
Bud Moore's are the intense, serious, searching eyes of a perfectionist ... a
man they call "the wizard". A man whose cars have been driven by the likes of
Jack Smith, Speedy Thompson, Buck Baker, Joe Weatherly, Darel Deiringer and
David Pearson to more than 100 NASCAR victories and three Grand National
Championships during a career spanning 25 years. He is an expert on engines,
chassis, race strategy - and people.
And because of Bud's quiet and unassuming nature, not many folks outside the
NASCAR fold knew that ... until 1967 anyway... when the Lincoln-Mercury Division
of Ford Motor Co. tapped Moore as their man to lead a factory assault on the
Sports Car club of American Trans-Am championship.
Now Bud Moore hadn't exactly earned his stripes on the road racing tour, but the
Mercury people were impressed with the way he had taken their little
intermediate-sized Cyclone (nicknamed "Little David") and forged it into a tough
competitor on the Grand National circuit the year before. You could say they
had a "hunch", and lots of the faith that just seems to assimilate when you
watch Bud Moore at work ...!
With Parnelli Jones, Dan Gurney and Peter Revson driving, the Bud Moore Cougar
Team put electricity into the Trans-Am series, winning four races and just
missing the series title - won by the Ford factory team - by just two points.
Not bad for the first time out against the "sporty car set".
In 1968, Moore was given the task by mercury of winning the NASCAR Grand Touring
championship, and did so with Tiny Lund taking 11 of 18 events.
Moore returned to the Trans-Am battle-of-the-factories in 1969 - this time with
Ford - where he pushed Chevrolet's seemingly unbeatable combo of Penske-Donohue
to the wire in one of the most competitive Trans-Am seasons on record. But it
would be the 1970 season when the impact of Moore's underdog effort on behalf of
Ford would be fully felt.
With Parnelli Jones and George Follmer tearing up tracks from Watkins Glen to
Riverside, and Bud Moore at the wrenches and stopwatch, Ford won its most
convincing championship ever, scoring six wins and three seconds in eleven
races, underwriting the sage of the Ford Mustang.
No other car building in NASCAR history had ever ventured into the ranks of any
other form of professional auto racing to win a major championship.
But Bud Moore is an experimenter ... an innovator ... and an engineering genius
who doesn't really care whether the track turns left or right or both.
And his mastery of the small-block Ford engine has led him into new research and
development with FoMoCo. This time with the 351 cubic inch Cleveland engine in
a Torino stock car chassis.
Dubbed the "mini-motor", it has presented no small challenge to the "wizard",
who must send his No. 15 into the NASCAR wars against 427-430 cubic inch-powered
competition.
But challenge is Bud Moore's thing. You can see it in his eyes.
Transam History Bud Moore Cougar
1967 Four Victories in 11 Races
Second in SCCA Trans-Am Series Points
Parnelli Jones/Dan Gurney/Peter Revson
1969 Three Victories in 12 Races
05-11 - Wolverine Trans-Am/Brooklyn,MI Parnelli Jones
06-22 - Bridgehampton Trans-Am/NY George Follmer
07-06 - Donnybrooke Trans-Am/Brainerd,MI Parnelli Jones
1970 Six Victories in 11 Races
SCCA Trans-Am Champion
Parnelli Jones/George Follmer
04-19 - Laguna Seca Trans-Am/Monterey,CA Parnelli Jones
05-09 - Schaefer Trans-Am/Lime Rock,CT Parnelli Jones
05-31 - Herald-Traveler Trans-Am/Louden,NH George Follmer
06-07 - Mid-Ohio Trans-Am/Lexington,OH Parnelli Jones
09-20 - Kent 200/Kent,WA Parnelli Jones
10-04 - Mission Bell 200/Riverside,CA Parnelli Jones