CLOSE CALL FOR DIXON AND A MOTORHOME
Bob Sanders was just an ordinary race fan who thought he'd beat the
traffic leaving Memphis Motorsport Park at the conclusion of the 13th
annual AutoZone Nationals presented by Pennzoil. Instead, he got caught
up in one of the most dangerous off-track incidents in recent NHRA history
and wound up leaving long after most fans were well on their ways.
Sanders, 49, said he'd just settled into the driver's seat of his motorhome,
turned on the radio to listen to the Top Fuel final, and pulled back
the drapes from the windshield just as Larry Dixon crashed his Miller
Lite-backed dragster. Then he saw the rear tire from Dixon's stricken
machine sailing toward him.
"It was comin' fast," the Campbell, MO, resident said. "I didn't even
have time to think about it."
On
what would have been an event-winning pass over Gary Scelzi, Dixon's
car had suddenly folded like a hinge and crashed at 270 mph near the
1,000-foot mark. The left rear wheel departed the axle and sailed perhaps
200 feet up and into the fan's parking area. The wheel and tire assembly
initially landed just a few feet in front of a slow-moving, white Ford
pick-up truck and bounced at least twice more before striking a glancing
blow along the side of Sanders' camper, well more than a hundred yards
from the track. Fortunately, there were few people in the area.
"It made a ton of noise when it hit," Sanders recalled with remarkable
calm. "I was surprised to see there wasn't more damage."
A couple of would-be souvenir hunters immediately chased down the tire,
but Sanders said he stopped them from taking it because he figured NHRA
or Dixon's team would want it back. He was right. He said race officials
arrived within a few minutes and carted off the wheel with little comment.
"The whole center was ripped out of it, completely gone," Sanders told
a small crowd of curious fans shortly afterwards. He also said the tire
appeared inflated when it was confiscated.
"I would never have thought something that big could make it this far
back," Sanders marveled. "It could've easily killed someone."
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