Category: Featured Interview

Featured interviews from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • Exclusive: Bubba Wallace embraces Richard Petty legacy while forging his own path

    Exclusive: Bubba Wallace embraces Richard Petty legacy while forging his own path

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. — In some ways, it was an unlikely pairing.

    Petty, deemed “The King” of stock car racing, was instrumental in the development of the sport while Bubba Wallace epitomizes the future of NASCAR.

    Wallace first connected with Richard Petty Motorsports in 2017 when he filled in for the injured Aric Almirola, competing in four races mid-season. After Almirola announced his departure from RPM at the end of 2017 Wallace was signed to drive the iconic No. 43 in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

    Since then, he has handled being the face of the African American community in NASCAR with a maturity beyond his years. He has also risen to the challenge of representing the legacy of Petty with ease.

    And though they come from different generations, they share a passion for racing and an appreciation for their fans that is reflected in their working relationship. Petty’s iconic status stems not only from his 200 wins in NASCAR’s top series but because of his dedication to those fans.

    Some drivers look at signing autographs as an obligation. Today’s fans often have to jump through hoops just to be part of autograph sessions that are first-come, first-served and limited to a strict period of time. Petty is a different breed of driver and has never forgotten that without fans, there would be no racing.

    Wallace shares Petty’s point of view.

    “We’re here racing, putting on a show for them,” he told me. “There’s obviously boundaries and the right times for the right things.” But, he continued, “You’ve got to realize, you’ve got to put yourself in their shoes. They don’t get this opportunity but one time out of the year when we travel to their state. They get to see an athlete right in front of them having a meal and obviously at the track. NASCAR is second to none as far as fan access.”

    Wallace has learned from the master, not through words, but by example.

    “There’s been plenty of opportunities where it’s just been him and me going to appearances and you see the fan engagement with him and you’re just like, Hey, that’s pretty cool and you want to be that guy.”

    “I don’t know if I’d ever be able to pull off the cowboy hat and the sunglasses,” he joked, “but yeah it’s pretty cool to see what he does for his fans.”

    While Wallace’s respect for Petty and his heritage is profound, he remains grounded by striving above all else to be true to himself. He prefers to concentrate on what lies ahead rather than look backward.

    “I think about it a lot. But times have definitely changed since then. Back when he was racing versus now, is a huge difference. The sport has totally changed since then. I look at it as driving an iconic number but rewriting history, no.”

    Above all else, Wallace has found a team that embraces his values as he upholds their traditions.

    His favorite aspect of driving for Petty, he said, “is that because it’s a small team, we’re all like family. We see the same people every day of the week around the shop. Everybody’s just there to bring you back up or cheer you on or keep you going so it’s super nice”.

    The best thing, he reiterates, is, “The Petty’s are all about family.”

    Follow @angiecampbell_ for the latest NASCAR news and feature stories.

  • Exclusive- Hailie Deegan taking her time rising through the ranks

    Exclusive- Hailie Deegan taking her time rising through the ranks

    Kansas City, KS – Many have probably already heard the name of the rising superstar Hailie Deegan who currently competes full-time in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series driving the No. 19 for Bill McAnally Racing. She also drove part-time in the No. 55 Venturini Motorsports Toyota this season for five races.

    Deegan is the daughter of Brian Deegan who had a historic career in the Supercross ranks back in the day. The Temecula, CA native broke through in NASCAR last season making her first career start at Bakersfield in the K&N West Series. Since then she has risen to stardom and taken the NASCAR world by storm. Many claim she is “the next big thing.” Deegan’s fan base is growing race by race, season by season and that has come with a lot of success.

    In this week’s interview, we talk with Deegan about how successful 2019 has been for her, how she got connected with the Venturini’s to drive for them in the ARCA Series, her debut and the criticisms she faced growing up.

    As mentioned, 2018 was a breakout year for Deegan who scored a popular victory at Meridian. Since her success in 2018, she has brought a lot of momentum into the 2019 season. The California native explains why she thinks she is having success for 2019.

    “I think after 2018, everything was going really good,” Deegan explains. “I’ve had some bumps in the road in 2019 but I think we had a really strong program building at the beginning of the year and it not only gave us high hopes but a nice pace that we were setting. Every season is not perfect, you’re not going have to a perfect season.”

    “There’s always a middle point in the season where everything gets a little rocky and it comes back up. So, I think we’re on that come back up point right now. We’ve had some good finishes these last couple of races. I’m happy with how everything is going on.”

    Deegan talks about how scoring her first career victory at Meridian was a big turning point in her young career.

    “I think it was cool because no other girl has done that before,” she explained. “It was in my first season and it was just a good program we had going with those team guys for a while. I think we had a strong program that I was confident in my abilities. Not like being cocky, but I was confident in my team, like confidence all the way around that I could do it. That race showed we definitely had our stuff together.”

    Deegan also earned another big win at the beginning of the 2019 season at the Las Vegas Dirt Track. She chooses what win is her favorite so far.

    “The first career victory is still the biggest one,” Deegan added. “The dirt track was cool because being a dirt racer, I wanted myself to win that last year but it just didn’t work out, I got second. Sheldon (Creed) is a good dirt racer so I’m not mad about that. The dirt race is cool because that’s where my background came from. That’s where I showed where I excel.”

    Before getting those victories to prove her doubters wrong, Deegan faced criticism growing up and details how she puts the noise behind her.

    “I think I just focus on my racing, focus on my driving,” she said. “I look at all the comments. I look at stuff on everything on social media. Like, I see every single thing on social media. If I don’t see it, it gets sent to me. I do see it all but at the end of the day, I know there has been no other girl in my position and have people supporting me. I’m in a good opportunity to make a lot happen but I’m still learning here.”

    “The people kind of set you to the expectation of Cup guys, like, Erik Jones and stuff like that. When in all reality, I haven’t made it to the top three series yet.”

    While competing full-time in the K&N Series, Deegan got connected with the Venturini’s to give her a shot in the ARCA Menards Series.

    “It’s really the TRD Program that put it together,” she describes. “Being with Toyota, having them support me in the K&N West with Bill McAnally. The next step would pretty much be in an ARCA car which came through with Venturini.”

    She made her debut at Toledo earlier this year where Deegan started 12th but wound up with a disappointing 18th place finish due to a crash. Other than an oil leak at Madison, she has finished in the top-10 in three starts and has a best finish of fifth which came at IRP.

    “I think that I could always do better,” Deegan said. “I am happy with the starts that we have had the past couple of races. Just because I know being another added car on the team, it’s hard being a part-timer compared to the full season guys. Even on the BMR program, there are part-time guys and if you are full-time, you can spread the attention out on how many people you have for the full-time guys. It’s always harder on the team having a part-time driver, which I think they’ve done a great job with me.”

    “So, with our last race, we are getting better and better as we get to know everyone. I am happy with it.”

    By competing in the K&N Series and driving the ARCA Series, Deegan explains the differences between the two and if it provides any challenges to her.

    “I think the ARCA Series is a lot harder than the K&N Series, especially the West Series,” she explains. “The cars are a lot slower on the West Series, less horsepower. I think the ARCA Series has a lot more heavy hitter drivers. There are about five to eight drivers that could win every week and on the West Series, there’s like three.”

    Even though the California native has had tons of success driving in stock cars, Deegan wishes she would have started in them sooner.

    “The only thing different I would do is start in stock cars earlier,” Deegan says. “I didn’t start racing pavement until I was 15 (years old). So, it was pretty late.”

    By rising through the ranks and being successful in stock cars, she faces the pressure of other young drivers and that’s moving up too quickly. The Toyota Development driver says it’s important to take the time before leaping to the next step.

    “People have to understand with a girl in racing, it’s hard to get funding,” Deegan said. “That’s the biggest thing. A lot of people think my dad (Brian Deegan) has a lot of money just to put on racing but he does not at all. It’s still hard being a girl racer trying to get funding. At the end of the day, it’s doing it the best way possible and to have the most success.

    With facing that pressure, she believes that she could be one of the lucky ones to be racing in Cup when the opportunity comes at the right time.

    “Yeah, I think racing in Cup is a realistic expectation,” she said. “That’s obviously the goal. I think whether it’s in a few years, eight years, who knows. It just depends on everything in between.”

    Though, she explains she needs the experience before moving up to the top three tier series.

    “I need to gain all the experience in the next year of my career before I head to the Truck Series or Xfinity Series in the next couple of years. I need to get that experience now so I am prepared when I get there.”

    The 2019 racing season is just about all wrapped up for the 18-year-old. And Deegan is already looking forward to the 2020 season and areas where she needs to improve.

    “I believe next year it’s finding a solid program with people that believe in me and are confident and where we can have success,” she said. “2020 is going to be a pivotal year for me in my abilities.”

    While she is enjoying a lot of success right now in her career that has just barely started, Deegan points out something she’ll always think of when her racing career is all said and done.

    “I think it’ll be that first win (Meridian),” she describes. “Just the first win, nothing is going to really compare to that one.”

    Deegan has amassed six starts in the ARCA Menards Series, earning one top-five finish and four top-10 finishes with a best finish of fifth that occurred at Lucas Oil Raceway a couple of weeks ago. The California native has 26 starts in the K&N West Series with three victories, 11 top fives and 21 top-10 finishes.

    You can follow Deegan on Twitter @HailieDeegan and on Instagram @hailiedeegan.

    Many thanks to Charles Krall for making this interview happen and special thanks to Hailie Deegan for taking the time out of her busy schedule on race day.

  • Where are they now? Featuring Lance Norick

    Where are they now? Featuring Lance Norick

    In this week’s interview Speedway Media catches up with Lance Norick. The former NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver competed in the Series from 1996-2002 for L&R Motorsports, a family-owned team. Norick is from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma where he resides today.

    SM: Explain how you got your start into racing?
    Norick: “I started racing motorcycles as a kid and got hurt, then moved into Formula cars. I actually had the opportunity to drive in the Trans-Am road racing series and trying to find money like going to sponsors, and all the sponsors were like, Trans what? Then we started talking about the NASCAR Truck Series way back when it first started, they were like, oh yeah, NASCAR. At that point, I realized if we wanted to go racing, we would have to go NASCAR. The only reason we went NASCAR racing is because that was the only place we could find funding to go race. Originally, I had a ride with Walker Evans back in 1996. Walker is a great guy, but his wife which kind of pulled the strings around there, isn’t exactly friendly to the crew or anybody else, so halfway through the season, we decided we needed to do this on our own. That’s when we moved to Charlotte and found a shop, bought some trucks and built some trucks.”

    “We lived out of a motel in Mooresville (North Carolina) right off exit 36 for five months.”

    SM: Were there any other sports that interested you or was it simply racing?
    Norick: “It was racing pretty much. I raced motocross professionally for four years. I’m not big enough or fast enough to do any other sports. The racing was in my blood. I came from a road course racing background which is totally different. (NASCAR) was obviously a learning curve. Over time, we learned and did the best we could with the funding we had.”

    SM: The Truck Series competed on road courses. Do you feel like your road racing skills helped you at those tracks?
    Norick: “Oh yeah, I definitely think it helped. I wouldn’t say our finishes showed too much of it because back in the day, that’s when they had all the road course ringers show up, guys like Ron Fellows, Boris Said, The Simo Brothers. We had stacked road racing fields, but we ran good. However, the road course ringers showed up in road course built trucks for that one race. We had a truck and we were trying to set it up to turn right and left. It was fun, we got to run Portland, The Glen, Sears Point.”

    SM: At Watkins Glen, you were the first driver to run rain tires during a practice session.
    Norick: “I didn’t realize we were doing anything special. They obviously stated we were going to run this race rain or shine. So everybody had the wiper on, tires. Sitting there during practice in the pouring rain, everyone is sitting in the garage. Finally, my crew chief said, ‘Hell, let’s go out.’ I didn’t realize that Ron Hornaday was all pissed off because they were trying to get out first. There was no, oh we need to be the first out. We went out and ran some laps, came back and everyone is in the pits saying, oh you were the first one and everything. It was crazy. We’d run down the back straight away at The Glen going into the bus stop, there was so much spray coming inside the truck, that you’re sitting there with a squeegee trying to clean the windshield off so you could see the turn. So you’re trying to clean the window and trying to turn.”

    SM: Was there any pluses or minuses fielding your own team in the Truck Series the second year?
    Norick: “It’s all about money, I think now if you had three or four million dollars, hire the right people and build a couple of trucks, you could be a good team. Obviously, the cost wasn’t that much in ’96. But soon after that, the series saw Childress, Hendrick, and all those guys had Truck teams and had the budgets and got into that range, which we didn’t have. It got to be tough.”

    SM: You had sponsorship from the NHL. Were you able to gain any perks like free tickets or merchandise?
    Norick: “At the time, my dad was working with a group of investors and they were thinking about bringing a National Hockey League team to Oklahoma City, which obviously they didn’t do that. That was a partnership with NHL, they were introducing us to sponsors to the hockey league. It was fun, but I wouldn’t say it brought us any sponsorship. All the games we were around, we would drive our truck on the ice at halftime. At Phoenix, we almost got thrown into jail. We were set up in front of the stadium at the game, signing autographs on our cards. It was a real race truck, it wasn’t a show truck. Somebody was supposed to come get us but nobody came. So we were like, alright well, I guess we’ll start it up and drive it around the stadium. Obviously with no headlights, driving it and we get to the stoplight, my truck driver throws his arm out the window like a turn single. All these Sherriffs were just sitting there acting confused, next thing we know we were getting pulled over. The police were saying, you don’t even have no headlights. And we stated we were just going to go right here. Someone came on the radio to the police and said just let them go. It’s not like we’re downtown Phoenix joyriding in a race truck. We were just trying to get underneath the stadium.”

    SM: You were involved in a big wreck at Daytona in 2000, which is still one of the most talked about wrecks today. Do you remember the wreck?
    Norick: “You know, when it’s all happening, there’s so much smoke. The truck landed up on my windshield, we were flipping and I caught on fire. I remember getting out of the truck in the infield and I stepped out on the grass, and you know you’re kind of dazed, what’s going on? I get out and there’s literally an entire motor laying in the grass next to my truck. I’m thinking, oh that’s weird. So I’m walking back to the garage and pit lane, I think it was Richie Wauters who was the crew chief for Geoffrey (Bodine) for that race and he grabs me, and says, can you go over there and check to see if Geoffrey is okay. Then by the time he noticed my firesuit and how it was all burned up, he said, go on.”

    SM: The year later you posted a fourth-place finish at the same racetrack. How crazy was that?
    Norick: “The crazy thing is, I was good friends with Ricky Hendrick. Here we are, we were sitting in good position with five to go, both our trucks are Chevys and two trucks are Dodges. My spotter is up there talking with Ricky. I think Ricky was in first. My spotter was like, Lance, we will go with Ricky wherever he goes, we’ll finish second and push you to the win. We took the green flag, I think it was Ted Musgrave and Joe Ruttman, really experienced guys, they got the run on us. Ricky got panicked or something and he jumped between them and left me out to dry. And I was thinking, oh man. Of course, the Dodges, shuffled him out of line and they went on to finish first and second, and we were third and fourth. I was just like, why did you go with them? They’re not going to go with you, but I think he just got panicked.”

    “I had a really good speedway truck that was pushing the rules. The guy who worked at Hendrick built my Daytona truck. He was the head fabricator at one of the big teams for a lot of years, I’m sure he still is. They would never listen to him on the truck and he was my neighbor, so he came over at night and built me a truck. I remember taking it to Talladega for a test. NASCAR said everybody run, do what you gotta do. Then at lunchtime, we’re going to tell all the times, what we think the rule package is going to be. So all day long, we were testing with air boxes and computers. We were fast and everyone slowed down a second, and everyone came over and was like, what are these guys doing? We had a good speedway truck, pushed the limit but we passed tech.”

    SM: Did you feel as though, you had a special racing technique that came to you naturally?
    Norick: “I wouldn’t necessarily say I liked speedway racing because it’s such a chess match out there. I enjoy the process getting there. I enjoy finding the loopholes in rules, trying to build stuff at night when no one was at the shop. I liked that part of it, it was fun. The speedway part, you’re kind of holding on hoping there isn’t a big wreck. I liked the Texas type tracks, one-mile type tracks. The short tracks stuff was a little bit challenging to me.”

    SM: Your team eventually closed up shop in 2002 after Homestead. Were you satisfied at this point in your career, if this was your last race?
    Norick: “It came down to where we had sponsorship. We cultivated some pretty good sponsors that some of the Cup teams basically stole from us. So we would have a sponsor one year and they would be at Roush Racing the following year. It got to the point where it was like, we’re going out finding new sponsors and a year later they’re on a Busch or Cup team, paying twice the money. It got frustrating and my dad finally came to me and said, look we can keep doing this but we’re spending a lot of time and a lot of our own money to do this. At the end of the day, if there’s any inheritance you’re going to receive later on in life, this is it. It came to, we can keep doing it until we’re out. At that point, I realized it wasn’t smart because it takes so much money.”

    “I was out of the car until I moved to Arizona, then I started back racing in 2008. I’ve been racing again since ’08, I’m running winged sprint cars now. It’s something I can work on. It’s a lot more dangerous, but I enjoy it and I always wanted to do it.”

    SM: After all these years, do you miss being out on the track at all?
    Norick: “Yeah, I do. I mean, I look at Eldora when they run on dirt and I’m like, oh man that looks like so much fun. Being that I still have been racing a lot, I don’t feel like I would get into a truck and fall out of the seat because I had been racing for the last 10-20 years. If someone called me and said, hey do you want to fill in if a driver is hurt, I definitely would.”

    “Just like when I was hurt, Hermie Sadler would fill in for me for a while when I broke my arm at Memphis or Gateway. I would start the race and get out at the first caution and he would get in and finish. He did that for us for a while when I was hurt. Hermie was really good to help.”

    SM: In 2001, you had three top fives and five top-10s and finished 11th in the standings. Do you feel as though that was your best season in trucks?
    Norick: “We ran good that season. I’m good friends with Coy Gibbs and was good friends with J.D. Gibbs. I would’ve finished 10th that year if it wasn’t for J.D. I always gave both of them a hard time because J.D. would show up at Richmond and he’s a part-time racer. I think he wrecked me at Richmond; I know he did. His crew ended up putting the shocks on the wrong corner or something, that’s how he turned me around. It wasn’t intentional when he was doing it. Me and Coy was running for top-10, and I think Coy finished top-10 that year. So I always gave Coy a hard time. We had some good stretches in our truck. We finished second or something at Chicago, they tore our truck apart in tech, thinking we had traction control or something. For our budget, limited crew, all of our guys worked hard and did our best.”

    SM: What does a day in the life of Lance Norick 2019 consist of in 2019? Do you still live in Oklahoma?
    Norick: “I moved back to Oklahoma in 2017. I opened up a Tru-Value Hardware store. I’ve been in the building business for a long time and I just got sick of chasing rich people for their money, so I came home and opened up a hardware store. I also try to race 20-25 times a year in Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, Arkansas region in the ASCS 360 stuff. My five-year-old just starting racing this year. I’m having a good time going to the races with him and he’s starting to figure it out and mash the gas and win races. I think what I see from him, if he enjoys it, later on, we’ll see.”

    SM: To wrap things up, what was the best part about racing in NASCAR?
    Norick: “The crew guys, the team. I had some really good guys, especially early on. We just had a great crew, great guys, had fun and worked hard. Just the friendships you gain that you still have today. That was the most fun. Obviously, the racing was fun but it’s a business and it’s hard. The friendships and all the people that you met, you can’t replace that. That’s what I remember the most, other than you know, you had a good finish here and there, but the friendships don’t go away.”

    Norick had 154 starts, three top fives and 15 top-10 finishes in a seven-year span in the Truck Series. He scored a career-best finish of third at the now-defunct Chicago Motor Speedway in 2001. The Oklahoma City native also had starts in what was then the NASCAR Busch Series, in 2003. Norick also has starts in the Rolex Grand-Am Sports Car Series, NASCAR Southwest and Southeast Series, as well the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West.

  • 1-on-1 with Gander Outdoors Truck Series rookie Tyler Ankrum

    1-on-1 with Gander Outdoors Truck Series rookie Tyler Ankrum

    Among the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series rookies, DGR-Crosley driver Tyler Ankrum has already established his credentials as a contender by already scoring a victory when he won at Kentucky in July. Afterward, he followed his win with a runner-up finish at Pocono and a ninth-place run at Eldora. He now heads into the Michigan race weekend with a solid spot in the NGOTS Playoffs and is poised for a solid run for the Homestead finale.

    SM: You established your crendetials as a top rookie contender with your win at Kentucky, followed by a runner-up finish at Pocono and a ninth-place run at Eldora. That said, how do your feel about your odds winning the Rookie of the Year battle against fellow rookies like Sheldon Creed and Harrison Burton?

    Ankrum: I think they’re really good. With Michigan being the last race of the regular season, both Sheldon and Harrison have to win to make it into the Playoffs.

    To be frank, Sheldon’s showed a lot of speed on these mile-and-a-half and two-mile race tracks, so I think his odds are pretty good. I’m not too sure about Burton; [Kyle Busch Motorsports] as a whole has struggled all year. But overall, they’re both great racers and both are going to have equal opportunities and equal chances to make it in. I think our chances are really good, and going into Michigan all we’ll really need to do is to keep on doing what we’ve been doing.

    SM: Now that you’ve solidified your spot in the NGOTS Playoffs, have you updated any of your previous goals in regards to your Playoff campaign?

    Ankrum: No. At the beginning of the year our goal was to go win a championship. The goals have stayed the same. We’re aiming high, and that’s how we’re going to continue to push forward and continue to run up front like we have been doing these past few weeks.

    SM: Considering that DGR-Crosley is still somewhat new in the NASCAR garage, how did it feel scoring their first national touring series victory?

    Ankrum: Oh, it’s awesome because David [Gilliland, team owner] gave me the opportunity to drive Late Models when I was first getting started in stock cars, then he gave me the same opportunity in his K&N car, and now he’s doing it in the trucks. It’s pretty special for me, and I’m super thankful for all the help I’ve had along the way.

    SM: Who do you feel is your toughest competition on the track right now?

    Ankrum: That’s pretty tough because the truck series is so competitive right now. This is the most competitive it’s been in a really long time; the top 15 trucks have a chance to win every week and whenever they show up.

    The greatest competition right now? I’d have to say either the GMS Racing or ThorSport trucks. It’s either going to be Brett Moffitt or Grant Enfinger, Stewart Friesen (Friesen drives a GMS satellite truck), Ben Rhodes or Matt Crafton even though they’ve struggled a little bit this year. Those two teams alone right there have almost eight trucks, so competition has been real stiff. But I think we can hang with them. We’ve been hanging with them the past few weeks. We’ve been doing things a lot different in the race shop, been making a lot of improvements on our equipment and I’m really proud of what we’ve done.

    Just going forward, I have the utmost confidence in our guys and I think they have confidence in me, so at this point we’re starting to really figure things out. I think they’ll have to worry about us more than we’ll have to worry about them.

    SM: Due to some sponsorship issues you had to step away and run a couple of races for Joe Nemechek at NEMCO. How did that come about?

    Ankrum: When we announced that I was no longer full-time, we knew that for me to maintain my points eligibility you have to participate or at least try in every race. It wasn’t about a day later that Joe Nemechek called me and offered me the opportunity to go drive one of his trucks at Iowa and Gateway. He so graciously let us drive that truck and I’m so thankful to him as well and there’s such great guys over there and they’re super easy to work with. Just super guys who were a blast to be with.

    SM: Where do you feel your DGR-Crosley team has been the strongest in the 2019 campaign?

    Ankrum: We haven’t run too many short tracks, but we’re really good on the mile-and-a-halfs. We’re really good on working on the setups to what I like and what I can drive to. We’re good at keeping our nose clean during long distances and staying out of everyone’s mess; it’s really been the key to our success to go on up there and try to win every race and not get too caught up in points.

    Tyler Ankrum, driver of the No. 17 Toyota, celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the NASCAR Gander Outdoor Truck Series Buckle Up In Your Truck 225 at Kentucky Speedway on July 11, 2019 in Sparta, Kentucky. Photo by Brian Lawdermilk/Getty Images.

    SM: On that note, where do you as a driver feel your biggest strengths have been?

    Ankrum: I feel like my ability to learn is one of my biggest strengths. I can go out there behind a truck on the race track and watch and see what he’s doing while also paying attention to what I’m doing. I feel like I can learn a lot better that way than I could learn on a simulator or watching film. Learning that way helps me a lot when I’m out inside the truck.

    I also feel I can put my truck on the edge and leave it there. I feel like I can be consistent and smooth on the wheel, and I feel that’s what really makes a fast car or a fast truck. It’s easy to go out there and throw down a lap but it’s harder to go out there and do that lap after lap. I work on that quite a bit with myself and I think it’s been working so far.

    SM: Inversely, where do you feel that you need the most work in regards to your on-track performance?

    Ankrum: My restarts. My restarts are pretty poor. Really need to just figure out the transmission ratios for the most part, but I’ve been getting better these past few weeks. So the adjustments we’ve been making to the truck and to myself and just learning, it’s helped a lot.

    SM: Going back to your recent streak of a win, a runner-up, and a ninth-place finish, that’s three strong runs on three different kinds of tracks. To what do you owe your performance to?

    Ankrum: I would have to go back and owe that to my ability to learn. The ability to just take in as much as possible as fast as possible. Just the least amount of time working on the drivers and the most amount of time working on the truck and making it faster, with you making it faster along the way.

    I appreciate [Crew Chief Kevin] “Bono” Manion. He’s huge, in that department he’s a genius. He just knows so much and he’s so knowledgeable it helps. Having all those guys in my corner, it’s huge.

    SM: In regards to the Playoffs, there are those on social media who are quick to use you and Matt Crafton as two examples that the Playoffs are supposedly “flawed” towards “deserving” drivers: You started the season late, yet sit solidly in Playoff contention with the regular season finale at Michigan right around the corner, while Crafton sits second in points but could possibly miss out on the Playoffs if another series regular pulls off a surprise win. What’s your take on the assumption that some drivers are more “deserving” than others?

    Ankrum: Well, I mean, I feel that that’s the one word everyone gets caught up on – “deserve” – right? No one deserves anything in this world. I don’t deserve someone’s love or respect; that’s why you earn things. I feel like once you earn something you deserve to have it. I feel like that’s what we’ve done this year.

    We earned that win at Kentucky. With our hard work and blood, sweat, and tears we earned that win and earned our spot in the Playoffs. Even though I missed the first few races of the year, to me, that just meant I had to work harder to beat the rest. In my mind. Now, if that means that I don’t deserve it? That’s just a matter of opinion.

    But my opinion, we earned it and in a way I feel we earned everyone’s respect because they have to take DGR-Crosley seriously now. I feel that, in a sense, means that we deserve to be in the Playoffs. Whether that means there’s a rule that you have to run the entire season, granted, I couldn’t do so because of my age, and once again I did also have to get a waiver.

    I’ve seen a lot of the articles saying that NASCAR is abusing this rule because blah blah blah blah blah, I feel that it’s just keyboard warriors out there on Twitter just trying to make a story and stir the pot up. But that’s just my take. I don’t think anything in this world has to do with “deserve,” it has to do with earning and respect. That’s what I really out here trying to do, just earn my right to have everyone’s respect.

  • Matt Mills climbing through the ranks

    Matt Mills climbing through the ranks

    In this week’s interview, we catch up with current NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Matt Mills. Mills is in his third year of driving the No. 5 Chevrolet for B.J. McLeod Motorsports.

    In this interview, we talk about how Mills got his early start in racing, how he got his ride with B.J. McLeod and if we’ll see him in a Cup Series car in the next few years.

    Early on in his career, like most drivers, Mills started racing go-karts at a young age. This is where current NASCAR drivers get there start.

    “Like the majority of the field, everyone starts in go-karts or quarter midgets,” Mills said. “I did that for two to three years, then realized I wanted to make the next move which was racing Modifieds up in Ohio. They’re pretty popular up north. Did that for a year and then I actually began testing Outlaw Late Models at the end of that year, then we would just stay in the Late Models for a couple of years, and then transferred over to the CRA Series and started to travel a little bit more around the Midwest and down south a little bit.”

    “We were getting more serious about it. Sponsorship kept kind of presenting more opportunities to us, kept chasing the dream to where I got my start with Bobby Dotter in 2016.”

    Mills knew from a young age that he wanted to do racing for a living.

    “I played baseball and football for about 10 years,” he continued. “My dad raced Motocross, AMA Series, when I was growing up. So he actually started me on a dirt bike at three years old. I went that route for a little bit but didn’t do anything competitive enough. I saw his injuries and stuff from racing. About 11 or so, my dad said, this is your time, you can go race Motocross. I really didn’t want to do that.

    “I loved racing, we were fans of NASCAR. We went down to a local track, just a couple of miles from down the road. We decided to give it a shot and fell in love with it.”

    Mills remembers the first time he sat in a racecar and believe it or not, it didn’t go quite as planned.

    “I remember the first time I sat in a go-kart,” he said. “I spun out on the first lap, in the very first turn. I held it to the floor, didn’t know what to expect so I held it wide open, quickly realized that wasn’t going to be the case.

    “The first time I was in a racecar, I kind of got the basics down. My very first heat race, I led every single lap and spun out on the last lap. I got to the white flag and I was thinking, I’m going to win my very first heat race, but no, it’s definitely a surreal feeling. It’s something that you start out playing matchbox cars, wonder what it would be like to get in an actual car. Just to get that opportunity, oh crap this is real. You get freaked out a little bit, I always got nervous before races, still do to a certain extent.”

    Mills also remembers the first time he went to a racetrack.

    “Every Sunday we watched racing, just me and my dad” Mills said. “I think we didn’t start going to NASCAR races until about nine. My first race was Bristol, the year where Kurt Busch won and Matt Kenseth and Jeff Gordon got into a shoving match with each other and it snowed that year. That was my first NASCAR race. Then my first NASCAR race I was in was at Bristol (2016).

    “So yeah, we had been traveling to one or two NASCAR races a year. We didn’t have a whole lot of money growing up, so it’s kind of able to go do what we were able to do and just watch it on TV. I actually have a picture when I was 11-years-old at Darlington and the caption says, “Wouldn’t it be cool to race here someday?” So I’m looking forward to being able to post that when we go back to Darlington later this year.”

    While his first memory was going to Bristol, Mills says a driver should be warned about making their first start there.

    “I quickly realized that Bristol is probably not one of the best places to make your debut there,” he said. “Like I said, you can’t catch a break there. You’re always around somebody, you’re always working, it’s a hard racetrack. So the first 100 laps of the race weren’t too pretty. We weren’t wrecking or anything like that, we finished the race. The last 100 laps, however, I started to figure it out and starting passing people. It’s definitely a humbling moment.”

    Growing up, Mills received some fluff from his peers, especially his grandma, questioning his career choice.

    “I think that kind of comes from everywhere,” Mills said. “You always tell people that you want to be a NASCAR driver. Like I told my grandma that and she was like, yeah whatever. When we first started making our NASCAR debut, we had haters back home but then when you get to a certain point like now, you don’t have anybody talking crap, unless it’s NASCAR critics or keyboard warriors. If you wreck or something, they’re like who is this underfunded guy? He doesn’t belong out there, which really doesn’t happen anymore unless you wreck or something.

    “Last weekend, I had no negative comments (finishing 10th at Daytona). Nobody saying, like he doesn’t deserve to be there. Eventually, they all kind of turn over, it’s a bandwagon thing.”

    For a driver like Mills who doesn’t have the equipment to compete for wins, he explains the misconception of what it is like to be a driver.

    “The biggest way to prove those people wrong is just go out there and do your job,” he said. “They really don’t understand the underfunding aspect of it. It’s not that I blame the media coverage for it, but they (TV) really only show the top-10. All the fans that don’t see us, people, they think we’re bad or something. If they would talk about the underfunded teams a little bit more, like at Daytona where Justin Haley won in that Spire car. So if they would just talk about us a little bit, they would understand, wow, they know what they’re doing. Like Corey Lajoie, Ross Chastain, they talk about how hard it is to race for 30th than to race for top five.

    “I talked to Matt Tifft about and he says this year has been way harder to run 25th then it was at RCR to run top five. I think the fans need a little bit more help on the media coverage side, where they can see we’re back there racing our tails off trying to keep a job. At the same time, there are a lot of fans supporting us. You would be surprised how many fan letters we get in the mail.”

    Even with the top-10 run at Daytona, the Xfinity Series driver says it doesn’t raise his expectations that much more.

    “We still have the same goal going into every weekend,” Mills said. “That’s to bring all the cars home in one piece. Try to have the best finish we can, but also to be smart about it. That also goes for the rest of the year, just bringing clean racecars home. Trying to stay up in the owner points. That was the biggest change from last weekend, it helped out from a points position. It really helps a small team in a position like that and build a points gap, to try and qualify in on races. So we really got a good edge there at Daytona, but it doesn’t really change our aspect of races.

    “You know, we didn’t have any more financial sponsors come on-board, just because we finished good at Daytona. It’s just really building a comfort level as far as points go.”

    Mills continues on to explain why it seems that fans cheers for a guy like him, rather than a guy who has a chance to win every week.

    “It’s easier to pull for someone that has a chance of winning every week,” Mills added. “Where us, it’s like man, I hope he gets a top-20. It’s really an inspirational story, I guess. The people who come to our race shop, they see we finish top-20 and say, that’s a good day. So it’s a little harder to cheer for, but then again, it goes back to the media aspect of it, where there are a lot of good battles throughout the field. There are 30 cars out there they don’t know, they’re racing their ass off. I think that would help a little bit of it, but right now, it’s hard to find funding, even for the underfunded guys that are asking for a lot less. That’s what keeps us apart (from the competition) and I think fans need to realize that a little bit more.”

    Before making his NASCAR Xfinity Series start, Mills was racing in the JEGS/CRA Touring Series, which then lead him to his full-time job at B.J. McLeod Motorsports. Mills explains how that opportunity came about.

    “I met B.J. my very first NASCAR start with Bobby Dotter, you know, they kind of help each other,” he said. “B.J. was right there and taught me a lot about Bristol that first day and then, we always have just kind of been friends. We would see each other at the racetrack, ask each other for advice. Then that following year, I ended up running a couple of Xfinity races for him, then I ran out of funding. So I just kind of hung around the garage, Tommy Joe (Martins) was running for B.J. McLeod in the Xfinity Series that year. I was asking Tommy about the Truck stuff and I got to run Truck stuff for Tommy Joe for a lot cheaper at the moment.

    “Then the following year, I was running for JD Motorsports and I wasn’t having a lot of good luck as a big-time rookie in the series. So, it just wasn’t a good fit. Therefore, B.J. and I were becoming better friends off the track really well, and he was seeing what I was going through. He thought man, I want to give you a shot the following year. So I was like alright, let’s do a couple of races this year and talk about the area with JD Motorsports, and see how that goes. It went decent, wasn’t anything spectacular but I just enjoyed the atmosphere over there (B.J. McLeod) a lot more. At that moment, B.J. was trying to gain more inventory, more employees, got a new shop.

    “The following year was looking really good, he was like, I will give you this opportunity if you give me this opportunity. So we took a shot and I absolutely had a blast this year so far. I think we’ve got like six career-best finishes now. The top-10, that’s going to be pretty hard to beat. I’ve had a ton of fun, I’ve learned so much from B.J. We’ve had great support this year from the sponsors. The whole team, we’re turning a lot of heads. Really, all three of our cars ran good all year. B.J. and Jessica, they’ve done a lot with this race team and they’re continuing to grow it.”

    With that said, Mills kind of already has an idea what 10 years would look like from now.

    “I think a lot of it right now depends on NASCAR,” Mills said. “I’ve got a good showing on my sponsorship for the next six to seven years, but it just depends on NASCAR. It changes so much, every year and with this new GEN7 car they’re talking about, I don’t know what that means for the sport. It might be good, it might be bad, I really don’t know at this moment and I don’t think anybody does. So, I think NASCAR is going to go through a change, I can’t tell. The plan right is now is try to go back to B.J.’s the following year, maybe a year after that I don’t know. I have a good idea on my funding, my hope is to be in the Cup Series five years from now, but it depends how the sport does.”

    The Virginian native also gives his take on whether it’s more difficult or easier now to break into the sport as a rookie.

    “The price for a ride was a lot cheaper now then it was 10 years ago,” he added. “I really don’t know what it was like 10 years ago, were they seeking out talent? But right now, the sponsorship dollars are cheaper to go buy a ride, however, at the same time, it’s a little bit harder to go find something. The economy has changed the past 10 years. It’s not terribly hard for a rookie to have the opportunity, the main thing is about these underfunded teams or big teams, what they’re looking for is to finish races. Don’t go out there and wreck every time. It doesn’t matter if you go out there on the first lap, put it on top of the board and then lap 2, you’re in the fence. Every team owner looks at that.”

    Mills also gives his take on why you should cheer for him as a driver.

    “I mean, if you go up to us on any given weekend, we’re just normal guys,” Mills said. “We’re coming from humble beginnings. I didn’t have a family owned company or anything like that, so we are out there just trying to make a living doing what we love. I would love to have more fans to cheer for me, it grows every day but we’re still trying to make it right now.”

    Mills has 28 starts and counting overall in the Xfinity Series in a span of three years. He has just one top-10 finish, which came at Daytona in July. Prior to his best finish at Daytona, Mills finished 17th at Talladega earlier this year.

    Mills also has 11 Truck Series starts to his credit, his last coming in 2018.

    You can follow Mills on Twitter and like him on Facebook.

  • Exclusive interview with Grant Enfinger-Part 2

    Exclusive interview with Grant Enfinger-Part 2

    In the conclusion of our interview with ThorSport Racing’s Grant Enfinger, we discuss his career in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series.

    The Alabama native made his first Truck Series start in 2010 at Talladega driving the No. 95 Truck for Danny Gill. It would be his only start that year. Enfinger started 12th and finished 22nd due to a late-race crash, but he stills remembers that day vividly.

    “I can definitely believe it was seven years ago,” Enfinger told Speedway Media. “I remember the big wreck, but at the end of the day, it was an awesome experience. You know, I remember that one because that’s in the hometown state and all that, so obviously that was a memorable start and obviously a memorable memory winning there a few years ago. It’s definitely a place that holds a special place but a frustrating one too.”

    In 2017 Enfinger competed in his first full-time Truck Series season with ThorSport Racing. He ended the season with nine top fives and 10 top-10 finishes. The next year saw him win at Las Vegas in September with seven top fives and 15 top 10s by the end of 2018.

    “Man, I feel like I found a home here,” Enfinger said. “That was definitely what I was looking for, you know, surrounded by racers. All I want to do is compete and win, take whatever we got and make it better. I feel like being paired with Jeff Hensley (Crew Chief) has been a good thing, we both talk in the same language as racers. From where we have started to where we are now, I feel like we have the same core guys. To see where we were then to where we are now, it’s a good feeling. We’ve built this by growing together and being on the same wavelength. Everybody has each other’s back and I feel good about the momentum we’ve carried from the second half of last year to the overall progress we’ve made from the beginning, the mentality where we need to be legitimate to run for the championship this year.”

    Enfinger is also appreciative of teammates like Johnny Sauter, Matt Crafton, Ben Rhodes and Myatt Snider who work with each other throughout the weekend.

    “I honestly feel like it’s a good thing,” he said, in describing his teammates. “I mean I think if you look down on the entry blanks on any given weekend, I think ThorSport Racing is stacked. I feel like we have the talent to where any of our teams can win. I feel like our teams are capable of doing that, it’s just a matter of which one hits it that weekend. Knowing your teammate has a shot at winning, makes you work that much harder. It feels like we’ve been working together and I think it has shown that this year, more so than years past. Our F-150’s have been running more together and more consistently up front. We still obviously got work to do it, but I feel like we’ve made progress as a whole at the ThorSport organization.”

    When asked what the Truck Series would look like 20 years from now, Enfinger responded, saying, “Man, there ain’t no telling. I feel like the direction for the nearer future is to get rid of these couple of mile and half races, and go to some more short tracks. Everybody in America has been saying that for a long time and I feel like we’re finally going in that direction. But it’s changed so much in the last 10 years that I really don’t know.

    “Racing as a whole kind of goes back around to where the teams go out there and get the drivers. I think ThorSport Racing is one of the few old school teams, Duke and Rhonda Thorson do everything they can do to make it all work the way it’s supposed to, rather than a driver going to wherever he wants and bringing the funding to do that. So I feel like eventually, that cycle has to end and I feel like we’ve started to see a few examples of that in the Cup Series this year. I feel like it eventually has to come back around. I don’t know how long that will take and I don’t know where the Truck Series will be at that point. Maybe 20 years from now, but that’s wishful thinking. I’m hopeful it will come back around.”

    Introduced this year is the Triple Truck Challenge which starts at Texas Motor Speedway on June 7 and also includes Gateway and Iowa. Should any driver win one of those races, they will receive an additional $50,000 bonus.

    “I’m definitely excited about it for a lot of reasons,” Enfinger said. “Number one, that money means a lot to these Gander Outdoors Truck Series teams. That could potentially help us keep going racing at ThorSport Racing. It’s a large amount of money. What’s also huge is the notoriety the series is going to get.

    “I understand that we are kind of the third tier team in NASCAR and I get that, but I also feel like everybody you talk to will say the Truck Series is the best racing. It is the most exciting and that’s what they’re trying to model this Cup Series package around. I feel like it will be a great deal to some of the more true Truck Series fans and maybe get us some of the exposure we deserve. I think it’s great that the sponsor of the series Gander Outdoors is so involved to make that happen for everybody. That’s a win-win to everybody involved from the sponsors to the series to the teams. I think it’s huge and we’ve needed it for a while. That’s pretty exciting.”

    During a driver’s career, there are always one or more races that they wish they could do over again. Whether it’s for a shot at the win or simply getting a better finish.

    “There’s a lot of them,” Enfinger said. “You know, I would go back and change my last restart at Charlotte the other day. We weren’t going to win the race regardless, but we would have finished better. I mean, hell, I think of a hundred of them. I don’t know which one you want to know, but there’ve been some screw-ups along the way where there’s been some stuff that crap happens. A lot of could’ve, would’ve, and should’ve in racing.”

    We also discussed his goals for this season and the team’s championship hopes. Currently, Enfinger has 98 starts in the Truck Series with two wins at Talladega and Las Vegas, 22 top fives, 42 top-10 finishes plus four poles along with 337 laps led following the Charlotte race.

    The key, he said is, “definitely more wins. “We’ve got the solid finishes, but really it’s the peak that matters most. We haven’t peaked in my opinion to this point this year but we have been solid. Last year, from the last half of the second season on, we were solid then too. We stood a chance to win a few of them, winning one. We really had a terrible second stage of the Playoffs is what it boiled down to in a must-win situation at Phoenix. We were almost able to get that done but just a little short. The stars didn’t align for us. I don’t feel like it was really a lack of performance, it just wasn’t quite meant to be last year.

    “I think we’re close. We ran fast, speed wise through the entire Playoffs. We had the speed to get the job done, we were just inconsistent in the result outcome, some self-inflicted issues and some crap luck too. That’s what racing is sometimes. I feel like we’re in an even better spot this season than we were last year. Just continue following down that path further. I’ll be honest with you, I feel like we have a lot of things going for us this year.”

    Currently, Enfinger has 98 starts in the Truck Series with two wins at Talladega and Las Vegas, 22 top fives and 42 top ten finishes, and four poles along with 337 laps counting following the Charlotte race.

    For those who aren’t familiar with Enfinger, he describes himself as “the blue collar guy that’s worked his ass off to get here. I’m not the guy that someone picked up and wrote a check for me to be here. I’m living my dream, this has always been my dream. I’ve worked my butt off here to get be in the Truck Series. I’ve done the hard stuff. Like I talked about earlier in ARCA by start and parking. I was driving haulers, pulling motors, cleaning these things and doing whatever no one else wanted to do.

    “I feel like I can relate to the guy that works his butt off every day to make a living to go out on the weekends and enjoy it. I feel like I am that guy, I’m living that dream. I feel like God has let me do what I dreamed of doing. I’m just trying to live up to that, I guess.”

    You can follow Enfinger as he pursues his championship dream on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

  • Exclusive interview with Grant Enfinger-Part 1

    Exclusive interview with Grant Enfinger-Part 1

    In this week’s exclusive interview, Speedway Media catches up with ThorSport Racing driver and Alabama native Grant Enfinger.

    Enfinger entered the racing scene competing in the ARCA Racing Series before moving over to the Truck Series doing some one-off races from 2010-2017. In 2017, he was picked up by ThorSport Racing to drive the No. 98 for the full season. Since then, he has competed full time in two seasons, with one win in 2018 in September at Las Vegas.

    Like many drivers who start from a young age in hopes of racing in NASCAR one day, Enfinger always knew racing was what he wanted to do.

    “That’s where it’s always started from a young age,” he said. “My dad and me went to Talladega (Superspeedway) as a kid and kind of fell in love with it. He had a friend of his that raced at the local track there in Alabama and we would go with him, and watch him. It’s all I wanted to do, I don’t know if I ever seriously considered anything else.”

    Recalling the first time he ever sat in a racecar, Enfinger said, “It was one of those things that you thought were awesome. A friend of ours was actually running an Allison Legacy Car out of Mobile International Speedway. I don’t know when that was, but I was young. He let me sit in the car there before the race and that would be something you always remember. I said, I wanted to do it (racing) before then but yeah, I definitely remember that.”

    Enfinger also remembers his first ARCA start at Iowa in 2008 driving for Andy Belmont. It was a humble beginning.

    “As soon as I graduated college, I moved to North Carolina and just was working with teams there and started working with (Andy) Belmont,” he recalled. “From there, I start and parked his backup car, that’s what it basically boiled down to, probably three to five times that year in 2008. But yeah, Iowa was the first time for me to be in an ARCA car. Like I said, it wasn’t really racing, only did a few laps or whatever. But that’s how it all started.”

    Before he got to the ARCA Menards Series in 2008, Enfinger graduated with a Marketing degree. He explains why and how that makes him stand out from other drivers.

    “You know, I feel like you have to do something to set yourself apart,” he explained. “More than anything, you have to convince these guys who are spending all this money on racing and it isn’t returning. You have to find creative ways to get returns because a lot of times, racing is hard to make a return out of. I feel like the Marketing degree has opened my eyes to some of the creative ways, you can actually help this make sense. There are companies out there where it’s not just a benefit, but necessary for them to grow their business and to get what they’re looking for. I think it’s been necessary for me and my career. You know obviously I’ve been a hands-on guy on the racecar and race trucks, but it’s also something I take a lot of pride in that I do have that. I try to utilize that to keep myself racing. You know, at the end of the day, that was the reasoning behind that degree. None of that was coincidence, that’s all I wanted to do.”

    Enfinger went on to describe what he enjoyed the most about driving in the ARCA Series before making the jump to the Truck Series.

    “I love the ARCA Series,” he said. “I still do. You know if there is an opportunity that pops up, here or there, I’ll jump in one. If the opportunity was right I would do it. Yeah, it’s definitely an experience on those bigger tracks but all those guys from the competitors to the officials and everybody all like that, you kind of just get along with them. It’s a family atmosphere and it’s fun, but you want to do it when you be competitive, when you can be in good stuff. It’s not fun running in the back like anything else. I definitely feel like I learned a lot in the ARCA Series through the years, just to be on a lot of the same tracks that we’re running in the Gander Outdoors Truck Series. I feel like that experience has definitely helped me and running for a championship, stuff like that. That’s something a lot of people can’t say and it helps our case.”

    However, nowadays it seems like most young drivers don’t take the time to develop their skills in the ARCA Series but immediately jump into an Xfinity or Cup Series car to run in the mid-30s without having any prior experience at those tracks. Enfinger believes you have to gain some experience at those tracks to see if you’re ready to compete at those high levels, but also doesn’t blame someone for taking the opportunity when it presents itself.

    “I feel like from the racers aspect, you need to take the stepping stones to get there. Now does that include ARCA or whatever? No. I think you definitely don’t jump into an Xfinity Car or a Truck for that matter. I think there are certain steps in racing that work better than others, but you have to go down the right path. In my opinion, you excel at a lower division before moving to a higher division. I think it’s obvious but yeah some people don’t always do that.

    “But from the other standpoint, you have to go where the opportunities are when you’re a racer. You don’t have opportunities to be a top-level car at a lower level. If your opportunity at a higher level in a backmarker is the only opportunity you got, I don’t necessarily blame you but that’s not the opportunity I would be looking for. It’s so tough to make it make sense in all that. I understand people trying that, but that wouldn’t be my number one position.”

    The Alabama driver adds there is really no ladder system in place.

    “You know there is no sure enough system,” Enfinger continued. “You got some of the guys that get picked up from an early age that they’ll put in 10 or 12 ARCA starts and then they’ll put them in a Truck, put them in Xfinity, put them in Cup but yeah, that’s the proper system if you have the means and resources to do that. But there’s not a set in stone system. When you see the manufacturer get behind somebody, that’s what they will do. That’s probably the way you should do it to have those series.”

    It was announced last year that NASCAR would be buying the ARCA Series and possibly merging them with the K&N Pro Series. Enfinger explains his thoughts on the merger.

    “You know, I hate that they are in the position to do that,” he said. “But, I do think they are in a position where that needs to happen. The K&N field has been low for the last few years and ARCA is getting low this year. I definitely think it will help, I feel like there’s definitely a place for the ARCA Series and I don’t necessarily think there’s a place for the K&N Series. Where it is right now, they’re going after the same type teams, same type drivers. They’re both unfortunately incredibly expensive to do.

    “I feel like ARCA has done a pretty good job within reason of keeping the cost manageable, probably more so than K&N has historically. Yeah, it cost more money to run a full season of ARCA than K&N, but you’re at a different level with tracks and stuff like that. I hope they kind of go with some of the ARCA mentality on things and how they have done it in the past, but we’ll have to see how things go. I don’t think making everyone change over all their cars is the right move and it sounds like they’re trying to find a happy medium there. It’s going to be tough to merge that stuff, but you know like I said, I have a lot of history in the ARCA Series. I may be a little biased, but I hope they don’t change the ARCA mentality to put it like that.”

    Enfinger had quite the success in the ARCA Series with 16 wins, 47 top fives and 66 top 10 finishes, along with six poles, even winning the 2015 Series championship. He explains what his biggest victory is in that series.

    “It would definitely be the home town track in Mobile (Mobile International Raceway),” Enfinger said. “Number one is my first ARCA win, I’ve run second or third for half of my ARCA starts, it feels like. We would lead a bunch of laps and end up running second or third somewhere all the time. Finally got that win in Mobile in 2013 and they came a lot more often after that. That was definitely the most special win. Friends and family were there, and it (the track) is literally 40 minutes from where I live, my home track. That was the most special. I hate the ARCA Series doesn’t go there anymore. Filled up the stands there at every show. But yeah, that was definitely the most memorable one.”

    In Part 2 of Speedway Media’s exclusive interview with Enfinger, available Tuesday, May 28, we will discuss his career in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series.

    You can follow Enfinger on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook for the latest news.

  • Windscreen coming to IndyCar in 2020

    Windscreen coming to IndyCar in 2020

    INDIANAPOLIS — Ever since Justin Wilson’s death at Pocono Raceway in 2015, windscreens on race cars in the NTT IndyCar Series was an inevitability. Five years later, that inevitability becomes a reality.

    In the midst of Carb Day festivities at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, IndyCar announced that Red Bull Advanced Technologies will develop a windscreen, dubbed the Aeroscreen (though IndyCar President Jay Frye implied during the announcement that a different name is coming) as a means to enhance driver cockpit protection. The Aeroscreen makes its debut in 2020.

    “…we’ll have a prototype in probably 30 days, and we’ll have real pieces in another 60 days,” Frye said. “Get them on cars this summer to test, and then at some point we’re going into the off-season around November so we’ll have one for each entry.”

    According to the press release announcement, it will be “a polycarbonate laminated screen that includes an anti-reflective coating on the interior of the screen, an anti-fogging device through an integral heating element and possibly tear-offs…” It’ll be supported by a titanium framework, similar to the Halo design currently used in Formula 1.

    Scott Dixon says the piece that comes down in front of the driver’s view is “something you won’t notice too much.”

    “It’s very similar to the addition that we have right now as far as line of sight for the driver,” he said. “But I think it — until we get it into running conditions through the summer months, we’ll obviously pick up some differences. But I think this adds more to it. It’s structurally more sound. It is higher, creates obviously more room for error, as well. So I think it’s just a far better piece that has been improved from the original concept.

    The “addition” that Dixon’s referring to is the Advanced Frontal Protection (AFP), the three-inch trapezoid placed just in front of the driver that’s designed to deflect debris, such as tires, away from a drivers head.

    What happens to the AFP in 2020?

    “The AFP device comes off, and the frame for this screen just bolts on to it, so it’s in the same spot,” Frye said. “So that’s already been done. So the cars are already equipped to take on this frame by taking off the AFP device.”

    The Aeroscreen — in development since 2016, as Red Bull was working with the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) — is similar in design to those tested in 2016 at ISM (Phoenix) Raceway. The proposed design, however, is taller in the rear to provide greater protection to the drivers head.

    “So part of our work has been to study previous crashes in the IndyCar Series and to detect where the helmet position was during those crashes,” said Ed Collings, Red Bull Advanced Technologies head of composites and structures. “One of the important parts of our design is that we don’t put a very rigid structure in a position where the helmet could make contact in a high-G instant. So in order to deliver that, we’ve created an exclusion zone where this device, this protection system does not come into — doesn’t enter that zone so it wouldn’t impede the driver’s head. So it’s important that we haven’t introduced any compromises by adding this assembly on to the car.”

    Unlike the windscreen tested in 2016, this design might produce a little drag on the cars. While IndyCar will test to see if that difference can be mitigated, the safety value outweighs the drag factor.

    While it deviates a ways away from the “traditional open cockpit look” that’s a hallmark of open-wheel racing, aesthetics were taken into consideration and IndyCar thought Red Bull’s design “looked very cool.”

    “Remember when we did this car a couple years ago, we would put out sketches of the car to the fans to see what their opinion was, and then we’d put out a rendering of the car, so this car, remember we kind of reverse-engineered it where we did esthetics first and the performance was second,” Frye said. “So obviously we put all that effort into the aero kit, so we wanted to make sure the screen matched that, and they’ve done a phenomenal job. It looks, I think you see, it has a fighter jet kind of look to it, so we’re excited about that.”

    The designing of a windscreen came as a result of Wilson’s death at Pocono in 2015, when he was struck in the head by a nose cone that came off Sage Karam’s wrecked car.

  • Brittney Zamora flying under the radar

    Brittney Zamora flying under the radar

    Brittney Zamora is one of the next up and coming racers who is currently racing in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series this season. Zamora made her debut during the K&N Pro Series East race at New Symrna for Bill McAnally Racing, where Zamora started 15th and finished 15th.

    However, for Zamora, it wasn’t her first rodeo as she has been racing for quite some time. In fact, her father, Mike Zamora, was a racer himself thus seeing Brittney become the second generation racer in the family. Zamora got her start racing in go-karts at the young age of four.

    In this interview with Speedway Media, Zamora details how her life has always been around racing, what it’s like being a female racer and stand out against the guys, if she’ll be in a Cup car years from now and why you should cheer for her.

    “Yeah, my dad raced for the past 20 years before I started in the super late models,” Zamora said. “I actually went to the track when I was four days old. That was my first time at the track, I didn’t wait very long for that. It’s pretty much been my whole life. Going to the racetrack, going down on the weekends, and watching my dad win championships around the Northwest, I just knew that’s what I wanted to do.”

    “I got into go-karts at the age of four, then I moved up to Mini Stocks, and then I jumped into the Super LateModels in 2016. Did that for three years and now I am here doing the (NASCAR) K&N Pro Series West.”

    With Brittney being in the Northwest and the NASCAR racing capital in Charlotte, NC she describes how hard it is to stand out among other racers who are already making a name for themselves and are there in Charlotte.

    “It’s tough being over on the west coast,” she said. “The racing capital is on the east coast. The majority of it applies over there. It’s a little bit harder to get noticed and get your name out there for people to recognize it. Just because you are on the other side of the country out here, you really have got to be impressive and take every opportunity you can get.”

    “I do think Greg Biffle and Kasey Kahne are the two most recognizable names here in Washington State actually. It can happen. Just because you’re living out here, doesn’t mean you can make it. I do think living on the east coast and racing over there has its advantages for sure.”

    With many racers who grow up wanting to become a racecar driver, they can remember watching the first race on TV that catches their eye. For Brittney, however, that’s not how it was for her at such a young age.

    “Yeah you know, it’s kind of weird,” Zamora said. “I really don’t have a first memory of watching it because that’s what I grew up with. It was always on TV on race weekends. My dad has his own car back out in the shop, so it was a lifestyle for us. So not really a first memory growing up, but going to my first Cup race was fun and everything, but that’s kind of what I knew.”

    Growing up around racing during Brittney’s early years was something she got used too at an early age but she can somewhat remember the first time she sat in a racecar.

    “I remember helping as much as I could, being a little girl helping out with my dad,” Zamora said. “I would always want to sit in his car. You know the dream was to get into the Super LateModels. So I made sure I always got to sit in his car, work on it whenever I could.”

    “I actually got my first stock car and that was a really cool experience. There was a guy here in town that had the car and wanted me to drive for him. So, getting introduced in the stock car world myself and having somebody wanting me to drive for them, and giving me the car to do so; it was a really cool opportunity and it made it much more special.”

    Zamora made her first NASCAR K&N Pro Series West start at the challenging Las Vegas Motor Speedway dirt track earlier this year, right outside the big track of Las Vegas Motor Speedway. She started 16th and finished 11th. She describes what it was like being on dirt the first time.

    “Oh my gosh, that was my first time ever on dirt, I’d never stepped a foot on it, like a dirt racetrack, never a day in my life before,” Zamora said. “I really didn’t know what I was heading into and it was pretty tricky. Never being on dirt before, I didn’t know what I was actually supposed to be looking for in a car. You know, never having experience on that.”

    “So trying to talk with my crew and figure out what that feeling is, what I need to feel in the car. It was quite the learning experience and being only the second race with that team in a K&N car, it was so much new happening in that race. Our main goal was just to stay on the lead lap and finish all the laps. The top-10 was our primary goal, unfortunately, we got 11th but we were right there and met all but one of our goals. So, it was a decent first dirt race and second K&N race ever.”

    When Brittney experienced her first dirt track, she never really had any dirt track guys to lean on for advice.

    “Yeah, I didn’t have anyone to reach out for to that,” she continued. “I tried to get into a dirt car, whether it was a go-kart, modifieds, late models, anything that I could, I tried but the opportunity just never worked out in our favor. So, we didn’t get any experience on dirt. Yeah, I didn’t have any dirt guys to lean on for advice. My team is primarily asphalt and that’s what we do. That was a learning curve for all of us. It was really tricky for sure.”

    With the NASCAR K&N Pro Series being so different from the three NASCAR touring series, Zamora explained what she enjoys about racing in the K&N Series.

    “There’s so much about it, it’s a whole different world than what I’ve known my whole life,” she said. “I came from a Saturday night family life. Saturday night was our racing, just local short track stuff. My family has been my crew my entire life. I have my dad, my uncle, my grandpa, they are my crew. They are who I hear in my ear when I’m on the track.”

    “Being in the K&N Series is a different series. I had to adapt to not working with my family anymore and being with a new team. And then we went from 2016 where we did like eight Super Late Model races, to 2017 where we did about 12. And then in 2018, we stepped it up to about 20 (races) to kind of help to get ready if any opportunities came our way.”

    “Now that the K&N Series is here, we have about 26 races. So, the schedule is pretty cool. You’re racing a lot more, passing a lot more, going all over the country to new tracks that I’ve never been to like Bristol and Sonoma. We’re going to go to Phoenix, Iowa and Gateway. I mean there are so many tracks that I would never have the opportunity to race on in my super (late model) and I have the chance in the K&N Series.”

    With all those tracks Brittney mentioned above, most of, if not all of them, will be her first time visiting them. In this case, she tries to learn as much as possible whether it’s watching video or leaning on her team.

    “Video from past races,” she said, “you can learn from watching a driver’s technique, different lines, pit stop strategy, how to be strong at the end of the races as well at the beginning. Just taking notes on who is doing what, and then getting on track and actually applying what you saw and what you learned. Using the experience that my team has given me from years past at those tracks, and I lean on them a little bit to help get me adapted to those new tracks I haven’t been to yet.”

    Zamora drives for one of the staple teams in the NASCAR K&N Series, Bill
    McAnally Racing, who has been quite successful over the years. She described the experience and the added pressure to perform at the highest level with this team.

    “I actually got invited back to a Toyota combine back in August,” she said. “I didn’t really know what I would be learning or what the outcome of it was. I went there and I actually won one of the races there at the combine. Only four drivers got to compete in the championship race and I was one of them. I finished second and so, really caught Toyota’s attention, and then they got me a couple of late model races as an evaluation. We did really good in those and that’s kind of where it led to. Alright so I’ve done super late models, I did good in all the evaluation in the combine, so let’s see how I can do in a K&N Car.”

    “Toyota put me in a test with Bill McAnally Racing at Irwindale,” Zamora continued. “Everything went great. I was the best car out there so that’s where it kind of led to. Alright, so we’re gonna have something in the works for next year. So we gotta get sponsors lined up, it all fell right into place. Being with Bill McAnally Racing, he is one of the best teams in the K&N Pro Series right now, if not arguably the best.”

    “You know being a full time driver there, you definitely have a little chip on your shoulder. Everybody’s expecting a little more out of you, it’s tough coming in to the series. My teammates already having experience in the series at all the tracks that I haven’t been too, being brand new to all of this. You definitely want to hold up to everyone’s expectations and I think I put a little more pressure on myself than I need too, right now they just want to see improvement but a championship driver, championship team all my life, that’s what I strive for the series. Getting top-10’s, I’ve been content with them but that’s not what I’m aiming for. We want top fives, we want to lead laps and get those wins, so that’s what we are aiming for this year.”

    As a female racer, Zamora is adding her name to the list of other women drivers like Janet Guthrie, Shawna Robinson, Danica Patrick, Johanna Long, Natalie Decker and Halie Deegan. She explains how tough it is to stand out in such a competitive world.

    “You can’t get ahead of yourself,” she told Speedway Media. “You want to be successful in each series that you go to, be successful whether it’s go-karts or super late models. You know you can progress. I can go jump in a Cup car right now and be like, oh great she’s in a Cup car, but you have to progress at every level. You have to prove yourself and the only way you’re going to be good in a Cup car is you have to succeed at it. It’s definitely something you keep striving for and proving yourself, and you’ll definitely get to those next levels. Definitely, no rush though because if you rush yourself, it’s not going to be the outcome you want.”

    Zamora also talked about the pros and cons of being a female driver in a male-dominated sport.

    “Being a girl has its pros and cons for sure. I received a lot of love and hate, just for being a girl. It doesn’t necessarily have to do what I am doing on track, it’s the fact that I’m a girl, not a guy. I mean it helps me to get to where I am being one of the few females in the sport, then to be a smaller portion of the ones that have been successful time after time. You just want to keep proving that. But yeah, like Janet Guthrie and Lyn St. James, I really look up to both of them. A lot of the hate stuff was when I first got into stock cars and some were upset to see a 14-year old who was winning races and championships, let alone that she is a girl too.

    “I don’t think about it, honestly. It’s not a concern to me; it’s not going to affect my ability on the track. It’s just bringing a girl to the sport in such a male-dominated sport that some girls are a little too timid to get into that. It’s what I love to do and I’m not going to let anybody stop me or talk down on me for it.”

    With young drivers getting so much added pressure to get into a Cup car right away, Brittney describes whether or not it’s a realistic expectation for her.

    “Being a racecar driver or stock car driver obviously, the goal is to become a Cup driver one day,” Zamora told Speedway Media. “That’s how you know you truly made it. Being realistic, there’s only what, like 35 people in the entire world that are in the Cup Series. So chances are very slim. What I want to get out of racing is a career in any series that I can have. Whether it’s going back to the Super Late Models, or going to the track and being a threat for the win. Just to make a career out of racing would be my goal. NASCAR would be great, but I truly would be happy with racing anything in my career.”

    Brittney also kind shared what lays ahead of her for next year.

    “I would like to keep doing K&N next year full time,” Zamora continued. “I don’t think one year in the series is enough. Especially with how many tracks you go to and the competition you’re racing against. I think getting multiple years would help to really be able to prove yourself in that series and being adaptive to that series, and prepare yourself for the next level.”

    “Yeah, K&N full-time next year would be ideal. I would love to be able to make a Truck (Series) start here and there, maybe run a couple of ARCA races. That would really be ideal for next year.”

    Brittney is not being the only female racer in the K&N Series as Hailie Deegan is another up and coming star who is making a name for herself by already having two wins in the series. In fact, some may not know that Deegan is Zamora’s teammate. Even though they are teammates, they don’t interact as much as someone may think they do.

    “I think our styles are two totally different,” the Washington State driver explains. “I think we approach race day and practice day with different mindsets, the complete opposite. So we have to kind of do our own thing. You know our teams rely on each other, but we kind of keep to ourselves and focus on what we are doing. The team aspect comes into play for sets up, crew chiefs relying on each other and helping out the teams when we need it, but all three of us drivers are really independent and focus on what’s going on with our car.”

    Even though Zamora is young and it’s still early in her career, she already has a race that she wishes she can do over again.

    “I would like to do Irwindale,” she said. “I’ve had a race at that track before, so only one. I’m not like a pro at that track or anything, but it’s the only track I’ve been to on the schedule. I felt pretty confident going into it. You know, we didn’t qualify great. I qualified 11th, but within 10 laps I was up to fourth. For a top runner, we had a fast car. There were a couple of things I was feeling in the car like it getting a little tight on me. During our halfway break, we tried to fix that and it wasn’t like that anymore in the second half. You know we just kept climbing to the top.”

    “Unfortunately, we over adjusted. We went the right way, we just did too much on the car. We fell back a little bit in the second half. I think that if we would have minimized our set up changes, I think we would have been spot on. I think we would have been up there competing for the win at the end of that race.”

    One of the biggest honors of Zamora’s career so far is winning the Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award.

    “Last year when I got the call it was actually kind of shocking,” Zamora said. “I didn’t even know I was in the running for it. There were over 500 drivers eligible for this award. To know the people around the racing community voted for me, there had to be submissions. You know, people had to write a letter and vote for you. So that was truly amazing to know that people saw our efforts and saw that we would overcome our troubles, and jump into the next level and keep moving award.”

    “To have the award, the Wendell Scott Trailblazer is huge. I’m honored. I would really like to know who submitted my name and who voted for me. I would love to thank them for believing in me. It’s crazy for me because it wasn’t that great of a year looking back on it. And knowing that other people are noticing your hard work, that was really cool.”

    Asked why fans should cheer for her, Zamora said, “I feel like I go into the racing world with a different mindset and this is what I love to do. I have so much passion for it and what you see is what you get. I don’t put on a fake personality or a fake identity for the cameras, or anything. What you see is who I am. This is what I feel like I was born to do. You know when I strap in to get on the track, I feel at home. I just hope to make a good name for the females in the sport and keep showing the younger girls that we can be competitive and be successful.”

    Rapid Fire with Brittney Zamora

    SM: What’s one thing fans don’t know about you?
    Zamora: “This one is pretty cool because every time I say it, people are shocked by it. I raced for the past 15 years. In the past 14 years, I’ve done competitive dance and I’m a national champion.”

    SM: If you could be a racecar part, what would that be?
    Zamora: “Oh I would definitely be a motor. There’s just so much speed. I don’t know, they are pretty unique and special.”

    SM: Favorite track on the schedule?
    Zamora: “Bristol.”

    SM: Driver you would most like to race against in any series?
    Zamora: “Kyle Busch.”

    SM: What is your favorite social media app?
    Zamora: “Instagram.”

    SM: What is your favorite midnight snack?
    Zamora: “Salsa.”

    SM: Your favorite movie?
    Zamora: “The Blind Side.”

    SM: Your favorite TV show?
    Zamora: “Okay, everyone laughs at me for this but the Kids Baking Championship like with the kids and stuff. I’m all about competition, so I think it’s cool to watch anything like that.”

    SM: What is your favorite animal?
    Zamora: “Dog.”

    SM: Are you superstitious?
    Zamora: “Yes. I have to have a pair of race day socks that I always wear. When putting on my gloves and shoes, I always have to put on the left one first.”

    SM: Are you nervous before a race? Do you have any dreams about racing? Do you have nightmares about missing a race?
    Zamora: “I’m a little bit of both. You know, dreams about going to the track and winning. Then nightmares, you go on the track and crash, or parts break, anything like that. But yeah a little bit of both.”

    SM: Is there a food you don’t recommend eating on race day?
    Zamora: “Anything heavy or greasy. That’s a no, on race day. Stay away from all of that.”

    SM: How long does it take for the adrenaline to wear off after a race?
    Zamora: “I would probably say at least an hour or two.”

    SM: Who is your racing hero?
    Zamora: “It would be my dad (Mike Zamora) for sure. That’s who I grew up watching, admired, wanted to do everything he did.”

    SM: What or who is the most famous Twitter account that you follow?
    Zamora: “I would probably have to say Mark Martin. I don’t know, I would have to go and look. Yeah, I kind of had to look at it twice you know? Be like really? The Mark Martin?”

    SM: Who is the most famous person you have ever met?
    Zamora: “I’ve met a few Cup drivers like Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin, Ryan Blaney. I would probably have to say those guys.”

    SM: Were you popular in High School?
    Zamora: “I wasn’t like super popular, but a lot of people were really interested in what I did. Racing. They would always like to hear about it. They would always have me bring like clips and stuff from racing. They wanted to see.”

    SM: Are you a morning or night owl?
    Zamora: “Night owl for sure.”

    SM: Expectations at the end of the season?
    Zamora: “The three goals that I’m dead set on achieving are top five in the championship points, I want Rookie of The Year, and yeah, I want at least a win or two this year, minimum. If we can get those three, I would be pretty happy with how this season goes. Those are the three I’m dead set on. I’m also not about the burnouts because I hate how hard they are on the motor and stuff. I kind of call it respecting our equipment. Especially because this isn’t my stuff. So no burnouts or anything. I definitely do after every win I’ve had, I do like a polish victory lap. So I would probably keep that going.”

    You can follow Brittney Zamora on Twitter @brittneyz52 and on Instagram @brittney.zamora.racing. You can also check out Brittney’s website by visiting https://brittneyzamora.com/ for all the latest news and updates.

  • Getting to know Aaron Studwell

    Getting to know Aaron Studwell

    Aaron Studwell is a name NASCAR fans may or may not know. For those who are unfamiliar with him, he runs RACEWeather.net and collaborates with Brian Neudorff forecasting the weather for NASCAR races on their Patreon page.

    Studwell and Neudorff may be two of the most underappreciated people in the NASCAR community that don’t work in the sport but are very helpful to race teams and fans when weather threatens an upcoming race. Both are constantly updating the weather conditions that are near the tracks.

    For Studwell, however, it didn’t start out quite that way. Growing up he was focused on the weather.

    “I originally became interested in the weather in the third grade,” he said. “I grew up sailing on the Chesapeake Bay, so that was often impacted by the weather. I ended up getting my undergraduate degree from Michigan in Aerospace Engineering because I didn’t know about the careers in meteorology beyond TV and the Weather Service. I ended up in meteorology when I decided to get my Masters and wanted to move on from engineering.”

    Studwell explains the type of meteorology he does that is different from the meteorology people know about.

    “Marine meteorology is more focused on winds & waves, along with storms,” he explained to Speedway Media. “This is for both crew safety and for operational limits. So while the National Weather Service will do offshore forecasting for the U.S., it is for a broad region, where we will provide site-specific forecasts. Also, there are regions around the world, where that kind of forecast may not be available.”

    He has been a meteorologist since 1995, but Studwell’s first experience with NASCAR was in 2002.

    “The first time I really got in to NASCAR was in 2002 with the Daytona 500 when Ward Burton won,” he said. “I was a Dodge guy and always been a Dodge guy. Ward’s out there racing the Caterpillar Dodge. I have stuff of his sitting on top of my bookshelf, signed hat and memorabilia from him.”

    “I just remember sitting there watching the (Daytona) 500 and it was a beautiful Sunday, watching it as is and I just got drawn in. And then of all things, I go out and buy NASCAR Thunder 2002 (Video Game) and that was okay, but NASCAR Thunder 2003 got me hooked on NASCAR to watch it more, playing it more, and learning from the sport that way.”

    After that, Studwell began to forecast the weather for NASCAR races to let the fans know what they might expect on a race weekend. He details what led him to where he is today.

    “I was in the chat rooms or message boards for NASCAR 2003,” Studwell said. “Hurricane Isabel in 2003 was heading towards Dover for Dover race weekend in September. So people were asking me, ‘hey what’s your forecast.’ So I went out to go get the domain and someone already had raceweather.com. I got raceweather.net which is why I kind of kept it. They were willing to sell me raceweather.com for $3,000 and I was like, no that’s fine, thanks. Not that big of an effort to spend money on.”

    “So I took it from answering questions on the web board to okay, here’s the website,” he continued. “And then I just kind of kept this website going through the end of the year.

    2004 was a special year for Studwell as he was able to get his website featured on Jayski.com.

    “In 2004, I reached out to Jayski and he had a bunch of weather links on his webpage,” he explained. “I was like hey, could you put my weather link on there? And he did, so that was good. That’s how it kind of grew through Jayski and then updating the webpage, kind of driving web traffic that way.”

    “There wasn’t Facebook or Twitter then like it is a bigger platform now. Hurricane Isabel is the reason why I started raceweather.net and it all kind of tied together in that time frame.”

    Studwell also recalls the first race he attended and an exicting opportunity that came after.

    “In the 2003-2005 time frame, the first race I attended was the Las Vegas race in the spring, I think 2004,” he said. “I actually had the opportunity that I knew a guy, Adam Risher, who was then the Crew Chief for Kertus Davis on the No. 0 car (Busch Series) for Johnny Davis Motorsports, now named JD Motorsports. I believe Adam (Risher) is at (Richard) Childress now.”

    “This was before it was harder to have volunteers, but it was a small team and so I went to volunteer for them, just to have a chance to be on pit road, move stuff around, help a team to put things together,” he continued. “I learned about being there and see if it was what I wanted to do because I had interviews with Ford engineering for the Truck teams that were going to look at using the Toyota model, where you had this team of engineers look across all the Truck teams.”

    From there, Studwell met people who worked in the racing world and gave him interviews.

    “I met with “Cowyboy” Kevin Starland for an interview and I met Dave Charpentier when he was at PPI (Motorsports), and he (Charpentier) is now the Chief Engineer at JTG Daughtery Racing,” he explained to Speedway Media.

    “I also met Greg Erwin for an interview at Roush (Fenway Racing) at the time. I met a bunch of great people in the industry. I had somebody at Roush tell me, hey look your interview was great but it didn’t go much further than that. So the timing just never really worked out because having that Aerospace Engineering Degree, I can work as an Aerodynamist or a Race Engineer, because I had worked at General Motors. But having your own meteorologist on the (Pit) Box and accessable, was a nice perk as well.”

    Studwell also shared his thoughts about how the rain affects NASCAR races when the crew are looking at a different radar model than he is.

    “I think a great example is from Cole Custer on Friday (night),” he added. “The rain is 10 miles out, but you also have something that I posted several times that dry air is over the region and that rain will just continue to weaken/dissipate before it gets to the track. So there’s a lot more than radar reading or radar observing, saying hey nothing is going to change but if you look at the patterns from that, and then knew where to look elsewhere, knew what to think about. Why is the rain dissipating? Is it dissiapating? Will it continue to dissipate and so it’s a lot more than just throwing a radar up, and saying it’s 10 miles moving at 30 mph that it’s going to be here in 20 minutes.”

    He also offered his thoughts whether or not a team could afford a meteorologist.

    “I think it’s feasible,” he said. “Is it cost effective? I don’t know. That’s for them to decide. I think it’s an added value you have one those days when you have those concerns. I think the bigger issue is from a safety consideration.”

    “I’ve had the opprotunity to be at tracks and work the Brickyard 400 in 2017,” Studwell continued. “That’s when we had rain on both days and I had media access. It’s funny because I was talking to Bob Pockrass a couple of weeks ago and I didn’t have this realization until later why they put me where they put me in the media center. I was exactly in the middle from front and back, and in the middle from left to right. I was dead center in the media center because now everyone would have perfect access to me.”

    “So that was my first race to work from as a media weather standpoint. It was funny, I walked in Saturday and Bob Pockrass already had the radar up, and was like, oh hey Aaron there’s rain here. I was like, got it Bob thanks. But to have a chance to work with people like Claire B Lang, Lee Spencer, and Chris Knight.”

    “It was a great opportunity. I met Steve O’ Donnell, Doug Rice, and for them to put a face to a name and say okay, I see what he does, what he is doing, someone in there that they can trust as a resource, I think it’s great. It would also be great if NASCAR could use it as a resource of looking at things from fan safety, planning, earlier starts to races. I know they have their own resource, but to have their own dedicated resource would be great too in all the series.”

    Studwell also added that it is frustrating when there is information going out that may confuse people when fans watch the races.

    “Oh, it’s frustrating when there is conflicting information going out,” he emphasized. “It’s frustrating because they (NASCAR) have a agenda where everything is tolerant driven and I get it. They have a agenda they’re following and want to meet. They want to keep racing and don’t want to go to a red flag for rain. So they’re going to say, certain things.”

    “I’m going to go back to the Vegas race this year,” he added. “They (NASCAR) saw those dark clouds on the background and fourtantely those showers are staying north of I-15. But you see in the background there is rain. I was like okay, I better hit this one.”

    About six years ago, was the first time Studwell came across Neudorff online and it wasn’t all rainbows when they first interacted with each other.

    “I’m going to use a DW (Darrell Waltrip) term here, copertition,” Aaron told Speedway Media. “We would be out there almost competiting against one another to who could have the forecast up first, an advisory out first and we were kind of just stepping on one another’s toes. Then we got to a point and said, you know what? This isn’t how we should be doing it. We have never met in person, but we talk once or twice a week depending on the weather, and what’s going on in our world.”

    “We started coordinating about five or six years ago,” he continued. “We started a Patreon page last year. We take turns doing the weekly updates, he (Neudorff) updates it during the week, I’ll update it during the week sometimes, a little less frequently, as I am focused on raceweather.net.”

    “There was a race last year where we were trying to figure out who is going to put an update out. If we don’t, then we are both putting out updates and end up being contradictory. He has a larger social media presence than I do. When I first got into this (forecasting NASCAR races) and used NASCAR weatherman (on social media), I was concerned with legal reasons using NASCAR in my username, website, that there would be implications like, oh he’s just trying to make money off the company’s name and you put yourself in a weird position. But yeah, we’ll both sit down and coordinate with each other for an upcoming race weekend.”

    When Studwell is not doing the NASCAR weather forecast with Neudorff or for his own site, he is busy working on his Ph.D at Houston University.

    “My proposed dissertation title is, “Spatiotemporal Variations of Saturn’s Zonal Winds based on Cassini Long-term (2004-2017) Multi-Instrument Observations,” Studwell said. “So, it’s looking at the long-term wind patterns within Saturn during the totality of Cassini’s mission. Right now, my dissertation research will not apply to my work. It’s more for my own achievements/goals. I did have to take more classes too, so those will make me a better meteorologist and reinforced a lot of knowledge from my Masters work. I also don’t know what the future may bring, so stay along for the ride.”

    Like forecasting weather for NASCAR races, there are hard parts to his job and a lot of the time, it’s trying to have a regular life.

    “The hardest part of my job is trying to maintain a work/life balance because we have odd schedules and during some weather events, extra hours are expected,” he told Speedway Media. “But that’s also factoring in my PhD research and writing.”

    On top of having to try to have balance in his life, there are times when he does get a little negativity from time-to-time on social media such as being called out for getting a forecast wrong, but it’s been mostly positive.

    “Oh yes,” Studwell said. “There has been (negativity) and I really don’t want to go into those details. For the most part, I have talked with the people who posted it and we have come to better understandings. People should remember that I am a NASCAR fan, as well, that I want to see racing that is uninterrupted by weather. But when that can’t happen, I am going to produce the best forecast I can, as a free service to fans, media, teams, etc, for safety and for planning reasons.”

    “Now, I’d rather focus on the positives that I have received – both as tweets and through DMs. There have been kudos from Cup drivers, media, and tracks for both the quality of work and for our level of communication. And while I don’t do this for the recognition, they are nice to get for the validation of my work.”

    When Studwell first started out, he did not think he would be as big as he is today within the media.

    “To answer the question, no, it wasn’t at all what I was thinking,” he told Speedway Media. “When my son and I were at the Texas NASCAR weekend a few weeks ago, we went to the Tweetup there. I knew the media people and people knew who I was. So, as my son phrased it, I’m “Twitter famous.”

    There has been in times in Studwell’s career where he has thought about a different career path other than meteorology.

    “Oh yeah,” he said. “I’ve been all over the place, especially having the Aerospace undergrad. I graduated kind of soon after the Challenger accident, so it took me a few months to find a professional job after graduating from Michigan. So I’ve substitute taught during the day and as a doorman at a night club. My first professional job was Mission Control at NASA – Goddard Space Flight Center, then I worked on the Star Wars program. I moved back to Michigan and got a job designing and testing antilock brakes at the GM Proving Grounds.”

    He also explains why Clint Bowyer would be someone who he wants to be friends with and his thoughts on who the 2019 Cup Series Champion will be at the end of the season.

    “Clint Bowyer!,” Studwell excitedly answered. “First and final answer – hands down. He just seems (and this from the outside looking in) to be a quality, down to earth guy but also is a helluva driver. Plus he just seems like he’d be fun to hang out with but would likely drink me under the table.”

    As for predicting the 2019 Cup Series champion, he said, “Denny Hamlin will be champion at the end of the 2019 season.”

    Finally, Studwell gave advice for future meteorology students who may want to pursue this career.

    “First and foremost, learn how to program,” he stressed. “While we will still need human forecasters, there is a need for people who can program and also understand/appreciate the weather, so it’s a good combo.”

    You can follow Studwell on Twitter, visit his website RACEWeather.net and catch him on the Lapped Traffic Podcast every Tuesday night.