Drag Racing Baseball T-Shirts
Legendary Drag Racer "Jungle Jim" Liberman Baseball T-Shirt
by DarkLordPug
$19 $26
Defunct Pos-A-Traction Car Racing Tires Baseball T-Shirt
by DarkLordPug
$19 $26
Description: a little Modesto, a little Pasadena ,a touch San Demas, drag racing , hot rods in the summer sun.
So Cal Hot Rod drag racing cartoon Baseball T-Shirt
by Silentlyrob668
$19 $26
1982 Spring Nationals Drag Racing Baseball T-Shirt
by CultOfRomance
$19 $26
Jungle Pam - Retro 70s Car Drag Racing Icon Baseball T-Shirt
by DarkLordPug
$19 $26
Description: Epic vintage drag racing portrait-and-car graphic combining Big Daddy Don Garlits with his legendary Swamp Rat rear-engine dragster. Black and gold with NHRA Hall of Fame energy. For the serious drag racing historian and NHRA devotee.
Don Garlits Big Daddy NHRA Legend Vintage Drag Racing Art Baseball T-Shirt
by RacingRoots
$19 $26
Description: A perfect gift for someone who loves drag racing. Perfect to wear on Christmas, Birthday, Halloween, Father's Day, Thanksgiving, Anniversary and even on ordinary days.
It's Nice To Be Stroked But I'd Rather Be Blown Funny Drag Racing Baseball T-Shirt
by TeeNation
$19 $26
Description: This design combines the thrill of drag racing with the joy of our furry friends. A perfect blend of speed and wagging tails. Get yours now! A collaboration with rbpro! Visit the designer's website at rbpro.gumroad.com
Involves Drag Racing And Dogs Funny. Collab with RbPro Baseball T-Shirt
by mareescatharsis
$19 $26
Description: While organized drag racing came about in 1951, it was in the early '60s that the big three started paying attention. Detroit began quietly building stock-looking cars stuffed full of high-performance parts and no factory warranty, aimed squarely at taking drag strips by storm. With this new breed of off the lot drag racers, increasing numbers of people were suddenly able to get into drag racing without having to build a car from scratch, and boy did they ever. Once the bug had bitten them, they were all in as drag nuts and their stock racers began the never-ending modification process that all hot rodders go through in pursuit of speed.
K & G Speed Associates Havertown, PA - Jungle Jim Liberman Baseball T-Shirt
by DarkLordPug
$19 $26
Description: Ed Iskenderian was a Southern California hot rodder in the years leading up to WWII, working to make his roadster go faster. Post war, a high demand for parts from returning GIs eager to get back to hot rodding was so great that Iskenderian was faced with a long wait for a cam he wanted for his own car. Figuring he could do just as well himself, he bought a surplus cylindrical grinder, converted it into a cam-grinding machine, and went to work. He wasn’t just making a similar cam to those available at the time – he made them better. His cams made big power, and a business grew on the strength of that reputation that would succeed for decades to come, rightfully earning the title of America's fastest racing cams.
Jungle Jim - Retro 70s Car Drag Racer Baseball T-Shirt
by DarkLordPug
$19 $26
Description: Super Stock & Drag Illustrated was founded by John "Monk" Reynolds, publisher of Eastern Drag News and owner of Pennsylvania's US30 drag strip. The first issue was November 1964 and the magazine published continuously until June 1996 when it was re-titled 'Drag Racing' and only made it a few more years until a final issue in March 1999. The magazine was a thoughtful mix of drag racing coverage, tech articles, and street machines, which gave it pretty diverse appeal to gear heads of all sorts.
Description: More American Graffiti is set over the course of four New Year's Eve holidays beginning in 1964 and tells four separate stories, one of which is that of John Milner, the head honcho of the racing scene in the first film, as his drag racing career advances. John's story follows him and the Milner Racing Team crew through a series of personal and professional ups and downs, culminating in a fatal finale. This Milner Racing Team design is a replica based on a screen used tee, ensuring it's accurate to those seen in the film.
Description: Founded in 1964 in Columbus, Ohio, Nationwise was a chain of auto parts stores in the United States. In 1974, Nationwise partnered with Columbus-based engine builders, The Rod Shop, sponsoring a series of highly successful drag racecars. In stores, a Rod Shop section was created as kind of a speed shop inside of a parts store. In addition to go fast goodies from all the big names, Nationwise also sold Rod Shop branded performance parts. These parts were typically embossed with NRS (Nationwise Rod Shop), making them easy to identify by collectors, even decades later. The Rod Shop partnership ended in 1987, and less than a decade later, Nationwise became insolvent, and closed all stores on Sunday, October 15, 1995 at 3:00 PM.
Description: Perfect Products began forming fiberglass hoods, scoops, and body panels in the early '60s as a white label supplier to other companies. By the late '60s, they had had started advertising direct sales in the various hot rod and drag racing magazines, selling via mail order though their catalog. Whether you needed a bolt on hood scoop or a one piece front clip, Akron, Ohio's Perfect Products was the best in the business.
Description: This design includes a large Bee Line Dragway imprint on the back and a small AHRA logo on the front making it twice as cool! On July 20, 1963, ground was broken for a drag strip to be built on the Salt River Indian Reservation in what was then a pretty rural area in Scottsdale, Arizona. Jim Rodgers, national 1962 C/S drag champ, built the track on eighty acres of land leased for ten years from the Salt River Pima Indian tribe. Directions to the track were given as being four miles north of the McDowell Road on Arizona Highway 87. It was a 60-foot wide quarter-mile asphalt strip, with seating for 2,000 people, and a pit area to accommodate 300 cars. It opened for every-week Sunday racing on October 6, 1963, under AHRA sanction.
Bee Line Dragway Vintage Arizona Drag Racing Baseball T-Shirt
by JCD666
$19 $26