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AWESOME BILL FROM DAWSONVILLE:
My Life In NASCAR
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Throughout this "great American success story," Elliott shares numerous anecdotes and
thoughts that only a NASCAR insider could provide. Highlights include:
• Elliott describes in exciting detail how he won the Winston
Million and helped bring NASCAR into mainstream media. "My 1985 season can actually be traced to a dinner in New
York City late in 1984." At a gala dinner for drivers it was
announced that in the coming season Winston was going to pay
a million dollars to any driver who could win three out of
NASCAR's four major races: the Daytona 500, the Winston
500, the World 600, and the Southern 500. Bill went from only
having won four races in eight years to winning eleven in the
1985 season concluding with the inaugural Winston Million.
Bill's career would change from that point forward. He was now
in the NASCAR limelight as "Million Dollar Bill" and became
the first ever NASCAR driver to make the cover of Sports
Illustrated. NASCAR itself was even propelled into a new era as
it finally began to be accepted by sportswriters nationwide.
• "Richard Petty kept telling us that if you've got an advantage, don't flaunt it, don't run
away with things." Elliott had such a superior car in his 1985 season that he finished some
races up to 37 seconds faster than the second place driver. Critics said that Bill should've
eased off -"sandbagged"- at the finish to make everybody else and NASCAR look good.
They said the Elliotts were "stinking up the show." Bill says that it's not like a football game
where you can control the time and not run up the score. One tire blow out and suddenly
you're in last place. Having a big lead gave Bill insurance and he felt it was also true to the
nature of racing.
• "To this day I take some pride in the fact that I stopped taking Dale's crap." Elliott
devotes a chapter to "The Intimidator," detailing their differences and their rivalry, which
culminated in his ramming Earnhardt during his victory lap following the 1987 Winston in
Charlotte. Elliott goes on to talk about Earnhardt's savvy manipulation of the officials and
media, as well as his aggressive driving style that angered ma ny drivers. But before
Earnhardt's death at Daytona in 2001, Elliott describes the two old rivals as "quite close."
• "Shame on NASCAR for letting a handful of good men die before finally addressing
the problem after Dale died." Earnhardt's death caused some serious safety changes in
NASCAR, but Elliott thinks the changes should've happened sooner. It took Earnhardt's 2001
death to get the sport to go "full bore, head-over- heels on safety." Elliott goes in to detail how
he would change safety and medical services at the track.
• "Daddy was on the cutting edge of a generation of southern young men who propelled
stock car racing from its roots in prohibition to its glory days of Winston Cup." Elliott
shares a brief history of NASCAR. He says drivers looking for a cheaper way to race and the
growth of the state of Florida helped lead to the formation of NASCAR in 1947 and the first
race in Charlotte in 1949. Elliott also discusses the growth of sponsorships and the sport as a
whole through the first live nationally televised NASCAR race in 1979.
• Elliott describes how Junior Johnson was the model for the moonshiner-turned-
NASCAR driver. "Junior will proudly tell you that when he was young, his family was
among the largest still operators in the business. Junior would say, 'Some guys liked to (run
the moonshine) at one time and some guys liked another time, but starting about midnight
they'd be coming out of the woods from every direction. Some nights the whole road was just
full of bootleggers. It got so some nights there'd be somebody following you going just as fast
as you were and you didn't know who it was the law or somebody else hauling whiskey.'"
The NASCAR novice will enjoy Elliott's look at what it takes to run a racing team week in
and week out. He provides insight into everything from a description of the car to details
about the pre-race inspection of each ride to what the typical race day schedule is like, all the
way down to bathroom breaks and pit stops. AWESOME BILL FROM DAWSONVILLE provides fast action play-by-plays of Bill's most exhilarating races. Readers learn about the
turns and strategic car adjustments that allowed him to win races and become one of
NASCAR's 50 greatest drivers of all time. Fans won't want to miss this quintessential
autobiography by one of NASCAR's finest.
AWESOME BILL FROM DAWSONVILLE: My Life In NASCAR
By Bill Elliott with Chris Millard
HarperEntertainment Hardcover Original
Publication Date: October 10, 2006
ISBN: 0061125733
Price: $24.95
ABOUT CO-AUTHOR CHRIS MILLARD:
Chris Millard is a founding partner of a publishing, copywriting, and creative consulting firm
and the author of "Golf's 100 Toughest Holes" (Abrams, 2005). He lives in Atlanta with his
wife and two children.
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