By
Danny White
Russell Liberman
topped our poll as
the number one funny car racer
of the 1960s. There is not
much more that could
be said about Russell
Liberman, the man. Liberman
ranked number 17 on the list
of top NHRA drivers, had two
NHRA national events victories
(one of those as an
owner), and an infamous legacy
rivaling that of a rock star.
Russell began his
funny car career in such cars
as the “Hercules,” the “Gypsy”
Corvette,
and the “Brutus” GTO.
Russell’s stardom skyrocketed
when he built the
first “Jungle Jim” Chevy II.
By 1969, “Jungle Jim’s” long,
smoking
burnouts (some preceded by a
fire burnout), high-speed
backups, and long,
twisting wheelstands had
cemented his place as a
popular racer with the fans.
The showmanship
had previously been
backed up with average
finishes, but these stopped
in 1969. Russell had two
Chevrolet powered Novas in
1969 with Clare Sanders in
the second car. The two
started the year off with a
bang with Sanders beating
Jungle at Pomona for the
Winternationals title.
Liberman then went on the
match race circuit to win
countless races, running the
best of 7.28, 198.64. By the
end of 1969, Jungle
had one of the most
successful years in history
for a Chevy powered funny
car.
Liberman knew that the day
of the successful Chevy
powered engine in AA/FC was
limited. By the end of the
next year, “Jungle “ had
switched to the Hemi.
(Photo by Drag Racing
Memories; info from www.draglist.com
and Dennis Doubleday)
Gene Snow ranks
second in our
listing of top ‘60s funny
car stars for his
“Rambunctious” Dodges. Snow
went through the ranks of
Super Stocks, F/Xs, and
flip-top funny cars. Even
though Gene won the U.S.
Nationals twice in a row in
‘66 and ‘67 with his
Dodge, it was his ‘69
Mini-Charger that makes this
list. The second Charger,
the mini-version, replaced
the full sized one he
debuted at the end of ‘68.
Snow had been working on the
direct drive Crowerglide
setup and perfected it
with the ‘69 Charger. Snow
has never been known to shy
away from a new idea.
The Mini-Charger ran a best
E.T. of 7.13 at 213.27
M.P.H. The car would leave
the line behind the
automatic transmission funny
cars of the day and charge
by
them on the big end. The car
was one of first funny cars
to top the 200 M.P.H.
barrier and Snow did it on a
regular basis. (Photo from
Drag Racing Memories;
info from www.draglist.com)
When the Ford
Motor Company
commissioned Logghe Stamping
Company to build four Mercury
Comets, drag racing
would change forever. The four
Comets, raced by Don
Nicholson, Ed Schartman,
Jack Chrisman, and Kenz &
Leslie, were far ahead of the
competition in
technology. They were even
ahead of fellow FoMoCo racers
who were racing
Holman-Moody Mustangs. The
three had everybody else
catching up to them in 1966.
The best known of these four
funny cars was Don Nicholson’s
“Eliminator
I.” The Comet’s debut was less
than graceful when the body
came unlatched
and flew off. Ford engineers
burned the damaged body on the
spot.
The car was
fixed and the
“Eliminator I” went on a
tear, breaking into the
sevens with a best of 7.89,
178 at Atco in early ‘67. In
1966, Nicholson was able to
hold off the heavier
stock bodied cars despite
using an injected engine.
The several hundred pound
weight advantage clearly
helped, but it having Earl
Wade tuning for him did not
hurt. By 1967, the
competition caught up with a
new generation of new flip
top
cars. By the end of the
decade, Nicholson left funny
car racing to help form the
Pro Stock class. (Photo from
Drag Racing Memories; info
from Dennis Doubleday,
Bill Duke, and www.draglist.com)
In 1965, funny
cars were gaining
popularity across the
country. A lot of drag
racers and fans alike
regarded the
funny car/FX cars as
“circus” acts and not real
race cars. The car that
changed a lot of peoples’
opinions on funny cars was
the Mr. Norm’s
Grand-Spaulding Dodge. When
Norm Krause and Gary Dyer
brought the ex-Roger
Lindamood factory altered
wheelbase car to Lions in
1965, the team was not known
outside of the
Midwest. Dyer then ran
8.63 at Lions, and it went
down as
one of the great runs in
history. The other new funny
cars had just broken into
the eights. This run and the
many victories put Gary Dyer
into number four spot.
(Photo from Gary Dyer; info
from Gary Dyer, James
Ibusuki, and www.draglist.com
files)
Danny Ongais
ranks number five on
our list with the “Mickey
Thompson’s Mach-1.” Ongais
had gained famed as a
top ranked dragster driver.
Mickey Thompson was well
known as a racer, track
operator, and car owner. In
1969, the pair debuted a new
lightweight transition
style chassis Mustang. Pat
Foster built the blue 427
SOHC powered Mustang as
well as a red twin that he
drove himself. The team was
awesome that year. They
won many national events
with the car and Ongais ran
a reported 6.96, 204.73.
The team only lasted two
years. Foster
crashed in Dallas
and Ongais
went on to different rides
by the end of 1970. The
state the art Mustang was
outdated by 1970 due to the
new, lighter, dragster style
chassis other teams
were debuting. (Photo
provided by Drag Racing
Memories; info from www.draglist.com
files and Dennis Doubleday)
Pat Minick
landed in the number six
spot with the Chi-Town
Hustler 1969 Dodge Charger.
The ‘69 Charger was
legendary for its long
smoking burnouts and its
tough performance. The team
claimed that the car had a
90 percent win-loss record
in 1969. Minick did the
driving, Austin Coil tuned
the engine, and John
Farkonas was the behind the
scenes engineer. The car was
built with an offset roll
cage for the driver, one
of the last funny cars to be
built in that configuration.
The ‘Hustler ran a
best of 6.96 in 1970 and ran
206 in 1969. As tough as the
car was in 1969, it
became outdated by 1971 and
a new car had to be built.
(Photo provided by Drag
Racing Memories; info from www.draglist.com)
In the new
millennium, Don
Schumacher has become the
owner of the largest
professional team in drag
racing
with eight cars. But at one
time he was a driver himself
with the “Stardust”
series of AA/Funny Cars that
he raced from 1966 to 1974.
The car that gets him
into the number seven spot
is the “Stardust” ‘68
Barracuda. The car
featured a late Chrysler
engine inside a Logghe Bros.
frame. Schumacher bought
the car from Butch Leal, who
gave up funny cars to go
doorslammer racing. This
was a departure for
Schumacher, who previously
raced Romeo Palamides built
cars,
including a front-hinge
fliptop funny car. The
Barracuda ran a best of
7.22,
205.50 in 1969. (Photo
provided by Mike Ditty; info
from www.draglist.com
files)
Jack Chrisman
ranks number eight on
our funny car list. Chrisman
got one of four original
Logghe built Comets in
1966. Jack took his proven
blown 427 SOHC out of the
Chrisman Comet to run in
the new flip top car, unlike
Nicholson and Schartman, who
ran injected cammers.
In 1966, it seemed that the
four lightweight Comets
dominated the funny car
competition like no other
cars. Jack Chrisman’s high
point in his funny car
career was his 7.60, 190.27
run at Indy in 1967. No
other car ran in the sevens
during qualifying. That run
was light years ahead of the
competition.
Chrisman’s career cooled by
the end of the decade.
(Photo provided by Mike
Ditty; info from www.draglist.com)
As the story has
been told before,
Gas Ronda began drag racing as
a hobby. Ronda’s doctor told
him to find
something to do in his spare
time. I don’t believe drag
racing is what the
doctor ordered. Ronda made his
way through the Super Stock
ranks until he got
his first funny car in 1966.
The Russ Davis Ford Mustang
makes in our list in
number nine. The famed shop of
Holman-Moody built the first
Russ Davis Ford.
That car was replaced by a new
West Coast built car in 1967,
the one that makes
our list.
Gas had a very
professional
approach to drag racing that
made him popular with fans
and the press alike. He
won many races with the
poppy red Mustang, including
the ‘67 Manufacturers
Race at Orange County. The
car ran times of 7.90,
184.04 with an injected
engine, despite the stock
style body with removable
front end and opening doors.
By 1969, the car was
outdated and was replaced by
a newer Mustang. (Photo
provided by Mike Ditty; info
from www.draglist.com)