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My
friend, Gentleman Jim McCormick
By
Fred Farley
Special to RoundAbout
MADISON, Ind. (October 1999) Gentleman Jim McCormick,
the 1971 Gold Cup-winning driver of the community owned Miss Madison,
was a close personal friend of mine for 29 years.
I first became acquainted with Jim in 1966, the year that McCormick
first joined the Unlimited ranks. At the time, I was a 22-year-old
college student, living in Seattle.
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McCormick:
A champion
and innovator
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During the summer months, I worked for the
sponsoring organization of the Seattle Seafair Regatta and wrote
the program magazine that was sold at the race site.
My first meeting with Jim McCormick occurred in the pit area, shortly
after the Final Heat of the Seafair race. Someone told me that Jim
was looking for a copy of the program. (McCormick had been so busy
focusing on the race that he had neglected to obtain a program.)
I walked up to Jim, introduced myself, and promised that I would
hand deliver him a Seafair program at the next weeks race
in Coeur dAlene, Idaho.
Beginning with that first conversation, we became the best of friends.
I would talk with him at the races and kept in touch during the
off-seasons.
McCormick became a welcome addition to my Christmas card list.
Jim was one of those drivers who could be expected to give that
extra something in a competitive situation. It was fun
to watch him drive. I consider McCormick to be one of the better
of the best in the water sport of kings, which is Unlimited hydroplane
racing.
For much of Jims racing career, the boats that he drove left
something to be desired. Many were old and under-financed. But McCormick
somehow made the difference between a tailender and a contender.
At Detroit in 1967, Jim was stuck with one of the worst-riding hydroplanes
in Unlimited history the Notre Dame which had an alarming
tendency to fall on its nose at high speeds. By some miracle and
a lot of driving ability McCormick managed to guide the Notre
Dame to fourth place in a 15-boat field in the World Championship
Race on the Detroit River.
At Seattle in 1969, Jim occupied the cockpit of the Atlas Van Lines,
a hull built in 1957 and considered by most insiders of the sport
to be over the hill and down the other side. McCormick
nevertheless demonstrated his prowess as a competitor by finishing
a strong second to the front-runner Bill Sterett and Miss Budweiser,
a state-of-the-art superboat with 10 times the operating budget
of the Atlas. Jim outperformed such well-respected teams as Bill
Muncey and Miss U.S., Dean Chenoweth and Myrs Special, and
Fred Alter and Miss Bardahl on that memorable day at Lake Washington.
Precious little can be said of McCormicks 1971 Gold Cup triumph
aboard Miss Madison that hasnt already been. No one who was
there on that sun-blessed Fourth of July will ever forget it. To
Jim, personally, the victory before the hometown crowd ranked second
in importance only to his wedding day to his wife, Bonnie.
Moments before the one-minute gun, prior to the final heat of the
Gold Cup, McCormick moved to the inside lane. His strategy was obvious.
He wanted to force the other drivers to run a wider and longer
track around the 2.5-mile Ohio River course. Entering the
backstretch of lap one, Jim put the accelerator to the floor and
thundered into the lead. The other boats were fast, but not as fast
as Miss Madison; the others cornered well, but not as well as Miss
M.
At the end of six heart-stopping laps, it was Miss Madison and Jim
McCormick the winners, followed by Atlas Van Lines II, Miss Budweiser,
Pride of Pay n Pak and Towne Club, in that order.
For me, the 1971 Gold Cup was the single most exciting sports event
that I have ever witnessed. It was Unlimited hydroplane racing at
its best. The outcome was in doubt right down to the final moment.
It was also the first time that a race had been won by a personal
friend.
The 1971 Madison Gold Cup Regatta was on the occasion of my first
visit to the Ohio River Valley. It would not be my last.
Jim McCormick continued to be an exciting presence in Unlimited
racing for years afterward. His first race after the 1971 Gold Cup
was the occasion of another Miss Madison victory. On July 25, I
watched Jim win the Tri-Cities Atomic Cup at Kennewick, Wash. He
followed the same strategy that he did at Madison by running conservatively
in the preliminary heats and then letting it all hang out
in the finale.
McCormick was always concerned with the issue of driver safety in
boat racing. In 1975, as pilot for the Pay n Pak team, he
was the first to use a cockpit harness system a concept
that did not gain wide acceptance for another decade but which is
now mandatory in all Unlimited hydroplanes.
Im glad that I knew Gentleman Jim. I will always
treasure his friendship. When he passed away in 1995, it was like
losing a family member.
Now that there is a movie in production that tells the story of
the 1971 Gold Cup, I know that Jim would have been proud.
Fred Farley has served as the official historian of the Unlimited
Hydroplane Racing Association since 1973. He has witnessed close
to 200 Unlimited races, including 28 Madison Regattas, and has written
more than 600 articles for publication on boat racing. A retired
school teacher from Seattle, Fred is a freelance writer who recently
moved to Milton, Ky.
Copyright 1999-2008, Kentuckiana Publishing, Inc.
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