Category: Featured Interview

Featured interviews from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • Richard Petty speaks about females in racing, thoughts on rule changes and more

    Richard Petty speaks about females in racing, thoughts on rule changes and more

    Last weekend, Richard Petty was the special guest as part of the Canadian Motorsports Expo. Petty was brought on stage to take part in a half hour Q&A with fans, before signing autographs.

    Never one to shy away from expressing his opinion, Petty answered the questions from the fans in his most honest way possible.

    Most people have since heard of Petty’s comments that Petty told the Toronto Star during the media session.

    “If everybody stayed home. If she’d been a male, nobody would ever know if she’d showed up at a race track.”

    The question about Patrick directly was brought up to Petty following the Q&A after a fan asked for Petty’s thoughts about females in racing.

    “I’m not a fan of it,” he commented. “I believe men were born to drive, but woman should do something else.”

    He went on to express how females and males are built different physically and that plays in effect to driving.

    Petty was also asked about his thoughts on the Chase format.

    “I won the championship seven times but was done five different ways,” he commented. “You have a good year and you won. This format…you could win 15 races and not win the title, but you could win zero races and win the title.

    “I think you’ve heard of this thing called Obamacare and I think they asked Obama if he could help them with the Chase points system.”

    Other concerns have surrounded the races that are included in the Chase and whether a road course should be added.

    “We need cookie cutters, Martinsville, Bristol and a road course – to be a champion, you have to be good everywhere,” he commented.

    Petty’s thoughts on the Chase led to a fan asking about his thoughts on the new qualifying format…

    “The new 10 year TV contract brought it about,” he stated. “Qualifying usually takes two hours and TV said they’d only give an hour so they needed to think of some scheme.”

    Petty also expressed concern of the fact that teams are only allowed to use one set of tires for the whole session.

    Other topics included bringing a Sprint Cup Series race to Canada, which Petty said would be a success, but is tough to do with the current schedule.

    “We run 36 races for points, and then two exhibition races and then the two 150s,” he explained. “Not enough time to start adding more. If they start going to each track once rather than twice, then there’s a good chance.”

    There topics of a lighter nature, including how the petty blue was developed.

    “It came about at two or three in the morning,” Petty recalled. “We didn’t have enough color to paint the whole car so we mixed them together – a bit white, a bit of blue. Once it was done and we saw it, we liked it.”

    The fan forum ended off with Petty’s advice to drivers that are trying to make their way up through the ranks.

    “If some guy walked up to me and asked me for advice, I tell them to forget what they know,” Petty started. “Look at nothing but racing for four years. Do nothing but race. Dedication is what it takes.

    “I believe in fate. If it’s going to happen, it’ll happen. Don’t be let down if it doesn’t happen.”

  • Mack DeMan says Lucas Oil Can-Am Midget Championship “finally sunk in”

    Mack DeMan says Lucas Oil Can-Am Midget Championship “finally sunk in”

    Last year, Mack DeMan had a memorable season, claiming his first ever Lucas Oil Can-Am Midget Championship. At the Canadian Motorsports Expo, DeMan said it “finally sunk in. Felt good to bring trophy home to the shop. We had a good year.”

    DeMan was one of the six drivers that was featured as part of the Young Gun Panel, a group of young drivers that are looking to make a name for themselves in racing.

    DeMan started racing go-karts at the age of seven in the Waterloo Regional Kart Club, winning races and championships. From there, he graduated to the Can-Am Midget ranks and currently races the No. 40 Lucas Oil sponsored Can-Am Midget for car owner Andy Mackereth.

    After finishing third in points in 2012, DeMan came out last year, strong all season and was able to take home the championship.

    “Each year you learn more about set-up and how to run well on track,” he commented. “Lots of talent is coming up ranks we’ll have our work cut out next year.”

    DSCF0005One of the unique things with the Midgets, as DeMan points out, is you have to build them all yourself.

    “You got to fabricate everything on them yourself,” he commented. “You can’t buy one. You got to build it and hope it’s fast.”

    DeMan will be back with the Midget club in 2014 as he looks to defend his title, though is looking to possibly run some ISMA Super Modified races in the future.

    He recently expanded his racing horizons, going to Atlantic City, New Jersey to run the Gambler’s Classic. After finishing fourth in his heat and failing to make the main event by one spot, he started up front in the B-Main and brought home the win. DeMan then started 22nd in the main event and had worked his way up to 14th before a wreck took him out of the running. DeMan has posted videos from the event, which can be viewed on his youtube channel at http://www.youtube.com/user/CanamDriver93.

    “We took a knife down to a gun fight but had a lot of fun. Definitely new experience but lots of fun,” he commented. “We plan to go back next year and try again with a list of improvements.”

  • Brandon Watson ranked Top Driver in Inside Track Power Rankings

    Brandon Watson ranked Top Driver in Inside Track Power Rankings

    For the second straight season in a row, Brandon Watson found himself at the top as he won his second straight OSCAAR Super Late Model Championship.

    “We kept our nose clean and were able to win the title,” he commented. “Definitely got to thank the crew, especially my dad. Definitely without them, we wouldn’t be here. They are always thrashing on the car.”

    For his accomplishments, Watson was honored at the 2014 Canadian Motorsports Expo as part of the Short Track Night of Champions. He was also ranked first in the Inside Track Year End Short Track Power Rankings presented by London Recreational.

    Going into the year, Watson wasn’t even sure if he was going to run the full schedule.

    “We didn’t know what to expect going into year but got off to a good start and stayed with it,” he commented.

    Photo Credit: Ashley McCubbin
    Photo Credit: Ashley McCubbin

    Though after winning three of the first four features of the season, the decision was simple – run the full schedule and go for the championship.

    From there, Watson finished inside the top five every week – except Kawartha where mechanical problems took him out of the running.

    Watson announced at the CME that he will not be back to OSCAAR full-time in 2014 as he is looking to go run some late model races in the United States with the CRA Series.

    Watson will kick off his season like many drivers do by heading down to take part in the World Series Speedweeks at New Smryna Speedway. Last year, Watson was able to pull off a couple of feature victories.

    “Obviously going down there looking for success,” he commented. Hope to get it figured out and also get some top five finishes.”

  • Andrew Gresel receives Inside Track Rookie of the Year Award at CME

    Andrew Gresel receives Inside Track Rookie of the Year Award at CME

    Coming into the 2013 season, Andrew Gresel was going to use his rookie season to, as he said, “figure everything out”.  Gresel would debut his Hemke chassis at the second race of the OSCAAR Super Late Model season – Barrie Speedway – finishing inside of the top three.

    “I was nervous,” Gresel admitted. “I didn’t get a lot of time in it (pre-season). Lots of fun, lots of work, but it paid off.”

    Gresel then backed it up with a pair of solid runs in the Don Biederman Memorial features, before grabbing his first career OSCAAR victory at his home track of Sauble Speedway.

    “It felt good to win at home,” Gresel commented.

    From there, Gresel kept racking up solid points finishes and won a couple more races along the way, including leading all 50 laps at Kawartha Speedway.

    “I knew Kawartha would be an awesome track,” he commented. “I just enjoy it and the car was working good from start. I love Kawartha and would run there every week if I could.”

    Gresel then capped off the season with the biggest win of all – the Autumn Colors Classic – to finish second in points and win OSCAAR SLM Rookie of the Year. Gresel attributes the success to hard work all season long.

    “The more you put in, the more you get out,” Gresel commented. “You will know the car better.”

    Gresel was honored for his success at the Canadian Motorsports Expo Short Track Night of Champions, receiving the 2014 Inside Track Rookie of the Year Award, as well as being ranked fifth in the Inside Track Year End Short Track Power Rankings presented by London Recreational.

    Gresel has announced his return to OSCAAR in 2014 with his focus on the championship.

    “We’re running the full season and definitely shooting for the championship,” he commented. “Hope to pull it off but we got a lot of work to do.”

    Before the OSCAAR season starts in May, Gresel will head down to New Smyrna Speedway to take part in their World Series Speedweeks event, running his Pro Late Model that he campaigned to a championship previously at Delaware Speedway.

    “We’re ready to go,” he said. “The car needs a lot of adjustments but we’re ready. We’re going to have some fun.”

  • Jay Beasley Sees D4D Opportunity as Dream Come True

    Jay Beasley Sees D4D Opportunity as Dream Come True

    For 21 year old Jay Beasley, himself a track champion in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Super Late Model at The Bullring at Las Vegas, being chosen for the 2014 Drive for Diversity Class is nothing short of a dream come true.

    “It’s amazing and I’ve been thinking about this my whole life being in NASCAR,” Beasley said. “For NASCAR to look at me and want me to be in this D4D family is a huge recognition.”

    “It feels really amazing and it’s a blessing.”

    Beasley was born and raised in Las Vegas and loves racing in the area. In addition to his home town track championship, he has also won the Series Nevada championship with eight victories in 14 starts. In addition, the young up and comer was the recipient of the 2013 Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award due to his early successes on the track.

    “I love Las Vegas,” Beasley said. “It’s really cool racing out on the west coast.”

    “The Bull Ring is a really tough track,” Beasley continued. “It seems like having that track under my belt helps me out at every other track that I go to.”

    While Beasley is perfectly at home and has had great success at the Vegas Bull Ring, he will now be challenged to race in the K&N Pro Series East for Rev Racing on tracks where he has never been before in his life.

    “I’ve only been on one track back east and that’s Langley for the combine,” Beasley said. “So, I’m really, really green. Everything is new to me.”

    “This year, I’m really excited to be going to these different tracks and to be racing in the K&N East Series,” Beasley continued. “Everything is going to be different and I actually get a kick out of that and it fires me up even more.”

    “I have to adapt quickly and be on the ball, because if I’m not, I’m going to struggle.”

    Beasley is also looking to adapt to his team and is already hard at work on establishing that critical relationship with them, as well as crew chief Eddie Dickerson.

    “My crew chief has been in the sport for a really long time, has worked for Hendrick, and has built a whole bunch of chasses,” Beasley said. “Everyone that is in the Rev Racing program has been in the NASCAR family for quite some time. So, when you get picked, it’s truly an honor to be working with these people because they have so much knowledge.”

    “Coming into the shop and working with the guys, you are learning and gaining a relationship every day,” Beasley continued. “It’s really amazing.”

    While Beasley admits that there are many racing idols that he looks up to, he is also committed to being his own individual on the track, as well as creating his own unique style and brand.

    “I look at a lot of drivers and there are just things about drivers that make them who they are,” Beasley said. “Like Jimmie Johnson, he has won so many championships and he is so level-headed. Clint Bowyer is really a crazy guy but he’s himself and is not trying to put on a façade. Then you have the Busch boys and they are bad and then they are good and trying to be better and they’re fast.”

    “I’m excited to change the sport and put some Jay Beasley into it and to make a name for myself and to put my brand out there.”

    “My brand is going to be the Michael Jordan of NASCAR,” Beasley continued. “That means that I can have any age kid want to be like me. Or I can give them a good way to look at life, not just racing.”

    “I just want to open people’s minds about racing and the passion for it,” Beasley said. “It’s not about the money or the fame because when you get into that race car, you are in bliss. You’re happy and you do it because you love to do it.”

    “You’re not there to make it into the fame but to do it because it feels good in your heart,” Beasley continued. “That’s how I feel. Being in that race car is like that oxygen. For me to survive and for me to live, I need to be in that race car or I’m not living.”

    “That’s just the way it is.”

    Beasley has clear goals for 2014, as well as bringing balance to what he knows will be a challenging season.

    “My goals for 2014 would be to finish every race and not get wrecked out,” Beasley said. “To get top-10s and top-5s and to even win a couple races would be amazing. To adapt and to be in the shop every day with my guys working on the car and working out are all goals to write down and keep digging on.”

    “This is going to be more exciting to me,” Beasley continued. “I will have to take one day at a time, have fun and enjoy what’s going on.”

    “I will have to really stop and smell the roses because this doesn’t happen every day,” Beasley said. “I’m just really excited and I need to thank NASCAR and everyone getting ready for the season so we can do what we love to do.”

  • Gary McLean reflects back on his second OSCAAR Modified Championship

    Gary McLean reflects back on his second OSCAAR Modified Championship

    The 2012 season marked the inaugural season of the OSCAAR Hanover Holiday Modifieds and Gary McLean went out and flat out dominated on his way to winning the championship. Last season, McLean once again went out with the same goal in mind and succeeded – scoring five wins and 11 top fives – for his second straight OSCAAR Championship.

    In reflecting back on the championship run at the Canadian Motorsports Expo, McLean said that this past year was certainly tougher than 2012.

    “But that’s what you expect,” McLean added. “You help the kids and get them better because you want to race the best guys.”

    The Conn native kicked last season off like he kicked last year by winning the season opener at Sunset Speedway after leading all 30 laps. He’d then back the win up with a second at Barrie Speedway, followed by a third at Delaware Speedway. A return trip to Sunset Speedway brought forth McLean a solid fourth place finish, followed by an 11th place finish the next night after suffering damage in an early race incident.

     McLean would get the damage fixed on his No. 8 McLean Industrial Design and Fabrication Ltd./McLean Farms Modified before the series headed to Sauble Speedway. He’d duel with David McCullough for the lead for a number of laps before settling for second.
    McLean then got on a roll as he would win at Sunset Speedway at the end of July, followed by a win at the Chase for the Colours event at Peterborough Speedway.
    McLean then finished off the month of August with a solid fourth at Kawartha Speedway, followed by a second at Delaware Speedway.
    Photo Credit: Ashley McCubbin
    Photo Credit: Ashley McCubbin

    The only DNF of McLean’s season would come at Flamboro Speedway when a mid-race wreck saw McLean’s modified sustain heavy front end damage.

    The No. 8 would work hard and have the car ready to go for the Rick Woolner Memorial at Varney Motor Speedway.
    “If it was any race but the Rick Woolner Memorial, you wouldn’t had seen the car back,” McLean stated. “These guys work hard and you can’t expect them to drop everything and come help. But for that race, they bonded together.”
    The hard work paid off as McLean timed in as the quickest car and won the preliminary feature on Saturday night at Varney. Rain would then fall, forcing the Sunday 50 lap feature to be moved to Sunset Speedway’s Velocity weekend and shortened to 40 laps. McLean kept the domination going despite the move to Sunset as he won his heat and then led all 40 laps on the way to scoring the victory.

    McLean then capped off his 2013 season with a win in the Autumn Colours Classic at Peterborough Speedway after holding the field off in a series of late race restarts.
    McLean says when it comes to his team, they focus on each race.
    “Really we go to every race to win,” McLean said. “We have a lot of fun. The guys put a lot of work into it. We just go for the win.”
    McLean will be back in 2014 as the series heads in a new direction, ready for their inaugural trip to Capital City Speedway.
    “Excited to try out a new track,” he commented. “We’ll go have some fun and see what we can do.”
    He’s also excited in the way the series is heading with a large car count expected in just the series’ third year.
    “There’s more and more interest,” he said. “Lot of guys are going to step up that have ran other series, and some are coming to run the series that have competed in the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series.”
    For his success last year, McLean was honored as part of the CME Short Track Night of Champions and was ranked sixth on Inside Track’s Year End Short Track Power Rankings presented by London Recreational.
  • Sergio Peña Sets Sights on Championship as Fourth Year D4D Participant

    Sergio Peña Sets Sights on Championship as Fourth Year D4D Participant

    A multi-year participant in NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity program, 21 year old Sergio Peña has set a high bar for himself in the K&N Pro Series East this year. In fact, the first generation Colombian American from Virginia, along with his Rev Racing team, intends to be the champion.

    “I definitely have my goals set high this year,” Peña said. “This is my fourth full-time season in the K&N Pro Series East and I want to go out and win as many races as I can and hopefully the championship.”

    Peña already has three career K&N Pro Series East wins under his belt, as well as a pair of top-10 finishes in the point standings and 19 top-10 finishes in 39 East starts. But he yearns for the big prize in 2014, just like one of his racing idols and former Rev Racing driver Kyle Larson.

    “I know Rev Racing is capable of doing it because they’ve done it with Kyle Larson,” Peña said. “They’ve had strong programs every year.”

    “Any up and coming driver right now wants to imitate what Kyle Larson is doing,” Peña continued. “He’s kind of set the standard.”

    “So to be doing it with the same team that he had and his same group of guys is exciting,” Peña said. “Everyone works together and it’s a big family here at Rev Racing so I’m excited to be a part of it and hopefully I can follow in his footsteps for sure.”

    Although Peña is excited about working with his Rev Racing team, he admits that they are a totally new group and he and his team have much to learn about one another.

    “I’ve got a whole new group this year so that will be interesting to get to know everyone,” Peña said. “I’ve been in the shop a few times and got to meet my crew chief, car chief, and a couple of the guys who will be working on the car.”

    “I’ll have to get to know those new faces as quickly as possible so that we can click as a group,” Peña continued. “If you don’t have a good relationship with your guys, it just doesn’t work out very well.”

    “So, I’ve been in the shop and we’re getting along great,” Peña said. “I’m excited to get going here and do some racing.”

    Many, including East Series Director Kip Childress, have described Peña as a very calculating, very precise racer. So, how does Peña prepare himself for the 2014 season?

    “I go to the gym every single day,” Peña said. “That’s something that I’ve been doing since high school.”

    “I’m really into sports and I play basketball almost every day too,” Peña continued. “Staying physically fit is something that I stay on stop of a lot.”

    Peña is also very exacting as far as his mental approach to the sport. And for this up and coming driver, it is all about maintaining his focus.

    “I would say this is more of a mental sport than any sport there is,” Peña said. “When you’re driving on the edge at one hundred plus miles per hour, you definitely need to be focused.”

    “It’s something that you train yourself over the years from when you first start racing,” Peña continued. “You learn how to focus, how to stay focused in those longer races, and throughout the years, I’ve just learned how to stay focused.”

    While Peña is focused on winning the K&N Pro Series East championship, he also has his eye on another prize, that of moving up to the next level in the sport.

    “I definitely have a relationship with several Truck Series and Nationwide teams,” Peña said. “As we all know, a lot in this sport is about funding. It’s hard to find sponsorship to do that so I definitely want to leave many doors open as I can to find some rides like that.”

    While Peña has been competing since he was four years old, when his father bought him a dirt bike, he credits his success in NASCAR to date to the Drive for Diversity program.

    “My involvement with the Drive for Diversity program has definitely helped me,” Peña said. “NASCAR is trying to get more diverse and this program is proven to work very well.”

    “I believe that being a part of this program is definitely helping factor into my success,” Peña continued. “In fact, it can be the deciding factor in not only NASCAR since the whole entire country is trying to diversify in every angle.”

    “It’s an awesome opportunity to be a part of and I’m really thankful that I’m selected again to participate,” Peña said. “I’m ready to help them spread diversity through the sport.”

    “And I’m definitely ready to win that championship.”

  • Daniel Suárez Proud to Represent Mexico in 2014 Drive for Diversity Class

    Daniel Suárez Proud to Represent Mexico in 2014 Drive for Diversity Class

    While Daniel Suárez is proud to have been chosen for NASCAR’s 2014 Drive for Diversity program, he is even prouder to represent his country of Mexico in the sport.

    Suárez, a 22 year old driver from Monterrey, Mexico, will be competing for his second year with Rev Racing in the K&N Pro Series East. Last year, he finished third in the championship standings in that Series, the highest mark for an international driver in the Series’ history.

    The young up and coming driver earned his first K&N Pro Series win at Columbus Motor Speedway in 2013. He was also the championship runner-up in the NASCAR Mexico Toyota Series.

    Suárez admits that the competition is intense in the K&N East Series. But he also feels that his strong finish last year, particularly in the second half of the season, will give him and his team just the boost they need to get out of the gate fast for 2014.

    “There are many teams competing in the K&N East so that’s pretty tough and for sure there are many good teams,” Suárez said. “But I feel that Rev Racing is doing an awesome job and now with the same people as last year, we are going to start pretty strong.”

    “I feel like in 2013, the start of the year was pretty difficult,” Suárez continued. “Many small things were not in the best position but in the second part of the year, we were earning more points than anyone.”

    “We closed 2013 very, very strong so I feel like if we can start 2014 like that, we’re going to be pretty strong.”

    One of the biggest hurdles that the driver, his crew chief Skip Eyler, and his team have had to face is communicating effectively with one another, especially in the heat of race competition.

    “Last year, everything was difficult, not just for me but for my team because with me being from another country and speaking another language, it’s kind of difficult,” Suárez said. “I mean, I can speak English but when you are in the race car, with all the engine sounds, it’s kind of difficult to keep up.”

    “But now I feel like our communication is good already.”

    In addition to having mastered the art of conversation, Suárez is also thrilled to have his sponsor, Visit Acapulco and Tourism of Mexico, return to his race car.

    “It’s awesome because when they support me, many people in Mexico are now knowing that there is a race car driver from their country and that is something,” Suárez  said. “They are looking forward to being involved again because they were happy with what happened last year.”

    With this young racer being unique in his country of origin, at least for so many who participate in the sport, just how did he get interested in becoming a NASCAR competitor?

    “For me, it was kind of different than everyone,” Suárez said. “Normally, everyone starts because his dad or his grandpa was a race car driver or something like that but my family doesn’t come from racing.”

    “I have a friend that used to race go karts,” Suárez continued. “When I was ten years old, he met me to do a practice and to hang out on the weekend. His dad started watching me and he told my family that I got some potential.”

    “When I turned eleven, my dad bought me a go kart and then we started doing some races and I started winning,” Suárez said. “That was really impressive and so we did more and more races.”

    “My second year racing when I was 12 years old, I went to Las Vegas actually and we ended up in the top-five getting the best Mexican driver in the States,” Suárez continued. “We started doing some international races and we went to Europe and everything that started like a hobby started changing to be my career like it is now.”

    Suárez admits that he looks up to many drivers as potential role models, however, he has been humbled to be also wear the moniker of role model himself.

    “There are many drivers that I want to be like them or I want to compete with them,” Suárez said. “There are many drivers out there that are really good, like Jimmie Johnson and Brad Keselowski, not just here in America but also in Europe.”

    “Well, my goal is to be the first Mexican in the top series,” Suárez continued. “I will tell you something, I was in the Hall of Fame in Charlotte signing autographs and some Mexican fans came out to ask for our autograph and I was very surprised”

    “Those guys not just brought the hero card to sign but they also brought a very old picture of me when I was starting here in the States racing stock cars,” Suárez said. “And that really was really important for me because many Hispanic fans here in the States are starting to follow me and my career.”

    “I mean, hopefully we can keep winning races and being in the top all the time to have more Hispanic people to follow me,” Suárez continued. “And hopefully we can make my goal of a championship come true.”

    Although Suárez cannot wait for the 2014 season to start so that he can work toward achieving his goal, he is also, in one word, grateful for the opportunity.

    “I want to say thank you for everyone in NASCAR for the Diversity program, Suárez said. “The luck to be part of this program in 2013, with more learning and getting the opportunity to still learn about this is awesome.”

    “I’m really proud of this opportunity and looking forward for it.”

     

  • Ryan Gifford Confident As 2014 Drive for Diversity Contender

    Ryan Gifford Confident As 2014 Drive for Diversity Contender

    NASCAR Drive for Diversity (D4D) recently announced its 2014 class of young, up and coming multicultural and female drivers and one of the headliners of the group is Ryan Gifford.

    Gifford, a 24 year old from Tennessee, made history in 2010 by becoming the first African-American driver to win a NASCAR K&N Pro Series East pole position. He also scored his first East win at Richmond last year, as well as making his Nationwide debut for Richard Childress Racing.

    “First of all, it’s awesome to be back with the team,” Gifford said as he returns to his same Rev Racing team from last season. “It’s rare to get this opportunity this many times and I’m looking forward to having a really good year.”

    “I think we’re going to bring back most of the same guys on the team and I’ll have the same crew chief Mark Green,” Gifford continued. “We had a good run last year and I really like all my guys.”

    “They work their guts out for me and I think that’s what it takes.”

    “I know Mark’s really excited and they’ve put a lot of work into the cars over the winter,” Gifford continued. “Really for me, I’m excited to have new cars coming together. And when I go to the shop and see everyone working, I think it will be a really cool year.”

    While Gifford admits that he learned many lessons from last year, the biggest lesson learned sounds easier said than done.

    “I’ve learned just to be confident in myself really,” Gifford said. “To know that I can go out there and be fast and know I’m capable of doing it this year, which means everything to me.”

    “I want to go out and win the championship this year.”

    Gifford has also learned a great deal about the tracks on which he has competed. This has been especially challenging for the young D4D competitor as his background has primarily been on the local dirt tracks.

    “For me, my best tracks where I feel most comfortable are the companion races and the faster tracks,” Gifford said. “I don’t have a lot of experience on pavement even though I’ve driven in the K&N Series for four years.”

    “Before that, I raced all dirt,” Gifford continued. “So, all those kinds of race tracks compare more to the dirt than the little, slower short tracks that we go to. I think the slower places are the ones I struggle at more.”

    “But last year, I did really well there too so I think this year will be fun,” Gifford said. “I know I still have a lot to learn but I’ve learned some of them the hard way. I think I’ve got a little experience under my belt and I’m ready to go for it.”

    While Gifford will most certainly be concentrating on asphalt racing, his heart and roots remain in dirt and he will continue to race late models whenever possible.

    “I think I’m looking at about 15 races this year,” Gifford said. “So, it will be exciting to fit all that into the schedule and try and make everything work.”

    “But I’m really excited to be able to do all that and it really helps to stay in the seat when we have two or three weeks off.”

    How does the young D4D competitor intend to balance the rigors of racing so often and on so many different surfaces?

    “I think just staying in the race car is the biggest thing that helps me balance it all,” Gifford said. “And staying in different kinds of race cars helps me adapt.”

    “I need to be a really versatile driver so that part will keep me mentally focused and not thinking about other things,” Gifford continued. “Aside from that, I stay busy at the shop and every now and then I try to squeeze in a work out to try to keep myself in shape. That keeps me comfortable when I’m in a race car.”

    Gifford has been significantly influenced by Richard Childress Racing, from the choice of his racing idol to his two best friends in the sport.

    “In the past, my racing idol has always been Dale Earnhardt but then, once I moved here, I’ve gotten to know the Dillon brothers and they are kind of like my brothers now,” Gifford said. “They have let me live with them for a couple of years and they’re really good friends.”

    “Seeing them go up through the ranks and handle everything has been really cool and I really look up to both of them.”

    Fans of the up and coming racer may also be surprised with his day job and his ability to work on his own race cars.

    “I still work at the shop and I still work on Austin and Ty’s cars,” Gifford said. “That’s pretty much my during the week job.”

    “Even K&N racing is still not the big time yet so you have to do what you can to pay the bills,” Gifford continued. “It’s a lot of fun to work on those cars.”

    “I can pretty much build a race car from the ground up so I’m for sure a gear head,” Gifford said. “I’ve always had to work on my own race cars and to build them and keep them up so, I’ve learned pretty much every angle of the sport that I can, including building the cars and servicing them.”

    “I think that’s a cool fact for fans to know.”

    But what Gifford really wants fans to know is how he intends to approach his 2014 Drive for Diversity K&N Pro Series season.

    “If I could choose one word to describe how I feel about the year and participating in the Drive for the Diversity Program it would be confident,” Gifford said. “I’m really excited for this year and can’t wait to get started.”

     

  • NASCAR BTS: Bob Pockrass ‘Humbled’ by NMPA Writer of the Year Honor

    NASCAR BTS: Bob Pockrass ‘Humbled’ by NMPA Writer of the Year Honor

    This week’s NASCAR Behind the Scenes focuses on one of the sports hardest working reporters Bob Pockrass, who received the National Motorsports Press Association’s highest honor this past weekend as Writer of the Year.

    And as is his typical style, Pockrass found the honor to be, in one word, humbling.

    “Well it means a great deal to me,” Pockrass said of the recognition. “When your work is put side by side with some of the other great writers that are in NMPA and that entered that contest, it’s very flattering and very humbling to have people think that you are worthy of that honor.”

    While flattered and humbled, however, Pockrass put the award in perspective, reflecting the real vision of how he approaches his writing and his work in the sport.

    “It’s great to be honored by people in the field but you always know that these decisions are a couple of people’s opinions so you don’t let it go to your head too much,” Pockrass said. “It’s just like the Oscars or the Golden Globes.”

    “You don’t write the stories to win awards,” Pockrass continued. “You write them to inform people.”

    “This is just a validation that you’ve done a good job in performing for the people who read the stories.”

    Pockrass has spent most of his career telling the stories of NASCAR to his readers and his knowledge of racing runs deep, from short tracks to the storied Indianapolis Motor Speedway where he grew up.

    “I’ve always had an interest in racing,” Pockrass said. “My older brother had done some journalism work for the school paper and was working for the Indianapolis News and so I kind of followed him because I had the same interest in journalism and in sports.”

    “I got my first job at the Daytona Beach newspaper and I worked there covering high school and college sports,” Pockrass continued. “And in January and February, I found myself at the race track helping out to cover NASCAR.”

    “I had some racing experience because at Indiana University I did some stringer work for UPI at Indianapolis Motor Speedway,” Pockrass said. “I spent one summer working for Gannett at the Speedway too.”

    “I always had an interest in racing and when NASCAR Scene had a job opening in 2003, they knew my work and that’s how my NASCAR-centric career got launched.”

    In addition to his NMPA Writer of the Year award and other accolades, Pockrass is probably most well-known for the time he puts in each and every weekend at the track, from being the first one at the media center to typically being the last one to leave at night.

    So, what drives this passion and dedication to telling the stories of NASCAR racing?

    “It’s really easy,” Pockrass said. “One of the first stories I did at Indiana was on the crop walk for hunger. And so I wrote about that in advance of the event and I had to go cover it.”

    “And when I got to the event, there were a couple of people there who had clipped the paper and signed up to do the walk,” Pockrass continued. “And I think that showed me the power of journalism and the power of being able to have an influence.”

    “And if you keep those people, those readers, in mind and know that you can influence what people do through what you write,” Pockrass said. “They may decide whether to go to a race or they may decide if they’re going to root for Jeff Gordon or boo Jeff Gordon or whether or not they will buy a Dale Earnhardt Jr. T-shirt or never buy one.”

    “I think that responsibility is what makes me want to do everything I can to be knowledgeable, that I’m writing with accuracy and with a passion for it,” Pockrass continued. “If I didn’t care, then I’m doing those people who read me a really big disservice.”

    “If you think about the people that are reading what you’re writing, it’s real easy to be there early and stay late because you owe it to them,” Pockrass said. “You owe it to your readers to give your best effort.”

    While Pockrass has told many stories over his years of covering NASCAR so passionately, there are several that have stood out as ones that touched him deeply.

    “The most memorable story was Dale Earnhardt’s death,” Pockrass said. “That was one day you just don’t forget.”

    “You don’t forget the scene of that evening and everything that surrounded that race,” Pockrass continued. “You don’t often see reporters crying when they’re writing.”

    “I’ll never forget seeing Ken Schrader outside the medical center and you could just tell,” Pockrass said. “His face was so white and his expression was that this was not good.”

    “That was one of those days that you never forget.”

    There are also stories that have been incredibly difficult to tell due to the personal connections that evolve after years of being in the garage area and getting to know the racers and team members on a weekly basis.

    “One of the other hardest stories that I had to write was the day that Rodney Orr died in Daytona,” Pockrass said. “He was from the area and I had talked to him several times.”

    “He had died a couple of days after Neil Bonnett died and we had talked about that in the garage,” Pockrass continued. “That was a pretty tough thing because he was a driver that I had known very well and one of the first drivers that I had known well that died on the race track.”

    With all that history and knowledge, including the highs and lows of the sport, fans might just be hoping that Pockrass would step back a minute and put his musings all in one place and join others in the sport who have written books on the subject.

    “I guess I might have a little bit of a desire to do a book, but I’m so busy with what I’m doing now that I need to give one hundred percent to,” Pockrass said. “So, I’ve never really thought about it very much because I enjoy doing what I’m doing.”

    “As long as I’ve still got the pen and the paper to do what I’m doing, I don’t know that I’d have the time to devote to a book.”

    Pockrass is also enjoying the new and evolving ways to interact with his readers, including social media and the popular ‘tweet ups’ that he hosts at almost every track, sharing the location of the event through Twitter.

    “The great thing about Twitter and the tweet ups is that I talk to more fans now than I ever did and get a better feeling about what the fans are thinking,” Pockrass said. “I embrace that.”

    “Sometimes it’s a juggling act between finding out information in the garage and meeting with the fans,” Pockrass continued. “But I think there are very few people who write and don’t interact with fans because they just don’t even know you or your writing are even there anymore.”

    Pockrass, along with his media brethren, are currently involved with the NASCAR media tour, meeting with all of the teams in preparation for the Daytona 500 and the start of the 2014 season. Looking into this own crystal ball, Pockrass has some predictions about the major story lines that he intends to cover for his readers and followers.

    “I think Tony Stewart coming back is going to be a major story line,” Pockrass said. “The new aero package for the cars and the new qualifying procedures will be story lines.”

    “And the changes to the Chase will be a major story line.”

    As the season gets underway, however, Pockrass took a moment to reflect again on the honor that he received this past weekend from the National Motor Sports Press Association for his work in telling the stories of the sport.

    “That’s what I do,” Pockrass said. “If you have that passion, it’s not hard.”

    “While it’s always good to be recognized, it is also humbling,” Pockrass continued. “But it’s a nice feeling.”