2019 BC39 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

USAC HoF Inductions Wednesday at BC39

USAC HoF Inductions Wednesday at BC39

The eighth USAC Hall of Fame class will be inducted Wednesday, September 4, at the second running of the BC39 at The Dirt Track at IMS.

Sep 1, 2019
USAC HoF Inductions Wednesday at BC39

The eighth USAC Hall of Fame ceremony will be held at The Dirt Track at IMS on the opening night of the Driven2SaveLives BC39 powered by NOS Energy Drink between events for the second running of the USAC NOS Energy Drink National Midget event.

The Hall of fame ceremonies will coincide with heat races and the Stoops Pursuit race at IMS honoring USAC’s newest class of inductees for 2019 alongside Johnny Capels, Bryan Clauson, Dick Jordan and Dave Steele  on September 4.

Capels, New Mexico native, is a five-time National Championship-winning chief mechanic, winning back-to-back USAC National Championships with driver Joe Leonard in 1971-72. He also won USAC Championship Dirt Car titles with Al Unser in 1973 and Mario Andretti in 1974 . He also won as a Chief Mechanic/car owner for Pancho Carter in 1978.  Other wins behind the wheel came as USAC Sprint Car driver in 1968 while he served as the USAC Senior VP and Director of Competition in 1992 as well as the USAC President and COO from 1997 to 2001 and Chairman of the Board of Directors for USAC from 2002 to 2010.

Clauson, of Noblesville, Ind., won 112 USAC races as a driver between 2004 and his 2016 passing. He is one of just six drivers to reach the 100-win mark during his career with the club. He ranks seventh on both the USAC National Sprint Car and USAC National Midget wins list with 41 and 38 wins, respectively, in each division. He also scored two career USAC Silver Crown victories and captured the overall USAC National Driver Championship in 2010, 2011 and 2012. He won the USAC National Midget championships in 2010-11 and USAC National Sprint Car titles in 2012 and 2013.

Jordan, of Brownsburg, Ind., was USAC’s public/media relations man for over half a century from 1968 until his death in 2019. It’s safe to say, no individual has witnessed more USAC events than he did. Jordan devoted his entire working life to publicizing the club’s drivers and events, working with the media, as well as preserving the club’s rich history with his thorough race reports, statistics and record-keeping. As one of the most respected individuals in all racing media, the recognition he received from around the racing world because of his contributions have been extensive.

Tampa, Fla. native, Steele, racked up one of the greatest careers in the history of USAC. Ultimately, he became a two-time Silver Crown driving champion in 2004 and '05, and one of the club’s most accomplished drivers in the decades of the 1990 and 200s. Steele earned 60 USAC National victories, all of which came on pavement, including 16 Silver Crown, 26 National Sprint Car and 18 Midget. He was a two-time Little 500 winner at Anderson Speedway, where he earned his final USAC win in 2009 before he passed away in 2017 following a crash on the opening lap of a Southern Sprint Car Shootout Series event at Florida’s Desoto Speedway.

The USAC Hall of Fame began in 2012 and has previously inducted 80 individuals over the past seven years: J.C. Agajanian, Mario Andretti, Earl Baltes, Henry Banks, Rollie Beale, Gary Bettenhausen, Tony Bettenhausen, Tom Bigelow, George Bignotti, Tom Binford, Don Branson, Clint Brawner, Steve Butler, Jimmy Bryan, Duane Carter, Pancho Carter, Jimmy Caruthers, Russ Clendenen, Donald Davidson, Jimmy Davies, Willie Davis, Frankie Delroy, Mike Devin, Larry Dickson, Bob East, Tony Elliott, A.J. Foyt, Paul Goldsmith, Chuck Gurney, Gene Hartley, Butch Hartman, Jack Hewitt, Bob Higman, Tommy Hinnershitz, Gus Hoffman, Lindsey Hopkins, Tony Hulman, Jim Hurtubise, Parnelli Jones, Don Kenyon, Mel Kenyon, Dick King, Sheldon Kinser, Jud Larson, Jason Leffler, Steve Lewis, Howard Linne, Bill Lipkey, Fred Lorenzen, Roger McCluskey, Rick Mears, Norm Nelson, Pat O’Connor, Kevin Olson, Roger Penske, Larry Rice, Lloyd Ruby, Johnny Rutherford, Troy Ruttman, Eddie Sachs, Ken Schrader, Bob & Gene Shannon, Jimmy Sills, Don Smith, Robbie Stanley, Steve Stapp, Tony Stewart, Bob Stroud, Bob Tattersall, Shorty Templeman, Johnny Thomson, Sleepy Tripp, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, Rich Vogler, Rodger Ward, A.J. Watson, Bob Wente, Don White & Bob Wilke.

On track action begins Wednesday, Sept. 4, beginning with the drivers meeting in the IMS Media Room at 2pm.  Public gates open at 3pm with cars hitting the track for practice at 5pm, followed by opening ceremonies at 6:30pm.  Heat races and the Stoops Pursuit race will conclude the night’s racing action.

The finale, on Thursday, Sept. 5, will have the public gates opening at 3pm and cars on track for practice at 4:30pm, with qualifying races to follow at 5:30pm.  Opening ceremonies are slated for 7pm and immediately followed by the main feature events, starting with multiple D-Mains, C-Main, the semi-feature and the 39-lap main event.

Exactly 90 drivers are entered for the BC39, which pays $15,000 to win the Thursday, Sept. 5 A-Main, which was claimed by Broken Arrow, Oklahoma’s Brady Bacon during the inaugural edition of the BC39 in 2018.

Spectator tickets and any competitors still looking to buy seats in the competitor section can purchase through www.ims.com/usac.

Both nights of racing at the BC39 and the USAC Hall of Fame induction ceremony will be live on FloRacing.