Milton Nelson Minter
Milton Nelson Minter - died after long fight with
cancer on the 23rd December 2004 in Sanger,
California. He was a great friend and favorite
racing driver of Mr. Vasek Polak.
Peter Soukup
Auto Tip Magazine
Prague, Czech Republic
Hal Thoms looks back on a racing desperado - Milt
Minter
http://sportscarpros.anamera.com/across-the-border-features-from-guests/features/hal-thoms-looks-back-on-a-racing-desperado-milt-minter/default.htm
A few weeks ago my friend Hal Thoms and I made a
journey to the small town of Sanger, located just
outside Fresno in the central valley of California.
The purpose of this drive was to get together with
several hundred people and to throwback a few beers
and swap tales of one of the most original
individuals to climb aboard a race car. Upon
arriving, it was obvious that we were here for a
party, not a weepy memorial. The choice wasn’t
a church or hall but a sound stage full of Americana
and a large horseshoe bar located off to one side.
But then that's the way Milt Minter is and was.
In today's motorsport world talent and ability
are not enough, it is what one can bring in addition
to the table. Milt Minter's greatest asset was
himself and nothing else. Hal Thom's remembrance
of the man is proof enough of that. Ironically there
were several close friends of Milt's that
couldn’t make the trip because it was the same
weekend as the test days for the Daytona 24 Hours.
Any guilt? Nah, Milt would have skipped his own
party to be back in a race car.
- Kerry Morse
Milt Minter – An American Driving Legend (
Donkey Bop )
Milt Minter was a great
race car driver. He had an immense fire and passion
for racing, and was as competitive as they come. He
could drive the wheels off of anything he drove. He
“kicked ass” not only on the track, but
also in life. He made many cars appear much better
than they actually were with his smooth, aggressive
driving style. More importantly, he was a true
friend. Every one of us, who knew him, knew him as
one of the friendliest, kindest, sincere people we
have ever known. He always had time for everyone. He
was one of the best storytellers ever. He is truly
one of the last of a rare breed. We will miss him
dearly. We lost Milt after his long battle with
cancer on December 23 in his hometown of Sanger, Ca.
He was 71.
Down by the River ( side )
My friendship started with Milt in the summer of
1968. I had just graduated from high school, and
attended an SCCA race at Riverside Raceway. Boy, was
I into Porsches! I borrowed my mom’s Brownie
instamatic camera, and off I went. Nothing was
sweeter than the sound of a 911S “on it”
with the pure Porsche tunes being played out of a
Bursch exhaust! I was truly awed by a bright orange
911S being driven sideways lap after lap through
Turn 6. It was there that I clicked off the first
picture of this 911S that I ever took at a car race.
We later ventured into the pits. There it was, that
hot 911S! Beside it, it’s driver, Milt Minter.
To our surprise, he asked us “How are you guys
doin’?” Is he talking to us? WOW! We
talked for nearly a half hour before an older
gentleman came up and needed to speak to Milt. I
need a photo before we go. Click. My second photo
ever taken at a race. It was of Milt, and the older
gentleman I would later come to know, Vasek Polak.
Soon thereafter, in January of ’69, I began a
4-year stint serving my country in the Air Force. I
would miss, what I now consider, the “glory
days” of Road Racing. Not only the SCCA races,
but the Trans-Am and Can-Am wars. Thank God for ROAD
& TRACK. I kept up with all the racing news.
Among others, I read about that driver that had
befriended us in the pits at Riverside.
P-O-R-S-C-H-E
In 1958, after service in the Navy, Milt began his
racing career in his hometown of Sanger, Ca, when he
traded in his VW Beetle on an MGA that he prepped
for racing. He found it uncompetitive even though he
finished 3rd or 4th in his class behind a gaggle of
Porsches in his very first race.
Sam Caldwell of Foreign Motor Sales in nearby
Fresno, where Milt had purchased his Beetle, also
introduced him to those quick little Porsches. Milt
was convinced Porsche was the car to have if you
wanted to be successful in racing. After scrimping
and saving his earnings from driving a school bus,
be had enough to buy a very used 550 Spyder in 1960
for $5,000.00. It was a handsome amount back in
those days. With fewer than 5 total races under his
belt, he entered himself in the prestigious Pacific
Grand Prix at Laguna Seca. The world- class event
included the likes of Jack Brabham, Jimmy Clark, and
Dan Gurney. He did well enough not to embarrass
himself in his first professional outing.
Unfortunately, the 4-cam engine blew before the
checker flag fell. He soon found out that no one in
the Fresno area would touch the complicated 4-cam
engine. He had disassembled the engine but
didn’t have the knowledge (nor did anyone
else) to rebuild it. The 550 would sit in his
backyard for over a year before he sold it for
$4,000.00 to a local PCA crony, Warren Crumly.
Meantime, Milt’s first real patron in his
racing career was another Fresno area native, Bob
Rhodes. Rhodes turned his gorgeous concours winning
Super-90 356 Coupe into a road racer. He installed a
roll bar behind its drivers seat for Milt who would
not disappoint as he would place second behind Harry
Weber’s 356 at a race at Laguna Seca. In the
pits between sessions, Rhodes would be wiping off
his car trying to keep it in pristine shape. Milt
didn’t put a scratch on it.
Harry Weber was so impressed with Milt’s
aggressive, smooth driving style, that he hired Milt
to drive for his own team. In 1963, Weber fielded
Milt in a black Carrera GT belonging to Don Dickey,
once again at Laguna Seca. Milt was having a
tremendous race until the motor blew. Still
impressed, Weber put Milt in his newly purchased red
904 at an SCCA event at Candlestick Park in San
Francisco in 1964. This was the ride that boosted
Milt out of production car ranks and into the sports
racer elite. Even though Milt came within a length
of beating Porsche guru Scotter Patrick, driving
Otto Zippers 904, Weber withdrew his 904
“baby” from further competition after it
had suffered minor collision damages in the contest.
It would be Milt’s last Porsche ride for 4
years.
Enter Otto, here's Vasek and a no go for Ginther
After the Candlestick Park race, Otto Zipper
convinced Milt to move to the L.A. area to become a
mechanic for him. Zipper thought Milt had prepared
Weber’s 904 for competition. He hadn’t.
Even though he insisted he wasn’t a good
mechanic, and that it was his great driving skills
that had gotten him his 2nd place finish, Zipper
insisted on hiring him. As Zipper and his team,
anchored by Patrick, departed for the 12 Hour race
in Sebring, Florida, Milt was left behind to be in
charge of Zipper’s Beverly Hills garage.
“It was one of the saddest times of my life.
Everyone went off racing but me.”
When Zipper returned and discovered that Milt
wasn’t really a mechanic, he let him go to
Vasek Polak who had also thought that Milt was a
great mechanic, even though Milt continued to
confess it was great driving skills that he
possessed. After a short time, Polak also let him
go.
In 1965 Milt drove a Lotus Super-7 fielded by
another Fresno area patron, Clarence Matthews in
many selected SCCA events. He had some great battles
in C/Production with yet another Fresno resident,
Dick Smith in his quick Carrera Speedster. Smith
wound up taking the Division title, and later the
National Championship in his Speedster. Once again
beaten by a Porsche. Milt did have a fine season and
finished up 6th in the Pacific Coast Division in
C/P.
1966 saw Milt behind the wheel of the Universal
Motors Formcar Formula-V. He went on to take 1st in
the Southern Pacific Regional Championships.
By the time 1967 rolled along, Clarence Matthews
offered Milt a ride in his new Mustang in the second
year of the Trans-Am series. It was a successful
year. In 10 Trans-Am events where he finished, Milt
never finished out of the top 10. Milt gained much
experience ‘banging fenders” with the
likes of Parnelli Jones, David Pearson, Cale
Yarborough and Peter Revson.
At the end of the season, Vasek Polak again entered
the picture when he approached Milt and offered him
a test drive in his SCCA C/P 911. Milt jumped on the
chance to pilot a Porsche once again. The test was
conducted at Willow Springs. Milt passed with flying
colors and was offered the ride for the upcoming
’68 season.
In 1968, C/P was the factory battleground for
bragging rights in the sports car industry. The
Porsche 911s were up against the heavy guns from
Lotus, Triumph and Toyota. In the very first race of
the season at Willow Springs, Milt had a race long
battle with Scotter Patrick’s factory Toyota
2000 that damaged every corner of his Polak 911.
Milt was victorious! Polak was ecstatic! The
“farm boy” from Sanger thought he had
found a new home. Not so. Days later he was informed
by his boss that Jon von Neumann made an offer to
Polak for Milt’s services that he could not
refuse. It was off to von Neumann’s Porsche
Distributor team headed by Richie Ginther. He soon
found out that he was expected to play “second
fiddle” to the teams lead driver, Alan
Johnson. Johnson had won the ’67 SCCA C/P
National Championship at Daytona.
Milt’s status with the team created a major
problem for Milt. “When it came to
scrappin’ and we were back a little ways, I
could run circles around Alan fightin’ for the
lead.” Milt did confess that Alan was a much
better frontrunner, and very hard to catch and pass
while in the lead.
After two full seasons with Ginther and the team
orders, it came down to the 1969 SCCA American Road
Race of Champions at Daytona, and Milt had had
enough. “I told Richie that the race was going
to be mine, even though I knew it might cost me my
ride.” He was told that if he won, he’d
be fired. He drove to a convincing win. After the
winner’s ceremony in winners circle, he was
indeed fired.
Milt’s driving relationship with Polak was
quickly rekindled. The following year, 1970, he took
Polak’s 906 to the BSR National Title. Milt
also spent time behind the wheel of the Polak 904,
which dated back to ’68, winning several
Pacific Division A/P races.
Heavy Metal - enter Trans Am
1970 also saw Milt driving for Roy Woods
Camaro-American Racing Team again in the Trans-Am
Series. In July, at the Donnybrook, MN round, Milt
became the first independent driver to win a
Trans-Am race.
Other highlights of Milt’s career included
1972 when he drove a Jerry Titus Firebird to victory
at Mid-Ohio, becoming the first driver to win a road
race for Pontiac. He wound up 2nd overall in the
season’s Drivers Championship. He also
finished 2nd overall in the Can-Am Drivers
Championship driving Polak’s 917/10. At the
end of the season, Milt was flown to Stuttgart where
Ferry Porsche awarded him the “Pedro Rodriguez
Trophy” for most aggressive Porsche driver in
the 1972 Can-Am Series.
1973 was off to a quick start as he co-drove a Luigi
Chinetti Ferrari to a fine 2nd in the 24 Hours of
Daytona. That was followed up the following month
with another 2nd overall in the 12 Hours of Sebring
co-driving Michael Keyser’s Porsche Carrera
RS.
Meanwhile back in the States….
Milt had accomplished quite a bit in his racing
career. But he was not done. As I mentioned earlier,
I was off serving my time in the USAF from January
’69 – January ’73. A great racing
era. I missed it.
In October of ’73, I was off again to
Riverside Raceway for the Can-Am race. The Can-Am
Series was in its final glory that year. Porsche
917s had been totally dominating that year as well
as the previous two. Mark Donohue in Roger
Penske’s 917/30 was all conquering in
’73. Porsche’s dominance would lead to
major rules changes the following year, as the
Can-Am would eventually die off a few years later.
Milt was not driving a 917 for Polak. That was left
up to Jody Scheckter and Brian Redman. Instead, Milt
was driving once again for an old friend, Otto
Zipper. He had a great race finishing 5th overall in
Zipper’s little 3-liter Alfa Romeo. On Friday,
cruising the pits, I once again came across Milt as
I had back in ’68. “How’s it
goin’?” he asked me once again. I told
him “Great!” I told him of our previous
encounter and explained I was now attending College
and was taking up photography. I was armed with my
new Nikon 35mm camera, and I was shooting my very
first rolls of B&W film for my first assignment
for my first photography class. I clicked off a few
shots of him and his Alfa. After a nice chat, he
wished me luck in my photography endeavors. It made
another long-lasting impression on me.
Unfortunately, over time, I have misplaced those
first rolls of B&W. They were the first rolls of
film I ever developed myself, and the first prints I
ever printed myself, ever. I got an A in my class. I
would later attend Brooks Institute, School of
Photography in Santa Barbara, CA, where I would
later obtain a BPA degree in photography.
More racing laurels were obtained by Milt in 1974.
He came in first in Toad Halls Carrera RSR at the
IMSA Camel GT race a Laguna Seca, defeating Peter
Gregg and a very large and talented field.
Throughout the ’74 IMSA season, Milt drove 3
different cars. Later in the season, at Talledaga,
he would win driving John Greenwoods Corvette. Going
down to the wire of the IMSA season, Milt was locked
in a tight battle with Peter Gregg, previous
multiple IMSA driving champion. In the series
finale, a 250-mile race at Daytona, Gregg lead Milt
98 to 96 in points. Milt jumped once again in the
Toad Hall RSR and led the race until the engine
disintegrated. Greg went on to win the race, and the
championship.
1974 also saw Milt’s first appearance at the
24 Hours of Le Mans where he co- drove an RSR with
Michael Keyser. They experienced several problems
during the race, but still managed to finish 20th.
The remainder of the ‘70s saw Milt in action
as a “hired gun” by several professional
race teams. He competed for Ferrari Teams several
times at the 24 Hour Daytona race. In 1977, he
finished 5th in a Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona co-
driving with Elliot Forbes Robinson and Paul Newman.
In 1979, Milt and I would have another chance
meeting. This time, I was now a professional
photographer working for Rapid Pace, Inc., and
shooting for Ted Field’s Interscope 935 team.
Danny Ongais, Fields usual co-driver, was off at
Indy for the 500, so Milt was hired as Fields
co-driver for the Riverside 6-Hour event. I was very
surprised, to say the least, when I entered the
Interscope pit area – THERE WAS MILT! I made
my way over to him and he asked me
“How’s it goin’?” NO WAY! We
once again had a great chat. He was very impressed
that, after hearing about our earlier encounters, I
was now a professional photographer. He was very
happy for me.
I got a Nikon camera, I love to take
photographs…
It would be another 5 years before Milt and I would
meet up again. By now I had been earning my living
as a professional advertising photographer for
several years. I had become good friends with Carl
Thompson and Vasek Polak. Carl was Head of the Polak
Competition Department, which had moved into
historic racing. I had done a lot of product/race
photography for Vasek Polak’s magazine ads.
When I had spare time, you could find me hanging out
at Polak’s race shop in Torrance, Ca.
In 1994, Polak & Thompson were ready to begin
running one of the Polak 917/10s in vintage racing.
Who better to drive it than Milt! It was VARAs
(Vintage Auto Racing Association) Porsche/Alfa
Challenge being held at Willow Springs that
September. Friday afternoon, it was getting pretty
late. “Where’s Milt?” Finally, in
rolled an old green PU truck and out jumps this
crazy guy with a Gotee - its Milt.
“How’s it goin’?” he asked.
That weekend he hung out with us. I now had a
motorhome and several of our 356 racers would use it
as a base at the vintage race event. Beer was in
order and a BBQ followed by hours of Milt’s
great story telling. He made several new friends
that weekend.
Desperado
After many vintage races, and a few years passed,
VARA planned to revive Pomona’s glorious road
course of the late ‘50s and early ‘60s
through the L.A. County Fairgrounds. An initial race
was run in 1995. For it’s second race at this
historic venue in May of ’96, VARA was looking
for something great to promote the race. I suggested
to Dan Verstuyft, VARAs President (and excellent
Speedster racer!) and to Carl Thompson an idea I
had. “How about having the race in honor of
Vasek?” After some discussion with Vasek
himself, it was decided that is what we would do.
The race would be a Tribute to Vasek Polak. I was
very honored to have lunch with Mr. Polak several
times, and other meetings with him, and got to know
him quite well.
After 6 months of planning, over 65 vintage Porsche
race cars would show up to pay homage to Vasek. Cars
included 550, 550A, RSK, 356 Carreras, 911s, 904,
908, RSR, and 962 examples. Vasek brought out 3
917s, a 908/3, a 2.1 RSR Turbo, and the very first
935 ever produced. Drivers in attendance included
Milt Minter, Jack McAfee, Jon von Neumann, Joe
Playan (550 Spyder driver), Max Balchowsky (Ole
Yellar fame), John Morton and George Follmer. It was
quite a weekend indeed. Drinking beer and hanging
with Vasek and Milt one evening was quite an
experience. Who was the most popular storyteller?
Why, it was Milt of course.
Milt would also visit our campsites at Laguna Seca
for many of the Monterey Historic weekends. That man
could stay up all night drinking beer and telling
Bill Doyle, Steve Schmidt, Gary Emory and me his
stories as only he could tell.
Speaking of Gary, he built a 356
“time-bomb” racer called Desperado in
the early ‘80s. Desperado was so radical, it
could only be raced in the POC (Porsche Owners Club)
events in an experimental class. The body fenders
were flared, the front fenders had
“917-type” design, and the body was
painted in Gary’s favorite Porsche 908
Flounder paint scheme. Eventually, Dean Polopolus
needed a radical car to place his newly developed
911 engine into, so he talked Gary into installing
it into Desperado. Dean’s engine was a
3.2-liter, 911 6-cylinder engine, with the middle
two cylinders cut out, producing a 2 liter,
4-cylinder configuration. “It ran like
stink!” said Milt, who was the cars primary
driver. Milt would go on to set several fast times
of the weekend in POC time trials.
Gary once decided he would like to drive Desperado
at an event at Willow Springs. Milt was Gary’s
instructor for the weekend. In an early practice
session, Milt was riding shotgun as Gary was
familiarizing himself with the track and the car.
After a few laps, Milt was getting bored.
“Come on Gary, Goddamn it! You’re
driving like an old woman, lets get
goin’!” Gary quipped that he was going
fast enough, thank you. Well, the next thing Gary
knew, as they were approaching the
“sphincter-tightening” turn 9, Milt took
his left foot and stomped Gary’s right
accelerator food down to the floorboard and grabbled
the steering wheel with his left hand, “Come
on Gary, we can go twice as fast through this
turn!” For the next half lap, Milt was driving
from the right hand seat, and Gary had one of his
thrills of a lifetime!
Fast lap and the final lap
Milt had his biggest battle the last few years of
his life. He battled cancer. It was a gallant fight.
He would never complain. You wouldn’t expect
anything but that from Milt. I saw him drive Ray
Stewart’s ex-Ginther 914/6 at Willow Springs
last October. (See our last issue.) Guess what, he
still could kick ass and won the race. It would be
his last.
I had been telling him for quite some time that I
wanted to come up to Sanger and see him because I
wanted to do a story about him. A few weeks later I
finally made the trip to see Milt and Melissa. What
an afternoon we spent. His good friend Dean
Polopolus was also there. Milt had his passion for
great story telling in full gear sharing many great
tales with us. Nobody could tell a story quite the
way Milt could. After another most memorable
afternoon, it was time for me to head back home to
Southern California. He gave me a huge hug, and with
a twinkle in his eyes, he told me he wasn’t
doin’ to good. He looked into my eyes and told
me we’d be friends forever. He passed away
about a month later.
I am a lucky man. I have a wonderful wife, Marilyn,
and two wonderful daughters, Tricia and Traci. I
have been very blessed. I have gotten to pursue my
passion in life that I have totally enjoyed. How
many people can get up every day and look forward to
it and the work they are involved with?
No one else in my life inspired me to pursue my
dreams of being a race photographer than my
encounters with Milt did. He was a great driver, but
a greater friend. I only know one thing, when I
hopefully reach the Promised Land, he’ll be
one of the first ones to greet me,
“How’s it goin’?”
Hal Thoms
Tustin, California
February 2005
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