Tag: NASCAR Hall of Fame

  • NASCAR Champions Featuring ‘Red’ Byron

    NASCAR Champions Featuring ‘Red’ Byron

    Cup Champion – 1949
    March 12, 1915 – November 11, 1960
    Career: 1949 – 1951

    Robert ‘Red’ Byron had a short but historic career. Although he only competed for three full seasons, his contributions to NASCAR are significant.

    Byron won the first race sanctioned by NASCAR in 1948 on the Daytona Beach road course driving a modified 1939 Ford. He went on that year to win NASCAR’s first championship in the Modified Division.

    The following year brought more success as he teamed up with car owner Raymond Parks.  In 1949, driving the No. 22 Parks Novelty Oldsmobile, Byron won NASCAR’s first Strictly Stock Division championship; the forerunner to today’s Sprint Cup Series. He competed in six of the eight series races that season, capturing two wins at Daytona and Martinsville.

    Byron began racing in 1932 but his career was interrupted when he enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1941. During his stint as a pilot in World War II, he was severely wounded. Byron’s bomber was shot down and he nearly lost a leg. As a result of the injury, he endured constant pain and had to wear a leg brace as well as an orthopedic boot.

    After the war he moved to Atlanta and met ‘Red’ Vogt. Vogt was immediately impressed with Byron. He was not only a gifted driver but had an understanding of the strategy it took to win a race. The two men automatically clicked. Vogt was the mastermind behind the innovative modifications that allowed Byron to compete with his injured leg.

    In late 1945, Vogt introduced Byron to Raymond Parks. These three men would soon become one of NASCAR’s first super teams.

    Byron’s declining health cut short his racing career but he continued his involvement in motorsports.  In his later years he was working on developing an American car that could win the 24 Hours of LeMans.

    He died of a heart attack on Nov. 11, 1960, in a Chicago hotel room, at the age of 45.

    “In so many ways he was the perfect first champion,” Bill France Jr. said of Byron in 1998 when he was named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers. “A guy who loved racing so much he refused to give it up. And he loved his country so much he gave it all he had.”

    Accomplishments:

    2010 – 2013 Nominee for NASCAR Hall of Fame
    2008 – Inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame
    1998 – Named one of NASCAR’s “50 Greatest Drivers”
    1966 – Inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA) Hall of Fame
    1949 – Won NASCAR’s first championship in the Strictly Stock Division
    1948 – Won NASCAR’s first championship in the Modified Division
    1948 – Won the first race sanctioned by NASCAR at Daytona Beach

  • Ken Squier: A Common Man with an Uncommon Impact on NASCAR

    Ken Squier: A Common Man with an Uncommon Impact on NASCAR

    Photo Credit: Gary Buchanan
    Photo Credit: Gary Buchanan

    As NASCAR readies to kick off the 2013 season with the Great American Race at Daytona, one common man, Ken Squier, will be ready to once again have an uncommon influence on the sport.

    Squier, a Vermont native, has had a lengthy history of covering the sport that he has grown to love and influence. In fact, he started his broadcasting career at the tender age of 14 years.

    “I hitchhiked to the track because I didn’t want my parents to know,” Squier said of his first announcing gig. “I think I got $5 for it.”

    “They had taken a bull dozer around the field a couple of times and called it a race track,” Squier continued. “It was the north against the south at that time in Vermont and it was a war.”

    “The public address system was on a logging truck,” Squier said. “It got so bad that me and another kid hid under the truck until the fights were under control.”

    As with many in the sport, Squier came by his love of racing naturally, tagging along with his father who was a harness racing announcer. And thanks to those travels, he got his first exposure to stock car racing.

    “My dad was a harness race announcer so I knew I had to be a part of racing somehow, someway,” Squier said. “We used to go to country fairs and one afternoon lasted about five years.”

    “It was awful,” Squier continued. “However, on the weekend, you could blast through those awful days because they had the Hell Drivers and the open wheel, open cockpit cars.”

    “This was no children’s game,” Squier said. “It was the real deal.”

    “We would see on a Saturday or Sunday American Automobile Association races,” Squier continued. “I actually saw the original Joie Chitwood and all the others.”

    “My hero when I was a kid was Ted Horn from California.”

    From then on, Squier was hooked on this intriguing sport of automobile racing, so much so that he was involved with the founding of the Motor Racing Network, where we served as a commentator from 1969 to 1978.

    “The first office for Motor Racing Network was a Pepsi cooler with a glass top folded back and forth out in the hall,” Squier said. “They gave us a phone and said get your ass busy and find some radio stations to carry this race.”

    He then took on a role with CBS Sports, again telling the stories of the racers he so admired, as well as covering other sports, including boxing and even frog jumping and hollering contests. In fact, Squier was part of the debut of the NASCAR broadcast for the 1979 Daytona 500 and would be part of many Great American races from that time forward.

    “I wore my CBS necktie every Daytona 500,” Squier said. “I paid $5 and selected it because whatever you spilled on it, no one could see.”

    And of course, Squier would be part of that one special CBS Daytona 500 broadcast, capturing the infamous fight between the Allison brothers and Cale Yarborough, which was not only seen around the world but which catapulted the sport of stock car racing to the level that it is today.

    “The show was over and the Goodyear blimp was headed back to the airport,” Squier said of that incredible Daytona 500 finish. “We were just fussing around and the producer said, “Take a look at this.”

    “Capturing that brawl was just one of those moments,” Squier continued. “Everything fell into place that day and all fit together.”

    Squier was also part of another historic moment, bringing the innovation of an in-car camera to the sport of stock car racing.

    “I was in Australia and the people providing the in-car equipment invited me to see Bathurst which was their Indy 500 at the time,” Squier said. “I was in the truck and sure enough the thing goes on and the course was like a Christmas tree, up one side and down the other.”

    “It was just remarkable to see the cameras focused on the drivers,” Squier continued. “When they came down the mountain, there was a straightaway and the race is on and the racer is providing commentary right from the track.”

    “I said to myself, I just think I found what we need to do in the Daytona 500.”

    Cale Yarborough carried that first in car camera in a Daytona 500, sharing his insights right from the cockpit of his race car. And he went on to win the race as well.

    Patty Wheeler, Humpy Wheeler’s daughter, recognized other accomplishments of her good friend and mentor Ken Squier.

    “There were other innovations like the Hollywood Hotel on Fox, which was conceived by Squier in the early 1980s as the STP Pit Communication Center,” Wheeler noted. “He started the first ever television production company and launched the first ever weekly motorsports show called Motor Week Illustrated.”

    “You remember that 5:35 on Friday afternoons was must-see TV to find out about racing,” Wheeler continued. “And it even led into live wrestling.”

    “One of Squier’s great legacies was Motorsports University,” Wheeler said. “When you look at the people on the air, most got their first shot or their big break from Squier.”

    “We all owe him a great deal of gratitude for that.”

    “What Squier did for motorsports was what Howard Cosell did for boxing,” Wheeler said. “He introduced a broad American public to the sport he loved and showcased it in a way that made everyone else love it with him.”

    In addition to his broadcasting prowess, what intrigued Squier most were these racers, these gutsy risk takers, who gave their all both on and off the track.

    “This was not a children’s game played by adults,” Squier said. “These were men that were so committed and believed so wholly in what they did that they were willing to take the risk.”

    “If one fell, the greatest tribute was to be there the next week to race in their honor,” Squier continued. “It was the kind of sport where those people who took those chances understood that.”

    “You could trust them,” Squier said of the NASCAR racers. “They could be wild, but when the chips were down you didn’t have to worry that your children were going to take on a hero that was stuffing something up their nose.”

    “That didn’t play in NASCAR,” Squier continued. “It was a different world and still is today.”

    “These were common people doing uncommon deeds,” Squier said. “It was Bud Moore in World War II over in Europe.”

    “So much of what we know of racing and love came from those incredible people who fought for this nation,” Squier continued. “They were common men that did incredible deeds.”

    “And racing is full of those people and still is today,” Squier said. “So, that’s what has always brought me back to this.”

    “I can’t stop it because I like it so much and I like the people so much.”

    “It is that good.”

    For his years of passion for the sport, Squier was inducted recently into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame and also was recognized with the unveiling of the Squier-Hall Award for Media Excellence, with his good friend Barney Hall, at recent ceremonies at NASCAR’s Hall of Fame.

    So, this weekend, as fans across the nation sit down to watch the Great American race yet again, with the new gyrocam and other technological broadcasting advances, all should remember that common men doing uncommon deeds, both on and off the track, have grown the sport to what it is today.

    And Ken Squier was certainly one of those common men with an uncommon influence on the sport of NASCAR racing.

  • HOF Revisited: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Talks Heroes, History and Superstitions

    Dale Earnhardt Jr photo for story
    Whenever I’m covering a NASCAR race or other event, I often record countless driver interviews. Some of them find their way into articles and some are set aside.

    I recently ran across an audio recording that I made in November 2011 when Dale Earnhardt Jr. visited the NASCAR Hall of Fame for a fan question and answer session.  Winston Kelley, the Executive Director of the Hall of Fame, hosted the event.

    Dale Jr. was in rare form. I distinctly remember thinking to myself that he was more relaxed and confident than I had seen him in quite some time. He didn’t seem like a driver fulfilling an obligation. It was more like a conversation among friends and as usual, he left his fans wanting more.

    Winston Kelley: “In addition to your father, who were the guys you looked up the most to, that you admired or wanted to be like? Who were the guys that were Dale Earnhardt Jr’s heroes growing up?”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.: “I always liked Jimmy Means a lot. He was a driver and now is a car owner in the sport. His son was a friend of mine so we palled around the racetrack together every weekend. So I spent some time around Jimmy and watched Jimmy do what he did. I just admired how hard he worked and how dedicated he was to what he was doing.

    Cale Yarborough was a guy that I thought a lot of, how he carried himself around the racetrack and how he handled his business.

    I thought David Pearson was pretty cool but I didn’t really know him enough or get to know him well enough as a driver.  But watching old films and old footage, reading and stuff like that, he seems like an interesting character.”

    Winston Kelley: “When you did the “Back in the Day” show, you seemed to really enjoy the history of the sport.”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.: “I do. I’m sort of mystified on how the cars have changed over the years and how much they’ve changed. It really is interesting to me to look back at some of the older machines and wonder as a driver how they drove and how they went around the track and what those cars felt like when you raced with them compared to what we have today.

    I wish that if I could go back in time I could race in the 70’s with the old Chargers and old Oldsmobiles and stuff like that. It would be a lot of fun to be a part of.

    I think the sport was different then and simpler in a lot of ways but I definitely enjoy the history a lot.”

    Fan: “Are you superstitious?”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.: “I’m not really that superstitious. I believe in the typical things that your parents or your family teaches you when you’re growing up like breaking mirrors or stuff like that but nothing else.”

    Winston Kelley:  “Green used to be a really big deal. Was that something your Dad was superstitious about? You’re driving a green car now. It kind of started to go away with the Mountain Dew car.”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.: “I don’t think Dad was that superstitious but I’ve heard through my grandmother that Ralph Earnhardt was pretty superstitious about the color green and peanuts and stuff like that. They say in racing you’re not supposed to eat peanuts around the race cars. I don’t know why. Apparently at Concord Motor Speedway one night he chased some fellow off with a gun for eating peanuts around his racecar.”

    Fan: “Whenever you’re racing, do you ever feel your father watching over you?”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.: “I think so. I think you carry that with you all the time with everything you do. If I need to make a decision I’ll bank on what he taught me or what we talked about or if we ever discussed it before and try to make the right decision with his help. And I do feel like his spirit rides with me and keeps me safe.”

  • NASCAR Announces Hall of Fame Nominees For 2013 HOF Class

    NASCAR Announces Hall of Fame Nominees For 2013 HOF Class

    [media-credit name=”http://www.nascarhall.com” align=”alignright” width=”141″][/media-credit]On April 11th, NASCAR announced the 25 nominees for the 2013 NASCAR Hall of Fame Class. The 25 nominees will be broken down to five via the NASCAR Hall of Fame Voting Panel and they will become the fourth group to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. Along with the voting panel, fans will have the chance to go to NASCAR.com and place their vote, which will be counted in in the final vote. The date for voting is set for May 23rd and the class of 2013 will announced live on NASCAR.com that day.

    As for the list, 20 people return from last year’s group as they were not inducted into the Hall of Fame. Added to those 20 were five new people who held their own level of high quality in NASCAR.

    NASCAR’s First Treasurer and Secretary Anne Bledsoe France, who was married to Bill France, in which Big Bill formed NASCAR back in 1949. Anne took care of the financial aspects of building the sport, beginning her service to the sport in 1959. She kept working up until her death in 1992. France becomes the first female nominated for the Hall of Fame.

    Engine Builder and owner Ray Fox built engines for a variety of race winners including Fireball Roberts and Junior Johnson. He built his first engine in 1955, which was for Roberts, but was disqualified after mechanic Red Vogt modified the push rods. 1956 was the year that Fox began hitting stardom as he built the engines for Carl Kiehafer, winning 22 of the first 26 races with three drivers. They would go on to win the championship that year with Buddy Baker. Fox would become a car owner himself in 1962, winning races with Johnson and Baker. He would retire in the early 1970s, yet became a NASCAR engine inspector in 1990. He held that role for six years before retiring at the age of 86.

    NASCAR Competitor Wendell Scott, who became the first full-time African-American competitor. Scott made his first NASCAR start in 1961 at Piedmont Interstate Fairgrounds, but failed to finish due to oil pressure issues. He would become the first African-American to win a NASCAR race in 1964 at Speedway Park in Jacksonville, Florida. Over the course of a career that saw 495 starts, he had 20 top five finishes and 147 top 10s. NASCAR currently awards scholarships in tribute to Scott, handing out twelve each year to students from historically black colleges and universities and Hispanic-serving institutions. Scott becomes the first African-American nominated for the Hall of Fame.

    Promotor and Sponsor Executive Ralph Seagraves, who brought R.J. Reynolds Tabacco Company to NASCAR. Junior Johnson went to Seagraves originally looking for sponsorship for his car, yet instead it turned into a sponsorship for NASCAR. NASCAR’s premiere series became the NASCAR Winston Cup Series in 1971. Winston would sponsor the Cup Series till the end of 2003, when Nextel took over. Seagraves led as the president of RJR’s Special Events Operations for 13 years, heading the sponsorship effort and leading many track upgrades. Seagraves would retire from R.J. Reynolds in 1986.

    NASCAR Champion Rusty Wallace, who won the 1989 NASCA Sprint Cup Series Championship. Wallace followed his father Russ into racing, winning the American Speed Association title in 1983. He made his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start in 1980, driving for Roger Penske. He would not enter NASCAR full-time till 1984,winning Rookie of the Year while driving for Cliff Stewart. In 1986, Wallace would capture his first Cup win at Bristol Motor Speedway while racing for Raymond Beadle. The championship would come in 1989 while driving for Beadle, 12 points over Dale Earnhardt. In total, he would score 55 victories over his career, ranking him eighth all-time. The majority of his wins (25) came on short tracks like Bristol, Martinsville, North Wilkesboro and Richmond. He currently is an ESPN NASCAR analyst.

    The rest of the 20 nominees are as follows (in alphabetical order)……

    • Buck Baker, first driver to win consecutive NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series titles (1956-57)
    • Red Byron, first NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion, in 1949
    • Richard Childress, 11-time car owner champion in NASCAR’s three national series
    • Jerry Cook, six-time NASCAR Modified champion
    • H. Clay Earles, founder of Martinsville Speedway
    • Tim Flock, two-time NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion
    • Rick Hendrick, 13-time car owner champion in NASCAR’s three national series
    • Jack Ingram, two-time NASCAR Busch (now Nationwide) Series champion and three-time Late Model Sportsman champion
    • Bobby Isaac, 1970 NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion
    • Fred Lorenzen, 26 wins and winner of the Daytona 500 and World 600
    • Cotton Owens, driver-owner, won 1966 owner championship with David Pearson
    • Raymond Parks, NASCAR’s first champion car owner
    • Benny Parsons, 1973 NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion
    • Les Richter, former NASCAR executive; former president of Riverside International Raceway
    • Fireball Roberts, 33 NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series wins, including the 1962 Daytona 500
    • T. Wayne Robertson, helped raise NASCAR popularity as R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company senior VP
    • Herb Thomas, first two-time NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion, 1951, ’53
    • Curtis Turner, early personality, called the “Babe Ruth of stock car racing”
    • Joe Weatherly, two-time NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion
    • Leonard Wood, part-owner and former crew chief for Wood Brothers, revolutionized pit stops

    The nominees were selected by a 21-person committee, containing representatives from NASCAR, the Hall of Fame and track owners.

    Those individuals are…..

    NASCAR Hall of Fame: Executive Director Winston Kelley; Historian Buz McKim.

    NASCAR Officials: Chairman/CEO Brian France; Vice Chairman Jim France; Senior Vice President Paul Brooks; President Mike Helton; Vice President of Competition Robin Pemberton; Senior Vice President of Racing Operations Steve O’Donnell; Competition Administrator Jerry Cook; former Vice President Ken Clapp.

    Track Owners/Operators: International Speedway Corporation CEO Lesa Kennedy; Martinsville Speedway President Clay Campbell; Texas Motor Speedway President Eddie Gossage; Atlanta Motor Speedway President Ed Clark; former Indianapolis Motor Speedway President Tony George; Dover Motorsports CEO Denis McGlynn; Pocono Raceway board of director member Looie McNally; Bowman Gray Stadium operator Dale Pinilis; Riverhead Raceway operators Jim and Barbara Cromarty (1 vote); former Toyota Speedway at Irwindale operator Jim Williams; Rockford Speedway owner Jody Deery.

  • Today’s Stars and Yesterday’s Legends Join together at the NASCAR Preview 2012

    Today’s Stars and Yesterday’s Legends Join together at the NASCAR Preview 2012

    [media-credit name=”Credit: Streeter Lecka/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”227″][/media-credit]NASCAR Preview 2012 was all about the fans and the fans came by the thousands.  Many camped out overnight in front of the Charlotte Convention Center, even standing in the pouring rain, in anticipation of the event.  This may sound crazy to some but I can only imagine the stories told and the new friends made while they waited patiently for the doors to open.

    Sam Alverson of Jacksonville, Fla. had the distinction of being the first fan through the door after standing in line for 26 hours.

    They came from all over the country carrying pictures and diecast cars to get autographs and a picture taken with their favorite NASCAR drivers.  Over 60 drivers from all three national divisions were there to accommodate them.

    A few of the drivers even hung out after their autograph sessions and spent a few minutes talking with their fans.

    A friend told me about one small girl that she saw carrying a tire through the long lines for autographs. She would carry it for a few feet, set it down for a quick rest and repeat the process again and again. Her father asked his young daughter if she wanted him to carry it for a while but she loudly told him, “No, I can do it.”

    You can’t help but smile at the dedication and loyalty of NASCAR fans.

    The day was filled with non-stop action including driver interviews on stage, sponsor exhibits and car displays. There were plenty of places to rest and get a bite to eat plus you could buy the newest items honoring Friday night’s class of inductees.  It may have been rainy and dreary outside but inside the fans were having the times of their lives.

    The preview also honored the legends of the sport.

    The day began with a free breakfast with Junior Johnson featuring his famous breakfast items. You could also get a picture and an autograph with the 2010 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee.

    Throughout the day you could take a NASCAR Hall of Fame tour that included a meet and greet with legends Junior Johnson, Ned Jarrett, Bud Moore, Richard Petty, Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip.

    Finally the day ended with an “Evening of Living History.” These storytelling sessions took place at different areas in the Hall of Fame and were led by Cale Yarborough, Darrell Waltrip, Ned Jarrett, Junior Johnson, Glen Wood and Dale Inman who were joined by friends and family on stage.

    Several of these were held at the same time so I chose to attend the one led by Junior Johnson.  It was held in front of his moonshine still and guests were encouraged to sample some of Johnson’s ‘Midnight Moon Moonshine.’ Although I didn’t indulge, the ‘Apple Pie’ flavor seemed to be the crowd favorite.

    Johnson was joined by NASCAR Hall of Fame Executive Director Winston Kelley and writer Tom Higgins.

    This turned out to be the highlight of my day so I’ve included one of several stories that left me with a smile on my face as I headed home Saturday evening.

    Higgins opened things up with what he called his favorite “Junior moonshine story.”

    It was back in the 1950s when Junior and Gwyn Staley, a good friend, headed up to Virginia to take two loads of moonshine to some thirsty sailors. They had to keep moving their stash to keep ahead of the revenuers so they had to drive across the Brushy Mountains to a hiding place near Taylorsville, N.C.

    When they got there, they loaded up their hauler cars and were on the way back to Wilkes County to gas up the cars.

    “They were coming across the mountain and saw where a car had slid off the road. Steam was coming out of it and two dazed men were walking around the car. So Junior who is a very kind man, generous and a Good Samaritan, stopped, although he had liquor in the car. He went up to this car that had turned over and lo and behold there was the high sheriff of Wilkes County and his chief deputy.” said Higgins.

    By this time, everyone in the room was hanging on every word.

    “They had liquor on their breath and lipstick on their collars and they’d been somewhere they shouldn’t have been.  The sheriff looked up and said thank God it’s you Junior. You’ve got to get us back to the courthouse or they’ll throw me out of office.” Higgins continued.  “Junior said, Hell sheriff I can’t take you to the courthouse I got a load of liquor in my car. The sheriff said, Junior if you’ll get me out of this I promise I’ll never chase you again and I’ll never let any of my deputies chase you.”

    Johnson agreed to take the sheriff back.  So they rearranged the cases of liquor in the car to make seats and they took the high sheriff and the deputy back to Wilkesboro.

    Higgins ended the story by saying, “Junior still sees the sheriff from time to time on the streets of North Wilkesboro and he tries to evade Junior but Junior won’t let him.”

    “He’ll grin at him, wink and say, Sheriff, you been across the mountain lately?”

    Kelley asked if the sheriff had been true to his word. Johnson just laughed and said, “After that, he didn’t even want to talk to me.”

  • ‘Fearless Freddy’ Belongs in NASCAR’s Hall

    ‘Fearless Freddy’ Belongs in NASCAR’s Hall

    It came as an email from Ford’s PR guy, Dan Zacharias, Friday evening. Former NASCAR driver Fred Lorenzen is going to be honored by the Illinois General Assembly at Chicagoland Speedway on December 7, 2011. It is the start of a push by many to get Lorenzen into the NASCAR Hall of Fame. It brought back lots of memories. It made me smile.

    [media-credit name=”NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”235″][/media-credit]The first race I ever attended, way back in 1964, was won by Lorenzen at Martinsville Speedway. For the major part of his career, he drove the No. 28 Ford out of the Holman-Moody shops to tremendous success. He won 26 races in his career, always running a limited schedule. The record shows that the 26 wins came in only 158 races, less than five seasons in today’s world. He was the first driver to win at NASCAR’s original super speedways (Daytona, Darlington, Atlanta, Charlotte, and Rockingham. From 1961-1967, he won a quarter of the races he ran, which brings me to the point of this article.

    As I watched the festivities at Las Vegas tonight, and I’ve mentioned this in articles before, all the emphasis these days is on the season championship. It’s been bastardized by the Chase which allows a driver to have a horrible year and still win a championship by concentrating on the last ten races, but I’ve worn that opinion out over the years, but “Fearless Freddy” never ran the whole schedule. Much like David Pearson and Cale Yarborough in his later years, he ran selected races and was pretty successful in the races he ran. And they were stars. Not anymore. The television guys give us a running update on who is leading the points from Daytona on while always reminding us who is in the lead. Never mind who won the race, it’s the championship that counts.

    Lorenzen has been on the ballot twice before without much interest from voters. That’s a shame. Probably part of it is because Lorenzen retired in 1967 at the tender age of 33. He came back in the early 70’s to run for Paul Goldsmith and the Wood Brothers, but left the sport in 1972 for good. Most of today’s enthusiasts probably don’t remember him, but I do. This event’s main purpose is to once again introduce one of NASCAR’s greatest drivers to voters. Unfortunately, the decision by the hall to allow only a limited number of inductees each year might spell doom for drivers like Lorenzen. The practice of only allowing a limited number of not only drivers, but car owners, crew chiefs, broadcasters, and officials, there is a good chance that guys like Fred will forever be overlooked. How can Lorenzen be chosen over today’s feel good guys like Rick Hendrick? It’s a flawed system that needs to be changed, but I’m afraid I am in the minority in this attitude.

    Today, Fred Lorenzen is in a nursing home suffering from dementia. It would be wonderful to see him get in the hall before he dies. The same could be said for Chris Economaki and many others. The trouble is that the current policies will make it impossible for many of the heroes of the sport to ever get in the hall. Those without a championship need not apply. I find that horrible.

  • Dale Earnhardt Jr and Brad Keselowski at the NASCAR Hall of Fame

    Dale Earnhardt Jr and Brad Keselowski at the NASCAR Hall of Fame

    To promote the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, all of the eligible drivers have been making appearances at the NASCAR Hall of Fame to spend some time with their fans. 

    [media-credit name=”Ed Coombs” align=”alignright” width=”238″][/media-credit]Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Brad Keselowski were the featured drivers this Tuesday for a fan question and answer session.

    Miss Sprint Cup Monica Palumbo started things off with a round of trivia questions and prizes for the fans. After the crowd was warmed up, Keselowski took the stage with the Executive Director of the Hall, Winston Kelley.

    He delighted the crowd with both his honesty and humor.

    The biggest laugh came when Keselowski was asked, “What is the strangest thing you’ve ever been asked to autograph?”

    His answer was “the baby in a bucket of beer.”

    Yes, you read that right.

    A woman once asked Keselowski to sign her baby that she had placed in a bucket of beer. He drew the line at autographing the baby, signed the child’s shirt instead and sent the satisfied fan on her way.

    Keselowski answered the tough questions too.

    He was asked what he thought about the actions that NASCAR had taken after Kyle Busch intentionally wrecked Ron Hornaday at Texas Motor Speedway.

    “I feel pretty good about the way NASCAR handled the situation. I don’t think there’s any way that you can handle it that makes everyone happy because you can’t go back in time and fix it.”

    He went on to describe the nature of racing as an evolution in progress. He used the ‘Boys have at it’ decree from NASCAR as an example of something that is constantly evolving to the next level until someone finally has to say, “Stop!”

    Keselowski was also quite outspoken about NASCAR’s decision to switch to a fuel injection system next season.

    Is he happy about the change?

    “I’m not a big fan of it at all,” he said.

    He went on to say that he thought the main impetus for the change was simply public relations.

    Keselowski went into more detail when he talked with members of the media after the fan question and answer session ended.

    “We’re not doing this because it’s better for the sport or better for the teams. I don’t even think we’re really going to save any gas.”

    “It gives them something to promote,” he continued. “And we’re always looking for something to promote. But the honest answer is it does nothing for the sport except cost the team owners money.”

    Keselowski knows that speaking his mind may get him in hot water with NASCAR.

    “But that’s the honest part of it. I think it’s a disaster.”

    After a short break, Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the stage to answer questions.

    Winston Kelley started things off by asking Earnhardt Jr. to name someone, in addition to his father, who he had looked up to while he was growing up or admired.

    He answered with three names; Jimmie Means, Cale Yarborough and David Pearson.

    “I always liked Jimmy Means a lot,” he said. “I just admired how hard he worked and how dedicated he was to what he was doing.”

    “Cale Yarborough was a guy that I thought a lot of. I admired how he carried himself around the race track and how he handled his business.”

    “I thought David Pearson was pretty cool but I didn’t get to know him that well as a driver. But watching old films and old footage and reading about him, he seemed like an interesting character.”

    The questions from the fans ran the gamut from “What sports do you like?” to “What is the best way to pursue a career in racing?”

    Quite a few of the fans simply stood up to proclaim that they were his biggest fan or to ask for an autograph.

    We learned that he’s not particularly superstitious and doesn’t have any pre-race rituals.

    “I just get up in the morning, put my clothes on and go to work,” he said laughing.

    Then one young fan stood up and quietly asked, “Whenever you are racing do you feel your father watching over you or feel your father’s spirit when you are driving the car?”

    Without hesitation, Dale Jr answered, “I think so. I think that you kind of carry that with you all the time and with everything you do.”

    “I do feel like his spirit rides with me in the racecar and keeps me safe.”

    A small ripple of applause spread throughout the crowd.

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. may not be the most eloquent of speakers but at moments like these it’s easy to understand why his fans feel such a special connection to him.

  • NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Buck Baker

    NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Buck Baker

    Elzie Wylie “Buck” Baker was one of the most dominant drivers in NASCAR during the 1950s. His never give up attitude was the fuel for the fire that pushed him to be the best. Baker became the first driver to win consecutive Sprint Cup Championships in 1956 and 1957.

    His strategy was a mixture of determination and the belief that he was capable of winning any race.

    “You can’t let anyone think you’re not going to win a race,” he once said during an interview. “If you talk yourself out of believing you are a

    winnner, then you might as well stay in the pits and let someone else do the driving.”

    “There were times we left home without money to buy new tires. We didn’t know where the money was coming from. Heck, there’s times we didn’t have money to put gas in the truck to get to the track.”

    “But someone always came through for what we needed. We always could have used more and better equipment, but I’m talking about don’t let yourself believe you can’t be a winner.”

    Baker was born on a farm near Chester, SC on March 4, 1919. He didn’t grow up with dreams of racing but he always had a wild streak.

    It was a bull calf named Buck that inspired Baker’s nickname because he shared the same uncontrolled abandon as the animal. That recklessness continued into his teenage years when he began running moonshine for his cousin.

    He also supplemented his income with a variety of other jobs including working in a bakery and selling cars.

    When World War II erupted, Baker did a stint in the Navy and served in Maryland. But even the regimented life of a serviceman did not change him. He still found a way to run moonshine for his pals in his spare time.

    After the Navy he moved with his wife and son to Charlotte, NC. Baker found work as a bus driver for Trailways. He had a family and a regular job but Baker was never the typical family man.

    One evening he was headed to Union, SC, with about 20 passengers on board. Somebody mentioned that there was a square dance in the town of Chester. They all took a vote and decided to take a detour to the dance.

    “The vote to go to the dance was unanimous among the passengers, who were singing and having a good time. So I parked the bus and we all went in. Meanwhile, the dispatcher had the police out looking for the bus.”

    They finally arrived in Union about three hours late.

    “The passengers were half drunk, hanging out the windows and waving and carrying on. Driving into the garage to park the bus, I almost ran over the owner of the company. He fired me on the spot but rehired me the next morning before it was time to make another run.”

    It was during this period of his life that Baker decided he wanted to try his hand at becoming a race car driver. He got a later start than most but competed in his first NASCAR race in 1949, at the age of 30.

    Baker found some success in those early years, racing mostly as an independent owner/driver and in 1952 he captured his first win in the Grand National Series (now Sprint Cup Series) in Columbia, SC.

    Baker was known as a hard charger both on and off the track. His competitors knew that too much beating and banging on the track would be dealt with in the pits after the race.

    “My dad won his share of races on the track,” said Baker’s son Buddy, “but I don’t think he ever lost a battle in the pits.”

    In 1955 Baker finished second in the points standings and caught the eye of mulit-car team owner, Carl Kiekhaefer.

    “I saw that Buck was my top competition,” Kiekhaefer said.  “There is only one thing to do with a man like that — hire him!”

    In 1956 Baker won 14 races and his first Cup championship while driving for Carl Kiekhaefer who was partnered with legendary car and engine builder, Ray Fox.

    The following year, Kiekhaefer left NASCAR and Baker was on his own again. He partnered with Bud Moore as his crew chief and scored ten victories in 1957. Baker won his second Cup championship becoming the first driver to win consecutive championships.

    The following season Baker once again finished second in the points standings.

    One of Baker’s most controversial races was on December 1, 1963 at Speedway Park in Jacksonville, FL. Although NASCAR awarded the winning trophy to Baker, the race was actually won by Wendell Scott.

    Hours after the event, NASCAR officials admitted that Scott had won the race. Wendell Scott went in the record books as the first and only African-American to win a NASCAR race in the premier Cup series. They gave him a trophy about a month later in Savannah, but it wasn’t the real thing. Baker got the real trophy.

    Years later, Baker would say, “Many racers gave him a hard time, including some of my friends, but I got along fine with him and tried to help him. He did as well as anybody with the equipment he had.”

    “By the time he was declared the winner, all the fans had left the track. I’ll always believe that I won the race, but I don’t want to take anything from Scott by saying that. It was OK with me, and I was happy for him.”

    Baker continued to race until 1976. In 636 starts, he won 46 times and ranks 14th on the all-time wins list.

    In addition to his two championships, Baker won the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway three times. His last victory there came in 1964, at the age of 45. It would also be the final win of his career.

    Baker considered it his biggest accomplishment.

    “In 1964, I drove Ray Fox’s Dodge in the Southern 500. I was 45 years old at the time. Fox was concerned that I was too old to run 500 miles. Others had written me off as too old. I told Fox not to worry about the horse, just load the wagon. Buddy (Buck’s son) was there, and toward the end of the race, Fox was seriously thinking that I might need relief. Buddy told him there was absolutely no need to say anything to me, because I wouldn’t get out of the car. And he’s never been more right.”

    “It was the biggest thrill I had in racing. There was nothing left for me to prove to those who had said I was finished.”

    Baker was known as one of the most versatile racers of his time. He won races in NASCAR’s Modified, Speedway and Grand American series, raced in multiple makes of cars and won for eight different team owners.

    His son, Buddy once said, “There was a time in the modified division that nobody could beat him.”

    After retiring from NASCAR, Baker opened the Buck Baker Driving School in 1980. Many of today’s top drivers have attended his school including Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, Ryan Newman, Jeff Burton and Ward Burton.

    Baker claimed that Jeff Gordon made the decision to race stock cars at his school.

    “He turned North Carolina Speedway about three seconds faster than the school car he was driving had ever gone. He drove to the motel and told his mother that stock car racing was what he was going to do for the rest of his life. I knew then that he was going to be a hell of a driver. I guess the rest, shall we say, is history in the making.”

    In 1998 Buck Baker was named as one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers and in 2010 was honored as a nominee in the inaugural class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

    Baker died on April 14, 2002 at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, NC, at the age of 83.

    His son, Buddy, followed his father’s path, winning 19 NASCAR Cup races and continued his legacy at the Buck Baker Driving School.

    He summed up his father’s life saying, “Throughout the entire racing world, I don’t know of anybody who would have said he didn’t give 110 percent from the time they dropped the green flag until the time the race was over.”

    “He was that same way in life, too.”

    Achievements:

    1982 – Inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame
    1990 – Inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame
    1992 – Inducted into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame
    1996 – Inducted into the Stock Car Racing Hall of Fame
    1998 – Inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America
    1998 – Named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers
    2010 – Nominee to the inaugural NASCAR Hall of Fame induction class
    2011 – Nominee to the NASCAR Hall of Fame
    2012 – Nominee to the NASCAR Hall of Fame

    Thanks to circletrack.com for Buck Baker quotes

  • NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Richie Evans

    NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Richie Evans

    On Tuesday, June 14, 2011, the NASCAR Hall of Fame announced the 2012 class of inductees. Richard “Richie” Evans was named as part of this new class and joins fellow legends Cale Yarborough, Darrell Waltrip, Dale Inman and Glen Wood as part of an elite group.

    For those who only follow the Sprint Cup Series, his name may be unfamiliar. But a close look at his record makes it immediately obvious why he was included in such a prestigious class.

    Evans won nine National Modified Championships, including eight consecutive championships from 1978 to 1985. His eight straight championships still stand as a record in any NASCAR division to date.  He has been hailed as the best to ever drive the asphalt modified circuit.

    During his career he won more than 400 feature races and over 30 track championships. One of his best seasons was in 1979 when Evans ran 60 races capturing 54 top five finishes that included 37 victories.

    The International Motorsports Hall of Fame lists his achievements as “one of the supreme accomplishments in motorsports.”

    Evan’s left his father’s farm at the age of 16 to work in a garage in Rome, New York.  He soon ventured into the world of racing as a drag racer but eventually switched to stock cars. In 1965 he began running in the Modified division.

    Evans was not only a gifted driver but often spent 100 hours a week working on his own cars, leaving nothing to chance.

    “Working with the car and working on it in the garage every week is an advantage,” Evans once said. “While I’m working on the car, I’m thinking about every lap I rode in that thing. It’s not like the mechanic who stood and watched it during the feature and then has to make some decisions.”

    Nicknamed the “Rapid Roman,” Evans won his first NASCAR Modified Championship in 1973 at the age of 32. He won his second title in 1978 and continued his reign as “king” of the modified division through 1985.

    Evans was a winner in more ways than one.  He won the Most Popular Driver award nine times and was highly regarded by even the competitors he raced against each week. He was well known for his down to earth manner and his willingness to help others.

    In the eyes of his fans, Evans was a true star.

    Once before a race at Daytona, Paul Newman was sitting next to Richie Evans on the pit wall talking when a seven year old boy spotted his favorite driver. He walked over to the pair and when he got there, Paul Newman said “I don’t give autographs.”  The boy innocently answered, “I wanted Richie’s autograph.” Evans just smiled and gave the boy his autograph.

    Richie Evans never competed in the highest levels of NASCAR.  But don’t make the mistake of thinking that this meant he wasn’t good enough. Richie Evans was, and still remains, one of the best racers in any NASCAR division.

    In 2010, Tommy Baldwin and Steve Park teamed up to race a Richie Evans tribute car at Daytona to pay their respects to this legendary driver.

    “Having Richie Evans along for the ride for this weekend and honoring him is something special to all of us,” said Baldwin, “especially in the NASCAR short track community around the country.  Richie was somebody we all looked up to and when he came to town, we knew we had to beat him to win.  He made us all work harder and I think that prepared a lot of us for the Sprint Cup level.”

    Evans had already clinched his last championship when tragedy struck. On October 24, 1985, Evans was killed during a practice session in a crash at Martinsville Speedway.  A heartbroken racing community mourned the death of one of their own.

    Tony Siscone, a fellow modified racer, summed up the shock and sorrow that many were feeling.

    “Good old Richie just did it to us again. He left under his own conditions and lived his life on his own terms.”

    Accomplishments:

    • Named #1 on NASCAR’s Modified all-time Top 10 list.
    • Only retired number in NASCAR in any series — #61 on the Whelen Modified Tour.
    • Named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers in 1998.
    • Selected by fans as NASCAR‘s Most Popular Driver in Modified Division nine times.
    • International Motorsports Hall of Fame 1996.
    • National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame 1986.
    • New York State Stock Car Association Hall of Fame.
    • New England Auto Racers Hall of Fame inaugural 1998 class.
    • FOAR SCORE Hall of Fame: 1986 – inaugural class.
    • Oswego Speedway Hall of Fame 2000.
    • As part of the 25th anniversary of the NASCAR Weekly Series in 2006, Evans was named one of the series’ All Time Top 25 drivers.
    • 2010 nominee to the NASCAR Hall of Fame.
    • Evans’ #61 was retired at his home track – Utica-Rome Speedway in Vernon, New York in 2008.
    • 2011 nominee to the NASCAR Hall of Fame.
    • 2012 Will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame

    Thanks to Area Auto Racing News and allthatmatters.org for quotes.

  • NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Cale Yarborough

    NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Cale Yarborough

    On Tuesday, June 14, 2011, the NASCAR Hall of Fame announced the 2012 class of inductees. It should come as no surprise that Cale Yarborough’s name is at the top of the list. Yarborough received the highest percentage of votes with 85 percent.

    Driver, car owner, businessman, author and actor, Cale Yarborough has done it all. This hard-charging three-time Cup champion was known for giving 100 percent from the first to the last lap.

    Richard Petty said of Yarborough, “It didn’t make no difference if he was two laps behind or 20 laps ahead, he drove that car as hard as he possibly could.”

    Cale Yarborough ruled NASCAR in the 1970’s with three consecutive Sprint Cup championships from 1976-78. No one had ever shown such dominance and his record stood until 2008 when Jimmie Johnson won the championship for the third straight year.

    During those three years, Yarborough won 28 races – nine in 1976, nine in 1977 and 10 in 1978. He not only won those championships, but by a huge margin. In 1978, Yarborough won by a margin of 474 points.

    His 31-year career total of 83 victories ranks fifth all-time and his 69 poles rank third all-time. Yarborough won the Southern 500 at Darlington five times.  He also managed to win the Daytona 500 four times (1968, 1977, 1983-84), second only to Richard Petty’s seven.

    William Caleb Yarborough was born in the small town of Timmonsville, South Carolina in 1939. He was the oldest of three sons born to Julian and Annie Mae Yarborough. As a small boy, he attended races in the nearby towns of Florence and Columbia with his father and fell in love with racing. Yarborough remembers the first Southern 500 in Darlington in 1950. His father had been looking forward to it and he was hoping his Dad would take him to see it.

    “We’d certainly talked about the Southern 500,” Yarborough remembers. “I don’t know whether he was going to take me or not.”

    Sadly, he never got the chance to go. That summer Yarborough lost his father when he was killed after his small plane crashed. Yarborough made it to the Southern 500 the next year, crawling under the fence to get in. He had a ticket but was too excited to wait in line.

    “I wasn’t sneaking in to be sneaking in,” he said. “I was just too anxious to get inside and see my heroes.”

    It seems like no coincidence that Yarborough made his racing debut at that very same track in 1957. It was not the start he had envisioned. Yarborough finished in 42nd place after a broken hub took him out of the race.

    Yarborough only drove in three more races over the next four years but in 1962, he earned his first top ten finish when he placed tenth in the Daytona 500 qualifying race. Over the next few years, he drove for various owners on a limited schedule including Herman Beam, Holman Moody and Banjo Matthews.

    In 1965, he ran in 46 races and captured his first win at Valdosta, Georgia. That year he also had one of the scariest moments of his career at the Southern 500 while trying to pass race leader, Sam McQuagg.

    “We went in the corner side by side, and for some reason my car just got airborne,” said Yarborough. “I went over the hood of his car, never even touched the guardrail, and went out into the parking lot. I ended upside of a telephone pole.”

    In 1966, Yarborough began to find some success. He won both the Atlanta and Firecracker 500 while driving for Bud Moore and finished out the season driving the No. 21 car for the Wood Brothers team.

    Yarborough started to make a name for himself after his partnership with the Wood Brothers and won six races in 1968 including his first Daytona 500 win. That year also saw him in victory lane for the first time at the Southern 500. Yarborough considers it the biggest of his 83 career wins. This was the track where he had watched so many of his heroes race as a young boy. More importantly, it was the last race on the old track before it was repaved.

    “It’s still hard to drive today,” Yarborough says, “but back before they changed it, it was almost impossible to race on. The difference between the old track and the new one is like night and day.”

    “I think Jeff [Gordon] ought to have to win six to equal my five,” he jokes, “because my first one was on the old track, and it was twice as hard to win.”

    Finally, in 1973, Yarborough was able run a full schedule. He won four races that year, including the Southeastern 500 at Bristol International Speedway, where he led every lap from start to finish. What makes it even more unusual is that the race took two weeks to complete because of rain.

    Yarborough finished second in the points standing in 1973, behind Richard Petty. In 1974, he captured ten victories but again finished second to Petty in points. But Yarborough was not to be denied.

    With nine victories in 1976, Yarborough won the first of his three consecutive championships, driving for the legendary Junior Johnson. According to Johnson, winning with Yarborough was easy.

    “When you got a driver you know is going to give you everything he’s got,” Johnson said, “you can take away 30% of the car and he’ll still give you enough to beat everybody.”

    One of Yarborough’s most memorable moments was in 1979 at the Daytona 500. It was the first stock car race ever televised in its entirety. Yarborough and Donnie Allison were fighting for the lead and wrecked when Yarborough tried to pass for the lead during the final laps. The wrecked cars slid into the infield and both drivers jumped out of their cars. Fists started flying with Bobby Allison joining in to help his brother. The entire episode was captured on television and has become one of the most notorious NASCAR fights in its history.

    Yarborough retired as a driver in 1988, ending his driving career with a phenomenal 83 wins. He remained on the NASCAR scene as a car owner until 2000. He had limited success as an owner and recorded only one win with John Andretti in 1997. After leaving NASCAR, he opened a successful Honda dealership in Florence, South Carolina.

    Cale Yarborough was a small town boy with big dreams. He joined the ranks of the heroes he watched race as a young boy to become a NASCAR legend. He remains one of NASCAR’s most beloved drivers and an integral part of its history.

    *Achievements:

    1967 NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver Award
    1976 Cup Championship
    1976 Five Consecutive Race Wins – Single Season Record
    1977 Cup Championship
    1978 Cup Championship
    1980 Won 14 Pole Positions – Single Season Record
    1984 First driver to qualify at the Daytona 500 at over 200 mph
    1986 Wrote his autobiography, with William Neely: ‘Cale: The Hazardous Life and Times of the World’s Greatest Stock Car Driver’
    1993 Inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame
    1994 Inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame
    1994 Inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America
    1996 Inducted into the Court of Legends at Charlotte Motor Speedway
    1996 Talladega Walk of Fame inductee
    1998 Named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers
    2009 Monument on the Darlington Legends Walk
    2010 Nominee NASCAR Hall of Fame
    2011 Nominee NASCAR Hall of Fame
    2012 Will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame
    4-Time Winner of the Daytona 500
    5-Time Winner of the Southern 500
    83 Career Wins (Fifth All-Time)
    69 Poles (Third All-Time)

    Trivia:

    Yarborough appeared in two episodes of the TV show ‘The Dukes of Hazzard,’ playing himself.

    1979: ‘The Dukes Meet Cale Yarborough’
    1984: ‘Cale Yarborough comes to Hazzard’
    1983: Yarborough appeared in the Burt Reynolds movie, ‘Stroker Ace’

    Thanks to darlingtonraceway.com and NASCAR Hall of Fame for Cale Yarborough quotes.

    *NASCAR statistics as of May 31, 2011