Forum Activity for @jeff-gilder

Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/17/11 10:20:33AM
1,783 posts

The Classic Track Tour


Stock Car Racing History

Tonight at 5 PM ET on ESPN2 with Ryan McGee and Richard Childress. Ryan will be my guest on Racing Through History tonight to talk about what this series means to him.

Below is Ryan's post on ESPN.GO.com. Here also is the link to the article if you would like to give your support by commenting.

http://espn.go.com/rpm/blog/_/name/mcgee_ryan/id/6556991/welcome-classic-track-tour

Lee Petty

ISC Images & Archives/Getty Images Lee Petty (42) leads Bob Welborn (49) during a NASCAR Convertible Series race at Winston-Salem's Bowman-Gray Stadium on June 22, 1957.

When my daughter was a little younger we used to joke that my pickup was a time machine. We'd joke about jumping in, hitting the gas, and turning back the clock to go visit heroes of bygone days.

This week, my pickup actually will be a time machine.

Starting Tuesday on "NASCAR Now" I'll be living every old-school race fan's dream, meandering through the Carolinas on what we're calling the Classic Track Tour. Just call it a crash course (in some cases quite literally) in stock car racing history as we march into a weekend that will be bookended by the Sprint All-Star Race, NASCAR's modern-day version of a Saturday night A-Main, and the induction of the NASCAR Hall of Fame's second class.

I'll spend the week jumping in my big red truck and going back in time to visit some of the greatest speedways in NASCAR history, bullrings where the men and women who fill the Hall of Fame became legends. All five of our stops played host to races in NASCAR's Strictly Stock, Grand National, or eventually one of the many sponsor-led versions of the Cup series.

All five were hosts to some of the biggest events and greatest stories that NASCAR has written. All five were eventually left behind by NASCAR's biggest division. But all five are still in business today, despite the financial struggles that continue to hamper short track racing. Just last week, one of our five tracks made headlines when it announced that it will be reclosing its doors for a while.

On Tuesday (5 p.m. ET, ESPN2), we'll kick off the Classic Track Tour at the place they call the Madhouse, the uber-flat, uber-tough oval of Winston-Salem's Bowman-Gray Stadium. I'll be joined there by the Madhouse's most successful alum, Richard Childress. When he was still in elementary school, RC would walk halfway across town to sell peanuts in the Bowman-Gray grandstands. As he got older he figured out how to get into the infield, where he fetched cold beverages for the likes of Curtis Turner and Fireball Roberts. As a teenager, he raced there. As a young man, he worked out of a shop just down the road. And now, as a six-time Cup series champion team owner, he serves as one of its living legends.

On Wednesday (5 p.m. ET, ESPN2), we'll head down U.S. Highway 220 to a place where Childress clinched that sixth Cup by stomping the field on a cool fall evening in 1994. Back then it was the North Carolina Motor Speedway. Shortly afterward it was known as the North Carolina Speedway. But no one ever called it that. They called it The Rock. Andy Hillenburg, the man who saved what is now known as the Rockingham Speedway from ruin, will join me to talk about it.

Thursday (5 p.m. ET, ESPN2), we travel northwest into the foothills of the Carolina Piedmont to check on the status of another once-proud NASCAR racetrack that is fighting to stay alive. The North Wilkesboro Speedway sat dormant for a decade and a half, then reopened to much fanfare last summer. Now it's struggling again and the men behind its revival will give us an update.

We'll stay in those mountains on Friday (11:30 pm ET, ESPN2), driving over to the place they call "Birthplace of the NASCAR Stars," the Hickory Motor Speedway. That's where 1970 Cup champ Bobby Isaac still overlooks his home track from the cemetery on the hillside above. And Ned Jarrett, barely 72 hours from his Hall of Fame induction, will revisit the track he once owned.

Finally, we'll wrap up the Classic Track Tour by kicking off All-Star Saturday (11 a.m. ET, ESPN2) at a place that lists its all-stars along a world famous backstretch wall. The Greenville-Pickens Speedway is to Upstate South Carolina what Darlington is the coastal plains, handpicked by Bill France Sr. to help NASCAR take root in the Palmetto State. It's been there, and at Greenville-Pickens, ever since. In 1971, GPS hosted the first flag-to-flag televised NASCAR race, called by Jim McKay on "Wide World of Sports." Forty years later it'll have to settle for me and "NASCAR Now."

Between the interviews and live shots we'll also teach you a history lesson on each track. Who built them? What was its greatest moment? Who were its greatest legends? What's happening at each racetrack today?

As the week goes along, be sure to check back here for my Classic Track Tour Travelogue. And I'll be tweeting my oil-stained fingers off at http://twitter.com/# !/RyanMcGeeESPN.

So, please come along with me on the NASCAR Now Classic Track Tour. Climb into my big red 4x4 time machine and let's take a ride down memory lane ... the fastest, loudest, greasiest, most barbecue sauce-covered memory lane there is.


updated by @jeff-gilder: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/13/11 10:55:07AM
1,783 posts

Racing at The Rock


General


updated by @jeff-gilder: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM
Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/10/11 05:07:41PM
1,783 posts

JUST ANOTHER HEARTBREAK FOR THE OLD TIMERS


Stock Car Racing History

My response is...don't give up yet. This is only one attempt and therefore leaves room for more hope until it is gone.
Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/09/11 02:06:13PM
1,783 posts

Kyle Busch's smartest move yet as quoted by racewin


Current NASCAR

I agree, Tommie. Stupid move. And for Kevin, whats the point of taking a swing at a guy ...in the car...with his helmet on. I'll give Kevin credit..he kept his helmet on...a sure sign of a veteran. But that swing reminded me of the time Mikey punched Lake Speed while he was sitting in his car.

Tommie Clinard said:

For the "STUPID MOVE" that Busch made by pushing Kevin's car into the pit wall he should be suspended, fined, and lose points for making such a dangerous move. Someone could have gotten hurt bad or even killed had they been standing over the wall. After all the race was over and that would have been allowed. If he wanted to run from Kevin he had a reverse in the car.

That was a lot worse than the Montoya/Newman deal the previous week. That was on the track, not on pit road.

It's one thing to "have it out boy's," but to endanger a bystanders life????

Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/08/11 08:32:57AM
1,783 posts

Origins of Figure Eight Racing: Where and When?!!


Stock Car Racing History

Yea, I agree, Butch. I'd have to say figure eights date back to the 40's...possibly 30's or even earlier. But I do not know the facts...just that in my travels I have seen pictures of them that were pre-WWII.

Many folks do not know about all the board tracks that existed way back. We have a member here (Jon Clifton) who did a lot of research on them. I don't know if he would have any info on the Maine track, but might.

Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/07/11 07:26:43AM
1,783 posts

AND THE WINNER IS


Current NASCAR

Put the ring in the infield (Franklin county style) and make it part of the penalty. The loser pays a fine and starts in the back the next race. Just think of what it would do for ticket sales and TV ratings. Just like Dana White of the UFC says. "If a sporting event of any kind is underway and a fight breaks out...where does the attention go?"I'm really kidding in case you wondered.....but I do think it would improve the ratings.
Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/02/11 06:12:26PM
1,783 posts

IS IT HOW YOU WIN?? Really is it


Current NASCAR

Part of the deal...its a win!. Sometimes you eat the bear...sometimes the bear eats you.
Jeff Gilder
@jeff-gilder
05/02/11 12:23:29PM
1,783 posts

The Other Side of NASCAR


General

I read this, I think from your email, PKL. I too agree and have thought for some time the future of NASCAR would have to include PPV. Where else can they turn with declining ticket sales and less-than-favorable TV ratings? It does seem they are staffing up for more "show" and "marketing the show" related tasks that will most assuredly take them even further from the roots we enjoyed. Many of us seem to hang on to some sort of hope that someone will awaken some Monday and realize we and and millions of other old-school fans have wandered away wondering what happened to the sport, and that someone will begin the process of putting things back together for us. I don't think the future holds any hope of those folks, even for a moment, wondering where we may have wandered and why. They are in search of an entirely different fan. After all, most of us are no longer part of that ever-so-popular 18 - 35 year old demographic. For now, we are not their concern. They have noticed our departure and have with purpose, chosen their path.

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