Lenny Boehler
By the grace of God and 600 horsepower! Those words
describe those that drive and own the Modifieds. Car owner Len Boehler
was one of those. For over forty years Boehler owned and built Modifieds
that won from the deep woods in Maine at the Oxford Plains Speedway to
the sands at the New Smyrna Speedway in Florida .
His credits include six NASCAR National Modified
Championships, three in a row with Bugsy Stevens as his driver in
1967-68-69, Wayne Anderson in 1994 and with Tony Hirshman in 1995 and
1996. Fourteen track championships including seven at the Thompson
Speedway, three at the Stafford Motor Speedway, three at the Seekonk
Speedway and one at the Norwood Arena. At Thompson, Boehler won four
titles in a row with Fred DeSarro and with Stevens he won titles in
1966, 1968 and 1969. The three titles at Stafford came with Stevens in
1968 and with DeSarro in 1972 and 1976. At Seekonk, track titles came
with Stevens in 1965, Leo Cleary in 1979 and Bruce ”Gomer” Taylor in
1986. Boehler's lone track championship at the Norwood Arena came in
1966.
In four decades Boehler's cars amassed over 300 wins.
Among his major wins were the Trenton 200 in 1967, the Dogwood 300 in
Martinsville, Va. in 1968, The Thompson 500 in 1969, the Islip 200 in
1971, back to back wins in the Fall 100 and the Cardinal 500 at
Martinsville in 1971, the Spring Sizzler at Stafford in 1972, the Race
of Champions at Trenton in 1974, the Oswego 200 in 1985, the Richmond
200 in 1992 and four wins at Loudon, New Hampshire including three in a
row with Tony Hirshman in 1996.
Len Boehler was the consummate racer. He built his own
chassis until he died and engines well into the 1980's when his
competition was going to professional chassis and engine shops. His
head, hands, and the local junkyard were the ingredients. He was also
the master of deception. His ball joint coolers made from Maxwell House
Coffee cans received national recognition in the Stock Car Racing
magazine. He wore shoes that were taped up and shirts that had other
people's name on them. His engines looked like something that had been
pulled out of a swamp. His competition would see all of this and walk
away laughing and shaking their heads. It was Len Boehler who would have
the last laugh as his cars always ran up front and hardly ever broke.
Bugsy Stevens, who drove Boehler's cars from 1964 until early 1971,
stated, “Lenny built bullet proof motors”. Boehler's diversions
would keep his competition at bay, as many would never take a closer
look at what he really had.
Boehler began his career as a car owner-builder in
1957 with Tony Cortes as his driver in 1957 through1962, Don Hall in
1963 and Ed Hoyle in 1964. Racing primarily at Seekonk and Norwood ,
Boehler never achieved the success he desired. At Seekonk Boehler became
friendly with a young upstart by the name of Bugsy Stevens. Hoyle didn't
like the big track at Thompson; so on June 14, 1964 Boehler asked
Stevens to drive his car at the fast 5/8-mile oval. The first time out
they won, went back the following weekend and won again. Boehler was
committed to Hoyle for the balance of the 1964 season and let him go at
season's end.
Boehler and Stevens became a team in 1965
concentrating their effort at the Seekonk Speedway. A dynasty was begun
and the legend of Ole Blue was born. Stevens won nine of the twenty-one
events run at the D. Anthony Vendetti owned ¼ mile speedway. At
season's end, Stevens `had won Boehler his first track championship. On
Columbus Day weekend they ventured to the Langhorne speedway in
Pennsylvania for the 200 mile Race of Champions where they finished
third behind Bill Slater who won the prestigious event. That third place
finish gave Boehler the confidence that his cars could compete on a
national level.
In 1966, Boehler and Stevens left Seekonk to compete
at the NASCAR sanctioned Norwood Arena, which at the time was considered
the hotbed of Modified Stock Car racing in the Northeast. In their first
outing, Bugsy brought Ole Blue home in third spot behind Freddie Schulz
and Fred DeSarro. It was quite an accomplishment as the best in the
business including Leo Cleary, Eddy Flemke, Bill Slater, Hop Harrington,
and Fats Caruso, to name a few, ran there every Saturday night. At
season's end, Ole Blue had carried Stevens to three wins and a second
track championship for Boehler. They also raced at Thompson where
another track championship was served up. The Stafford Speedway was in
its last year as a dirt track. Stevens drove for John Koszela at the
half mile and despite going winless, won the track championship, which
made it a grand slam for Stevens. Ernie Gahan won the 1966 NASCAR
National Modified Championship. Stevens, in his first year of NASCAR
competition, finished second. It was also during 1966 that Lenny and
Bugsy went into partnership in an auto salvage yard in Assonet ,
Massachusetts .
During the winter months the decision was made to go
after the NASCAR National Modified Championship in 1967. Boehler built a
new car and two new engines. The run for the Championship meant a lot of
traveling. Back then there was no tour series. All the weekly races,
plus the special events awarded points toward the Championship. Boehler
did almost all of the maintenance work himself plus on many occasions
was a one-man pit crew.
The weekly venue included Catamount Stadium in Milton
, Vermont on Thursday night, the newly paved Stafford Speedway in
Connecticut on Friday night, the Norwood Arena in Massachusetts on
Saturday night, and Thompson in Connecticut on Sunday night. In the
spring and fall when Thompson ran on Sunday afternoon, Boehler would
leave as soon as the race ended, making a high speed run to the
Utica-Rome Speedway in Vernon , New York . Utica-Rome is a little over
90 miles west of Albany , New York . Lenny installed a 427 Chevy engine
and a real tall gear in his racecar hauler for the high-speed runs.
Bugsy would jump out of the car and into the truck without even changing
his uniform. Boehler would drive while his driver slept. They would
always make it in time to run the consolation, then the feature.
From Utica-Rome it was back home to East Freetown ,
Massachusetts , arriving just as the sun was coming up. Bugsy would go
home to Rehoboth , Massachusetts for a couple of hours of sleep before
heading out to the salvage yard to open up in time for the Monday
morning business. Lenny, who had been up since Sunday morning would
sleep until noon on Monday and then spend the rest of the day making
repairs and doing general upkeep. Lenny Boehler was an iron man to say
the least. On a few occasions he and Stevens ventured off their
well-worn path to race in special events at Plattsburg, New York, and as
far south as Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
In addition, to that first championship the highlight
of the year came in August when Bugsy and Ole Blu out-ran Donnie Allison
to win the North-South battle at Trenton . It was especially gratifying
to Boehler as his car beat the famous Tant-Mitchell No. 11, which at the
time was considered the best car in the NASCAR Modified division.
Boehler's car, for the championship run, was a thing of beauty and
looked like a Modified should look like. He used the coupe body of a
1937 Chevrolet mounted on a 1953 Chevrolet frame. His engines, 327 and
427 Chevrolet, were built in his garage. Both sported Hilborn fuel
injection. He had his own hue of blue for color with a ceramic-yellow
No. 3 on the doors. The hard work and stamina paid off with over 25 wins
and the 1967 Modified National Championship.
In 1968, Boehler's car carried Bugsy Stevens to
twenty-nine feature wins out of sixty-eight races entered. A new
adversary in the form of Don MacTavish kept Boehler and Stevens on their
toes throughout the season. MacTavish was a seasoned point chaser who
had George Colwell as his crew chief. In addition to the many races they
ran on the track, Boehler and Colwell had many races of their own on the
Mass Pike and New York Thruway. Boehler and Stevens started the 1968
season by winning the Dogwood 300 in Martinsville and by season's end
has won track championships at Thompson and Stafford in addition to
their second National Championship, Boehler used one engine for the
entire season, a fuel injected 427 Chevrolet that he had been re-built
after the 1967 season. Following the 1968 season, Ole Blue was getting
tired. The Tant/Mitchell No. 11 has beaten Ole Blu at Trenton and
Martinsville in the fall. Clayton Mitchell, who had built the No. 11,
had abandoned the conventional straight axle-Flemke split spring front
end and gone with a Chrysler-type torsion bar front end. Lenny spotted
the new front end set up at Trenton and after making a few mental notes,
put the plans into motion to duplicate the torsion bar front end in a
new car he was about to build.
The 1969 season for Len Boehler was bittersweet. Don
McTavish lost his life in a horrific crash at Daytona and Lenny's wife
Joanne was diagnosed with cancer and passed away after the season had
ended. MacTavish was a rival, but he was also a friend. His passing
bothered Lenny and Bugsy deeply. The season itself started off with a
bang-literally. Work on a new car had started, but was a long way from
being completed. Lenny took his two-year-old mount to Martinsville for
what was then a 500-lap event. Bugsy qualified the car second fastest to
Ray Hendrick in the Tant/Mitchell No. 11.
The two ran side by side for 19 laps when they came
together in a grinding crash as they exited turn four. Fred DeSarro, who
was running his own car at the time, assumed the lead and led until
there were four laps to go when his battery shorted out and ended his
day. Jerry Cook, who was two laps down, took the lead and the win. Not
one to cry in his beer, Boehler loaded the wrecked racer and took it
home to East Freetown to make repairs that would keep them going until
he completed the new car. Cook led the point standings up until the
final race, which was the first and only Thompson 500 which Stevens and
Boehler won.
In route to the championship, Boehler and Stevens ran
fifty-four races and recorded fifteen wins and ten seconds. Catamount
had dropped the Modifieds with the exception of an All Star League
event, which Stevens and Boehler won. Cook was a conservative racer and
coupled with the fact that a mid-summer strike at Stafford, Norwood, and
Thompson took away available races to run, was the main reason it took
so long to take the point lead that led to the third championship.
Boehler finally finished the new torsion front-end car
in mid July. The first time out for the car was a mid week All Star
League event at Norwood on July 23 rd . Stevens won the event, but in
his own words, “the car was a beast and didn't handle”. It took
Boehler a few weeks to understand how torsion bars affected chassis
loading, but once he hit on it, that car was unbeatable. After
completing the season with a third championship in hand, Boehler's world
all but disintegrated when his wife lost her fight with cancer and
passed away.
The sport of Modified racing also changed. Norwood
dropped the Modifieds and Stafford , now under the ownership of Jack
Arute, changed their race night to Saturdays, plus fuel injection was no
longer allowed. Boehler was devastated by his wife's passing and lost
interest in everything. Had it not been for the efforts of Bugsy and his
wife Doris, Lenny may not have made it through the winter.
When the 1970 season rolled around, the decision had
been made not to seek a fourth National Championship. Boehler and
Stevens would race part time as Bugsy had an offer to go down south to
do some Grand National (Winston-Nextel Cup) racing. Stevens took Boehler
with him, but the good rides never came. Stevens did get an offer for a
factory-backed ride at Holman and Moody, but turned it down as he, along
with Boehler, felt their first responsibility was to their junkyard
business. Racing on a part time basis, Bugsy still recorded seventeen
wins in Boehler's car. Boehler, still hurting from the loss of his wife,
went into a deep depression over the winter months, not wanted to work
at the salvage yard or work on the race cars. During his championship
years, Stevens had been offered rides in other top cars of the day, but
always refused. With everything that was happening with Lenny Boehler,
Stevens began to look for another ride.
The 1971 season began like many others in Martinsville
, Virginia . Boehler managed to get a car ready for Stevens. The weekend
ended up a disaster. Down on power and off on handling, Stevens
qualified poorly and on race day was not as competitive as he once was.
In the closing laps of the race, Stevens tangled with Lou Austin, which
resulted in a massive wreck that all but blocked the track. Somehow,
Bernie Miller got through the mess and went on to record his biggest
win. Fred DeSarro, who had won the 1970 NASCAR National Modified
Championship, was embroiled in a dispute with car owner John Koszela,
Jr. DeSarro had qualified on the outside pole of the Martinsville event,
but after an early race tangle with Ray Hendrick, found himself out of
the race. Unknown to everyone, including himself, it would be his final
ride in the famous Woodchopper Special that had carried him to the
title.
The New England racing season began at Thompson on
April 11. Boehler had patched up his car and was ready to race. Stevens
won the opener but the wheels had been set in motion to vacate Boehler's
cars and buy out Boehler's interest in the salvage yard. The combination
that had been so successful was over. Koszela had split from DeSarro and
Stevens had accepted the open ride. The split was complete when Stevens
took sole possession of the salvage yard. Very few knew of the split
until the following Sunday when Stevens took the Koszela 15 out for
practice. Boehler evidently assumed that DeSarro would be at the track
as he had the mighty No. 3 unloaded and ready to go. DeSarro, not one to
hang around a racetrack looking for a ride, spent the day with his
family.
A few drivers approached a dejected Boehler, offering
their services. Lenny had his mind set. There was only one who could
fill the seat. Needless to say, Bugsy went out and won the twin 25 laps
features that day as Boehler loaded his car and went home. In Modified
racing circles, it was known as the “Shot Heard Round the World”.
Later that evening the phone line between East Freetown , Massachusetts
and Hope Valley, Rhode Island was buzzing. A deal was struck and Fred
DeSarro would be the new driver of the Len Boehler No. 3.
With renewed vigor, Boehler went to work preparing Ole
Blue for the following weekend's events, which would include a 100
lapper at Martinsville on Saturday afternoon and the twin 25s at
Thompson on Sunday. Boehler headed out for Virginia by himself, picking
up DeSarro and his mechanic, Charlie Main along the way. Their first
outing together produced a fourth, nothing to brag about, but gratifying
just the same. The all night ride home produced some excitement, too.
Just north of Roanoke , Virginia on route I-81, Boehler spotted the
Koszela hauler and the race was on. They were side-by-side,
wheel-to-wheel and wide open, all the way to Harrisburg , Pennsylvania .
It was quite a night to say the least. Best of all, Boehler was back! He
drove the entire distance to Thompson, making it in plenty of time. Back
on home turf, DeSarro put the mighty No. 3 through its paces and won
both ends of the Sunday afternoon twin bill, beating Stevens in the
bargain. It was, to the delight of the fans, great wheel to wheel
racing.
Lenny Boehler got a new lease on life. Bugsy's leaving
gave Lenny the motivation to be competitive once again. DeSarro and
Stevens would wage many battles, but would always remain good friends.
During the summer of 1971 Lenny was back in the groove running four,
sometimes five times a week. The routine for the weekend included Malta
, New York on Friday night, and Stafford Speedway in Connecticut on
Saturday night, Thompson , Connecticut on Sunday afternoon, and the
Utica-Rome Speedway in Vernon , New York on Sunday night. The resulting
schedule showed 19 wins for the Boehler-DeSarro team. They closed out
the season with back-to-back wins at Martinsville . Coupled with
Stevens' win at Thompson in the spring, it gave Boehler 20 wins for the
year. Boehler earned living by racing cars. It was also, once again a
labor of love. It was also during the 1971 season that he met and
ultimately married Janice, his second wife.
Lenny Boehler began the 1972 season with renewed
enthusiasm. The first win came in April at he inaugural Spring Sizzler
at Stafford, a unique 80 lap open competition-all green sprint that was
conceived by Dr. Dick Bergeron, Bruce Cohen, and Lew Boyd. Eddy Flemke
appeared to be the eventual winner until his water pump failed in the
closing laps. DeSarro, running second at the time, took advantage of the
Flemke's misfortune and went on to take the win. Boehler and DeSarro
would go on to score twelve more wins including seven at Stafford ,
which would give Boehler and DeSarro their first championship together.
The 1973 season saw the beginning of the end of the
backyard mechanic being able to field a competitive Modified. Modified
racing was beginning to be infiltrated with wealthy car owners who went
racing with unlimited funds, while Boehler tried to survive still
building his own equipment and financing his racing out of his own
wallet. The season produced only six wins, four at Malta and one each at
Stafford and Thompson. The highlight of his season came when his wife
Janice gave birth to a son, Michael. It was also during the season that
DeSarro received numerous phone calls from wealthy car owners who told
him he could write his own ticket. His standard answer was, “I
followed that car for a lot of years and as soon as I get out of it, I
will be following it again”. DeSarro was extremely loyal to Lenny
Boehler but he never told him about the phone calls.
The Thompson Speedway dropped their NASCAR sanction
after the 1971 season. They ran with competitors who were on strike from
the Seekonk Speedway in 1972 before going with their own program of open
competition: Small block modifieds in 1973. The big block 427 Chevrolet
was still the engine of choice in the NASCAR modifieds. The 1974 NASCAR
modified season for Len Boehler was one disappointment after another.
Much of his competition had gone to using professionally built big block
engines that put out considerably more horsepower than Boehler's home
built power plants did. Finally, he and DeSarro gave up on Stafford . In
the meantime, Boehler had built a small block engine for Thompson. The
events only paid $500 to win, but the field of cars consisted of many
home built cars like his own. Boehler and DeSarro cleaned house on
Sunday night wracking up 14 winds and the track championship. Unknown to
many, Boehler was assembling another big block power plant, which would
bring him one of his greatest wins. In mid September, Boehler and
DeSarro traveled to Trenton , New Jersey for the Race of Champions. The
best that modified racing had to offer was in competition. It all came
down to the final lap. DeSarro and Bugsy Stevens roared off turn four,
wheel to wheel, heading for the checker. The Boehler built engine
mustered the needed horsepower and gave DeSarro a six-inch victory over
his old adversary.
Boehler took his Race of Champions winning Vega to
Daytona Beach in February of 1975 for a 200-mile event run on the
4.1-mile road course at the Daytona International Speedway. It was a
while new ballgame for the season car owner and his driver. Just about
everybody there suffered transmission and clutch failure in the practice
sessions leading up to the event including the high dollar teams of
Maynard Troyer and Geoff Bodine. While many ran out to buy special road
racing transmissions, Lenny Boehler built his own using files and a body
shop grinder. Once again, Boehler had the last laugh as Fred DeSarro
finished second to Merv Treichler in the Daytona 200.
By 1975, the expensive high winding small block engine
had all but shoved the big block into oblivion. Boehler still ran his
big block at Stafford , but the writing was on the wall. One win, as a
result of Eddie Flemke being disqualified for being 60 lbs. light,
brought Boehler his only win at Stafford that season. The competition in
Thompson's small block division was becoming very intense as many of the
big names Geoff Bodine, Ronnie Bouchard were now running there every
week. DeSarro still managed to garner five wins and another track
championship for Ole Blue.
For the 1976 season, Lenny built a new Vega bodied
modified. Rather than buy new body skin, Boehler used body parts from
the three wrecked Vegas. When the new car rolled out of its beech bluff
garage, it was tri-colored. It was white on one side, blue on the other,
and had a red rear deck. Rather than sanding and painting the body
panels, Boehler left them just the way he found them in the junkyard.
Daytona 500 television anchorman Mike Joy, the announcer at Stafford at
the time, labeled the car the Bicentennial Vega in honor of our
country's 200 th anniversary. The name stuck and the race fans loved the
patriotic theme of the car.
The Vega ran consistently in the top three at Stafford
plus entered Victory Lane twice. When the points were tallied at
season's end, Boehler and DeSarro were the track champions. Boehler's
small block Vega took seven wins at Thompson, which produced another
track championship. One of the most notable runs made by the
Bicentennial Vega came at Trenton in the Race of Champions. An oil leak
early on in the event put Ole Blu and DeSarro three laps down in the
200-mile event. After numerous pit stops, Lenny made the necessary
repairs and got DeSarro and Ole Blue back in the hunt. DeSarro caught
the cautions right and was able to make up the three laps he has lost.
Maynard Troyer had led during the late stages of the event and had just
taken the white flag when he looked in the mirror and to his amazement,
saw Ole Blu closing in. DeSarro had already passed Troyer three times
and had there been one more lap at the 1.5 mile oval, DeSarro would have
taken the win.
Lenny and his wife Janice always took a mid-winter
vacation in Daytona Beach , Florida in February during Speed Weeks. Just
about every year, Lenny had taken a car to race at the Daytona
International Speedway. Bill Slater convinced the owners of the New
Smyrna Speedway to add the modifieds to their nine night World Series
program. Most of the top drivers of the day were there including Geoff
Bodine, Richie Evans, Eddie Flemke, and Ronnie Bouchard. Boehler watched
DeSarro closely during practice and made a few chassis adjustments prior
to the feature. Boehler sent Ole Blu into battle for the 25 lap main
event. DeSarro started on the outside pole and sprinted to a non-stop
win. Lenny Boehler had now won from Maine to Florida . With all things
being equal including new tires on all the cars, Boehler's cars could
hold their own against anyone.
The only difference between Lenny and his competition
was that he refused to try to out-spend the competition in order to win.
The rest of the Florida series turned into a slugfest between Evans and
Bodine who raced with unlimited bank accounts behind them. While they
would bolt on four new tires a night, Boehler elected to wear a set out
before replacing them and by weeks end, Boehler had run consistently in
the top five and finished third in points. The bottom line was the fact
that Boehler spent considerably less and in the end actually made more
money. Boehler and DeSarro skipped Martinsville and the Spring Sizzler
at Stafford . They did run a spring event at Trenton where they finished
second.
DeSarro was employed at Stanley-Bostich in East
Greenwich , Rhode Island . He has become a part of management and his
superiors were pressuring him to cut back or get out of racing all
together. Boehler understood as he scaled back to two nights a week.
With the exception of one win at Stafford on May 27 th , Friday nights
saw one frustration after another. On one occasion, DeSarro didn't make
it to Stafford . Lenny's main effort went into the Thompson car. It paid
off in spades as DeSarro romped to 14 wins, including four in a row in
one stretch during the summer. At season's end, Ole Blue, with DeSarro
aboard, won the small block modified portion of the World Series and
wrapped up the Thompson Track Championship; their fourth in a row!
Boehler made the trip to New Smyrna again in 1978. A
mid winter February blizzard dropped close to two feet of snow in
Southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island . Lenny found himself land
locked in East Freetown and with just a day to spare was able to leave
for Florida . All roads in Rhode Island were closed, so Boehler had to
drive to Springfield , Massachusetts before heading south. DeSarro ended
up getting a ride on a snow mobile from his home in Hope Valley, Rhode
Island to Stonington , Connecticut were he hooked up with Charlie Main
and headed south.
At New Smyrna the competition was intense. Ole Blu was
not quite up to par. Geoff Bodine, Ron Bouchard, and Bugs Stevens
dominated the series. DeSarro managed to stay in the top five but sensed
that something wasn't right. DeSarro had to return to his job and left
one night early. Lenny took the car out himself and finished tenth. An
engine blew at Martinsville and DeSarro retired Ole Blu at Trenton when
he broke a valve spring. After finishing fifth at the Sizzler, Lenny
told Fred that he has been diagnosed with Lymphoma, a form of cancer.
Throughout the summer, Lenny managed to race. It took
the willpower of a man of steel. The effects of the Chemotherapy were
sometimes devastating. Lenny was a very private person. His friends and
family, many of his competitors and the fans in the grandstands never
knew of his ordeal. The performance of Ole Blue was not what it once
was. DeSarro understood and continued to give it its all and managed
three wins at Thompson and two at Seekonk. Late in the summer DeSarro
and Boehler discussed their future plans. Both agreed that they would
scale back their racing in 1979 to running just the added purse special
events.
Despite his medical problems and with a lot of help
from his friends, Lenny rolled out a new car at Thompson on September 3
rd . DeSarro had wanted to “call it a season” which would allow
Lenny to deal with his health, but Lenny insisted they finish out the
year, at least at Thompson where they had enjoyed so many wins and
championships. The new car never won and then on October 8 th , the
unthinkable happened.
During warm ups, DeSarro has just gotten the new Vega
up to speed on the back stretch when he sailed off the third turn at
high speed. Kenny Bouchard and Bugsy Stevens were directly behind
DeSarro when he went over the bank. Both stopped their cars and ran to
DeSarro's aid. With his bare hands, Bouchard tore the roof off the car.
Although the car landed on all fours, the impact inflicted severe head
injuries to DeSarro. DeSarro was unconscious and was eventually moved to
the trauma unit of the Rhode Island Hospital in Providence . Lenny was
devastated. DeSarro was not only his driver, he was a friend and they
had been through a lot together. DeSarro remained in a comatose state
until he died on November 1 at 2:00pm . While DeSarro laid in the
hospital on life support, Lenny's condition deteriorated. At Fred
DeSarro's funeral, Lenny had to be all but carried into the funeral
home. Many thought he would never make it through the winter.
Lenny spent a lot of time in the hospital during the
winter of 1978-79. A strong will to live and to be with his wife and
son, Boehler made his way down the road to recovery to the point where
the cancer was in remission. While Boehler was recovering many his
friends including Leo Cleary worked to finish another new car that he
had started the previous year. He had made a remarkable recovery, enough
as he was able to once again field a car. The first time out with Leo
Cleary behind the wheel was the Seekonk opener on April 8 th . The
Boehler magic was still there. Cleary led the first 42 laps of the 100
lapper until Richie Evans got by and was able to take the win.
Boehler and Cleary also raced at Stafford but it was
at Seekonk where their light burned brightest. Lenny rolled out the new
Chevette bodied modified on May 18 th . Cleary went on a tear at the
Seekonk oval, wracking up five wins on his way to the track
championship. Boehler was back! It was a good season except for one
problem. Lenny was all but broke. The cost of racing had escalated to
the point where it was no longer feasible to race without being wealthy
or having a major sponsor or a driver who could bring the necessary
funding with him. Leo Cleary was a hired gun: he raced for a percentage
of what he won. In fact, Cleary prided himself in the fact that he had
put his kids through college with money he made racing. During the
winter months, Lennie was approached by Ronnie Bouchard and his
mentor-sponsor Marvin Rifkin of M&H Tires. Rifkin has two cars and
coupled with Lenny's Chevette a deal with struck. Lenny would maintain
Rifkin's cars plus his own for Bouchard to drive. Marvin would provide
the sponsorship to run the race team.
One of the hardest things he ever did was when he
called Cleary and told him he was being replaced by Bouchard. It was
strictly a business decision he needed to make in order to survive.
Clearly was bitter but in time realized that Lenny had little choice in
the matter. Boehler often stated that he had the highest regard and
respect for Leo Cleary.
It was a sign of the times. The cost of fielding a
competitive modified had gotten so far out of sight, Lenny became a
hired gun himself. With Rifkin's cars and sponsorship, Boehler was back
on top. Ronnie Bouchard was in his prime and wracked up 23 wins during
the 1980 season. In 1981 Bouchard got the opportunity to go Winston Cup
racing with Jack Beebe Race Hill Farm team out of Madison , Connecticut
. In his rookie year, Bouchard won the Talladega 500 and a Busch pole
and took Rookie of the Year in NASCAR's elite division. During his off
time, Bouchard drove Boehler's and Rifkin's modifieds to eight wins.
When Ronnie was off racing in the Southland, his younger brother Kenny
drove the cars to three wins. The arrangement with Bouchard carried over
though 1983. In 1982, Ronnie ran the full Winston Cup schedule and Kenny
picked up a modified ride in the Ted Marsh No. 55. Ronnie still found
time for Ole Blu, especially if there was a mid-week show.
For Boehler, it was an easy paycheck. Ronnie's' best
finishes came at Thompson where he recorded a third on August 3 rd and a
win on August 29 th . In 1983, Boehler raced very little but was still
keeping the cars ready for Bouchard. Ronnie finished 7 th in a Modified
event at the Pocono Raceway on May 30 th and John Rosati drove the car
to a ninth place finish at Oxford Plains on September 17 th .
Following the 1983 season, Boehler parked his car. The
association with Bouchard and Rifkin had ended. When the1984 season
began, Lenny didn't have a driver or a sponsor. Ole Blue sat in his East
Freetown garage collecting dust. Lenny's son Michael turned 12 and
started to show an interest in racing. A very secretive person, Boehler
began to show his son the basics of racing. By mid May, opportunity
knocked in the form of Mike McLaughlin. McLaughlin has been driving for
a western New York car owner who decided to drop out of racing.
McLaughlin brought sponsorship and funding which put Lenny Boehler back
in the racing business. They only ran the big shows but the results were
positive. McLaughlin recorded major wins at Thompson, Oswego , Stafford
, and Riverside Park .
The NASCAR Modifieds were placed into the touring
series concept in 1985. McLaughlin and Boehler ran the entire series and
recorded one win, the rich Oswego 200 on Labor Day Weekend. McLaughlin's
consistency and Ole Blue's reliability served up a second place finish
in the final point standings behind Richie Evans. Ironically, Evans was
killed in a practice crash prior to the last event at Martinsville .
Evans had sewn up the title one week before at
Thompson. Boehler had high hopes for the 1986 season when just before
the season started, McLaughlin left to drive the Corazzo Sheri-Cup 12.
Corazzo had on his crew among others Clyde McCloud and Greg Zippadeli
who would in later years, open doors for McLaughlin in the Busch South
Series. Lenny, without a driver, hooked up with Kenny Bouchard. With
limited sponsorship, they raced exclusively on the Modified Tour series
and at season's end finished 4 th in points with one win: Monadnock on
May 18 th . Lenny and Kenny ran a partial schedule in 1987 and finished
16 th in points.
Enter Kerry Malone. Lenny had known Jack Malone from
the Norwood Arena days. Jack's son Kerry drove SK Modifieds at Stafford
and Thompson. The second-generation racer had aspirations to move on to
the tour type Modified division. Jack Malone became quite wealthy
because of his real estate dealings in the Boston area and agreed to
sponsor and fund his son's efforts in Old Blu for the 1988 season.
Boehler and Malone never achieved the success they desired and split up
at the end of the season. Malone went back to the SK's at Stafford and
Thompson.
Doug Hevron, a product of the central New York area,
had raced and won in quarter midgets in the Syracuse area as a youngster
then raced and won in a Super Modifieds at the Oswego Speedway. Plus, he
had run in selected Winston Cup events and Modified events in his family
owned equipment. Hevron had the desire and necessary funding to compete
on a national level in the NASCAR Featherlite Modified Tour Series.
Lenny Boehler's operation appeared to be a perfect fit and an alliance
was formed for the 1989 season.
Hevron's tenure as the driver of Ole Blue lasted five
years. During that time Hevron recorded many top finishes and recorded
big wins at Loudon , New Hampshire and at Richmond , Virginia in 1992.
His best finish in the Featherlite Modified Tour Series was a 5 th in
points in 1993. Following the 1993 season, Hevron quit racing Modifieds
and moved to Florida .
Wayne Anderson was a successful campaigner on Long
Island where he has won at Islip , Freeport , and Riverhead. Anderson ,
also a successful trucking company owner had attempted to compete on a
national level but with a part time crew it couldn't be done. Anderson ,
then in his early 50's contacted Len Boehler and a deal was struck for a
run at the 1994 Modified Tour Series Championship. Boehler worked day
and night to keep two cars ready and competitive. Lenny's work paid off
and by mid season, Anderson was in the heat of battle for the
championship he wanted. It all came down to the last race, which was the
Fall Final at Stafford . Anderson 's father had just recently passed
away as the veteran driver entered what was to be the race of his life.
True to form, Len Boehler had made Ole Blue bullet proof as the mighty
No. 3 carried Anderson to a convincing win and the 1994 Tour Series
Championship. It was a long grind. Equally responsible for the
championship effort were Michael Boehler and Lenny's stepson Peter
Caron, and brother in law Jimmy Fournier who had taken over much of the
fabrication and preparation of the Boehler Racing Enterprises effort.
Anderson returned to racing part time in his own equipment on Long
Island after the 1994 season.
Tony Hirshman, a veteran driver from North Hampton ,
Pennsylvania had lost his ride at the end of 1994. Hirshman had the
funding behind him and the timing was right. He needed a ride and
Boehler needed a driver. Hirshman, a very aggressive driver at times,
rewarded Boehler with back-to-back championships in 1995 and 1996.
Hirshman had only one win in 1995, that coming at Nazareth , but in 1996
won three in row at Loudon. Hirshman won the 1996 Championship by a mere
12 points over Steven Park. Despite midseason slumps in 1997 and 1998,
Hirshman moved on when some friends close to his home put a race team
together.
Tom Cravenho, of nearby Raynham, Massachusetts had
heard the Boehler had lost his driver. After some necessary details were
ironed out, Cravenho had the much-treasured ride in a Boehler car for
1999. Racing exclusively on the NASCAR Featherlite Modified Tour Series
Cravenho annexed one win at Riverhead in August and finished 7 th in the
final point standings. Continuing into 2000, Cravenho stepped it up to
finish 6 th in points with eighth top 10s including a season ending win
at the World Series at Thompson.
The 2000 season gave Lenny Boehler his most gratifying
season. His son Michael had taken one of the back up Ole Blus,
renumbered it 34 and also drove on the tour. Lenny Boehler was a very
non-excitable person. Win, lose, crash or break, his emotions never
changed or showed. That all changed one Sunday afternoon in September
during the running of the Fall Final at Stafford .
Michael had been using, for the most part,
hand-me-down equipment with a tight budget. About midway in the event,
Michael charged his way into the lead. The smile on Lenny Boehler's face
lit up the entire pit area. Without a doubt, the kid was a Boehler. The
apple doesn't fall far from the tree. He had learned his lessons well.
Another big moment in Lenny Boehler's life came at the awards banquet
when he was summoned to the podium to present Michael the 2000 NASCAR
Featherlite Modified Tour Series Rookie of the Year award. Equally proud
was his mother, Janice.
The cancer that had almost claimed Lenny's life in
1978 reared its ugly head again in 2001. Lenny never gave up. While most
of the fabricating and preparation was done by Peter Caron and Michael
Boehler, Lenny oversaw the operation. Cravenho began the season with a
fourth at South Boston in Virginia .
Jerry Marquis had won the 2000 Championship while
driving for Mario Fiore. Marquis started the defense of his title with a
win at South Boston only to lose his ride because of a dispute between
Fiore and his sponsor. The sponsor took the cars and the equipment
leaving Fiore out of business and Marquis out of a ride. Marquis knew
the Boehler Racing operation was top rate and he had seen what Michael
had done with the equipment he had. A phone call was made and Michael
agreed to step aside giving his ride in the Boehler team car. Lenny
never got to see Marquis win in Michael's car as he passed away on May
13.
It was a devastating blow to his family and many
friends. Michael, Janice and Peter agreed to continue on the Boehler
Racing. Like Kyle Petty has said many times, “Racing is what we do”!
They picked up the pieces and continued on in Lenny's memory. Cravenho
finished out the season and Marquis went on a tear and gave Michael his
first win as a car owner on August 10 at Chemung Speedrome in New York .
He backed it up by winning the Thompson 300.
Lenny Boehler is gone but his memory and legacy will
live on in the hearts of his family and friends forever. He had the
uncanny ability to do more with less and was always a step ahead of his
competition. What many didn't' know was that Lenny was a devoted husband
and family man as he was deeply loved by his wife and children.
Throughout his life he was highly respected by his peers. The legacy of
Lenny Boehler and the legend of Ole Blue will live on for many years to
come.
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