LOU "The Monk" LAZZARO
January 7, 1935 to May 1, 2000
Lou Lazzaro won a ton of races in the North East on both dirt and asphalt. Lou finished in the top 10 in NASCAR National Sportsman Championship 3 times in 1962 (7th), 1963 (8th), 1964 (8th). Lou finished in the top 10 in the NASCAR National Modified Championship 3 times, in 1969 (9th), 1971 (9th) and 1972 (8th).
Lou is the only 2 time Champion of the All-Star Racing League.
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For More Photos of Lou Check Out Danny Lazzaro's Web Site
Reprinted from the
Observer-Dispatch 5/2/00
Lazzaro was an area racing legend
By RON MOSHIER
Observer-Dispatch
It’s nice to know that in the end, at least, everybody really does love a
winner.
Hopefully, Lou Lazzaro knew that.
Certainly, there were times when he must have had his doubts, back in the 1960s
and 70s when nobody won more stock car races at Fonda Speedway than he did.
Back then, the grandstands were filled with spiteful fans who showed up each and
every week just aching to see anybody but Lou Lazzaro win Saturday night’s
main event.
Back then, the feature winner was interviewed right on the frontstretch of the
racetrack — and when Lazzaro and his all-too-familiar maroon and white No. 4
won yet again, the Utica driver dodged more than his fair share of beer cans and
barbs.
That’s how good he was. That’s how often he won. And back then, many in the
angry post-race mob didn’t appreciate it.
“They’d throw full cans of beer at him,” said longtime fan and friend
Danny Morrone of Watervliet. “Louie would have to leave his helmet on.
“They’d say, ‘Go back to Utica,’ all that stuff. ... It bothered me so
much, I quit coming here for a while.”
Lazzaro didn’t quit.
Instead, he kept coming back and he kept winning. He did it again, and again,
and again, much to the dismay of his competitors and the disdain of a growing
number of detractors.
“This one girl wanted my autograph, and then she tore it right up in front of
me and she didn’t even know me,” Lazzaro said a few years ago. “Yeah, it
bothered me, but the way I look at it, if they boo you, they know you’re
good.”
Still, winning more didn’t ease the pain.
“The fans hated him and they hated us,” said Lou Lazzaro Jr., the oldest of
Lazzaro’s six children, when his father was inducted into Fonda’s Hall of
Fame in 1990. “It was hard on us. They made us cry.
“Now, they love him. It’s funny how the tables have turned.”
Now, nobody’s laughing.
At age 65, still racing and still capable of winning after all these years —
nearly 50 of them — Lou Lazzaro ran his last lap around Fonda’s »-mile clay
oval last Saturday night.
Two days later, just a month before his induction into the Greater Utica Sports
Hall of Fame, he was gone.
The good news: Lou Lazzaro left while he still was going what he loved to do
most, and he was still good at it, too.
“It’s a shame,” said crew chief and lifelong friend Junior Bianco on
Monday, “but Louie always said he wanted to go when he was racing, and
that’s what he did. He wouldn’t have given it up. That was him. He wanted to
be there, racing.
“Even if he just got in the car and drove around, people would come to see
him,” Bianco said. “Now, it’s not going to be the same. No way.”
Lazzaro, who grew up on Gilbert Street not far from the old Bennett’s Field
race track in North Utica, never saw the end in sight. If he did, he never
admitted to it.
Instead, he grew tired of the same old questions about how old he was and,
‘How much longer will you be racing?’
“This age stuff, I don’t even want to hear about it,” he would grumble.
“I am what I am. ... I’ll know when to quit.”
He never did. The gritty veteran — who first made a name for himself back in
racing’s good old days when winning depended more on the man than his machine
and how much money he put into it — figured it was better to burn out than to
fade away.
Always operating on a shoestring budget, he came back from a life-threatening
intestinal illness in 1984 and open-heart surgery in 1996 to win again.
And the legend lived on.
“You have people in the stands now who saw Louie race when he was younger, and
their grandchildren were there last year to watch him win,” said Betty Biittig,
who along with her husband Ed is a media coordinator at Fonda.
“If there’s a legend at Fonda Speedway, it’s certainly Lou Lazzaro.
We’ve been to Daytona and people there always ask, ‘Is Louie still
racing?’ Even there, they know the name.”
Now, the man is gone.
His name and his legend will live on, though. And rightly so.
When Lou Lazzaro was at his best there was nobody better, and in the end,
everybody at Fonda Speedway would have loved to see him win again, and again.
Even those who grew up booing him because they thought he won too much.
I know. I was one of them.
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