24 Hours of Daytona

February 6, 1977

Ferrari 365 GTB/4 S/N16407

Did Not Start

 

 

John was teamed up with Bobby Carradine and Roy Woods for this race.

“The team (Modena Sports Cars) had started out splashy in 1977 with three cars and between Daytona and Sebring having movie actor drivers Bobby Carradine and Paul Newman, also Dick Smothers along with drivers Bob Bondurant, Elliott Forbes-Robinson, John Cannon and Milt Minter. They had fancy uniforms from Ferrari of San Francisco and people wearing gold chains falling over people in the pits also wearing gold chains. Carradine stuffed our car in a guardrail at Daytona.”

 

 racingsportscars.com photo

 

 

12 Hours of Sebring

Ferrari 365 GTB/4 S/N16407

March 19, 1977

3rd in class

 

 

 

 

John teamed with Bobby Carradine. They finished eighth overall and third in class.

 

Morton collection – photo courtesy of autosportsltd.com

 

 

Hallett Motor Racing Circuit

Tulsa, Oklahoma

July 24, 1977

IMSA (Round 10) GTU

Oldsmobile Cutlass

DNF

 

 

 

 

Can-Am

When the SCCA decided to revive the Can Am Series in 1977, they did so with a new rules package, converting old F5000 cars to closed bodywork. John converted his car and race it in the Can Am series. Despite operating on a shoestring budget, John was able to finish 3rd twice in 1977.

 

 

Lola T333 Can-Am Willow Springs testing

 

After a rule change in 1977, the T332 F5000 car was converted to Can-Am specifications with a wide body and single seat. “The first letter from the SCCA on the body change hit me like a bad joke,” Morton remembered. “In 1977 I had just scrapped together enough money for a Lola and now I had to find six grand more to buy totally untested bodywork from Carl Haas. The first remakes took off like airplanes with Brian Redman and Elliott Forbes-Robinson. That’s what happens when committees draw pictures of race cars. Trevor came by my shop, scratched his head then took a roll of masking tape and marked off the places to cut holes in the body to let the air out from under it.”

Morton remembered: “We did all-nighters trying to get ready for the first race, cutting holes in the bodywork. “Yes,” Trevor chuckled. “It did go from skateboard to resembling a fiberglass hunk of Swiss cheese.” To the surprise of many, Carl Haas included, it kept its wheels on the ground and eventually evolved into a stable of successful second wave Can-Am cars: the Prophet, the Spyder, as well as Trevor’s own very successful Frissbee.

Below John test drives at Willow Springs with yarn on the car so Trevor Harris can evaluate the car’s aerodynamics.

Morton collection

Morton collection – Sylvia Wilkinson photo              

 

 

Mid Ohio Can-Am

Lola T333

August 7, 1977

DNF (12 laps)

 

 

 

 

 

Mosport

Lola T333

August 21, 1977

17th

 

 

In the inaugural year for the “new” Can-Am in 1977 Morton appeared at Mosport driving a converted Lola 332 with a conversion kit paid for with his movie stunts. He qualified third in the car he had single-handedly prepared but lost his motor in the race.

 

Qualifying results:

 

Morton collection

 

 

Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course

Camel GT Challenge

Holbert Racing DeKon Monza

August 28, 1977

15th

Morton collection

 

 

 

Sears Point Raceway

September 25, 1977

Lola T333 Chevrolet

3rd

 

 

John put his Lola on the front row at Sears Point beside Patrick Tambay’s factory entry, still preparing the car himself. That feat — racing a professional series without a paid team to take care of the car — could not be duplicated in today’s professional racing.

“I ran the car on prize money. About $17,000.”

Morton collection

Morton collection                  

Qualifying results:

Race results:

 

“I kept doing my own preparation during the week and had a friend mechanic, Jonesy Morris, help me on weekends when I was driving. A high point for me was qualifying second at Sears Point beside the factory Lola with Patrick Tambay driving.”

John Morton collection – Autoweek

John Morton collection – Vacaville Reporter

 

 

Riverside Raceway

Lola T333 Chevrolet

October 16, 1977

3rd

Morton collection                                           

 

 

 

 

John Morton collection – LA Times

 

Morton collection

 

Morton collection      

 

 

Daytona Finale (250 Miles)

Camel GT Challenge (round 15)

November 27, 1977

Oldsmobile Cutlass 

DNF (16 laps)

 

 

Photo gallery

Morton collection         

Morton collection

Morton collection

Morton collection

Morton collection

Morton collection            

 

 

Greased Lightning

 

John: “Every stunt guy on Greased Lightning got one big one to do because the big ones paid the big money. The cannon, where they rig gunpowder to blow a driver-activated telephone pole down a tube to the ground at an angle, rolls the car multiple times depending on the size of the charge. It was the only stunt left that nobody wanted to do, so I did it. The first time nothing happened when I pushed the button because nobody connected the wires to the battery. I had to get my nerve up all over again. The second time it went big and I rolled it six or seven times down the middle of the track. I had a headache for two days.”

Morton collection

 

 

 

 

 

John flipping a flathead Ford in a cannon roll

 

 

 

John jumping off a barn in Greased Lightning with a chicken under each arm

 

“In the collapsing barn stunt, I wasn’t in a car. I had to jump out of the loft as a car ran through and the barn collapsed. When it was about to happen, I suddenly realized I didn’t really want to jump but I was committed because the off-camera bulldozer was going to pull the barn out from under me whether I jumped or not. I never saw those two chickens I was holding again.”

Morton collection

Morton collection      

Morton collection