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TRIBUTES/MEMORIALS TO
LEGENDS
Glenn "Fireball" Roberts

From an inauspicious start on the hard-packed
sands of Daytona Beach, Fla., in 1948, Edward Glenn Roberts Jr. fashioned
one of the most successful and glamorous careers in NASCAR.
"Fireball" was a name everyone recognized. He was the epitome of the
exciting, young racing star. Oddly enough, he didn't get the nickname
through his on-track achievements. Rather, he earned it for his ability to
throw a baseball. But baseball was never his primary interest. Racing was.
From the time he started on the beach course at Daytona when he was 17 -
he wrecked on the ninth lap of a Modified race - until his untimely death
in 1964, Roberts shaped a career that saw him win 24 times in 204 races.
He set more than 400 records at various tracks, including 1,644 laps led
at tough, old Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, NASCAR's first superspeedway.

Born January 20,1931 in Daytona Beach, Roberts attended the University of
Florida but never graduated. He preferred racing and struck out to find
his way in the sport. He found his way into NASCAR in 1949 and his career
began in earnest.
He won several times over the years, but it was on the fast, exciting new
superspeedways that began to crop up in the late '50s and early '60s that
he made his mark. He won the Firecracker 250 at Daytona International
Speedway in 1959 and then, in 1962, he won the Daytona 500 and the
Firecracker again, thus becoming the first man to sweep the speedway's two
events in a single season. In 1960, he won the Dixie 500 at Atlanta
International Raceway.

But Darlington was his favorite superspeedway and on it, Roberts became
one of NASCAR's best in the fledging start of the big-track era. He won
the Rebel 300 in 1957 and 1959 and the Southern 500 in 1958 and 1963.
His 1963 victory was particularly significant. He came to the track in
excellent physical shape after recovering from an injury. His plan was to
start in the middle of the pack, which meant having to qualify on the
second day. During practice, however, he hit the guardrail in his No.22
Holman-Moody Ford and almost washed the car out. But it was repaired in
time for him to set a qualifying mark of 133.819 miles per hour that got
him the ninth starting spot.
Roberts ran a cautious race until the latter stages, when he began to
charge. He took the lead with only 75 laps left and won in a cakewalk. He
had run the perfect race, saving man and machine.
A year later at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Roberts was involved in a fiery
crash with Ned Jarrett and Junior Johnson. Severely burned, he survived
for 37 days before he succumbed to pneumonia.
It was a blow to the racing world. Many have said there was no predicting
how far Roberts would have progressed as a driver, since he was clearly
the pathfinder of the superspeedway era. However, his niche had already
been carved. When he left, he was vastly popular and vastly successful.


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