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Mel Kenyon (born April 15, 1933, in DeKalb, Illinois) is a former midget car driver. He is known as the "King of the Midgets", [ 1 ] "Miraculous Mel" [ 2 ] and "Champion of Midget Auto Racing." [ 3 ] The Motorsports Hall of Fame of America says "Many consider him to be midget car racing's greatest driver ever."
A wing of the Hall of Fame The National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame Entrance. The National Midget Auto Racing Hall of Fame is an American Hall of Fame and museum for midget cars. The Hall of Fame is located at Angell Park Speedway in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, and can be accessed during weekly Sunday races during the summer.
Mel Kenyon: 1965 Mike McGreevy: 1966 1 Mike McGreevy: 1967 1 Mel Kenyon: Kenyon 1968 1 Mel Kenyon: Kenyon 1969 3 Bob Tattersall: Stroud 1970 5 Jimmy Caruthers: Caruthers 1971 5 Danny Caruthers: Caruthers 1972 81 Pancho Carter: Rieder 1973 2 Larry Rice: Shannon 1974 61 Mel Kenyon: Kenyon 1975 5 Sleepy Tripp: 1976 1 Sleepy Tripp: 1977 43 Mel ...
In 1965, one of the most spectacular comebacks in auto racing history began with the serious burns and injuries to Mel Kenyon. Kenyon later returned to racing and placed third at the Indy 500 and won numerous national midget racing championships.
From 2022 to 2023, Patterson competed in series such as the USSA Mel Kenyon Midget Series, and the Show Me The Money Pro Late Model Series. [1]In 2024, Patterson participated in the pre-season test at Daytona International Speedway, driving the No. 73 Ford for KLAS Motorsports, [2] and placed in the top-twenty in the overall results between the two testing days, [3] although he was involved in ...
Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said U.S.-owned border wall materials, which were available for sale, were pulled from an Arizona auction at the government's request. The Lonestar State had shown ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President-elect Donald Trump cannot ignore a law requiring Chinese-based ByteDance to divest its popular short video app TikTok in the U.S. by early next year or face a ban ...
Raceway Park (1938–2000) was a quarter-mile stock car race track located in Blue Island, Illinois, on 130th Street and Ashland Avenue between Western Avenue and Halsted Avenue, used for stock car races from the mid-1930s until 2000.