d2jsp
Log InRegister
d2jsp Forums > Off-Topic > Sports Coliseum > Motor Sports & Cars > Rip Jason Leffler
Prev123Next
Add Reply New Topic New Poll
Member
Posts: 49,220
Joined: Oct 24 2003
Gold: 0.00
Jun 13 2013 11:01pm
Member
Posts: 49,220
Joined: Oct 24 2003
Gold: 0.00
Jun 13 2013 11:05pm
Member
Posts: 49,220
Joined: Oct 24 2003
Gold: 0.00
Jun 14 2013 08:41am
http://www.nationalspeedsportnews.com/sprints-midgets/usac/usac-establishes-grant-in-memory-of-leffler/


usac stepping up big time, and Tony Stewart is helping get the ball rolling.

Quote
INDIANAPOLIS – The USAC Benevolent Foundation has today announced a $10,000 grant in the memory of the late USAC racing champion Jason Leffler, who lost his life Wednesday night in a racing accident in New Jersey.

The 501-3C-designated Foundation will also be accepting additional donations earmarked for usage by Jason’s son Charlie Dean and Charlie’s mother Allison.

A designated cap amount to be announced by the Board of Directors of the Foundation will also result in additional dollar-for-dollar matching funds for this purpose.

“We are devastated by Jason’s loss and recognize his long and loyal commitment to USAC racing and to the sport of auto racing in general,” says USAC CEO/President Kevin Miller. “We encourage everyone to participate in this worthwhile endeavor as we honor the memory of one of our most cherished champions and appreciate the Foundation Board for their efforts in making this all possible.”

All contributions earmarked for the Leffler program, which may include the Charlie Dean Leffler Education Fund, may be directed to the USAC Benevolent Foundation, c/o Executive Director Bill Marvel, 4910 W. 16th Street Speedway, Speedway, Ind. 46224. Bill may be reached at 859-749-0646 or at billmarvel@gmail.com. Donations should be earmarked for this program.
Member
Posts: 1,655
Joined: May 23 2012
Gold: 0.00
Jun 14 2013 09:17am
may he rest in peace, very unfortunate. Sprint cars can be very dangerous, & so can professional racing. Just a reminder that every time they get in that car they are risking their lives.
Member
Posts: 4,719
Joined: Dec 16 2010
Gold: 19.87
Jun 14 2013 09:45am
Quote (KoJ @ Jun 14 2013 09:41am)
http://www.nationalspeedsportnews.com/sprints-midgets/usac/usac-establishes-grant-in-memory-of-leffler/


usac stepping up big time, and Tony Stewart is helping get the ball rolling.


This does good things for my dwindling faith in humanity. I don't follow organized motor sports much, but I respect professional drivers.
Member
Posts: 49,220
Joined: Oct 24 2003
Gold: 0.00
Jun 14 2013 10:11am
Quote (jeditrader @ Jun 14 2013 08:17am)
may he rest in peace, very unfortunate. Sprint cars can be very dangerous, & so can professional racing. Just a reminder that every time they get in that car they are risking their lives.


yeah, like I have said before, I race dirt, but you wouldn't get me to race a sprint car, at least not one of the standard cars, mine would be to heavy from using a larger thickness wall of tubing

doing 140 mph in .095 tubing is nuts to me
Member
Posts: 49,220
Joined: Oct 24 2003
Gold: 0.00
Jun 14 2013 02:35pm
http://www.latimes.com/sports/motorracing/la-sp-leffler-parnelli-jones-20130614,0,4731294.story


Quote
"I just want to cry," Parnelli Jones said, and a moment later tears welled in the eyes of the legendary race car driver Thursday.


The tears were for veteran driver Jason Leffler, a Long Beach native who died Wednesday night from injuries in a sprint-car racing crash in New Jersey. He was 37 and left behind a 5-year-old son, Charlie.

As tributes from the racing community poured in for Leffler, who also raced in all three of NASCAR's national series, his death was acutely felt at Jones' race shop in Torrance.

That's where Leffler as a teenager learned about race cars while working alongside Jones, whose accomplishments included winning the Indianapolis 500 in 1963, and Jones' sons P.J. and Page, who also raced at the time.

Leffler dreamed of racing, so he happily swept floors, cleaned car parts and soaked up everything he could about the sport at the Torrance shop, with the elder Jones becoming his early mentor.

"He probably had more desire to become a race driver than we realized at first," Parnelli Jones said. "That's why he wanted to work on the cars."

Over the years, Leffler stayed close to Jones' family, which first got word of Leffler's fatal crash when P.J. Jones heard about it from family friend Jimmie Johnson, the five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion.

"It's just a dead feeling all over," Parnelli Jones, 79, said as he sat at his desk in the Torrance facility. "I still feel that way. I can't get over that.

"I just can't imagine [Leffler] not being around," Jones added. "We've never really been far apart."

Leffler might not be familiar to casual racing fans and he never achieved the results or status of Johnson and NASCAR's other stars. But Leffler was an accomplished driver.

Starting in the 1990s, he drove sprints and midget cars, lightweight but powerful open-wheel cars often raced on dirt tracks, and won four U.S. Auto Club (USAC) championships in those series.

(Sprint cars are not to be confused with NASCAR's Sprint Cup Series, which is named after the sponsoring telecommunications company.)

His record included twice winning the traditional Turkey Night Grand Prix midget car race in Southern California on Thanksgiving (in 1999 and 2005), a race Parnelli Jones himself won.

Leffler then moved mainly to NASCAR. He never won in 73 starts in the Cup series, and won twice in 294 starts in its second-tier Nationwide Series over a 12-year period. He also had one victory in 56 starts in NASCAR's truck series.

Leffler also drove in the Indianapolis 500 in 2000, finishing 17th.

But when the 2013 season arrived, Leffler was without a full-time NASCAR ride, so he returned to sprint car racing.

"I think he was not happy doing that," Parnelli Jones said. "He was happy to be still driving something, but I think he — I didn't like it, I didn't like the fact that he had to do that.

"I felt badly for him because somebody else didn't pick him up in the Nationwide Series or the truck series or something like that."

But Jones acknowledged that there are "a lot of young, talented racers" and that, "like in the movie industry or anything else, as long as you're climbing that ladder, everything is good. But when you falter, pretty soon people start writing you off."

Regardless, "We lost a great race car driver and a great friend," P.J. Jones said. He recalled how Leffler "came to the shop every day" as a teenager, and "It was like an apprenticeship. For a kid that was 13, 14 years old, he was incredibly sharp about race cars."

"I also remember how every day we would go to lunch," P.J. Jones added, and Leffler "would order a cheeseburger with French fries and pour a whole bottle of ketchup on the fries. Every day."

Leffler's death came as Jones' shop prepared for a previously planned barbecue for Friday, and workers were setting up tables and hanging checkered flags for a party that now had taken a solemn turn.

"It's kind of a sad deal," Parnelli Jones said. "I'm sure the topic is going to be all about Jason."
Member
Posts: 10,780
Joined: Feb 19 2007
Gold: Locked
Trader: Scammer
Jun 15 2013 12:21pm
rip
Member
Posts: 80,637
Joined: Mar 25 2006
Gold: 3,188.50
Jun 15 2013 12:28pm
that sucks RIP
Member
Posts: 49,220
Joined: Oct 24 2003
Gold: 0.00
Jun 16 2013 03:46am



http://auto-racing.speedtv.com/article/miller-remembering-leffler-helping-charlie/

Quote
The irony that he was sponsored by Great Clips didn't escape Jason Leffler.

"Makes sense to me, young and good looking, I'm the logical choice," he deadpanned before breaking into laughter back in 2010.

Leffler's red hair, with the Billy Idol spike job, fit his personality because he was a racer with a flair for standing out in a crowd despite being vertically challenged.

"We called him Elrod for the little kid on the Jetsons and Mini-Me because he was the world's shortest race driver," said P.J. Jones. "But brother he always stood up in the seat when he was driving and he was a hard charger who never took any s*** from anyone. He was always on the gas."

The 5-4 Californian who lost his life in a sprint-car accident last Wednesday night always ran with the big boys and was never intimidated by the competition or the stage he was performing on.

Matter of fact, he could be a downright bully -- all 150 pounds of him!

"Oh man, he never hesitated to give you the bumper if you were holding him up, which I did quite often," recalled Dario Franchitti of his NASCAR Nationwide experience in 2008. "He might have been as aggressive a driver as I ever met and he taught me a few things. But he was the nicest guy outside of his race car."

Leffler learned that aggression in USAC, where he excelled on the bullrings and short tracks in midgets -- winning three consecutive championships from 1997-99 and also the USAC Silver Crown title.

"I met him when he was 12 or 13. He came over to our shop and never left," said Jones, who along with brother Page were the west coast hot shots in midgets at Ascot Park in the late '80s and early '90s. "He was a helluva mechanic and he worked on our midgets all the time. We ate lunch together every day and he had a cheesburger, french fries and a bottle of ketchup.

"Basically, he became the third Jones brother and then after working on our cars he decided he wanted to be a driver. Hell, he didn't start driving until he was 15 or 16 but he was fast learner."

Six years after starting, Leffler was a USAC midget champ at age 22 and those were the days when being a front-runner in USAC was a direct ticket to NASCAR. He followed Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, Ryan Newman and Kasey Kahne to stock car country in 2000 and instantly won three pole positions in the Nationwide series.

That got Jason a seat in Chip Ganassi's Cup team for 2001 but it wasn't a top tier operation and he struggled before being replaced by Jimmy Spencer. That set off a car and series and car-hopping oddessey that pretty much defined the next decade. Fast in the truck series and with a couple wins in Nationwide for different teams, Leffler got the nod from Joe Gibbs in 2005 to wheel the FedEx Special in the Sprint Cup. It ended after 19 races and that was pretty much it as far as getting another shot in NASCAR's top rung.

"We talked about it a lot and I just don't think Jason was mentally ready for Cup, he just didn't seem to have the confidence he usually carried," continued Jones, whose success in sports cars for Dan Gurney led him to Indy cars and NASCAR's three divisions as well.

Like Sam Hornish, it seemed like Jason found a home in Nationwide. He scored Toyota's initial NASCAR win in 2007 at Indianapolis Raceway Park and was rewarded with a ride in the Toyota Great Clips car from 2009-2011 -- sharing the seat with Kahne. He was back in trucks in 2012 along with some one-offs in Cup but had no stomach for the start and park circuit.

"I know it's decent money but I didn't start doing this to pull in after a couple laps so I'll just go back to short tracks in midgets and sprints," said Leffler last January at the Chili Bowl.

Of course his lone NASCAR start this year was last weekend at Pocono in that exact scenario ("He probably needed a quick 10 grand," reckoned Jones, "plus he was already in Pennsylvania.") in between running the All-Star sprint series.
P.J. talked his old friend a few days before his fatal crash.

"We were joking around and I said you're getting your ass kicked and laughed and said, 'Yeah, it's not that easy in these winged cars," said Jones. "You know he'd never driven a winged sprinter before this year but he was getting better. He was all excited because he'd finished right behind Sammy Swindell in a heat race."

Jones didn't think Leffler missed the big time all that much, other than the money it could bring.

"He was having fun, taking Charlie (his 5-year-old) son with him to the races and they had started karting. They were having a blast.

"I'm headed to Colorado with my two boys to go karting and I keep thinking of Mini Me and Charlie. It just tears your heart out."

USAC HELPING CHARLIE

Leffler had no life insurance but longtime racing promoter/publicist Bill Marvel has started the Charlie Dean Leffler Fund through the United States Auto Club's Benevolent Foundation.

Marvel announced Saturday that USAC's Benevolent Foundation, which has been supporting and aiding deceased drivers, mechanics and their families for six decades, will match any donation dollar-for-dollar up to $25,000. After the $50,000 mark is reached all donations will be added to it.

In addition, Marvel is setting up a PayPal account but it won't be operable until Tuesday.

Donations should be sent to USAC Benevolent Foundation, 4910 West 16th Street, Indianapolis, Indiana, 46224. Any and all inquiries should be emailed to bill marvel@gmail.com
Go Back To Motor Sports & Cars Topic List
Prev123Next
Add Reply New Topic New Poll