Through the Beltsville Shell book I have reconnected with
dozens of old friends. An unanticipated benefit has been finding many new
friends along the way. At the top if the list is Bill Goodwin.
Bill works in the telecommunications business and is a
“technology guy”. He is friends with a guy named Al Becke, who was a
colleague of Johnny Bradley years ago. Al’s stories about a bunch of
crazy car guys from Beltsville led Bill to do some internet research, and sure
enough Bill stumbled across the Beltsville Shell web site. Next thing you
know I get an email from a complete stranger who grew up in Montgomery County,
was about the same age as the BSYAWYD guys, had buddies with similar cars, drag
raced at the same tracks we did, knew everything about the Mighty Mo, and had
an equal number of stories about wild and crazy gear-heads. Bill
announced he wanted to meet up with us at one of our reunions.
I have a slight fear of stalkers, so I decided to send Nace
on a reconnaissance mission. Nace agreed to take on the mission as long
as beer was part of the agenda. So Bill and Nace met at a
neutral site, (Red, Hot & Blue) consumed a few beers, exchanged stories and
had a good time. Nace’s report came back positive: we needed to
invite this guy into the “club”. This decision was one of Nace’s all-time
best.
Bill got his hands on a few copies of Beltsville Shell and
began spreading the word about the Boys from Beltsville. Bill attended
his first BSYAWYD reunion in 2005. Bill must have a hundred drag racing buddies
and before long our circles of friends became intertwined. But the best
connection Bill made for us was to Sonny Kruhm, the owner of “Monster Racing”,
the NASCAR racing experience company at Dover Speedway (MONSTER RACING). Bill
landed a 4-pack of “day on the race track” tickets for us. In July 2006
Bill, Sonny Boteler, Nace and I rented a Hemi station wagon, drove to Delaware,
and conquered “The Monster Mile”. Sonny Kruhm treated us to a great
driving experience, photos, videos, and a million laughs.
The day at Dover triggered a wickedly evil thought in Bill’s
mischievous mind. He negotiated the purchase of a real-life NASCAR
(retired) race car with spare parts, towed it back to Maryland, somehow
registered the thing with some unsuspecting (naïve) DMV clerk and started
driving the car on the street! Notice that the car has headlight decals -- and doesn't have headlights! OK, no one at the Mighty Mo ever drove a
real NASCAR racer on the street; I’m nominating Bill for the Nobel Prize in
Automotive Excess.
As crazy as the NASCAR street-machine idea was, it is not my
favorite. My all-time favorite Billy-Mobile was the AM General FJ8C
United States Postal Service Delivery truck with the 9” rear, slicks, mag
wheels, Chevy V-8, straight pipes and 700-R4 transmission. Billie went to Walmart and bought about 30 cans of white spray paint and painted the truck in his garage! Love the ingenuity. I got to ride
in the “Mail Truck” to 75-80 Drag strip. When Bill pulled into the pits
everyone stopped what they were doing, pointed at us, and said, “What the hell
is that?”
Bill is also the guy who introduced me to the annual Los
Angeles Roadster Show in Pomona each January. We have gone together a few
times, but the best trip was the time Bill appropriated some bogus Press Passes
and snuck us into the show two hours before the poor slobs waiting outside
could come in. We had the run of the place and had a blast visiting with
the owners (who thought we were going to get them in the magazines!). It
is a good thing that Bill lives in Delaware and I live in San Diego or the two
of us could get in some serious trouble together!
Happy Birthday Billie, from all your friends at Beltsville
Shell!