One Lap of America Keeps Cannon Ball Baker’s Legacy Going Strong

Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

Without Erwin George “Cannon Ball” Baker, it’s likely that nothing in the rest of this story would have ever happened. Baker, who passed away in 1960 at the age of 78, defied the odds by dying of a heart attack instead of crashing a motorcycle or a car while participating in one of the 130-odd mad dashes he made from one side of America to the other, the first occurring in 1914 when he rode an Indian motorcycle coast-to-coast in 11 days. He backed that up a year later by driving a Stutz Bearcat cross-country, which also took 11 days.

Baker lived to set records, 143 of them, like the time he drove a Buick two-ton truck—loaded down with gallons of water from the Atlantic Ocean—to the Pacific Ocean in five days, 17 hours and 30 minutes. In 1933, he drove a Graham-Paige from New York City to Los Angeles in just over 53 hours, setting a record that stood for 31 years. The Indianapolis News once referred to him as, “Here-He-Comes-There-He-Goes Baker.”

Cannonball Baker
1923: Erwin ‘Cannonball’ Baker is surrounded by fans during his transcontinental road trip from New York to Los Angeles. Baker completed the trip, driving an Oldsmobile Model 30A, in a record-breaking 12 1/2 days at that time.Hirz/Getty Images

Sponsors loved Cannon Ball Baker, which is how he signed his name; he even copyrighted it, and Cannon Ball is what his tombstone reads at Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis, lot 150, section 60. A 1929 Mobil Oil ad featured four men who were stellar examples of making possible “achievement through quality:” Pioneer aviators Charles Lindbergh and the Wright brothers, and Cannon Ball Baker. He was that famous.

No wonder Cannon Ball became a genuine folk hero to automotive journalist Brock Yates, who wrote 15 books but is perhaps best known for his work at Car and Driver magazine, a relationship that spanned 42 years. After Yates and a C&D editor named Steve Smith (not me—I’d figure into this story later) envisioned a Baker-style, modern-day cross-country dash, it was fittingly dubbed “The Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash,” or just Cannonball for short.

Brock Yates portrait
Brock YatesISC Archives/CQ-Roll Call Group

Ostensibly, it was in protest of the national 55-mph speed limit, enacted to help save gasoline during the current gas crisis, which, no question, Yates hated. But part of his motivation, some suspect, was to just see what would happen.

Yates and his son, Brock Jr., age 14, along with Smith and family friend Jim Williams, made the first crossing alone, as a test, leaving from the now-famous Red Ball Garage in Manhattan on May 3, 1971, headed to the racer-friendly Portofino Inn in Redondo Beach, California, a distance of about 2900 miles, depending on your route. They were driving a much-modified 1971 Dodge Tradesman van, nicknamed Moon Trash II.

They made it in 40 hours, 51 minutes, considerably faster than any of Cannon Ball Baker’s runs, but the quartet in the Dodge van had something Cannon Ball never did: The interstate highway system.

open stretch of american highway night time
Frederic Lewis/Getty Images

Satisfied by his sample, Yates and crew quietly laid out plans for an all-out assault on the federally mandated speed laws and the cross-country record, along with seven other teams that wanted in on the action. The first official, competitive Cannonball Run left the Red Ball Garage on November 15, 1971. The winning car rolled into the Portofino parking lot 35 hours and 41 minutes later: It was racing legend Dan Gurney, accompanied by Yates, driving a borrowed Ferrari Daytona. Tongue in cheek, Gurney said that at “no time did we exceed 175 mph.”

Yates said there would be another Cannonball Run, and there was: In fact, there were four in all. The second one was held November 13, 1972; the third on April 23, 1975, and the last one on April 1, 1979.

One of the Cannonball entries was Hal Needam, a top Hollywood stuntman who wanted to produce and direct movies, and he and Yates partnered to make multiple films that drew loosely on their experience with super-legal interstate travel at maximum speeds. First came Smokey and the Bandit (1977), quickly followed by Smokey and the Bandit II in 1980, both starring Burt Reynolds, who, at the time, was allowing Needham to stay in his guest house.

Then, in 1981, they finally made the first Cannonball Run movie. Needham directed it and Yates wrote it, but if you mentioned that to Brock, you’d get an earful about how he envisioned it as a more serious effort, starring auto racing enthusiast Steve McQueen, who was interested. But the Bullitt star was diagnosed with cancer and died at age 50 in 1980.

“Then Reynolds got hold of it, and turned it around completely,” Yates said. He was a little embarrassed about how the Cannonball Run movie turned into a slapstick farce, but he cashed the check. Made on a budget of $18 million, the film made $72 million in its first year, big money back then, and has since grossed $160 million. Film critic Roger Ebert gave Cannonball Run one-half of a star out of a possible four, and the less said about the two Cannonball sequels, the better.

Still, the movies made the Cannonball Run internationally famous, and interest from autocentric fans who wanted to compete in an actual Cannonball Run was at fever pitch. Yates knew the time had passed for the true Cannonball, so he conceived—and thanks for waiting for me to get around to this—One Lap of America, theoretically a more sedate event that had competitors driving around the U.S. from racetrack to racetrack, with timed stages in-between that could be accomplished, Yates promised, at a legal 55 mph.

The first One Lap launched in 1984, an unorganized, fledgling effort that had competitors try to match exactly the mileage Yates himself laid down when he pre-drove the route. Not knowing exactly what roads Yates took, where he stopped for dinner, where he got lost, made it a guessing game. Some 76 teams were on the entry list in ’84, ranging from a Cadillac Cimarron, to a Porsche 930 Turbo, to an Itasca motor home, to a Hertz unlimited-mileage rental car, to a 1959 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith.

Yates promised the 1985 event would be bigger, better, and at least more organized, as a time/speed/distance rally with point-to-point timed stages which you must complete no faster and no slower than your written instructions say: You’d be penalized one point for every second you were either early or late. These surprise timed stages were done en route to a variety of racetracks, where performance there would count toward the overall and class wins, too. Yates toured the country promoting the 1985 Uniroyal One Lap of America, visiting newspapers in the largest cities. That’s how I met Yates, and when I asked him if a seat might be available for the event, he said he’d see.

Not long after, Yates had added me to a team of several Chrysler factory entries. The bad news: I’d be on a three-man team driving a then-brand-new Dodge minivan. The good news: A fellow Chrysler teammate, driving a Chrysler LeBaron GTS, was Phil Hill, the 1961 Formula 1 champion, who also won the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the 12 Hours of Sebring, and the 24 Hours of Daytona. A kind, humble, extremely smart man, and one of my heroes; the day before we were to start the One Lap in downtown Detroit, Hill asked if I would drive him around to several stores. In my Dodge minivan. I’ve never made a more self-conscious trip.

My driving partners, whom I’d never met, were Ben Farnsworth, a commentator for the CBS Radio Network in New York City, and Bob Burns, a student who would go on to lead Land Rover and Range Rover’s off-road programs. Burns and I became lifelong friends; Farnsworth, not so much. You spend 10 sleep-deprived days hermetically sealed in a minivan with strangers, and you have no idea whether everybody will get along.

For 1985, the entries had swelled to a barely manageable 78, with a long list of alternates who wished they’d applied earlier. Notable was a 1985 Audi Quattro, with rally pros Ty Holmquist and Nicole Ouimet, and Car and Driver writer Jean Jennings, who was then Jean Lindamood.

Rocky Aoki, the founder of Benihana restaurants, was in a vintage Rolls that was equipped with a microwave, so he could prepare “the delicious new Benihana frozen meals” on the road. In a later One Lap, Rocky showed up in a Porsche 911 limousine.

Another Audi Quattro Turbo held rally champion John Buffum and experienced navigator Tom Grimshaw. Racer Anatoly Arutunoff, who can’t stand to miss anything and will be referenced later, was in a Mazda RX-7. Marshall Schuon, the New York Times automotive columnist, was in a Plymouth Voyager. Rally master Gene Henderson was in a turbocharged Subaru. Female race car drivers Patty Moise, Robin McCall, and Margie Smith-Haas shared a Chevrolet Suburban. And the bravest entry had to be brothers George and Timothy Fallar, in a 1984 Harley-Davidson TriHawk three-wheeler.

It was miserable and wonderful. Our route began in Detroit—a much-publicized launch that safety advocate Ralph Nader, a longtime nemesis of Yates, threatened to block by lining up wheelchair-bound individuals who had been seriously injured in car crashes, and Nader would tell everyone who listened that he essentially expected one of us to T-bone a school bus full of nuns. It’s important to report that no nuns were hurt during the running of any One Lap.

Neither Nader nor his wheelchaired constituents showed, and we were flagged off, one minute apart, by drag racer Shirley Muldowney. Who was, incidentally, in a wheelchair, recuperating from an accident in Montreal after she crashed into a wall at 245 mph. The car disintegrated, and Muldowney ended up in a field, still strapped in her seat, far from the initial crash impact. It was more than 18 months before she got back in her dragster.

The route took us to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, then back south and west through Montana, where we were the last vehicle allowed through on a just-closed interstate, due to a blizzard. More than half the field didn’t beat the closure and were stuck for hours at a truck stop. It was no picnic on that road, either; I was driving at beyond-maximum speed, in a minivan, unable to see the pavement. I began hallucinating by the end of the storm. From there, west to Oregon, then south to the Portofino Inn in Redondo Beach, California.

That was the only stop on the schedule in the 9000-mile trip. The only night we’d spend in a bed was at the Portofino. The next morning, it was south and then east, through the Big Bend in far south Texas, to New Orleans and through Bourbon Street, then on to Jacksonville, Florida.

Somewhere between New Orleans and Jacksonville, we were able to stop at a cheap by-the-hour motel, which is about how long we were there—just enough time for three showers.

Then it was north for a midnight drive through Manhattan, to the Watkins Glen road course, then west through Ohio, where the One Lappers were greeted by at least a hundred state troopers, some of whom would follow our cars—at 55 mph, of course—all the way to the border. Then back north to the finish, at Detroit’s Renaissance Center. A bed awaited, but first there was the One Lap Official Banquet, at which more people snored than ate. The winner, to no one’s surprise, was the Buffum/Grimshaw Audi. We were stunned and delighted to have finished 17th. I drove in several One Laps after that one, but the 1985 grind was the most memorable, and generally considered the toughest of all.

Brock Yates died at age 82 on October 5, 2016. Well before that, the responsibility for One Lap fell to Brock Yates, Jr., part of that original one-van entry in May of 1971 that, along with his dad and two friends, made that original cross-country drive to test the Cannonball theory. Brock Jr. was, in fact, a bartender at the Portofino Inn, where I first met him 40 years ago.

One Lap motorsports event 2025
Brock Yates Jr.Grassrootsmotorsports.com

Now formally called the Tire Rack One Lap of America, the 2025 edition began at the massive Tire Rack headquarters in South Bend, Indiana, on May 3 and concluded at Tire Rack on May 10. In between, One Lap visited eight venues, including Gateway Motorsports Park just east of St. Louis; Virginia International Raceway; Pittsburgh International Race Complex; the little-known Hedge Hollow road course in southwest Missouri, and the NCM Motorsports Park in Bowling Green, Kentucky, owned by the National Corvette Museum and located next to the Corvette assembly plant.

Of the 41 One Laps, Brock Jr. has been on 38 of them, first as a competitor, and then running the show, starting with the 2009 One Lap. Over the years, One Lap has dialed it down from the one-night-in-a-motel frantic dash it was in 1985 to a targeted maximum distance of about 3500 miles done over eight days, with an opportunity to get some sleep every evening.

One Lap aerial full group cars
Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

It’s a formula that works. This year, 83 cars were entered—85 is the maximum allowed—and the list included a bunch of Corvettes and Porsches, but also a 1963 American Motors Rambler Ambassador (there’s a Vintage class), and a 2017 Ford Focus (it competed in the Mid-Priced class). The entry fee per car is $4000, with lots of that going towards track rental—it’s much more expensive now than it used to be, Yates says—and administrative costs, including insurance. There’s also a charity aspect: Brock Sr. died after a 14-year battle with Alzheimer’s, and to date, One Lap has raised over $200,000 for the Alzheimer’s Association.

The experience level of the competitors varies dramatically—this year’s field included professional racers Randy Pobst and Ross Bentley—but the vast majority are amateurs. Brock Jr., a performance driving instructor himself, requires competitors to have completed at least two driving schools.

While many participants return year after year, there’s always a healthy batch of first-timers like Justin Schuh, 45, an experienced amateur racer from Loveland, Colorado, driving a 2019 Camaro ZL1 with the track-focused 1LE package, owned by his driving partner, Hsun Chen. The car is powered by a supercharged 6.2-liter V-8, pumping out 650 horsepower.

One Lap camaro team drivers
Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

Or at least it was supposed to. Chen had only owned the car for six weeks, and it wasn’t fully sorted. On the racetracks, Schuh noted that the Camaro ZL1 did fine on the corners, but it was slow on the straights. There was another Camaro ZL1 in the field, “and the driver of that car mentioned that he’d hit 161 mph on the straight at VIR, and we thought, ‘That’s 20 mph faster than us. Something is wrong with our car.’”

While Schuh drove to the next track, Chen began Googling all the potential problems. One likely culprit: The air-to-water intercooler. Indeed, “Half of the intercooler coolant had bled out of it through its six-year life of basically doing nothing, and we had about half the horsepower we should have had up until the last three events,” Schuh says. They discovered that it wasn’t a big deal: “Top it off and burp it, using a screwdriver, a funnel, bottled water, and duct tape. Near Beaver Run. Or Pittsburgh. Someplace. And suddenly we had the top speed that we were supposed to have had all week long. The car was transformed.” The closing event was the wet skid pad at Tire Rack, and Schuh won it.

One Lap camaro on wet track
Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

So what drew him to One Lap? “It had always been on my bucket list,” Schuh says. “I looked at the route, and I’d been to a couple of the tracks, and I asked my wife if it was OK for me to disappear for nine days. Maybe 10. And she said, ‘You’ve talked about this before—you’d be silly not to do it.’ So I did.”

But would he do it again? As is common with One Lap participants, right after the event was over, Schuh thought, “Never again. Not for me. It’s a pretty brutal event as far as sleep goes. But as I began talking to some friends, telling stories about it and all the good times we had—with the right car and the right co-driver, I think I’d do it again. You have stories to tell for a lifetime. It was a week-long race, whether the stopwatch is on you or not. It was fun. It really was.”

The event is unique, he says, as “You’d better be able to switch both you and the car from transit mode to track mode. I don’t think there’s a better test of street cars out there. You can spend all the money you want for something super racy, but you’d better be prepared to live with it for a week.”

One Lap camaro cornering
Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

Another factor is that competitors are presented with a list of 200-treadwear tires available from Tire Rack: This year, there were 13 brands. Teams choose the tires they want, and you must run those four tires for the entire event. Schuh and Chen picked Continentals, which Schuh said are great in the rain, because past One Laps tended to be wet. This year was surprisingly dry, but the Continentals did their job on that wet skid pad event that Schuh won.

One Lap motorsports event 2025
Grassrootsmotorsports.com

For Tom Suddard, the publisher of Grassroots Racing and Classic Motorsports magazines in Holly Hill, Florida, this was his fourth One Lap. While Grassroots is a presenting sponsor, Suddard uses the event to thoroughly test a car, and this year, it was a 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 N, entered in the Alternative Fuel class, with that fuel being, of course, electricity. The 5 N is the performance version of the Ioniq, and is capable of up to 641 horsepower.

But isn’t he taking a chance, with so much time spent hurrying from point to point, that they wouldn’t be able to find a charger when they needed one? No, Suddard says; he’s done this before, and “This is the first time, honestly, where every charger worked—we didn’t have any issues, didn’t have to go out of our way—and it really didn’t slow us down. We were getting to the hotels about the same time as the gas cars.”

One Lap GRM Hyundai drift
Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

Performance, he says, was “Pretty stunning. It’s still a 5000-pound SUV, and the laws of physics still apply, but it was super durable. We could run it as hard as we wanted on track without worrying about the charge. It didn’t slow down as the battery reserve was used up; in fact, we ran one of our best laps at VIR with the car at the lowest charge level of the whole trip.”

Suddard keeps coming back, he says, “Because I really enjoy the challenge. I love the challenge of learning a course that nobody’s ever seen before, having to do it quickly, then having to race on it right away. That’s what really draws me to it, and the fact that it’s a week long, and so many transit miles, the physical and mental aspect of performing not just one day, but for a week straight.”

And then there’s the people. “You see some of the same people over and over again, every time, and it’s like a big family that comes together for the event. People you haven’t talked to in a year, you’re right back at the dinner table with them, telling stories, having a blast.”

One Lap motorsports event 2025
Grassrootsmotorsports.com

This is a good place to mention the overall winners of the 2025 Tire Rack One Lap of America Presented by Grassroots Motorsports: It was team number 2, Salil Shukla and Christopher Mayfield, driving a white 2024 Porsche Cayman. Certainly not the most powerful entry in the field, but obviously a versatile and well-driven car. Worth noting is that an electric car, a 2021 Tesla Model S, finished second overall.

One Lap motorsports event 2025
Grassrootsmotorsports.com

The car count, vehicular variety, and camaraderie are music to the ears of Brock Yates, Jr. He’s already working on the route for the 2026 edition of One Lap of America—it’s different every year. For the event itself: “Basically, I’m the nanny,” Yates says. Herding 83 cars from place to place, making sure they all get the track time they were promised, supervising the track workers, who are typically different from one track to the next; yeah, it’s work. “But I’m still having fun,” he says.

One Lap Brock Yates Jr.
Yates Jr.Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

Yates says one of the hardest parts of the job is booking racetrack time. Not that long ago, “Racetracks were sallow for most of the year,” he says, and they were eager to book One Lap. Now, most of the good ones are busy—“If I don’t get all my requests for track time in by August for the next year, I’m out of luck.” Part of that, he believes, is due to One Lap’s tradition of introducing new drivers to racetracks, driving their street cars—track days, they call it now.

Arguably, he says, it began in 1989, when One Lap descended on the Hallett Motor Racing Circuit in Oklahoma. Then, the Sports Car Club of America sanctioned One Lap, and their rules were a little too restrictive for Brock Sr., and Hallett’s owner, the aforementioned racer and One Lap veteran Anatoly Arutunoff, so rather than run a slalom course on the front straight, they basically turned the cars loose on the track, one at a time like always, and you could go as fast as you were able. “We learned that street cars could actually run on racetracks and not spontaneously combust. Out of that came TrackTime, Car Guys, and a bunch of other racing schools. After we ran Hallett, it opened up a whole new industry,” Yates says.

One Lap foggy conditions
Stephen Burke/Driftpoint Media

Every year, Yates says, the quality of cars entered increases, but he worries about the amount of horsepower presently available to inexperienced drivers. Those cars often have manual transmissions, but few of the new drivers, he says, can heel-and-toe, which is where the driver brakes with their right toes while flipping the throttle with their right heel, enabling the engine’s rpms to match the lower gear on the downshift. Yates Jr., as a kid, used to marvel at his father’s ability to heel-and-toe, “and I taught myself to do it by practicing for hours on a Morris Minor that didn’t run. I was learning smoothness, and gentle downshifts.”

Now, he says, “People show up at racetracks with, say, a Mustang Shelby GT350 and tell me, ‘Teach me how to drive this stupid thing.’ Without a clue, without a background, without reading any books on driving. That’s what I’m contending with. We’ve always had the two-driving-schools minimum, but most of them can’t heel-and-toe—they’d rather use those little paddley things behind the steering wheel. They’re not prepared when they overstep the machine’s limits.”

“I’m not touting the fact that I’m a great driver, because I’m certainly not. Middling, at best. But I’ve been able to save myself and get out of some really stupid situations.” With so many new performance cars, Yates says, “You are removed from the driver’s seat. You are insulated. Desensitized.” Sometimes when Junior talks, I hear Brock Senior.

“I worry for the sport, I guess. I’m an old fart, and I admit it. But there’s a lot to be said for old school. For analog. That’s my rant for the week.”

If worrying keeps Junior motivated to run successful One Laps year after year, we’re all for it—bringing out the Pobsts and the Bentleys of the racing world and attracting weekend hotshoes like Schuh will help keep motorsports—and Cannon Ball Baker’s legacy—alive. Farts of any age with interest in the 2026 One Lap of America are welcome to keep an eye on the official website, and Facebook, for information about the 42nd One Lap of America. If you’d like to compete, sign up early: There’s typically a long waiting list.

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Comments

    “Ostensibly, it was in protest of the national 55-mph speed limit, enacted to help save gasoline during the current gas crisis, which, no question, Yates hated. But part of his motivation, some suspect, was to just see what would happen.”

    The oil embargo happened in Oct 1973 and the first proposals of reducing speed limits appeared shortly there after. At the time states had the full authority to set limits in their states. It wasn’t until Jan 74 that a national 55mph speed limit was signed into law set to take effect 60 days later.

    So while he may have used it as an excuse to talk against the limit in the later runs, it certainly wasn’t a reason for the first one.

    Scoutdude, yes, the first two (three) were in advance of a concept Brock was promoting in the early 70’s, a Master Driver’s License, where better drivers (by whose measure?) would be qualified to run quicker on the expanding Interstate System. But too, to celebrate the achievements of Cannon Ball Baker in the modern era in modern cars.

    Note, Scoutdude, the first word you quoted: “Ostensibly,” which the dictionary says means “means apparently or purportedly, but perhaps not actually.” Thanks for reading my story.

    Excellent piece, as always SCS!

    I ran my first One Lap back in 2010 after getting frustrated and burned-out on SCCA competition. I still remember that first track event vividly — Road America. I was terrified, having only ever run my local club track at speeds barely exceeding triple digits. But here I was — at the National Park of Speed.

    Further, while I was sitting on grid, a driver went off in Canada Corner — through the tire wall and over the catch fence. What had I gotten myself into? But lap after lap, I felt the speed increasing on a track I had only reconned on a single-speed bike that am. The emotional impact of that experience filled my soul.

    By the end of the day, I was a One Lap convert. It has become the center of my motorsports program every year. Every gearhead needs to do this event. “If you have the means, I highly recommend it.”

    As for the arms race Brocker mentions — it is real. For a long while I ran in a home-built, highly-modified Honda CRX, finishing as high 4th overall in 2014. Tom Suddard and I brought that car back last year, with substantial mods to make it even faster — and finished only 11th overall.

    Fantastic article. I love that our car, the 1976 BMW 2002, was featured as the cover photo! This was my second One Lap, and while it may be self-punishing to do so, I wouldn’t want to do this in anything but a vintage car. There’s an indescribably beautiful partnership between driver and machine when you’re running something fully analog, and that feels muffled, like a sound-deadened recording booth, to me when you’re behind the wheel of one of these brand-new performance cars.

    We were one of just two carbureted engines this year. A dying breed, but we’re not going out quietly.

    I skew toward the “very amateur” side of the racing field, with just a handful of HPDEs and now two One Laps under my belt, and there’s nothing more fun – in my opinion – to learn in than a lower horsepower momentum car that’s fully analog. It teaches you a lot about cars, about your limits, about how to shave precious seconds off to maybe catch a higher-horsepower car with bad lines in the curves and punish them for it. You make them look up and see the squared-off corners of a car 50 years older than theirs and with a third of the horsepower in their rearview and you can’t help but grin.

    A vintage car will make you work for it but will reward you tenfold. And so will One Lap. That’s the part that’s so maddeningly addictive. I can’t wait for 2026 in our old Beamer — and I really hope to see more vintage cars in the field. If you’re reading this and you have a resto project in your garage … get to it. You have a year. I’ll see you out there.

    Great article. I am 56 years old and have been racing on an amateur level all my life. I did the Silverstate Challenge in 1996 and that event created some very cherished memories.

    I had met Sr. Several times and always had the utmost respect for him.

    The fact that Yates Jr. feels that pushing his political agenda is as important as racing I will unfortunately never participate in the One Lap event, even though it was still on my bucket list.

    Bill III

    Bill, One Lap is by design, and rules, a week away from the rest of the world, politics too. I’m sorry you feel the need to reference my personal politics as a reason to avoid a truly remarkable week of friends, tracks and the beauty of America.

    I have had a number of friends run the one lap. We were cheering on the local Goodyear team this year.

    Last year in the little town of Minerva Ohio they gathered the greatest number of record setting Cannonball cars for an event. They went back to one of Cannonballs first cars to Gurneys Daytona and the latest cars like the Audi tgat was dressed as the Crown Vic police car that held the record at that time.

    They went back drivers and teams spoke at the theater and later they showed The Cannonball Run movie.

    Yes Captain Chaos was even in attendance.

    To me this is like breaking rules in racing with creativity. The things these guys do and think up are amazing. The latest record setter doing it solo was really note worthy.

    I didn’t realize this was still going on. Have not seen much of a mention of it in Car and Driver.

    A very good article of the history and experience of the One Lap of America. I participated in the event in 1998 with twin brothers from California. I had a 1941 Chevrolet with a 350 Chevy V8 and automatic transmission. I lived in Nebraska at the time and when we left for Detroit it weighed in at more that 5000 pounds with drivers and gear. None of us had any racing or rally experience but it didn’t hold us back.

    There were different classes and we were entered in the Street Rod class, seat-of-the-pants. That meant we were not allowed any equipment to help us out. Fortunately Brock relented and let us use calculators to make computations but that was it.

    Our first leg in Michigan was comical. We were passing competitors who were going in the opposite direction and almost got completely lost. We accumulated maximum points but learned some valuable lessons. After that we swapped positions and I did not drive any of the rally portions after that but did the calculations necessary to keep us on time. After that we did fairly well.

    The car developed a miss in the engine that seriously hampered performance. At the Pike’s Peak hill climb the car died on a curve about half way up. We were able to get it going before the next competitor caught up but it was worrisome for a bit. We eventually diagnosed the problem as a bad coil and got a replacement during the stop-over at Redondo Beach but didn’t get it installed until Chimney Rock in North Carolina. Two years later I discovered the reason was a stuck exhaust valve.

    Other than the poorly running car the remainder of the event was somewhat normal but not uneventful. We ran over a deer on the interstate that had been hit by a semi and then a competitor in front of us. The transmission cooler scraped off much of the hide and got burned on to stay for several months. One driver was sleepy and drove up the runaway truck ramp and another experienced driver rolled a BMW in the foggy San Bernardino Mountains. The Imperial Palace in Las Vegas provided a gourmet dinner and free preview of classic cars going on auction. The after the Pike’s Peak Run the town held a barbecue lunch for everyone.

    We often had to rush to make up time. I got two speeding tickets one at more than 100 mph in Missouri and the other in North Dakota. The officer at the latter was boasting of how many One-Lappers he caught speeding but told of the little red one that got away – a VW Golf GTI. I don’t have to mention the Ohio State Police to anyone familiar with this event.

    Back in Detroit at the awards banquet we took first prize in our class. If we hadn’t messed up the first leg in Michigan we would have been in the top 5 of the seat-of-the-pants entries. All the competitors were very nice people and the events and venues along the way were all well-prepared and organized. We put more than 11,000 miles on in nine days counting the trip to Detroit and back home.

    I would have done this again but I was in the military and was stationed overseas in the few years following. Thanks for publishing this great article!

    Back at the time, as I read Yates’ stories about the Cannonballs, I was Jonesing to participate, but it wasn’t in the cards. Then, after several cross-country vacation road trips, I figured out that those were preferable to trying to set speed records and I got to see a LOT more scenery and points-of-interest.

    Great article. Enjoyed the whole lot of it.

    I have done this event several times, and plan on another attack in the future (with my now capable Son). The stories I have are cherished, including my time with Sr. while competing (and trophying!) in class.

    I even have an epic story that consists of crossing State after State (at fairly high speeds) in a trio of cop-car look-a-likes (mid-priced sedan class)… Never to be forgotten.

    So, let me see if I can put together a competitive entrant, and I will see you there Jr. 😉

    Hey, “Cannonball Run” had Adrienne Barbeau in it – and that is all that mattered to 26-year-old me at the time!

    Interesting story. I remember reading the enjoyable Brock Yates stories about the Cannon Ball run. I was living in the Mid West during the 55 MPH fiasco. In Ohio the state troopers had a reputation for ticketing anything over the speed limit. A funny thing happened during the 55 MPH, folks went to great lengths to “beat the troopers” whose reputation took a hit for enforcing a hated law. I had a CB radio and all the truckers reported the mile markers were troopers had radar. Many cars had radar detectors. Traffic would speed up and slow down on the interstate avoiding speed traps. After the 55 MPH was repealed folks continued to exceed the speed limit, now 70 MPH. I ended up in California and have visited the Portofino Inn for breakfast numerous times. Glad to see One Lap lives on.

    Great article. Brought back a flood of memories of the 2000 event when I had co-driven a twin-turbo Audi S4 with Norm Babcock. Norm and I were both veterans of the 11,000-miles-in-11-days motorcycle Iron Butt Rallies. So we had no issues with the overnight distances or fatigue. But we could not keep the temperamental, over-boosted, not stock Audi running. When the unpinned hood flew up at Road Atlanta and shattered the windshield, a Cadillac team used its new On-Star service to find us a replacement nearby. I can still remember the young installer’s face when he said “we don’t advise you drive for 48 hours to let the sealant set up” and Norm replied “That’s nice. Do you have any duct tape?” We made it back for the second set of laps! Later we drove into a horrific storm leaving Sebring. Water was gushing in from all around the seam, the footwells, even the AC vents were wet! The Audi finally gave up at VIR, leaving us to tow it back to Michigan began the biggest (and only) U-Haul we could rent in Danville VA. That was my only OneLap, although Norm rebuilt the Audi and went on to compete in several more before passing in 2014. But his lesson that “Adventure is adversity told later in comfort” is one I still use today.

    I am humbled and proud to say that I was Brock’s graphic designer for many years. We worked so well together. I came up with the interstate sign shaped logo which took on a few variations. Brock was one of the funniest guys I ever met. His anecdotes about the business and the boating life always cracked me up. I was a regular visitor to The Farmstead in Wyoming NY. Conducting business and sharing ideas in his office was the ultimate privilege. I miss him terribly and will always be a part of The Cannonball Express.

    One has to give a shout-out to the movie “The Gumball Rally” from 1976. While clearly based on the original 1971 coast-to-coast race, it came out before the official Yates films and, to me, is superior. The scene of the timed departure from the NYC garage still gives me goosebumps every time I watch it.

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