Equally adept on both dirt and asphalt surfaces, he captured 7 track titles and nearly 200 feature wins in the northeastern United States and the southeastern Canada.
[1][2] Gary Reddick was born in Ottawa, Canada, and as a teenager moved with his family to a farm in Depauville, New York, a small hamlet with just one service station.
John Geng, the station's owner, fielded a car numbered Suzy-0 at the Watertown Speedway NY, and eventually added the S-1 and S-2 to the stable.
Reddick joined the pit crew in 1959, and by the end of the 1960 season, was driving the S-3.
Eleven years later, Reddick was faced with a similar situation at Can-Am Speedway, where he and driver Lew Miller pulled driver Kurt Bronson out of his burning car, although Bronson succumbed to his injuries weeks later.