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1935 AAA Championship Car season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1935 AAA Championship Car season
AAA National Championship Trail
Season
Races6
Start dateMay 30
End dateOctober 13
Awards
National championUnited States Kelly Petillo
Indianapolis 500 winnerUnited States Kelly Petillo
← 1934
1936 →

The 1935 AAA Championship Car season consisted of six races, beginning in Speedway, Indiana on May 30 and concluding in Langhorne, Pennsylvania on October 13. There was one non-championship event. The AAA National Champion and Indianapolis 500 winner was Kelly Petillo.

During the Indianapolis 500, Johnny Hannon died in practice, Stubby Stubblefield died while qualifying, and Clay Weatherly died during the race.

Schedule and results

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All races running on Dirt/Brick Oval.

Rnd Date Race Name Track Location Type Pole Position Winning Driver
1 May 30 United States International 500 Mile Sweepstakes Indianapolis Motor Speedway Speedway, Indiana Brick United States Rex Mays United States Kelly Petillo
2 July 4 United States St. Paul 100 Minnesota State Fair Speedway Hamline, Minnesota Dirt United States Deacon Litz United States Kelly Petillo
3 August 24 United States Springfield 100 Illinois State Fairgrounds Springfield, Illinois Dirt United States Kelly Petillo United States Billy Winn
4 September 2 United States Syracuse 100 New York State Fairgrounds Syracuse, New York Dirt United States Billy Winn United States Billy Winn
5 September 7 United States Altoona 100 Altoona Speedway Tyrone, Pennsylvania Dirt United States Floyd Roberts United States Louis Meyer
6 October 13 United States Langhorne 100 Langhorne Speedway Langhorne, Pennsylvania Dirt United States Billy Winn United States Kelly Petillo
NC December 15 United States Ascot 125 Legion Ascot Speedway Alhambra, California Dirt United States Floyd Roberts United States Rex Mays
  Non-championship race

Final points standings

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Note: Drivers had to be running at the finish to score points. Points scored by drivers sharing a ride were split according to percentage of race driven. Starters were not allowed to score points as relief drivers, if a race starter finished the race in another car, in a points scoring position, those points were awarded to the driver who had started the car.
The final standings based on reference.[1]

Pos Driver INDY
United States
HAM
United States
SPR
United States
SYR
United States
ALT
United States
LAN
United States
Pts
1 United States Kelly Petillo 1* 1 6 14 Wth 1* 890
2 United States Bill Cummings 3 2 2 6 8 630
3 United States Wilbur Shaw 2 4 16 8 550
4 United States Floyd Roberts 4 DNQ DNQ 3 3 510
5 United States Billy Winn 6 1 1* Wth 2 408.7
6 United States Chet Gardner 7 4 DNQ DNQ 9 270
7 United States Shorty Cantlon 6 13 6 Wth 221.3
8 United States Louis Meyer 12 6 8 1* 200
9 United States Ralph Hepburn 5 198
10 United States Doc MacKenzie 9 10 4 170
11 United States Frank Brisko 23 DNQ DNS 2 4 160
12 United States Al Miller 15 3 3 14 160
13 United States Deacon Litz 8 5 5 DNQ 152.3
14 United States Gene Haustein 5 DSQ DNQ 6 152
15 United States George Barringer 24 2 DNS 12 5 150
16 United States Chet Miller 10 DNQ DNQ 7 90
17 United States Emil Andres  RY  DNQ DNQ 3 80
18 United States Babe Stapp 25 14 15 4 70
19 United States Ken Fowler  R  11 5 DNQ 60
20 United States Overton Snell DNQ 5 60
21 United States Russ Snowberger 27 9 7 13 60
22 United States Floyd Davis  R  8 9 10 60
23 United States Johnny Sawyer 8 11 9 11 DNQ 43.5
24 United States Fred Frame 11 7 13 Wth 40
25 United States Bill Schindler  R  8 30
26 United States Henry Banks  R  12 9 20
27 United States Lou Moore 18 DNQ 10 10
28 United States Maynard Clark  R  10 10
- United States Ray Carter  R  7 0
- United States Milt Marion  R  7 0
- United States George Bailey 26 8 14 0
- United States George Wingerter DNQ 10 0
- United States Charles Tramison  R  11 0
- United States John Cebula  R  11 0
- United States Mauri Rose 20 12 DNQ DNQ 0
- United States Harry Hunt DNQ DNQ 12 0
- United States Vern Ornduff  R  12 0
- United States Zeke Meyer DNQ DNS 13 0
- United States Cliff Bergere 13 0
- United States Harris Insinger 14 0
- United States Ted Horn  R  16 DNQ 0
- United States Rex Mays 17 0
- United States George Connor  R  19 0
- United States Paul Bost 20 0
- United States Tony Gulotta 21 0
- United States Jimmy Snyder  R  22 DNQ 0
- United States Johnny Seymour 24 0
- United States Louis Tomei 28 0
- United States Bob Sall 29 0
- United States Al Gordon 30 DNQ 0
- United States Freddie Winnai 31 DNS DNQ DNQ 0
- United States Clay Weatherly  R  32 0
- United States Harry McQuinn 33 0
- United States Dave Evans DNQ DNQ 0
- United States Gus Zarka DNQ DNQ 0
- United States Herb Ardinger DNQ 0
- United States L. L. Corum DNQ 0
- United States Wesley Crawford DNQ 0
- United States Dusty Fahrnow DNQ 0
- United States Johnny Hannon DNQ 0
- United States Herschell McKee DNQ 0
- United States Floyd O'Neal DNQ 0
- United States Roy Painter DNQ 0
- United States Johnny Rae DNQ 0
- United States Phil Shafer DNQ 0
- United States Stubby Stubblefield DNQ 0
- United States Doc Williams DNQ 0
- United States Robert Wilson DNQ 0
- United States Muir DNQ 0
- United States Ted Chamberlain DNQ 0
- United States Gene Pirong DNQ 0
- United States George Metzler DNQ 0
- United States Myron Stevens DNQ 0
- United States Ivan Mikan DNQ 0
- United States Don Church DNQ 0
- United States Duke Nalon Wth 0
Pos Driver INDY
United States
HAM
United States
SPR
United States
SYR
United States
ALT
United States
LAN
United States
Pts
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green 4th & 5th place
Light Blue 6th-10th place
Dark Blue Finished
(Outside Top 10)
Purple Did not finish
(Ret)
Red Did not qualify
(DNQ)
Brown Withdrawn
(Wth)
Black Disqualified
(DSQ)
White Did not start
(DNS)
Blank Did not
participate
(DNP)
Not competing
In-line notation
Bold Pole position
Italics Ran fastest race lap
* Led most race laps
Rookie of the Year
Rookie

References

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  1. ^ "1935 AAA National Championship Trail".

See also

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