Strategic Changes Helped Richmond Prosper Through Seven Decades

NASCAR Press Release – Daytona Beach, FL

Staging NASCAR Sprint Cup races through portions of seven decades, Richmond International Raceway is proof that changing with the times equals prosperity.


Since its first series race in 1953, won by NASCAR Hall of Famer Lee Petty in a Dodge, the track has had five different configurations as well as a pair of racing surfaces – dirt and two iterations of asphalt. Auto racing at what’s known as Strawberry Hill in suburban Henrico County dates to October 1946 and Ted Horn’s championship car victory.


Other short tracks have come and gone – only Martinsville Speedway, which hosted its first race in 1949, is older – but Richmond continues to thrive. Saturday night’s Capital City 400 Presented by Virginia Is For Lovers (7:30pm EDT, live on FOX) marks the 112th time stock car racing’s premier series has taken the green flag.


Richmond, once a dusty, 0.5-mile fairgrounds operation seating no more than 10,000, is a short track in measurement only. Reconfigured as a 0.75-mile D-shaped layout in 1988, Richmond International Raceway’s grandstands can accommodate 94,063. It was the first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series facility to present both spring and fall races under the lights.


Twenty-two NASCAR Sprint Cup champions have won races at Richmond as well as 10 members of the NASCAR Hall of Fame – as driver, owner or crew chief, Richard Petty won 13 races. His Richmond record included seven consecutive victories – and nine wins in 10 starts – between 1970 and 1975.


“You can sit anywhere in the grandstands and see action,” said Petty. “If you miss it in one corner just look in another. There’s action up there.”


Before former owner Paul Sawyer, who bought the track with two-time NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Joe Weatherly in 1955, settled on Richmond International Raceway, the facility was variously known as the Virginia State Fairgrounds, Atlantic Rural Fairgrounds, Rural Exposition Fairgrounds and Richmond Fairgrounds.

Three Generations of Petty racing family
 – Lee – Richard – Kyle –
Photo – Don Hunter

Sawyer might well have named it Petty International Raceway.


An unprecedented three generations of Pettys’ – Lee, Richard and Kyle – won a combined 16 times in NASCAR Sprint Cup competition in Richmond.


“Richmond always was pretty good to the Petty crowd,” said Petty, who swept both dirt races in 1967, the season before the track was paved. He won 11 times on the asphalt surface. “I liked the dirt. You were sideways all the time. It was just a lot of fun.”


Lee Petty’s two victories came in 1953 and 1960. Kyle Petty, driving for NASCAR Hall of Famer Glen Wood, won in 1986. Video highlights of the race remain popular, showing Petty going from third place to victory when leaders wrecked in Turn 4 of the final lap battling for the win.


That race was one of the last in which the track was ringed by steel guardrails, which frequently were uprooted by the nearly two-ton stock cars.


Linwood Burrow, the track’s director of safety operations, drew his first paycheck from Sawyer in 1969 at the age of 16. Guardrail repair was among Burrow’s duties.


“Every race the drivers would tear down the guardrail and we’d have to fix it,” said Burrow. “Whether it was cleaning up the grandstand or cutting the grass, I was right there.”


Sawyer sold Richmond International Raceway to International Speedway Corp. on Dec. 1, 1999.


Winning races has come in bunches over the years: Petty for sure, along with fellow NASCAR Hall of Famers David Pearson, Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip – a combined 19 wins – and Hall nominee Rusty Wallace, six wins. NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt, a five-time Richmond winner, swept both races in 1987. Five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson did likewise in 2007 adding a third victory in the fall of 2008.

Lately, Joe Gibbs Racing’s Toyotas have been the dominant cars winning all but one Richmond race – five in all – dating to 2009. Kyle Busch has won three consecutive spring races. His teammate Denny Hamlin, added two fall victories before Kevin Harvick snapped JGR’s streak last September.


Busch said he and his teammate have worked together to maximize their performances at Richmond and the cooperation shows. Hamlin, a two-time winner in 2012, has a series-best Driver Rating of 117.6, two Coors Light Poles and an average finish of 7.6. The Virginian also will try to give the No. 11 its 200th NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory – 10 of which have come at Richmond with Hamlin, Waltrip, NASCAR Hall of Famers Cale Yarlborough and Ned Jarrett and Bill Elliott.


Busch, looking to end an uncharacteristic 20-race winless drought, owns Richmond’s second-best Driver Rating (114.8) and in 14 races has never finished off the lead lap.


“We really work closely together and Denny and I have had a good relationship where we’ve been able to talk a lot about this place and where we can really help each other. Different lines, how our cars are driving and obviously being on the same team helps all of that,” said Busch. “We run a lot of the same stuff there and it’s a place that we always look forward to coming to. We kind of know the tricks of the trade, if you’d say, at what it takes to be good at Richmond.”


RichmondInternationalRaceway.com

Speedway Motorsports Chairman Bruton Smith Announces Changes

Press Release

Less than a month after fan feedback convinced him to make changes to the concrete surface at Bristol Motor Speedway, Bruton Smith, Chairman and CEO of Speedway Motorsports, today announced his plans for significant modifications to the track.


“I said when this process began last month that I would listen to what the fans said they wanted,” Smith said. “The fan feedback over the past month, along with input over the past few years, was the impetus for alterations to the track.


“Since March 28, when we announced that changes would be made, we have listened to fans, heard from drivers and talked to engineers about what to do and how much time we had to do it. Once we knew the direction, we located the right equipment to make it happen.”


The changes concentrate on the progressive banking applied when the current track surface was put in place in the summer of 2007. 

“The majority of fans we heard from said they wanted adjustments made and the bulk of those said the progressive banking was what they didn’t like,” said Smith in explaining the decision-making process. “So that’s the focus of our efforts. And that is what we are working to change.”


When the deteriorating BMS track surface was replaced in 2007, variable banking was added. Often referred to as “progressive” because the degrees increase from bottom to top, the layout provided multiple lanes of racing on the famed short track.


Smith said the choice to change the track surface did not come easy, but listening to the race fans always has served him well.


“More and more fans kept asking us to do something to the track,” Smith said. “So I put it out there. They spoke and we listened. I want them to be happy; I want them to love their experience in Bristol. This will accomplish that and I know they will be pleased with the result.”


The August race week at BMS kicks off Aug. 22 with a doubleheader, which features the Camping World Truck Series race and the UNOH Perfect Storm 150 Whelen Modified event. On tap Aug. 24 is the Food City 250 Nationwide Series race, followed by the IRWIN Tools Night Race Sprint Cup event Aug. 25.


BristolMotorSpeedway.com

Fan at the Track – Kansas Speedway 2012

Chris Tuinstra is a NASCAR Fan and loves the sport!  He has an amazing collection of die-cast cars, showing his dedication and interest in a variety of drivers.  Chris’ favorite NASCAR race team is Richard Childress Racing as he follows all three series.  His favorite drivers are Jeff Burton, Elliott Sadler, Austin Dillon and Ron Hornaday. Chris also enjoys other sports and follows the Carolina Panthers and Minnesota Twins. 


Fans can follow Chris on Twitter @31jburtonfan

With Chris’ photo blog, fans will enjoy Kansas Speedway from his arrival to Denny Hamlin’s STP 400 Victory Burn out!  You’ll see great shots of the trucks, cars, drivers and even “The King” of NASCAR, Richard Petty and his famed retro STP #43 car! 


Thanks Chris for sharing your Kansas Speedway photos!

RIR Usually Leaves Team DuPont Guessing

Press Release – Richmond VA

Friday’s practice session at Richmond International Raceway (RIR) will probably leave the No. 24 DuPont team guessing but two-time track winner Jeff Gordon believes that is to be expected.


Practice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series 400 is scheduled during the day on Friday while the green flag at Richmond waves shortly after 7:30 p.m. (EDT) Saturday. Gordon enjoys racing under the lights at RIR, but that day-to-night scenario presents a challenge.


“I love night races – I always have,” said Gordon. “But they are a little tricky because we don’t normally practice at night. To really ‘dial in’ the car to the track conditions that we will experience during the race, there is a little bit more guessing that goes on.”


Along with his two victories (1996 and 2000), the four-time NASCAR Cup Series champion has five poles, 15 top-fives and 24 top-tens in the 38 starts at the Virginia track. The three-quarter mile layout typically offers side-by-side and sometimes three-wide racing, but having multiple grooves does not necessarily make the short track and easy one to navigate.


“(Richmond) is challenging to drive,” said Gordon, who dropped one spot to 18th in the point standings after experiencing engine issues at Kansas last weekend. “You can only do so much with the race car. It’s a short track where aerodynamics are important, but not as important as big mile-and-a-half tracks.”


“Richmond also has these great transitions into and off the corner where you can run two and three wide. It’s a different length race track (compared to half-mile short tracks), so it’s a little bit higher speeds.


“It puts on a great show.”


And under the lights? Even better according to Gordon.


“I think the race is more exciting on Saturday nights,” said Gordon. “And it doesn’t have to be on a Saturday night – just under the lights at night time.”


“I think Saturday night races make a lot of sense. The schedule is great, and I think it allows the fans to get home and have a day to themselves before going back to work. It also opens us up if there is weather (issues) to run it on Sunday if we need to.”


A Sunday off to recover from a Saturday night Victory Lane celebration?
Guessing that is appreciated, as well.


JeffGordon.com

Pearson-Wood Brothers Combo Was A Winner From The Start

Press Release 


Forty years ago this month, one of the great pairings in the history of NASCAR hit the track for the first time.

It was at Darlington Raceway, on April 16, 1972, that David Pearson first drove a car for the Wood Brothers race team.

Pearson, who hadn’t won a race in NASCAR’s premier division in more than a year and hadn’t won on a superspeedway in two years, was hired to take over the No. 21 Mercury for AJ Foyt, who was moving on to concentrate on his Indy Car racing.

Some in the sport at that time speculated that Pearson, then 37, was past his prime after winning 60 races and three championships. He’d only won three races in the previous two years combined, and his average finish in 1971 was just 18.9.

But Crew Chief Leonard Wood and the Wood Brothers believed otherwise.

“We’d raced against David and we knew how competitive and how good he was, “Wood said. “We knew he was available, and when we got the chance to get him we took it.”

Pearson had similar thoughts about the Woods, and it turned out that both parties were right.

While some driver-crew combinations take weeks or months for the chemistry to click, Pearson and the Woods hit it off from the start of practice that week at Darlington.

“You have crew chiefs and drivers get together, and sometimes it takes six months to hit the right combination,” Wood said. “But man, we hit it that first race. I knew what he was thinking, and he knew what I was thinking.”

During their first practice session together, Wood soon discovered that one of the things that others had told him about Pearson was indeed true.

The word was that Pearson would never show his hand in practice but still assure his team that the speed was there. He’d run hard on one corner on one lap, then run the other side of the track on another lap, learning what he needed to know without ever running hard all the way around the track until it counted.

When practice was done, Pearson told the Woods not to worry.

“Sure enough, after practice he told us: ‘I might run a little quicker when I qualify,” Wood said.

When qualifying was done, Pearson had the No. 21 Mercury on the pole with a lap of 148.209 miles per hour. He would go on to win 50 more poles driving for the Woods.

“There’s nothing more rewarding than having somebody run faster in qualifying than in practice, and David always did that the whole time he drove for us,” he said. “He knew what he had left.”

That Rebel 400 also launched a renewed rivalry between Pearson and Richard Petty. A hungry Pearson had put Petty behind him when Petty had to make a couple of unscheduled pit stops.

Leonard Wood remembers that Petty knew he was in for a battle.

“Richard made the comment that he knew David wasn’t going to back off,” he said.

Wood said he was amazed at how easily Pearson handled tough tracks like Darlington and at how simple it was to set up a car for him.

“His driving style just matched our way of setting a car up,” Wood said. “It just clicked from the start.”

Wood recalled that while some drivers left him with an uneasy feeling as they ran Darlington, Pearson made it look smooth.

“He knew exactly when to back off and when to get back on it,” Wood said, adding that Pearson was especially good at negotiating the old Turn Four (now Turn Two). “He’d run down into Three and let that thing go up to the high side. Then he’d run part throttle for a little way, and he knew when to bring it off the wall and make a straight shot out.”

While many of his competitors were flirting with a Darlington Stripe off of Turn Four, Pearson usually wasn’t.

“He never looked like he was in any danger coming off of Four,”

Wood said. “He brought it off earlier and dropped down low three-fourths of the way through the turn and ran straight out of there.

“I remember it well. The car would kind of leap twice over the bumps there, b ut it was completely straight and he was just flying coming out of there.”

Pearson parlayed those Darlington skills into his 61st Cup victory and the first of 43 that he would win with the Woods. He also prevailed in a 1-2 finish with Petty. From 1963 to 1977, Pearson and Petty finished 1-2 on 63 occasions with Pearson holding a 33-30 edge.

Leonard Wood said those days with Pearson were as good as it gets in racing.

“We became very close,” Wood said. “We sure had a great experience, a great racing career.”