Steve T wrote:
Bret--
You were fortunate indeed to see P-39 "Mr.Mennen". As you say, she never competed that year or any other (excepting a later visit in the ownership of the CAF, and she could not be said really to have "competed" then either). What apparently happened was that Slovak flew the Cobra in after the arrival deadline had passed and was prohibited from competing; the owner disgustedly retired the aircraft from racing, so "Mr.Mennen" never raced in earnest.
Okay, here's what REALLY happened--as told to me by the person on the contest committee who actually made the disqualification of Mira and Mr. Mennen:
Mira had purchased the aircraft from E.D. Weiner and completely gone through to rebuild the Cobra for racing...including bringing on George Mennan as a sponsor. Mira was also a Captain for Continental Airlines at the time, and as the story goes, he informed the Contest Committee that he was going to be 'late' in arriving at Reno because.....yes....if you know Mira at all....he had a date with one of his stewardesses at Continental, and he wanted a 'waiver'.
The Contest Committee members, to a person, all agreed that this was not a reason to 'waive' the arrival deadline for aircraft who were entered, and that if Mira were serious about racing, he'd be there on time. If he showed up late, they would not allow him to qualify or race.
He wasn't.
They did.
But in all seriousness, Mr. Mennen never would have been competitive with the racers of '72. The fastest a P-39 ever went was the super-modified (for the day, at least) Cobra II that Chuck Brown raced at Cleveland in 1948. He qualified at 418 mph on a bigger race course, with a bigger engine, and some trick racing fuel. Mr. Mennan was nothing more than a 'clean-but-stock' P-39, and had no chance of keeping up with Greenamyer's Bearcat or Gunther Balz's Mustang.