Did Mike Wallace Intentionally Wreck NASCAR's 1st Female Pole Setter? Yes, Said Joe Nemechek

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,137 posts

Here's one from the Sports Illustrated vault.

Let's hope Danica fares better today than Shawna in 1994, although a good cat fight might do wonders for the Nationwide Series television ratings!

SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

March 21, 1994
Shawna Robinson
Jill Lieber

After a decade of trying to make it in the macho world of motor sports, Shawna Robinson thought she had finally earned some respect. Last Thursday the 29-year-old Robinson became the first female ever to win a pole position in a NASCAR Grand National event, qualifying for Saturday's Busch Light 300 at the Atlanta Motor Speedway with a track record for Grand National cars of 174.330 mph. To mark the historic feat, fellow driver Joe Nemechek, the other qualifier on row 1, presented Robinson with a red rose in Victory Lane.

On race day, however, Robinson got a rude awakening. As she entered Turn 3 on her first lap, she was racing side by side with Nemechek when Mike Wallace slipped alongside her car on the inside of the track. Wallace took the air off Robinson's spoiler, causing her orange Polaroid Chevrolet to drift up and smack Nemechek broadside. Both cars spun and slammed against the retaining wall. The front of Robinson's car was heavily damaged, and in order for her to continue, much of the sheet metal had to be sawed off. Racing with the engine exposed, she completed 63 laps before a hole in the radiator forced her into the pits for good. Meanwhile Nemechek never got underway again, and as soon as he was out of his mangled car, he grabbed a microphone and made charges over the track's public address system that Wallace had intentionally caused Robinson to crash. "I'd heard from people before the race that he was going to take some air off her spoiler and get her loose," Nemechek, the 1992 Grand National champ, alleged later. "I figured he was running his mouth, but he did exactly that. Going three across on the first lap is a big risk. People could have gotten hurt. You don't pull a stunt like that."

Why did Nemechek think Wallace would want to take Robinson out? "It wouldn't be politically correct to answer that," Nemechek said. But Robinson, who after the race had to be separated from Wallace's wife, Karla, as the two exchanged words, was more direct. "Ego," she said. "Maybe some think it's a manly thing. I don't know where that thinking comes from."

Certainly that thinking is foreign to Robinson. Growing up in Des Moines. Robinson and her four siblings were taught that they could accomplish anything they set their minds to. Her father, Richard, was an amateur racer who competed on local tracks and tinkered with racing vehicles in his home garage. He encouraged his children to take up racing, which they did on minibikes, snowmobiles and motorcycles. "I still have the burn marks on my legs from racing motorcycles as a teenager," says Robinson. At 18 she began driving in a short-track series for trucks. Five years later she became the first female to win a NASCAR Dash series event.

As the only woman driver in either of NASCAR's top two series, Robinson still struggles for sponsorship. She often wanders the supermarket, pen in hand, copying the addresses of potential sponsors from packaging labels. A top finish in Atlanta might have helped her attract some backing.

Wallace denied trying to put Robinson out of the race, and after interviewing the drivers and studying a tape of the wreck, NASCAR officials issued a terse statement that nobody was to blame for the crash. But an unmollified Robinson asked, "How many fans were taking bets, 'Is the girl going to crash on the first lap?' By starting on the pole and racing well, I hoped I could have changed those attitudes. I've never wanted to flaunt the woman thing. I just want to be thought of as being a good driver, not a good female driver."




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"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"

updated by @dave-fulton: 03/20/18 05:06:52PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,137 posts




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
TMC Chase
@tmc-chase
12 years ago
4,073 posts

Advance to around 12m mark for start of race. Listen to those 6-cylinder Busch cars whine too.

I remember Front Row Joe calling out Mike Wallace on-air about his punting of Shawna. Advance to 23:50 to hear his remarks.




--
Schaefer: It's not just for racing anymore.
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,137 posts

Thanks for the very informative video.

I don't miss the whine of the failed 6 cylinder experiment.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
Jim Wilmore
@jim-wilmore
12 years ago
488 posts

Shawna's career in the Busch Series wasn't exactly stellar, her best finish was 10th at Watkins Glenn and two oval 11th place finishes, at Michigan and Volusia County, so to say Mike Wallace intentionally wrecked Shawna might be stretching it. There was no contact, nothing that hadn't happened without incident 200 times before, I just think she lost it and it wasn't due to experience, she had been racing for 6 years in the Dash, Busch North and Busch Grand Nationals. Joe was just PO'd for getting taken out, he wouldn't have given it a second thought had he made it out OK.
Sometimes folks are looking for an escape goat when things go wrong. Nothing against Shawna, she's come a long way but, I think Mike saw a hole and stuck it down low without losing it, give him some credit for driving it in so hard. That's racing. Oh, check out minutes 28 and watch the segment with Benny and Andy Hillenburg, pretty funny stuff.

Dennis  Garrett
@dennis-garrett
12 years ago
560 posts

Mike Wallace did tell a race reporter that he said "I'm going to put Shawna Robinson in the wall because women drivers don't belong in NASCAR racing". The next race he did it!! LOL

Sincerely yous,

Dennis Garrett

Richmond,Va. 23225 USA

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
12 years ago
9,137 posts

I thought it, but didn't say it.




--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"