He started from the bottom and now he is on top with the big dogs, Nascar is not just about left turns, there is a lot more than just that in the sport. It is about how much banking and routs to take on certain tracks, it is about the history of the sport. Drivers have to know when to pit and change tires, get more fuel and tell the pit crew to adjust the wedge. Nascar requires years and years of training, You also have to have sponsors to get a race car. In this paper you will find out what nascar is really about. The history of Nascar starts way back in the day when moonshining was hitting the tipping point with all of the bootleggers buy cars and making them go faster, to get away from the police. Bootlegging started when the prohibition …show more content…
Bootleggers would supe up their cars to go faster than the others and win reputation and some cash. Needless to say Nascar is made and brought up around moonshine. The first race in nascar history was at Darlington the first asphalt super speedway, But the first sanctioned race was at Daytona Beach in 1948 and that race was won by Red Byron in a Ford modified. A big shock to the sport was the first African American driver and his name was Wendell Scott, he was the first African American to win in nascar. In 1979 Richard Petty would win 7 championships in a row marking a battle between Richard petty and Dale Earnhardt. By 2004 the first chase for the Nascar Nextel cup would take place and be won by Kurt Bush. Jimmie Johnson would tie Cale Yarbrough record for Sprint Cup championships in 2008, in 2009 Jimmie Johnson would break that record and be announced as male athlete of the year. Most Nascar enthusiast say the sport died when Dale Earnhardt sr died, because Nascar would make the sport more safe so nothing like Dale's’ crash could happen again, Nascar would set rules around “bumping and rubbing” to keep from drivers crashing and possibly passing away. Nascar ended up making the cars some of the safest cars on the planet, with all of the safety attachments they have on the cars
When someone thinks of Ford Motor Company, one of the first things that comes to mind is the Mustang. Carroll Shelby revolutionized the world of cars, especially with his work on the Ford Mustangs. Carroll was not only a racecar driver, but he also created racecars and street legal vehicles. He is a member of the Automotive Hall of Fame and the International Motor Sports Hall of Fame, just to name a few, and in 1956 and ’57 was named Driver of the Year by Sports Illustrated. Shelby died March 10, 2012 at the age of 89, and in this speech I hope that I can convince you that he is more than worthy of the prominent place he holds in the history of performance vehicles.
NASCAR community is made up of sports personalities. The community values sports and champions sporting activities with the aim of fostering peace and unity (Batchelor 226). They have always achieved significant gains with the sporting initiatives concerning the transformation of the way of life of the southern people including other parts of the nation. Likewise, NASCAR is a sporting community that coordinates multiple auto-racing sporting events. The community started its activities in 1948, and the brain behind its formation is known as Bill France. It was formed to spearhead motorsports stock-car racing that is highly prominent. The community’s objective was to foster cultural practices, provide a
Before the mid-1970s, NASCAR was never televised live. In 1979, the Daytona 500 became the first NASCAR event televised in its entirety. Since then, television has become the main branding medium for NASCAR, and it appears to be working well.
NASCAR is one of the most rapidly growing sports in the world. There are people who think that NASCAR is just a bunch of hicks going around in circles, but it takes skill to drive at two-hundred miles per hour. I am going to talk about the history of NASCAR, early drivers of NASCAR, the three NASCAR divisions, the rules, and the new technology.
Junior Johnson, a NASCAR hero, is a true example of where the sport came from. He was raised in a moonshine family. Johnson's father taught him many values such as no stealing or lying. Although it seemed contradictory that they were breaking the law everyday with their business, apparently it was all they could do to survive. When a school friend named Millard Ashley was asked about Junior’s driving, he replied, “Junior? Hell, he’d run wide open all the time….Yeah, he was pretty bad about that. He was always blowing a head gasket or somethin” (Menzer, 61). Junior had a talent for making his cars faster with better handling than those of the law’s. Outrunning law enforcement officers became a means for the drivers to learn the knowledge needed in increasing a car's, or racecar's performance.
After retiring from chicken farming Shelby became an excellent racer. In 1952 during January Shelby drove his first race. Shelby started with a drag raced of a quarter mile in a hot rod. In 1952 he also drove his first road race. “Carroll Shelby drove a British MG, this car was considered very underpowered. Shelby beat everyone in his car’s class and even the jaguar XK120
Modern day NASCAR hasn’t really differed that much. It is said the best NASCAR driver today is Jeff Gordon. Jeff Gordon was born on august the 4 1971 in Vallejo, California. Gordon started driving when he was five years old. Preforming laps on a makeshift track. Gordon won rookie of the year in 1991 in NASCAR. He was the first race car driver to win $100 million dollars in cup winnings in 2011. He placed third on NASCAR all-time win list. The next driver is debatable the best NASCAR driver today. His name is Dale Earnhardt Jr. his dad was dale Earnhardt the “intimidator”. Dale was born October 10, 1974 in concord North Carolina. Nick named junior dale is a party and fun to be around kind of guy. And on the track he is all business. Junior shows he can
Dale Earnhardt Sr. died as he lived. Always known as a competitor who brought the best out in everyone around him, he died trying to bring the best out in one of his drivers, Michael Waltrip. Dale knew that several cars had the ability to win the Daytona 500, and he was determined to make sure that those cars had to get by him in order to reach Waltrip, the eventual winner. His final lap crash occurred as he was running interference for Waltrip and his son, Dale Junior, who finished second.
Dale Earnhardt grew up in automotive racing. Ever since he was a kid that is what his family did, and now his family carries on that legacy.
Racing seats have shoulder straps that hold the driver snugly to the seat. A crash at these speeds can rip a
Davey Allison was a very talented NASCAR driver. He was a second generation Alabama racer, and was known to be a part of the “Alabama Gang”. Allison was a very skilled driver; and he had changed the game in father-son competition, often going head-to-head against his father for the win on multiple occasions.
to Daytona Beach in 1935 to escape the harsh affects of the Great Depression. He formed the idea that people would enjoy to watch unmodified cars race. He put his plan into action and soon he had many race enthusiasts to come watch these dangerous high-speed races. Daytona Beach became known as the place to set land speed records. The beach was filled with racecar fans from across the globe. Fifteen records were set at the beach between 1905 and 1935. In 1936 the course began hosting racing events. Drivers raced a 1.5 to a 2-mile stretch of beach as a straightaway, and beachfront highway A1A as the other. But untrustworthy promoters would leave events with all the money before drivers were paid frequently victimizing drivers. So in 1947, he decided that racing would not grow until a formal sanctioning organization was formed, there were standardized rules, and there was a regular schedule and an organized championship. On December 14, 1947 France began to talk with other influential racers and promoters at the Streamline Hotel at Daytona Beach, Florida that concluded with the formation of NASCAR on February 21, 1948. With the help several other drivers of that time, its points system and rules were written on a bathroom napkin. The sanctioning body hosted their first event at the Daytona Beach on February 15, 1948. Red Byron beat Marshall Teague in the Modified division race. The first NASCAR "Strictly Stock" race ever was held at Charlotte
There are forty-five drivers on the NASCAR Nextel Cup; every single one of them is white. There has never been a person of color to drive a racecar in the Winston Cup or the Nextel Cup. That's about to change, or some hope it does. NASCAR'S chief operating official George Pyne has teamed up with Magic Johnson and started a program to help encourage minorities to try to race. There is one black driver on the NASCAR truck series and a couple in smaller race series down south, but to this day none are on the Nextel Cup series.
Over the course of the last 68 years, the sport of stock car racing has seen many legends. In the past two decades, Jeff Gordon has been the man that filled that legend position. Born in 1971 in Vallejo, California, Jeff was raised in Pittsboro, Indiana where he raced midget cars, as well as go karts and sprint cars. Jeff was extremely successful in doing this, becoming the youngest driver ever to earn a USAC license. In October of 1990, Jeff made his stock car debut in the Busch Grand National series (now NASCAR Xfinity Series), NASCAR's minor league. Twenty six years later, he is recognized as one of the greatest the sport has ever seen. Jeff Gordon was extremely influential in automotive racing because of how successful he was, winning
In the United States, automobile racing first started in the town of Ormond Beach in Florida. “The town’s flat, broad beach was an ideal place back in the early 1900s to test the newfangled horseless carriages” (Alexander). In 1903, two of America’s leading auto manufacturers, Alexander Winton and Ransom Olds, organized a speed test on the beach. The two men, along with business leaders from Ormond Beach, saw great economic potential for automobile races on the ideal racing surface that was the beach’s tightly packed sand straightaway. The Speed Carnival, featuring the two automobile manufacturers, showcased the men racing the clock along a measured out mile in the sand. The cars reached speeds of up to 68 miles per hour, the fastest speeds