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Rod Hall to race the 1000-Mile Baja for the 50th time

Off-road racing legend Rod Hall will tackle the Badlands of Baja for his 50th 1000-mile peninsula run. 4x4 Australia’s Chris Collard will be strapped in alongside Rod for the run.

Rod Hall to race the 1000-Mile Baja for the 50th time
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THERE ARE only a handful of names in off-road racing that merit the title of ‘living legend’.

The criteria may vary depending on which campfire debate you eavesdrop on, but everyone seems to agree that those whom have been playing in the dirt for 50 years qualify; they’re even raised to near-deity status.

Back in 1967, Rod Hall, a young gas station owner and four-wheel drive enthusiast, heard about a new event while Jeeping with friend Larry Minor at Pismo Dunes, California. It wasn’t the normal gymkhana that he’d done before, but a 1000-mile desert adventure in a land with no maps, few petrol sources and even fewer towns.

Rod Hall's Ford Bronco rearThe two pooled their funds, bought a stock Jeep CJ-5 and mailed in a registration form for the National Off-Road Racing Association’s (NORRA) Mexican 1000.

Between the starting line in Ensenada and the chequered flag in La Paz, they dodged tyre-shredding cacti, baked in the unrelenting Mexican sun, cleared hill and dale, got lost a dozen times, tossed their tools out (too much clanking around), and ate soggy sandwiches their wives had packed in a cooler. With only a whiskey compass and the sun to navigate by, they somehow made it to La Paz.

Rod hall bronco engineIt was the opening chapter of a carrier that would span five decades, many continents, a number of vehicle brands, record-breaking winning streaks (35 straight, which still stands), and it would put its lead character in the history books.

Last year, Rod Hall pulled his championship Ford Bronco, which he won the 1969 Mexican 1000 in, from the Off Road Motorsports Hall of Fame’s museum in Reno, Nevada, and sent it to Samco Fabrication for a full restoration.

The crewThe Bronco, which was built by Bill Stroppe, has a past that’s as storied as Hall himself. After Hall and teammate Larry Minor drove it to an overall win in the 1969 Mexican 1000, it was sold, raced, resold and then retired to a Barstow junkyard in California.

Half buried in sand and nearly forgotten, it was discovered by a local race fan and restaurant owner, and put on display in front of a Denny’s. In 2003 it was donated to ORMHOF and found its way back to Hall.

Rod Hall and ford broncoOn April 24, Hall, who has achieved more podium finishes that any American off-road racer, including 24 Baja 1000 Class wins and the only overall win in a four-wheel drive, will slip behind the wheel and again pilot his old steed down the peninsula in the 2016 General Tire NORRA Mexican 1000. It will be a monumental 50th 1000-mile Baja race for Hall.

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