Hagerty Inc.

05/16/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 05/16/2024 12:10

Barn Find Hunter: You Should Have Known Linda Sharp

The latest episode of Hagerty's Barn Find Hunter,just posted on YouTube, took me back to some joyful memories, and I highly recommend it. Host Tom Cotter, a racer himself, visits the home of late racer and automotive writer Linda Sharp, and buys the historic number 22, 1968 Datsun 2000 roadster that she raced.

I knew Linda. You know how some people look better in a fire suit than others? I don't mean more attractive or more stylish, I just mean more natural-like the Nomex just suits them.

Courtesy Kurt EslickCourtesy Kurt Eslick

That's the way Linda Sharp was, which is fortunate because she spent a lot of her life zipping up her one-piece. I noticed that when I met her 28 years ago at Talladega, where Saab had gathered some 900s and a bunch of auto writers; she appeared a lot more at ease than most of the journalists wearing new white Saab fire suits, many of whom spent a lot of time in front of the mirror and taking what then passed for selfies.

Linda had a lot of experience behind the wheel of race cars, in SCCA and various club racing and some pro series, like the IMSA Kelly American Challenge. She had been introduced to racing by her then-boyfriend of 20 years, Jim Fitzgerald. Yes, the same Jim Fitzgerald who won 350 SCCA races as well as multiple Runoffs, and was also a NASCAR Winston Cup driver. He also helped Paul Newman get started in racing, and eventually became his teammate. Fitzgerald had a deal with Datsun, and typically raced their sports cars. Consequently, so did Linda.

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Back to Talladega: In 1986, Saab had set a bunch of world speed and endurance records at Talladega in 9000s, and a few journalists were invited to come watch, and in a limited role, take part. There were not many of us there in 1986 available to return in 1996, when Saab set even more records, this time in 900s. And this time, journalists would play a larger role, actually helping set some records, too.

Linda and I gravitated to each other; I was amazed at the breadth and depth of her motorsports and production car knowledge, and being from Tennessee, her Georgia-bred accent sounded like home. On track, we paired up as often as we could get away with it. We were told not to draft, but we did anyway, running nose-to-tail as we tried to get as much speed as possible out of the Saabs.

At one wonderful point, for an hour, we had identical cars, and were running right at 160 mph. Drafting, we could hit 162. I led for a while, and kept trying different lines-high, low, high-then-low, looking at the speedometer for feedback. This line got us 163 on the back straight; that line got us 161. It might sound daring but Talladega is such a nice track, and the Michelin-shod Saabs handled the 33-degree banking with aplomb. Occasionally Linda and I would hear over the radio, in an invariably polite Swedish accent, "Cars 4 and 5, kindly separate," and we would, until we hit the back straight again, front and rear bumpers drawn together like magnets.

Facebook/IMSA Kelly American Challenge

That's when I knew I had a friend for life: Linda and her husband, Bob, who built engines for NASCAR teams, moved up to that list of people you can count on two hands that you know are kindred spirits, bolstered when I learned that Bob and Linda, like me, couldn't turn away a stray animal.

A few years later Linda and I, along with a third journalist who never really got comfortable, were invited to run a two-race weekend at Lime Rock in the Neon Challenge series. Our Neons were painfully slow-we had one of the regular drivers test Linda's car, and the driver came back and said, "Huh. Apparently there's stock, which are our cars, and REALLY stock, which are your cars."

It was good to hear that because we were questioning our own ability, but let's face it: If we were right on the tail of Chrysler hotshoe Eric Heuschele's Neon coming down the hill onto the front straight of Lime Rock, and then Eric ended up 150 feet ahead at the first turn-well, Linda and I were pretty confident in our ability to shift and floor the accelerator, so it had to be the cars.

So basically we raced against each other, seldom more than a few yards apart. At the end of the first race, Linda finished a car length ahead. For the first time in my life, I was beaten by a girl. Not that there aren't millions of girls who can outdrive me, but it had never happened before, and as enlightened as I think I am, it was a blow.

So onto the next race: Halfway through, Linda and I were side by side, and here comes the lead pack to pass us. I gave them room on the left, and Linda gave them room on the right, but somebody still body-slammed Linda's car, giving me about a hundred-foot lead on her. I won that race, and she very generously told everyone then and since that we split the races, but if I'm present, I correct her: You won the first race, and got crashed out in the second one. Slow-talking, Southern-drawlin' Linda Sharp is a better driver than me. Can kick my ass at will.

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Soon after that, Linda, who worked as a driving instructor, and as a columnist for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, started a dirt-track magazine called Muddslinger. I wrote for it, and she and Bob paid me more than the stories were worth. Linda and Bob semi-retired to a farm outside Mount Airy, North Carolina, the town that Andy Griffith's Mayberry was modeled after, where they took in even more stray animals. Linda and I emailed several times a weekend about racing, about politics, about dogs and cats.

One of her longest and uncharacteristically angry emails came after she watched "Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman," the Adam Carolla-produced documentary that aired in 2015. With Fitzgerald-who was killed in an awful crash in a Trans-Am race at St. Petersburg in 1987, a race that Newman was also in-Linda was there for Newman's racing career, and she was upset about how many people in Carolla's documentary talked about how close they were to the action when, as Linda wrote, "Paul never knew they existed."

One of my favorite passages from that email: "Robert Redford is also a very present 'interview' in the film. Paul would sometimes speak of Redford, but he never came to a race to my knowledge. I can recall Paul saying, 'Never go to dinner with Redford, because he eats off of everyone else's plate before he touches his own food.'"

YouTube/Hagerty

The last week of December in 2016, Linda went into the hospital for a minor surgery. Something went wrong. On December 30, she died. Leaving Bob, the nicest guy in the world, a widower, a couple dozen dogs and cats and horses nobody else wanted without a benefactor, and hundreds of friends like me stunned and saddened and ready as hell to get 2016 over with.

Cotter's Barn Find Hunter brings all that back. Good memories of a friend taken too soon.

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