It's part of an effort to ensure the future of an event that looked like a longshot before race officials satisfied the Federal Aviation Administration with added safety precautions last year, and persuaded state tourism officials to pony up sponsorship money to cover a doubling of insurance costs.
"It was important to get last year's event under our belts, part of a healing process," said Mike Houghton, president and CEO of the Reno Air Racing Association.
Houghton expects as many as 75,000 people to visit the 2013 competition through Sunday, for a weeklong, overall attendance of 200,000, compared to about 190,000 last year.
During World War II, Hoover's Mark V Spitfire was shot down off the coast of Southern France. He was imprisoned in a German camp before stealing a plane and flying to freedom under fire from allied troops who mistook him for the enemy.
Four years after his dramatic 1945 escape from Nazi Germany, Hoover was sitting on the roof of a hangar on Labor Day weekend in Ohio watching what would be the last National Air Racing Championships at Cleveland Municipal Airport when he saw pilot Bill Odom lose control of a P-51 Mustang, veer off course and into a home, killing him and two others on the ground.
"The plane snapped and went into a house and that ended the Cleveland Air Races," Hoover said.
He had the same sinking feeling two years ago when he witnessed another vintage P-51 slam into the apron of the grandstand at Reno-Stead Airport, killing longtime Hollywood stunt pilot Jimmy Leeward and 10 people on the ground and seriously injuring scores more.
"We all watched the whole thing as it happened, just appalled at what we were seeing  just devastating," said Hoover, who was in a golf cart near the carnage on the tarmac.
Hoover admits he never thought the competition would get off the ground when Bill Stead  a World War II flying ace, wealthy Nevada rancher and hydroplane champion  first approached him about trying to help persuade casino mogul Bill Harrah and others to revive the competition that hadn't run since the Cleveland crash in 1949.
Stead owned more than 1,000 acres north of Reno that he thought would be the perfect place to build a race course, but Hoover told him Reno wasn't big enough to support such an event.
"I said Reno is just too remote. It wouldn't be financially successful," he recalls. Stead told him, "It will catch on."
"And now," Hoover said, "we've got them coming from all over the world."