
The
long path that took Sal Fish to the top of desert racing
began on May 2, 1939, when he was born in Los Angeles. He
was educated in parochial schools; Transfiguration Grammar
School and Loyola High, where he was class president three
years and earned an industrial relations degree at the
University of San Francisco.
After graduation he began working in his father’s auto
repair business. Fish attended Rochester carburetor school,
General Motors transmission school and Bendix brake school
and was managing the family business. In 1966, he decided to
take a job selling advertising for Petersen Publishing
Company, a job which led him up the ladder to the
publisher’s office. In 1970, Fish was traveling the country
attending races for Hot Rod magazine when he met VW
aftermarket parts manufacturer Joe Vittone, who eventually
talked him into driving in a desert race in Baja California,
Mexico. Fish and fellow Petersen employee Bob Weggeland
started the race with no experience and no pre-run. In fact,
Fish had never even been to Mexico.
“I didn’t know what to expect,” Fish said. “I thought there
would be a white line down the middle of the course. We had
massacred our vehicle to put in creature comforts; we
stockpiled food, spare tires and tools to work on the car.
It was more an odyssey than a race, as far as we were
concerned.”
He recalled that most of the serious racers reached Lake
Chapala in eight hours. Fish and Weggeland had driven 16
hours before they broke their transmission and they still
hadn’t reached the Chapala checkpoint. Fortunately, one of
Jim Garner’s mechanics stopped to help and towed them to
Chapala.
“We went faster on a tow rope behind the mechanic than we
had been going in the race,” Fish said, “and when we got
there I wondered why we bothered. I had pictured this
hacienda with senoritas serving cold drinks, but all we
found were some families living in shacks and two cars to
lean on. The checkpoint was closed.”
Fish was recruited by the late Mickey Thompson, founder of
SCORE International, soon after Mickey started it in 1973
and immediately began to make the organization and the sport
more visible. He broadened exposure of the legendary SCORE
Baja 1000 until it became the premiere desert race in the
world, now covered by national and international television
as well as journalists from around the world.
Fish developed TV coverage of the SCORE Off-Road World
Championships at the old Riverside International Raceway and
created a number of highlights that made it a unique
spectator event. He developed the concept of “heavy metal”
and “mini metal” divisions, pioneered a system of emergency
medical response in the desert and created an independent
review board to hear appeals by racers who have been
penalized for rule infractions during the heat of
competition. The SCORE Trophy-Truck class, for unlimited
production trucks with upwards of 800 horsepower, was
another innovation when he christened the division in 1994.
In late 1986 the team of Sal Fish, president and chief
financial officer Ted Johnson, acquired full ownership of
SCORE International. Long associated with Mickey Thompson,
in reality, SCORE had been managed solely by Fish for many
years leading up to the acquisition. Not long after that,
SCORE joined with the late Walt Lott and Lott’s High Desert
Racing Association (HDRA) to produce a combined championship
series unparalleled in the world of off-road racing.
Together, Fish and Lott organized the major manufacturers
into an advisory committee, which served to recommend
technical and safety rules to the organizers, assist with
public relations and communicate to participants. The
combined HDRA/SCORE series ran from 1985-1991. SCORE
purchased HDRA outright, forming one organization in 1993.
A feature-length documentary, directed by Dana Brown, called
‘Dust To Glory’, was produced in association with SCORE
International. Released in April, 2005, it is a tribute to
the legendary Tecate/SCORE Baja 1000. The DVD sales of this
unique movie continue today at a record pace.
Sal Fish is a man of vision. Over the years he has earned
the respect of the off-road racing community and set a
standard of leadership for future generations to follow.
Biography By Dominic Clark
<< Back to Inductees