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Topic: Lou Blaney Email this topic to a friend | Subscribe to this TopicReport this Topic to Moderator
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IRL14
January 25, 2009 at 06:04:07 PM
Joined: 12/04/2004
Posts: 41
Reply

Jayski has reported that Lou Blaney has passed away. No other details as of yet..




shortywolf
January 25, 2009 at 08:09:32 PM
Joined: 12/01/2007
Posts: 63
Reply

we send our thoughts and prayers to whole blaney family



bahdubbieracer
January 25, 2009 at 08:17:49 PM
Joined: 03/20/2008
Posts: 151
Reply

it's up on pitgate.com too...

sad...


I wish Earl still did Eldora's track prep.  


shawndun2
January 25, 2009 at 08:27:36 PM
Joined: 01/25/2009
Posts: 4
Reply

R.I.P. LOU



jmartz11
January 25, 2009 at 08:53:43 PM
Joined: 09/03/2005
Posts: 2049
Reply

RIP Lou; you will be missed by all in Racing!


Long Live  20 Time  World Of Outlaws Champion Steve 
Kinser #11 

fastasu
January 25, 2009 at 09:29:25 PM
Joined: 12/03/2004
Posts: 682
Reply

Condolences to the Blaney family.




mesprint69
January 25, 2009 at 10:24:39 PM
Joined: 02/19/2005
Posts: 67
Reply

One of my all time favorites, weather he was in his Mod or Sprint. RIP Lou.....You will be missed....Condolences to the Blaneys.



jmartz11
January 26, 2009 at 02:15:08 PM
Joined: 09/03/2005
Posts: 2049
Reply

Racing legend Lou Blaney passes away
Hartford, PA - January 26, 2009
By: Brian Spaid
Race fans across Western Pennsylvania and Eastern Ohio are mourning the death of racing legend Lou Blaney of Hartford, Ohio.
Blaney, 69, passed away on Sunday January 25th. He suffered from undisclosed medical problems for some time, and the cause of death was not released by his family.
As news of Blaney’s death spread across the racing community on Sunday, it left many people in shock and sadness.
“I doubt there is anyone in Penn-Ohio racing history that has been more respected than Lou Blaney,” said racing historian and Tri-City Speedway track announcer Walt Wimer. “I don't know of hardly anyone anywhere that was such a big winner and still had so much respect from those who raced with him and those who sat in the grandstand and watched. Richard Petty would be about the only one in Lou's league. Those of us in the media are not supposed to have favorites, but it was impossible not to have Lou right up there at the top and you always felt good when he won, even thought it happened time and time again.”
“Lou Blaney was one of the few big winners that the fans have continued to cheer over the years,” added fellow historian and local radio personality Don Gamble. “Big winners usually have had their share of boos from the crowd, which goes with long term success. Lou was always a quiet, reserved person, who won his races with his head and right foot, and not with his mouth.
Blaney started racing in 1958. During his first 20 years behind the wheel, Blaney earned instant acclaim as a star Super Modified and Super Sprint driver. He captured over 200 wins in the division from 1961 to 1980. His greatest win came in the 1966 National Open at Williams Grove Speedway in Mechanicsburg, Pa.
In 1978, Blaney added to his legendary status when he started racing DIRTcar Big Block Modifieds. Adding to his victory list, Blaney scored over 200 wins in this class from 1978 to 2002. He also finished second to Merv Treichler in the prestigious 1981 Syracuse 200 at the New York State Fairgrounds, and that still stands as the best finish in the race for a local driver.
Over the years, Blaney scored wins and track championships at many regional speedways, including his hometown Sharon Speedway, Tri-City Speedway, Mercer Raceway Park, Lernerville Speedway, Jennerstown Speedway, Sportsman’s Speedway, Expo Speedway, Raceway 7, and Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Motor Speedway. He won Wimer’s Cavalcade of Champions Big Block Modified regional point title 16 times and the Super Sprint regional point title four times.
Blaney’s legend transcends all levels of motorsports. His legacy includes his famous sons, Dave and Dale Blaney. Both men achieved racing success like their father. Dave is a former World of Outlaws Sprint Series champion and raced the last several years on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. Dale is a three-time All Star Circuit of Champions Sprint Series champion.
Blaney is a member of the DIRT Motorsports Hall of Fame and the Pittsburgh Circle Track Club Hall of Fame. In 2008, he was inducted into the Tri-City Speedway Hall of Fame.
Blaney is survived by his wife, Kate, his sons, Dave and Dale, and five grandchildren. Funeral arrangements will be posted on the Sharon Speedway website, www.sharonspeedway.com, in the near future.
 


Long Live  20 Time  World Of Outlaws Champion Steve 
Kinser #11 

jmartz11
January 26, 2009 at 09:36:59 PM
Joined: 09/03/2005
Posts: 2049
Reply

Contact: World Racing Group

Chris Dolack, VP Media/PR

704-795-7223 ? [email protected]

Racing Community Mourns Passing of Lou Blaney

CONCORD, N.C. — Jan. 26, 2009 — The World Racing Group, Lernerville Speedway and DIRTcar Racing join countless others who are saddened to learn of Lou Blaney's passing on Sunday, Jan. 25.

Blaney was an incredible competitor on the track, piling up more than 600 victories and more championships than he could count in Sprint Cars and Modifieds during a legendary career that ultimately earned him a Hall of Fame induction in 2000.

Off the track, Blaney was a gentleman. He was calm, quiet and extremely knowledgeable. He was highly respected not only as a racer, but as a person.Few men have represented the racing community with such grace and elegance as Lou Blaney, who called Hartford, Ohio, his home.

His feats at Lernerville Speedway are matched only by the elite drivers in the track's 41-year history. He is second to only Bob Wearing Sr. in career feature wins (118) and track championships (seven). In one incredible stretch from 1972 to 1975, Blaney captured 49 wins and four consecutive track titles in Sprint Cars. He then moved into a Modified and reeled off championships in 1980, 1991 and 1996, along with a division-leading 69 feature wins. He also drove a Modified to a career-best second-place finish in 1981 at the New York State Fairgrounds during Super DIRT Week events.

"I grew up watching the red No. 10 and have to admit that my favorite nights at Lernerville were when my Dad (Lynn Geisler) won the Late Model race, Ed Lynch Jr. the Sprints and Lou Blaney the Modifieds," said Pennsylvania native and WRG Chief Marketing Officer Ben Geisler. "It never mattered where he started, because you knew he would always be in the mix at the end. He set the bar high, will live long in our minds, and will be known for generations to come in the history books."

Blaney was athletic and passed his competitiveness on to his sons, Dave and Dale, each of whom has achieved success behind the wheel of a race car. In recent years, the Blaney family, including Lou's wife Kate, has owned and operated the legendary Sharon Speedway, site of several World of Outlaws Sprint Car Series and World of Outlaws Late Model Series events.

"Lou was a true racer's racer," said Lernerville GM Gary Risch Jr. "He was a gentleman on and off the track. Lou has done so much for racing in our area, from being one of the best drivers in the country to working on rebuilding Sharon Speedway. He will be missed."

"It's honestly difficult to find the words to express what Lou Blaney meant to Lernerville Speedway and the local racing community in general," said Lernerville PR Director Eric Westendorf. "It sounds cliché, but he truly transcended the sport. He was a rival, a mentor, a hero for multiple generations of drivers and fans. He made everyone around him want to be better — a better driver, a better promoter, a better person. He will be sorely missed for a very long time."

While many in the coming days will recount the stories of Blaney's incredible and numerous epic performances on the track, some will recite the win totals and countless championships in a racing career that started in 1958. For others, Blaney is a measuring stick. To achieve, or surpass, a mark he established is truly a career accomplishment.

But ultimately numbers don't define this man. He had as much fun watching Dave and Dale race as he did himself.

"Working in Pittsburgh, I had the opportunity to cover Lou Blaney toward the end of his racing career," said Chris Dolack, the World Racing Group VP of Public Relations. "He still dominated every week, but he carried himself so differently than many others. He was quiet, but even when he was busy, he had time to talk. I never saw him without a smile no matter what was going on around him. It's the smile and quiet conversations in the pits that I will always remember."

Visitation is from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 27, at the Hartford United Methodist Presbyterian Church on State Route 305 in Hartford, Ohio. A funeral will be Wednesday at 11 a.m.

Cards can be sent to the Blaney family at P.O. Box 159, Hartford, OH 44424.


Long Live  20 Time  World Of Outlaws Champion Steve 
Kinser #11 


mjo
January 27, 2009 at 07:56:08 AM
Joined: 12/03/2004
Posts: 18
Reply

I’m so sorry to hear about Lou Blaney’s passing.My condolences to the family.


I am very happy to see the lengthy testimonials concerning to Lou as a racer and the true gentleman that he was.With respect to Lou’s racing Don Gamble said it best; in that Lou “ won his races with his head and right foot, and not with his mouth”.So very true.

A long time Lou Blaney fan, I have always said that if Lou were a part of another generation and the WOO, he would most assuredly be solidly ranked up there with Steve, Sammy, and Wolfie.

YMEREJ
January 27, 2009 at 06:01:28 PM
Joined: 07/24/2005
Posts: 528
Reply

My thoughts and prayers are with the entire Blaney family. God Bless.





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