Any land-speed racing historian worth his salt (get it? salt? haha!)
can tell you how organized drag racing evolved out of dry lakes racing,
when two or more cars would venture out side-by-side, rather than in
turn, as land-speeders do today.
In the aftermath of the hotly
contested battles for the ultimate land-speed record, Gary Gabelich
proposed a return to the side-by-side land-speed race format in an
exhibition match with Craig Breedlove on the Bonneville Salt Flats.
At
the time, Gabelich still held the world land-speed record
at 622.407 MPH in the flying mile, and everybody still had reservations
about hitting the speed of sound. Still, it wouldn't be until 1997 – 25 years
later – that the first supersonic land-speed run would take place.
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