Joe Pittman
Ron Trainor plans to place the name of Arizona racing mechanic Joe Pittman for consideration as a candidate for induction into the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame.
Joe Pittman first raced
in the early and mid-fifties as the mechanic of his own Ferguson-powered Kurtis-Kraft copy midget built with the help of Myron Stevens that was driven by Wayne Weiler and Bill Cheesbourg. In 1958, the team of Joe and Wayne won a
Saturday night 100-lap URA (United Racing Association) feature at Balboa
Stadium in San Diego then after changing gears in the parking lot, traveled to Carrell Speedway in Gardena and won the Sunday afternoon 100-lap feature.
After the midget feature was complete, Weiler then climbed into Phoenix area plumbing contractor Harlan Fike’s ‘Fike Plumbing Special,’ sprint car, also maintained by Joe Pittman, a finished second in the companion 100-lap CRA (California Racing Association) feature. Weiler and Pittman won the 1958 CRA car owner’s championship for Harlan Fike.
After the midget feature was complete, Weiler then climbed into Phoenix area plumbing contractor Harlan Fike’s ‘Fike Plumbing Special,’ sprint car, also maintained by Joe Pittman, a finished second in the companion 100-lap CRA (California Racing Association) feature. Weiler and Pittman won the 1958 CRA car owner’s championship for Harlan Fike.
Joe reached national prominence as the mechanic of the Chevrolet-powered ‘Fike Plumbing
Special’ paired with young driver Parnelli Jones that battled the proven USAC
Offenhauser contingent. In 1959, Jones and Pittman split their time between the
CRA and IMCA (International Motor Contest Association) circuits. Racing against a bevy of future Hall of
Famers, the Fike team finished fourth in the CRA season points with seven
feature victories, and after five IMCA wins, finished fifth in IMCA season
points.
Pittman opened
the 1960 racing season by wrenching Parnelli to wins in four of the first six
CRA races of the season, at Tucson and Ascot, and in races in Joe’s Phoenix hometown
at the Arizona State Fairgrounds and Manzanita Speedway. In late April, the
trio of Jones, Pittman and the Fike Plumbing Special headed east to run the USAC Midwest sprint car circuit.
Based out of a two-car garage on West 15th Street in Speedway Indiana, Pittman, Jones and the Chevy-powered ‘Fike Plumbing Special’ notched seven feature wins and captured the 1960 USAC Midwest title. In defeating the Offenhauser powered USAC elite, Pittman and Jones scored two wins each at the Salem Indiana and Dayton Ohio ‘high banks.”
Based out of a two-car garage on West 15th Street in Speedway Indiana, Pittman, Jones and the Chevy-powered ‘Fike Plumbing Special’ notched seven feature wins and captured the 1960 USAC Midwest title. In defeating the Offenhauser powered USAC elite, Pittman and Jones scored two wins each at the Salem Indiana and Dayton Ohio ‘high banks.”
Over the
winter, at his Phoenix shop on Airline Way, Pittman updated the Hank Henry
built sprint car for the coming season of 1961 USAC competition. As Pittman,
Jones and the ‘Fike Plumbing Special’ competed for the new unified USAC sprint
car title they notched nine feature wins including five race wins in a row.
By the end of the 1961 season, Jones and Pittman’s handiwork defeated the Offenhauser-powered sprint car driven by AJ Foyt for the USAC national title. In 1962, Pittman and Jones captured the USAC sprint car title for the second year in a row, with wins at Indianapolis Raceway Park, Allentown PA, Hatfield PA and New Bremen Ohio.
By the end of the 1961 season, Jones and Pittman’s handiwork defeated the Offenhauser-powered sprint car driven by AJ Foyt for the USAC national title. In 1962, Pittman and Jones captured the USAC sprint car title for the second year in a row, with wins at Indianapolis Raceway Park, Allentown PA, Hatfield PA and New Bremen Ohio.
After
Parnelli Jones cut back on his sprint car appearances following his 1963 Indy
500 win, Pittman teamed with a number of talented drivers on the sprint and
championship circuits that included Johnny White, Chuck Hulse, Don Davis, Jack
Rounds and Roger McCluskey.
After Harlan Fike ran into financial problems in 1966, Pittman went to work for JC Agajanian as the crew chief of his championship cars from 1966 until 1970. In retirement, Joe worked for Phoenix tire magnate Bob Fletcher. After a short stint as an interim Indy car crew chief in 1973, he applied his talents by rebuilding several historic racers that included the 1951 ‘Blakely Oil Special.’ Schroeder/Offenhauser Championship Car.
Joe Pittman was inducted into the Arizona Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2002.
After Harlan Fike ran into financial problems in 1966, Pittman went to work for JC Agajanian as the crew chief of his championship cars from 1966 until 1970. In retirement, Joe worked for Phoenix tire magnate Bob Fletcher. After a short stint as an interim Indy car crew chief in 1973, he applied his talents by rebuilding several historic racers that included the 1951 ‘Blakely Oil Special.’ Schroeder/Offenhauser Championship Car.
Joe Pittman was inducted into the Arizona Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2002.
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