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What
really happened that day in 1971?
Miss
Madison feat in Gold Cup
is the stuff of legends and now movies
By Fred Farley
Contributing Writer
(April 2005) No one who attended the fabulous 1971 APBA
Gold Cup Regatta in Madison, Indiana, will ever forget it. That
was when Miss Madison, the worlds only community-owned and
sponsored Unlimited hydroplane, confounded the oddsmakers and won
the race of races before the hometown crowd.
The Miss Madisons richly sentimental triumph on that memorable
Fourth of July was an historic one on several counts. Not since
the 1965 Dixie Cup at Guntersville, Ala., had the sun-bleached Miss
Madison scored a victory. It was pilot Jim McCormicks first
win ever in the Unlimited Class. The Miss Madison was built in 1959
and first entered competition in 1960, thereby making her the only
Unlimited hydroplane ever to win a Gold Cup 11 years after its competitive
debut.
The 1971 event also marked the first and only time that a community-owned
boat has ever won the Gold Cup. Not since 1966 had the American
Power Boat Associations Crown Jewel been won by a boat with
Allison rather than Rolls-Royce aircraft
power. The Miss Madison of 1971 also represented the end of an era.
(She was the last Unlimited hydroplane with the old-style rear cockpit-forward-engine,
shovel-nosed bow configuration to ever achieve victory.)
McCormick of Owensboro, Ky., made his Unlimited Class debut as driver
of the community-owned entry in 1966. He replaced George Buddy
Byers, who had signed to drive for casino owner Bill Harrahs
Tahoe Miss racing team.
For the first time in 1971, the APBA Gold Cup was the headline event
at the Madison Regatta. Due to a technicality and a misunderstanding,
the $30,000 bid for the race by Madison Regatta Inc., was the only
one submitted to APBA headquarters in time.
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| Jim
McCormick |
For 10 years, the volunteer Miss Madison
crew had tried to win the hometown race without success. They requested
and received assistance from two of the finest Allison engine specialists
in the sport Harry Volpi and Everett Adams who
flew in from Reno, Nev., and went to work along side regulars Tony
Steinhardt, Bob Humphrey, Dave Stewart, Keith Hand, Russ Willey
and pilot McCormick.
Volpi and Adams are credited with sorting out the teams water-alcohol
injection system, which resulted in some additional miles per hour
for the boat that proved crucial on race day.
Down to their last engine after having blown the other during practice,
the Miss Madison team was at a distinct disadvantage at the outset
of the race. McCormick ran conservatively in his three elimination
heats and finished just high enough to qualify for the final 15-mile
moment of truth on the Ohio River.
Entering their last heat of the afternoon, McCormick and company
had 1,000 points (based upon one first and two second-place finishes).
That was 100 points less than the combination of Terry Sterett and
Atlas Van Lines II, which had bested Miss Madison twice in the preliminary
skirmishing.
In order to win the Gold Cup, Miss Madison would have to win the
Final Heat with Atlas II finishing second. That would put McCormick
and Sterett in a point tie with 1,400 points apiece. According to
Unlimited Class rules, a tie is broken by the order of finish in
the Final Heat.
Miss Madison moved to the inside lane prior to the start, thereby
forcing the rest of the field to run a wider and longer track. Atlas
II, in lane-two, crossed the starting line first and led around
the first turn. Miss Madison, in lane-one, entered the first backstretch
in second position. Then McCormick made his move. He let it
all hang out and thundered past Sterett as if his rival was
tied to the dock.
The partisan crowd screamed in unison, Go! Go! Go! Atlas
II was fast but not as fast as Miss Madison. Sterett cornered well
but not as well as McCormick.
Miss Madison, an aging under-financed museum piece, streaked to
victory with fast pursuit from Atlas II, Dean Chenoweth in Miss
Budweiser, Billy Schumacher in Pride of Pay n Pak, and Fred
Alter in Towne Club.
The hometown favorite crossed the finish line 16.3 seconds ahead
of Atlas II, adding a new chapter to American sports legend, as
pandemonium broke loose on the shore.
Firebells rang, automobile horns sounded, and the spectators went
out of their minds with delight. Everybody, it seemed, was a Miss
Madison fan and, whether they lived there or not, a Madisonian.
Even members of rival teams applauded the outcome of this modern
day Horatio Alger story.
Deliriously happy Miss Madison crew members carried pilot McCormick
on their shoulders to the Judges Stand. Veteran boat racer
George N. Davis, a mentor of McCormicks during his Limited
Class career, wept unashamedly at this, his proteges moment
of triumph.
McCormick was the first to give credit where credit was due. He
quickly acknowledged that without the mechanical prowess of his
volunteer pit crew, victory would have been impossible.
And to prove that the hometown performance was anything but a fluke,
Miss Madison captured first-place honors in the Tri-Cities Atomic
Cup three weeks later on the Columbia River at Kennewick, Wash.,
and finished second in National High Points in the 1971 season.
POSTSCRIPT:
An air conditioning contractor by profession, Jim McCormick was
37 years old when he drove the Miss Madison (U-6) to victory in
1971. He competed in the Unlimited Class between 1966 and 1977 and
participated in a total of 70 Unlimited races, finishing in the
top three at 19.
In midseason 1971, McCormick started an Unlimited team of his own.
He purchased the former Parcos O-Ring Miss (U-8) and ran it
as Miss Timex, although he finished the season as driver of the
Miss Madison, while Ron Larsen handled the U-8.
In 1972, McCormick campaigned two boats the Miss Timex
(U-44) and the Miss Timex II (U-8) and drove the U-44
himself. In 1973, he owned and drove two boats the Red
Man (U-8) and the Red Man II (U-81).
While attempting to qualify the U-81 at Miami Marine Stadium in
1974, the boat hooked in a turn and McCormick was thrown out. He
suffered a serious leg injury, which left him with a lifelong limp.
McCormick took one last sentimental journey as an Unlimited driver
when he piloted the U-81, renamed Santa Rita Homes, at the 1977
Owensboro Regatta, where he finished eighth.
Following his retirement from competition, McCormick suffered health
problems and was for a time in 1981 legally blind. Following laser
surgery, which partially restored his eyesight, McCormick returned
to the sport one more time in 1988 as co-owner with Bob Fendler
of the Pocket Savers Plus (U-4), driven by Steve David.
McCormick regularly attended the Madison Regatta and last visited
in 1994. To his many fans, he remained Gentleman Jim,
never too busy to sign an autograph or to pose for a photo.
Jim McCormick died in 1995 following a brief illness. He was 61.
His widow Bonnie, son Mike, daughter Kim, and several grandchildren
still live in the Owensboro area.
Click
here to go back to the movie story pages.
Fred Farley is the APBA Unlimited historian. He resides
in Milton, Ky.
For more information, visit the official movie website:
www.madisonthemovie.com. To view the movie trailer and message board,
visit RoundAbouts Madison movie web page at: www.roundaboutmadison.com.
Editors Note: You can
view the movie trailer in its entirety online at:
www.madisonthemovie.com/madison.html.
Click on Madison.
Madison Movie Credits
Made in USA, 2001
Release Date: Late Summer 2004
Distributors: MGM
Runtime: 94 min.
Executive Producers: Carl Amari, Chris Dennis, Steve Salutric, Roy
Millonzi
Producers: Martin Wiley, William Bindley
Co-Producer: Lisa Lloyd
Screenwriters: William Bindley, Scott Bindley
Director: William Bindley (Credits: The Eighteenth Angel,
Judicial Consent)
Principal Cast: Jim Caviezel (Jim McCormick), Jake Lloyd (Mike McCormick),
Mary McCormack (Bonnie McCormick), Bruce Dern (Harry Volpi), Paul
Dooley (Mayor Don Vaughn), Brent Briscoe (Tony Steinhardt).
Additional Cast: Frank Knapp (Bobby Humphrey), Kristina Anapau (Tami),
James Andelin (Merle), Reed Diamond (Skip), Mark Fauser (Travis),
Richard Lee Jackson (Buddy), Matthew Letscher (Owen Henderson),
Cody McMains (Bobby Epperson), William Shockley (Rick Winston),
Vincent Ventresca (Walker Grief), John M. Watson Sr. (Walter).
Storyline: A somewhat fictionalized account of a true story about
an Unlimited hydroplane drivers surprise victory in the 1971
Gold Cup at Madison, Ind.
Official website: http://www.madisonthemovie.com
Copyright 1999-2008, Kentuckiana Publishing, Inc.
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