I just found this interesting, almost ironic, headline online:
Why Tennessee and Virginia Tech played football at a gigantic NASCAR track
Why is this interesting? Bristol Motor Speedway, the site of Saturday night's Tennessee-Virginia Tech college football game, has a huge number of seats (more than 150,000). But it is the SMALLEST NASCAR Cup track in the country.
They did set the record for the largest crowd (156,900) at a college-football game.
YEARS AGO, I WASdriving my truck up to the entrance at Daytona International Speedway, and a guard was going to check my credentials. I was feeling in a playful mood, so I decided to put a Ludwig van Beethoven CD into the machine. Ludwig's Fifth Symphony came out of the speakers as the guard peered inside the driver's side door. He looked at the dash, then peered at me. Apparently I didn't look like a Beethoven kinda guy. Anyway, later when I was leaving, I pulled the Beethoven CD out and slapped Merle Haggard in there. "Mama Tried" was probably more like what he'd expect of me, but he looked at me weirdly again. He looked at the dash, then looked at me. Maybe he missed Beethoven. Or maybe he didn't expect to hear Ludwig and Merle from the same wine-red pickup truck during the same day. If you're wondering, I'm a big fan of both musicians. "Moonlight Sonata" and "Ode to Joy" are two of my favorite pieces. And "Mama Tried" is as good as it gets in country music.
(NOTE: I wrote this feature in 2014 for the Hickory Daily Record.)
Youngster Byron drives for
consistency
By Tom Gillispie
Two things come to mind
about Late Model driver William Byron’s rookie season at Hickory Motor
Speedway. He is precocious, and he’s been consistent.
As for the precocious part,
Byron, 16, hasn’t been racing go-karts since he was five. He has only been
racing two seasons, and he’s been super successful in that short time. Just
this season, he’s posted 12 poles and 10 wins in 23 Pro Legends starts and
seven poles and one win (at HMS) in 26 Late Model starts.
As for consistent, he’s
posted 20 top-five finishes in Pro Legends and 14 top-fives in Late Models. At
Hickory, he’s posted one win, six second-place finishes and three thirds.
“The win came at Hickory in September,” he said, “and
we beat some good guys. I had to learn over the course of the year, and I was
just consistent over the year. I had to wait (for the win) until the time came,
and I took advantage.”
He and Jr Motorsports teammate Josh Berry posted wins
that night in September when HMS ran two Late Model races. Byron wound up second
to Berry in Late Model points.
He says the season went pretty much as he expected,
but added, “I didn't win as many races as I would have liked.”
He’s been busy in his two years of racing. He ran
upwards of 70 races last year, and he’s run 49 races this year. He says he has
seven races left to run in 2014; the first is one in southern Alabama, and one
of them is the Oct. 25 Fall Brawl at HMS.
He says he hooked up with Jr Motorsports because of
his big season in Pro Legends. They interviewed him, and, “We came to a deal,”
he said.
And, yes, he’s had some contact with team owner Dale
Earnhardt Jr.
“We had a (TV) commercial early year, and we were kind
of able to hang out with him,” he said. “We’ve done charity events and meetings
with the whole shop. It’s been good. What little we’ve talked has been very
positive. He watches what we're doing, and it’s cool to get shoutouts from him over
Twitter.”
Byron says he has two favorite memories of this
season.
“Winning the race (at HMS) was most the most fun
moment and also the most rewarding,” he said. “It was a lot of relief off me.
It was a moment that was awesome.”
The other highlight came in a Legends race at
Charlotte Motor Speedway.
“I beat Daniel Hemric in one of the races in the Summer
Shootout,” he said. “Considering how high he is in the Late Model world and
Super Late Models, that was great. I felt like I was in the zone in that race.”
The 5-9, 140-pound Byron is
a junior at Charlotte Country Day and a freestyler on the swim team. His Late
Model sponsor is Liberty University, and he says he plans to attend the
Virginia school when he graduates from Country Day. His major? Who knows?
He says he won’t race for
points at Hickory next year, but he’ll be back.
“I’d like to do half the 100-lappers, do the 150-lappers,
do the Bobby Isaac race,” he said. “I’m interested in traveling to different
tracks.”
He wants to run the NASCAR
K&N Pro Series East next year, but he’s not sure what his goals will be.
“I'd say I’d like to win one or two K&N races; that would be
pretty cool,” he said. “On the Late Model side, that would be hard to say. With
traveling around, it would be hard to tell. I’d just like to be consistent.”