

(1934- )
| Fred Lorenzen came out of Elmhurst, Ill., to become
the "Golden Boy" of NASCAR Grand National racing. He was handsome, he was articulate and he could drive. Just as the
"superspeedway" era of NASCAR began to develop, he was there. He rolled to
repeat victories on the big tracks, racking up 26 wins in his career. He had a stellar
season in 1963, during which he won a then-record $113,570 while driving for the legendary
Holman-Moody team.
Born one of six children, Fred displayed a talent
for cars early in life. When he was 13, he built a small car from junk parts and an old
washing machine motor. The police took it away from him because it went too fast. Later,
while in high school, he entered a demolition derby and won, pocketing $100. It didn't
take him long to figure out there was profit in fun.
He began racing Modifieds throughout the Midwest
while working as a union carpenter. He moved to Late Model Stock Cars in 1957, driving in
USAC competition. He raced his Chevrolet four times that year and finished 10th each time.
Undaunted, he switched to Ford the following year
and won five of seven events. He won at Milwaukee twice, at Trenton, NJ., DuQuom and
Meadowdale, Ill. In 1959, he won six of 13 starts.
Now known as "Fearless Freddie," he moved
to NASCAR in 1960, driving his own Ford. He soon found out he was no match for the factory
teams but he ran well enough to impress Ralph Moody, who made him an employee of
Holman-Moody.
He was off. In 1961, he won three times, including
his initial superspeedway victory, the Rebel 300 at Darlington, S.C. In 1962 he won at
Atlanta and in 1963, it all came together.
Lorenzen won at Atlanta again, took the World 600 at
Charlotte Motor Speedway, among others, to set the earnings record. In 1964, Lorenzen won
at Atlanta once more, becoming the first driver to win three straight times on the same
superspeedway. He also won at Bristol, Tenn., Martinsville, Va., and North Wilkesboro,
N.C. He then won at Indianapolis Raceway Park and once more at Darlington.
In 1965, he won the Daytona 500 and the National 500
at Charlotte. A year later, he won the inaugural American 500 at North Carolina Motor
Speedway in Rockingham, N.C. He retired in 1967.
But he came back in 1970, nearly winning at
Charlotte once more - and proving, in the process, he still had what it took. Late that
year, he and his father were in a traffic accident that left his father seriously injured.
But in 1971, Lorenzen was back at it, in a Ray Nichels Plymouth. He raced 15 times that
year and made eight starts in a Chevrolet in 1972 before retiring for good.
Even today, with
the superspeedway the staple of NASCAR's diet, Lorenzen, who has become successful in real
estate, feels he can get the job done. By his own admission, he "retired too
early." Perhaps he did. One wonders what might have happened if "Fearless
Freddie," racing's "Golden Boy" had pressed on.
Fred Lorenzen, Inducted 1991 |


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