Motor Sports: The Phoenix of the Race Track
- Share via
Steve Virgen
The flames were rising, yet Bob Hallock hardly worried. The Costa
Mesa resident actually giggled when his funny car caught fire in February
at the AutoZone Winternationals, the first race of the season, at the
Pomona Raceway.
For Hallock, 45, the accident was just another part of the sport and
he chuckled when trying to remember the safety procedures for exiting the
car.
His son, Benny, was also just as calm during the fire.
“Just a normal day in paradise,” said Benny Hallock, who watched the
fire as he is part of his dad’s racing team. “It’s normal circumstances
for us because it happens to racing people all the time. But this one was
just a little bigger than normal.”
The accident left Bob Hallock with third degree burns on his elbows
and feet and second degree burns on his buttocks. Bob Hallock suffered
the burns because his seat belt malfunctioned and he was stuck in the
fire. He remained calm because he said he had so much trust in the
National Hot Rod Association’s safety crew.
“They saw me waving my hand because that’s all I could do,” Bob
Hallock said. “If it wasn’t for those guys, I wouldn’t have made it.”
If Bob Hallock had stayed in the car any longer it would have
negatively effected his lungs, since the oxygen tank emptied because of
the length time he was in the car.
Yet the burns and the severity of that fire -- the Hallocks had to
construct a new car -- have not been able to stop Bob Hallock’s comeback
to funny car racing.
Bob Hallock will race his team’s new funny car in the NHRA 50th
Anniversary Nationals, July 5-7. He will go back to the scene of the
accident as the races are at Pomona.
“When you’ve been doing this for so many years, you just don’t quit,”
said Bob Hallock, who has been racing since 1987. “I’m not ready to quit
yet. And until this thing beats me up, I’ll keep racing.”
Said Benny Hallock: “(The accident is) like cutting a steak. You don’t
stop eating if you cut yourself. You keep eating and you just try not to
make the same mistake.”
As if thoughts of the accident aren’t enough, the Hallocks are also
against odds in terms of the competition. The elite racing teams have big
corporate sponsors and in some cases the teams are corporations.
But the Hallocks’ racing team has yet to find sponsors, and Bob and
Benny work separate jobs in addition to the toil on their car.
“I moved back from Utah, just for the race car,” said Benny Hallock,
who works with Bob and his paint contracting business. “Working on the
car is like another part of your life. During the day, I catch myself
thinking about the car. I’m thinking about what if something goes wrong
or how do we make the team work better. Everything is a team effort.”
The car’s demanding schedule has given Bob Hallock difficulties as
well. His time spent working on the car cuts into his sleep and more
importantly spending time with his family.
But just as he put his memories of the crash aside, Bob Hallock is
willing to make the sacrifice in order to have the opportunity to gain
the feeling of winning a race.
“We spend so many hours working on the car,” Bob Hallock said. “It’s
really hard for us. We spend the same time as the big-time teams, but we
do the work late at night and weekends because we have to keep other
jobs. Without a corporate sponsor, it’s practically impossible to keep
racing.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.