated with racing venues that included Riverside International Raceway (an ARI property) and Ontario Motor Speedway which already experienced slow ticket sales.

With the failure of Hanford Motor Speedway Inc. to generate the planned capitalization to buy the track and make the required USAC improvements, the 1971 scheduled Hanford races never occurred, although the Hanford facility was still included on an inventory of USAC sanctioned tracks released in August 1971.  The one-time hoped-for savior of Hanford, Lawrence LoPatin’s American Raceways, Inc. a five-track conglomerate, itself filed for bankruptcy protection during 1971 and was gone for good in late 1972. 

The state of the art Ontario Motor Speedway the construction of which in some ways hastened Hanford’s downfall, hosted its last races in 1980 after a short ten-year run, as ticket sales never met initial estimates to service its debt, and the track finally was demolished in the mid-1980’s. The builder and owner of the Hanford Motor Speedway, B.L. Marchbanks reportedly passed away in 1979, and the remains of the racing facility were demolished in 1984 and the property reverted to farmland.     

The racing at Marchbanks Stadium, whether on the smaller original ½-mile and 1/3-mile tracks or the later 1.4-mile paved tri-oval was always good – attendees recall the three Indianapolis-car races held in the track’s heyday as very competitive events. One may ponder what could have been, but in retrospect, the track’s remote location and reliance on temporary grandstands and sanitary facilities during Indianapolis car racing’s major growth period doomed its survival. Although Hanford Motor Speedway itself is long gone, Mr. Marchbanks will forever be remembered through his membership in the West Coast Stock Car Racing Hall of Fame as a visionary for his contribution that brought to life the first superspeedway west of the Rockies.   

Sunday, December 23, 2018


Hanford Speedway – Hanford California

Part three of the rich history of the first superspeedway west of the Mississippi



From the debut of automobile racing with jalopy races in May 1951 through 1962, racing events on Marchbanks Stadium’s paved ½-mile, oiled dirt 1/3-mile and 1-3/8-mile high paved tracks had been promoted by the track builder and owner Bircha Lewis “B.L”. Marchbanks.

The racing facility southeast of Hanford California was managed during the 1963 season by Bakersfield boxing promoter Ed York’s Racing Associates Inc. then in late June 1964 it was announced that race driver “Caveman” Bob Christie and his partner Tommy Francis had signed a lease with an option to buy the facility.  Writer Jack Lattimer, who broke the story in the San Mateo Times newspaper, noted that the big oval with three 22-degree banked turns had seen very little use lately outside of some “small time races.”

Christie, a 40-year old racing veteran from Grant’s Pass Oregon had qualified for eight consecutive Indianapolis 500-mile races between 1956 and 1963 with a best finish of tenth in 1960. Outside of Indianapolis, much of Christie’s racing career was spent in AAA (American Automobile Association) and USAC (United States Auto Club) stock cars. Christie appeared to be an unlikely candidate for a race track promoter as when not racing, he traveled the country as an employee of JC Penney Automotive Centers.

Just over a month after that surprising announcement, a United Press International wire article revealed that KS Enterprises Inc. had signed a 20-year lease for Marchbanks Stadium. T L “Tommy” Francis, identified as the KS vice president and general manager, said that the facility would immediately be renamed Hanford Speedway.

Francis a former stock car racer from San Gabriel California had notably competed in the 1950 Carrera Panamericana Mexican road race. Francis and co-driver Jimmie Crum were initially reported as killed after their 1950 Ford crashed and rolled over in the final stage, but that report was corrected after the pair and their battered car appeared at the finish line in Chiapas after the time limit had expired.   

In an extended newspaper interview, Francis related that the newly-formed company headed by Kalmon “Kal” Simon planned to spend $200,000 over a two-year period to develop the track into “the Indianapolis of the West.”  Simon, a machinery dealer, was virtually unknown although he had been involved in racing previously as the owner of a late model stock car. The new business, KS Racing Enterprises, Inc. was registered as a California corporation on May 11, 1964 with the 12-story Taft Building in Hollywood listed as its official address.   KS also maintained business offices in an industrial section of the City of El Monte and the Yucca Vine Tower office building in Hollywood.

The new company’s plan was to bring Indianapolis-type cars to Hanford “possibly within six months” to race for a purse of $20,000 before projected crowds of 35,000 to 75,000. In the UPI article Francis stated that “California is the breeding ground for racing with 48 race car builders located in the state,” and he noted that “of the 311,000 fans at the Indianapolis ‘500,’ 48,000 were from California.” 

Francis also revealed that Henry Banks, the USAC Director of Competition, and Louis Meyer, the first three-time Indianapolis ‘500’ winner, had recently inspected the Hanford facility and given a “100% okay for USAC stock car racing” and that the pair of retired champions thought that the track would be suitable for Indianapolis-type cars with a “few minor changes.”   

On September 5, 1964, the California Racing Association (CRA) sprint cars ran a 100-lap feature on the Hanford Speedway paved half-mile track in a program with a purse of $3,500. The entry list for the 24-car starting field included local favorite (and three-time Hanford track champion) Frank Secrist in the #94 Boghosian Brothers car, but it was Bob DeJong from San Francisco who set quick time in qualifying.

Speedway General Manager Francis reported paid attendance of 7,156 fans who watched Paul Jones (Parnelli Jones’ younger brother) flip down the backstretch during the feature and suffer a broken leg and collarbone in the crash. Hal Minyard in his Leonard Surdam owned Chevy-powered sprinter beat defending CRA champion “Lover Boy” Bob Hogle to the checkered flag with the race completed in 42 minutes 41.3 seconds.   

Due to the success of the first CRA visit, Hanford Speedway hosted the sprint cars again on Sunday afternoon October 11, with additional grandstands erected to accommodate up to 12,000 fans. In the penultimate CRA race of the 1964 season, things were not much different as DeJong again set quick time and Minyard won the feature again - this time Hal edged out 1961 CRA champion Jack Brunner who had started the 100-lap feature from eighteenth starting position.

In notching his tenth CRA feature win of the season on a warm 90-degree day, Minyard also shaved two minutes off the track record for the 50-mile distance. Bob Hogle second in points raced the Morales Offenhauser powered sprinter with an arm injury suffered in a crash the week before, but soldiered on to finish sixth after he stopped twice for new tires.  Two weeks later after the CRA season finale at Ascot Park, Minyard at age 40 was crowned the 1964 CRA driving champion as his car owner Leonard Surdam from Rialto California won the car owner’s title.





On Sunday afternoon November 29, 1964 the Hanford Speedway, which was now referred to as a mile and half long track, hosted the USAC stock cars, with qualifying held on Saturday the 28th. 1964 Indianapolis ‘500’ winner AJ Foyt won the pole position with an average speed of over 109 miles per hour (MPH) followed by Joe Leonard and Rufus “Parnelli” Jones, who three days earlier had won the Turkey Night Grand Prix for midgets with Bobby Unser in the fourth starting position.    

Other USAC ‘stars’ in the field included Lloyd Ruby, Bob Christie, Norm Nelson, defending USAC stock car champion Don White, Dempsey Wilson and Eugene “Jud” Larson who made an unusual stock car start.  With Hanford the penultimate event on the USAC schedule, Jones, the 1963 Indianapolis ‘500’ winner held a 300-point advantage over Nelson for the title of 1965 USAC stock car champion but Parnelli needed a solid finish to clinch.    

Bobby Marshman, who shared Rookie of the Year honors in the 1961 Indianapolis 500 with Jones, was scheduled to appear at Hanford but he suffered critical burns on November 27 in a tire-testing crash of his Pure Oil Firebird Lotus 29-Ford at Phoenix International Raceway. Marvin Porter winner of the 1960 NASCAR Grand National Marchbanks race was called upon to substitute for Marshman.  

KS Enterprises predicted more than 20,000 fans would attend the 200-mile ‘Billy Vukovich Memorial’ race, but only 6,500 fans passed the turnstiles.  Foyt in a 1964 Dodge charged into the lead trailed by Leonard, and the top remained static until the pair pitted around halfway through the race. Jones who had pitted earlier around lap 50 took the lead on the pit stop exchange but was forced to the stop for more fuel on lap 105.

When Jones stopped, Foyt regained the lead and raced to the win over Jones, Leonard, Unser and Marvin Porter with Lloyd Ruby in sixth place. Jones had secured his 1964 USAC stock car championship earlier in the race when the engine in Norm Nelson’s Plymouth blew up on lap 39. With his third-place finish at Hanford, former AMA motorcycle champion Joe Leonard clinched the USAC stock car division’s Rookie of the Year honors.  

During the 1965 season Hanford Speedway, which KS Enterprises billed as “Big H” that they advertised offered racing that included “stock, Indy Cars, sprint, sport and unlimited,” hosted two CRA sprint car races, both 50 lap events. The first CRA event was held on Sunday February 21 on what was now billed as Hanford’s 5/8-mile track. In practice on Saturday, Ernie Koch in Ben Zakit’s rear engine Offenhauser-powered sprint car from Oregon crashed and the crew was unable to make repairs in time for the car to compete in the next day’s races.

Ray Douglas in the Fisher Chevrolet-powered car topped the 31 cars that presented for qualifying and he set a new track record of 21.95 seconds. Second and third qualifiers Dick Atkins and Dee Hillman, teammates on the team owned by John Pestana and Bob Lang that used the former Fike Plumbing machinery, also eclipsed the old track record.  Don Thomas, Tink Elenberg, and Billy Wilkerson were the winners of the three five-lap preliminary heat races.

Douglas started the feature from the pole position and led the first 16 laps of the feature which was slowed by four caution flag periods for oil on the track, spins and crashes. Atkins powered past Douglas on the backstretch on the 17th lap and then held off his teammate Hillman to win by two lengths. Bob DeJong the former track record holder finished third trailed by Hal Minyard and Bob Hogle.  

In the week following the CRA sprint car race, San Mateo Times writer Jack Lattimer reported that with new financial backing, Hanford Speedway manager Tommy Francis was remodeling the “poorly designed” 1.8-mile track. “Parts of the track are being rebuilt and the racing groove stretched to two miles,” Lattimer’s article claimed “the turns will be 65 feet wide with two short and two long straightaways similar to Indianapolis. All turns will be equal and banked 15 degrees.” According to Lattimer, Francis hoped to have the new track ready by April 7 for a 200-mile USAC national championship race.

A month later, Lattimer wrote in the San Mateo Times that Hanford would host a 200-mile USAC championship race on the two-mile oval on November 7, followed by a 150-mile USAC stock car race on November 27.  There is no confirmation that the USAC schedule actually planned on a 1965 Indy Car race, but neither the race or the promised track construction ever occurred.  A planned 1965 American Motorcycle Association (AMA) 125-mile championship road initially scheduled for April or May 1965 was cancelled during the month of March according to the AMA “due to the promoter’s failure to confirm date.”

Hanford Speedway hosted an open-competition 200-mile race for cars with “early late model stock bodies (1950 to 1962) with big late model mills” for the weekend of April 17-18, 1965.  The $5000 purse event, run over the track’s 15-turn 1.8-mile road course was sanctioned by California Auto Racing Inc (CAR), the successor to the California Jalopy Association.

CAR president and race promoter Art Atkinson, a used car dealer and former race car driver, explained that the race was part of a “new trend of road racing stock cars which is spreading fast.” Advertised entries for the “Cotton Picker 200” included Frank Secrist, Jim Cook of Norwalk, Marshall Sargent of San Jose Speedway fame, and drivers from the nearby towns of Bakersfield, Shafter, Oildale, Porterville and Delano. Practice was scheduled for Friday with qualifying on Saturday to determine the “100 fastest cars to start.”

The promotion was a disaster as only 31 cars entered with some of the entries Atkinson described as “so bad we warned them not to run over 30 miles per hour.” Atkinson claimed that a “calculated cold-blooded plot” was the reason for the failure, because “other minor league local clubs called mandatory inspections for Sunday to sabotage my program.”  Bobby Mills of Porterville won the race despite that fact that during a pit stop an excited crewmember accidentally poured two gallons of water into the car’s fuel tank. 

The CRA sprint cars returned on Saturday night May 29 1965 for a scheduled 24-car 50-lap feature race. Entries included earlier winner Atkins and Frank Secrist, but Jay East drove Leonard Surdam’s orange #1 car to victory in place of regular driver Hal Minyard, who was “back East” as sale representative for his ‘McHal’ line of racing helmets. East started the feature from eighth place and made a daring last lap pass in turn two to claim his first career CRA feature victory.    

The November 28 race at Hanford Speedway was the final date on the 1965 USAC stock car schedule, and the Rookie of the Year honors had already been awarded to Canadian phenom Billy Foster but the driver’s championship still hung in the balance. Norm Nelson held a 260-point advantage over second-place driver Paul Goldsmith with 400 points available to the race winner. Behind the lead pair, Don White and Jim Hurtubise were separated by just 215 points in their battle for third place.   

Other big-name USAC drivers entered for the 200-mile included Sal Tovella, Bay Darnell, 24-year old Gary Bettenhausen and the 1965 Indianapolis 500-mile race rookie of the year and new USAC National Champion Mario Andretti in a 1964 Ford sponsored by Hanford Speedway promoter Kal Simon. Other entries included midget racer Tommy Copp, Dempsey Wilson, Lloyd Ruby, and USAC stock car rookie and three-time race winner Bobby Isaac although none of that quartet was able to crack their way into the 31-car starting field which was led by fast qualifier Goldsmith in Ray Nichels’ 1965 Plymouth.

The race day crowd of over 9,000 fans saw Foster start second in a 1965 Dodge and Hurtubise from third in Norm Nelson’s #56 1965 Plymouth. Hurtubise, Foster and Goldsmith all lead early but each retired with engine failure, and Goldsmith’s retirement on the 87th lap not only handed the lead to Norm Nelson, but clinched Nelson’s second USAC stock car championship.  Nelson crossed the finish line several laps ahead of Scotty Cain to claim the $2,000 winner’s check with Mario Andretti in third, five laps behind Nelson, with only 11 cars were still running at the finish.  This marked the USAC stock cars final appearance at Hanford, and it would be four years before the CRA sprint cars would return.