1972 Phoenix 150 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972): Difference between revisions

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(Bobby Unser generally controlled this one, although the final caution certainly went on for too long. Alas, that's the way the cookie crumbles sometimes! A British Pathé newsreel exists of this race, interestingly.)
 
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*[[1971 Schaefer 500 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1971)]]
*[[1971 Schaefer 500 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1971)]]
*[[1971 Trentonian 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1971)]]
*[[1971 Trentonian 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1971)]]
*[[1972 Indianapolis 500 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]  
*[[1972 Best Western Motels 150 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]
*[[1972 Indianapolis 500 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]
*[[1972 Rex Mays Classic (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]  
*[[1972 Rex Mays Classic (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]  
*[[1972 Tony Bettenhausen 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]
*[[1972 Tony Bettenhausen 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]
*[[1976 Indianapolis 500 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1976)]]  
*[[1972 Trenton Times 300 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]
*[[1981 Pocono 500 (lost televised footage of IndyCar race; 1981)]]  
*[[1972 Trentonian 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1972)]]
*[[1973 Schaefer 500 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1973)]]
*[[1973 Texas 200 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1973)]]
*[[1974 Phoenix 150 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1974)]]
*[[1974 Schaefer 500 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1974)]]
*[[1974 Trentonian 200 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1974)]]
*[[1975 Bricklin 150 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1975)]]
*[[1975 Michigan 150 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1975)]]
*[[1975 Trentonian 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1975)]]
*[[1976 Indianapolis 500 (partially found footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1976)]]
*[[1976 Jimmy Bryan 150 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1976)]]
*[[1976 Michigan 150 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1976)]]
*[[1976 Schaefer 500 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1976)]]
*[[1976 Trenton Times Auto Classic (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1976)]]
*[[1976 Trentonian 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1976)]]
*[[1977 American Parts 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1977)]]
*[[1977 Jimmy Bryan 150 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1977)]]
*[[1977 Michigan Grand Prix (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1977)]]
*[[1977 Rex Mays Classic (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1977)]]
*[[1977 Schaefer 500 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1977)]]
*[[1977 Texas Grand Prix (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1977)]]
*[[1977 Trentonian 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1977)]]
*[[1978 Coors 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1978)]]
*[[1978 Daily Express Indy Silverstone (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1978)]]
*[[1978 Daily Mail Indy Trophy (partially found CBS and BBC One footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1978)]]
*[[1978 Norton Twin 200 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1978)]]
*[[1979 Arizona Republic / Jimmy Bryan 150 (partially found footage of SCCA/CART IndyCar Series race; 1979)]]
*[[1979 California 500 (lost footage of SCCA/CART IndyCar Series race; existence unconfirmed; 1979)]]
*[[1979 Gould Grand Prix (lost footage of SCCA/CART IndyCar Series race; 1979)]]
*[[1980 Miller High Life 150 (partially found footage of CART PPG IndyCar World Series race; 1980)]]
*[[1980 Norton Twin 200 (lost footage of CART PPG IndyCar World Series race; 1980)]]
*[[1980 Primera Copa Mexico 150 (lost footage of CART PPG IndyCar World Series race; 1980)]]
*[[1980 Tony Bettenhausen 200 (lost footage of CART PPG IndyCar World Series race; 1980)]]
*[[1981 Kraco Car Stereo 150 (lost CART PPG IndyCar World Series race; 1981)]]  
*[[1981 Pocono 500 (lost footage of USAC Championship Car Season race; 1981)]]
*[[1996 Las Vegas 500K (partially lost footage of IRL Season race; 1996)]]  
*[[Indianapolis 500 WFBM-TV Broadcasts (lost racing footage; 1949-1950)]]  
*[[Indianapolis 500 WFBM-TV Broadcasts (lost racing footage; 1949-1950)]]  
*[[Indianapolis 500 MCA closed-circuit broadcasts (partially lost racing footage; 1964-1970)]]
*[[Indianapolis 500 MCA closed-circuit broadcasts (partially lost racing footage; 1964-1970)]]

Revision as of 13:29, 4 July 2022

1972phoenix1501.jpg

Program for the race.

Status: Partially Found

The 1972 Phoenix 150 (also known as the 1972 Jimmy Bryan 150) was the inaugural race of the 1972 USAC Championship Car Season. Occurring on 18th March at the Phoenix International Raceway, the race would ultimately be won by polesitter Bobby Unser in an Eagle-Offenhauser, after having led more than half of the 150-lap event.

Background

The 1972 Phoenix 150 was the ninth running of the event, with the annual race lasting 150 miles.[1] It was one of two 1972 USAC Championship Car Season races to commence at Phoenix International Raceway, the other being the 1972 Best Western 150,[2] which occurred on 4th November and was won by Bobby Unser.[3] While renamed from the Jimmy Bryan 150 to the Phoenix 150, the race still paid tribute to the 1958 Indianapolis 500 winner Jimmy Bryan.[4] The race would have ties with Phoenix events like the Desert Diamond West Valley Phoenix Grand Prix, before Phoenix races were dropped from the IndyCar schedule after 2018 following low attendance.[5]

Prior to the race, qualifying commenced with Unser winning the pole position with a record speed of 141.996 mph.[6][1] He was therefore deemed the pre-race favourite heading into the event.[6] Directly behind him was his brother and Colt-Offenhauser driver Al Unser, with Eagle-Offenhauser's Johnny Rutherford lining up third out of 24 competitors.[1]

The Race

With the starting order decided, the 1972 Phoenix 150 commenced on 18th March.[1] Unser maintained his lead from the start, holding it for the first 50 laps before making a pit stop that meant he dropped it to Rutherford.[7][1] Rutherford lost the lead a lap later to McLaren-Offenhauser's Mark Donohue, who controlled the next 24 laps.[1] However, he retired 76 laps in when he lost a wheel after a pitstop, causing by a cotter key for the right front tyre giving way.[6][1] Roger McCluskey assumed the first position in a Kuzma-Offenhauser, leading 12 laps before Eagle-Offenhauser's Mike Mosley took over for the next 29 laps.[1] Mario Andretti then went past Mosley on lap 117 in a Parnelli-Offenhauser, but was only able to defend it for three laps before Unser regained the lead.[1]

From there, a long caution period between laps 125-147 meant there was only three more laps of actual racing remaining.[6] Unser defended the lead for the remaining laps to claim victory and $8,996 in prize money.[7][1] Post-race, Unser felt he would have won regardless if the race finished under green or yellow, stating "I don't care whether we finished under a yellow or a green, just so we won. I knew I had the fastest car on the track and the only thing the green would have done at the end would have been to have the opportunity to break down. But no one can run with us."[6] Andretti finished four seconds behind in second, accepting that he would have been unable to challenge Unser even with 20 green laps.[6][1] Mosley finished a lap down in third.[7][1]

Availability

According to IndyCar on TV, the race received live flag-to-flag coverage from ABC as part of its Wide World of Sports.[8] The broadcast has yet to resurface, although a British Pathé newsreel of the event is publicly available. Photos and newspaper clippings can also be found online.[6]

Gallery

Image

See Also

External Link

References