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#1 |
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: TOLEDO,OHIO
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#2 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Oregon City, Or
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Wow. What a legend. I remember he was at a Woodburn Pro Stock Invitational race, which they held mid-week between the Sonoma and Seattle National events. It seemed to be a casual test session type of deal for most of the teams, but not Bob Glidden. I will never forget how his pit area looked like a bomb went off. Transmissions, center sections etc laying around. When they came back from each run it was an all out thrash. Trying different combinations and never stopped working on it for a minute. It was something to watch. So different from the other teams. Dedication.
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2001 Division 6 S/ST Champion 2002 Jegs Allstar 2010 Woodburn Dragstrip S/P Track Champion |
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#3 |
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Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 213
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Would like to salute Bob, & say that after meeting him @ E-town,many yrs. ago, during the summers, he had a lot of positive things to say about stk, & SS racers. He IS my hero. Thanks, Glen H.
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#4 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: lakewood, co
Posts: 558
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back a lot of memories. "The good old days " when tuning and driving was very raw without computers and rev limiters and such. As I recall story had that in the curly haired days Bob did that because he did not want taking care of his hair taking any time out of his day when he was working those horrendous hours. Always loved his humble no excuse interviews with the great Steve Evans. Did not need excuses often as much as he won of course. A friend of mine recalled after he won the race here in Denver he sat and signed autograghs for and hour or two after the race. Really great near the end asked how he wanted to be remembered he said family, not racing. He seemed very grateful and at peace with himself and his life. Highly recommend to anyone set aside 39 minutes of your time for the video.
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Randy Hyman. Lakewood co. stk 5394 P/SA Last edited by farmco r/sa; 07-04-2016 at 10:59 PM. |
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#5 |
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Central N.Y.
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Thanks for posting this Tom. It brings back my Bob Glidden memory.
It was at the Keystone Nationals when he won his 75th race. Can't remember the exact year, think it was 1889. I had taken 2 8x10's of him sitting in his old pinto and another of his 1970 Mustang and was standing at his pit area hoping he'd come out of the trailer(It was raining.... typical for Reading). Etta came out and came to the "rope". I asked her if she'd have Bob sign the 2 prints for me. She took them inside the trailer, and a few moments later leaned out and motioned me to come in. I ducked under that rope faster than lightning and went inside the air conditioned trailer and Bob was sitting in a directors chair just kind of chilling. He asked where I'd gotten the pictures from and I told him I took them myself at the 75 Summernationals. So 14 years had passed and he said he hadn't seen that Mustang in like forever. He then asked me if I was a big Ford fan, and in my "youthful" excitement of being in the presence of a star I said no(which was true), I was a big Bob Glidden fan. He asked me why, and I replied "cause you can make anything go fast". He was qualified 4th and W.J. was 1st, and he said he hoped he had enough for him come eliminations. Very very humble man. He signed both prints with the comment "Thanks, Bob Glidden" When he came down the return road which went by the spectator side back then after winning the 1st round, he was waving at the crowd in the stands, but it was only me he was waving to out of the thousands that were there.That's the way I feel it was like to me. So I almost fell out of the bleachers when he went on to win his 75th victory. A little long here, but I wanted to share. I still have those pictures too 27 years later. Walt |
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#6 |
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Carleton Place, On. Canada
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Thanks for the memories. Walt, are you able to post the pictures?
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old 1608 stock racer |
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: NJ
Posts: 503
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Mad Dog is Bada$$!!! Videos like this is the reason I no longer watch TV. Love the part about the nitrous and just how candid he is. Thanks for posting
And while I didnt root for them at the time because of Glidden... Lee Shepherd with Reher/Morrison simply showed team work and BadA$$ driving will conquer one mans hard work. I could listen to stories about Lee all night long. Focus and dedication. RIP Lee.... |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Northern New Jersey suburbs
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I was at Etown when Bob won his last race in Pro Stock. He was not the fastest car that race and won when Yates did not make a good run. The track really was what won the race for Bob. We were all down below the tower and Bob was with Rusty Wallace. Glidden was beyond happy and gracious and friendly to everyone. He never expected to win so it was a surprise. The place went wild when he did win. Obviously the crowd loved it. I used to see him and his family working as hard as anyone sometimes very early in the day. No other Pro guys even there yet and they were. Working in any conditions. Dirt, grass whatever. He always said things little guys could identify with. He was really just one of us like many of the early Pro Stock racers. Nobody worked harder than people like Bob and Frank Iaconio among others. Lee Shepard was a great driver and his head porting skills were also as good as it got back then. It's a shame Pro Stock has faded so badly from what it once was.....
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Rich Biebel S/C 1479 Stock 147R |
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#9 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Elysburg, Pa
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I had a nice chat with Bob at the Gators in the early 80s after seeing he had the same Ford CL9000 as I did, it was like hanging out with an old friend even though we never spoke before, nice guy for sure.
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#10 |
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Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Conway, AR
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Sometimes it gets lost in all the verbiage, but the significant fact is, Bob Glidden did all this (85 National Event wins) with a FORD, outnumbered by G,M, entries 10-to 1 and usually more (except for the one year he ran a Mopar 340-powered racer that nobody else ever won even ONE RACE (event) with... won the World Championship that year, too,,,)
And yet, he is so self-effacing and humble, he acts like it was all just luck.... NOBODY has luck like that... nobody. It's for a very good reason that they called him "Mad Dog." LOL!
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Bill |
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