A Daytona Summer – The Way Things Were

dpkimmel2001

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Interesting article about the way things used to be surrounding the July 4th Daytona race and how things have changed.

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Over the past 15 years, perhaps no NASCAR event week has changed as much as that surrounding the summer Sprint Cup race at Daytona International Speedway.

The race, known for many years as the Firecracker 400 (the name itself is one of the big changes, from one of the coolest race names on the tour to one driven by sponsors), was moved to an evening start time in 1998 as Daytona followed the major 1990s track trend by adding lights to its race course.

The conclusions then were that the potential television audience would be bigger and the temperatures would be cooler. Traditionally, the race had been held at 10 a.m. or 11 a.m. on July 4, and it was billed as one of the country’s biggest Independence Day celebrations.

But the switch to summertime evening racing at Daytona did much more than move the race from day to night. It upset the applecart for the whole week at the World Center of Speed.

Prior to the change, many teams treated the Daytona summer week as a vacation of sorts. Activities at the track during race week typically were limited, and some drivers, team members and their families were on the beach east of the track by late afternoon, tossing footballs and Frisbees and playing in the sand and surf.

Before drivers and other top team members moved into motorhomes at virtually every track, many stayed in beachfront hotels and mingled with fans during the week. Beverages – adult and otherwise – were consumed on pool decks late into the evening as many of the world’s problems were solved in intense discussions.

The high-rise Inn on the Beach was a favorite lodging spot for drivers, team members and much of the news media corps during those years, leading to more than a few afternoons and evenings of frivolity and devilment around the pool or on the beach.

No one who was sitting poolside on one particular day will forget Darrell Waltrip’s first appearance on the pool deck. A typical race car driver of that period, he was outside a lot – obviously – but spent much of that time wrapped in a firesuit, most of his body immune to any hope of tanning. His legs apparently had never seen sunlight. When he stepped poolside on the first day of that particular race week in shorts, he looked for all the world like the whitest man in America.

Sometime during the week, drivers and other team members typically scheduled a run to the pier area of the beach to ride go-carts, people-watch or slam down a few funnel cakes.

On race day, the 400 generally ended in early afternoon, giving fans in town for the festivities a chance to hit the beach afterward, long before the sun went down. Fireworks, beachcombing and food followed.

The switch to the night race changed all that – and dramatically. Now, the days – and nights – of race week are mostly jammed with scheduled activities, and there is little time for freelancing.

Instead of dodging waves on the beach, everybody is dodging the late afternoon-early evening thundershowers that visit Daytona Beach on many summer days, delaying schedules at the track.
Once the race finally begins, it’s a dynamic atmosphere, but there’s something to be said for the way things were.

Mike Hembree is NASCAR Editor for SPEED.com and has been covering motorsports for 30 years. He is a six-time winner of the National Motorsports Press Association Writer of the Year Award.

From here.
 
I remember those days very well and not just Daytona but everywhere they held races and I have a lot of pictures packed away somewhere that I am going to dig out one day. Returning to that would be impossible as well as improbable and it would kill my ass since I'm not in my teens twentys thirtys or whatever anymore. Race on McDuff.
 
I liked it on the Fourth. I divided the season, even the year by the time line of this race.



But the real tragedy is that drivers have hotter wives now, and precious photo ops are being lost at the beach. In some cases there is more to life than racing. Do we need that prime time event at the expense of never getting to see pictures of Samantha Busch on a hot Daytona Beach?


I don't think so.
 
But the real tragedy is that drivers have hotter wives now, and precious photo ops are being lost at the beach. In some cases there is more to life than racing. Do we need that prime time event at the expense of never getting to see pictures of Samantha Busch on a hot Daytona Beach?

Man, I like the way you think. :D
 
Over my head. McDuff as in J D McDuffie?

Naw that was a very popular saying from my youth, its from Macbeth "Sail on McDuff, or close, something to do with cannons I think, cant remember. Means something like, doing a good job, carry on.
 
Lot's of good old classic firecracker memories, many surrounding Petty. I was a big time Petty fan growing up, so losing some 400s are as memorable as the 500 wins.



In 71 or 72 Bobby Isaac in the old K&K Dodge crew chiefed by Harry Hyde had him beat pretty bad in the 400. Late in the race Isaac had a hood pin to come loose, and it slowed him down. At 10 or 11 years old, I was to young to care how, and I was just hoping Petty would catch him. But Isaac hung on for the Win, Isaac was a great driver.



I heard it on the radio. The next day the newspapers showed Isaac get the checkers with half of the hood in the air. I was thrilled to get a picture, that was the best I could expect in those days.



Pearson seemed like the master at the 400, and Petty the 500s. They had some classic 400 battles, he may have been more the 'silver fox' in those races than anywhere else.
 
Even if the race was still run on July 4 in the midday today, that doesn't change today's drivers staying in their RVs. The race would be over and they'd hop on a plane for somewhere else instead of going to the beach to mingle with fans. Today's drivers are more the celebrity types and not the heroes of motorsports like they were 30 years ago.
 
Things have changed a lot here , the track of course but also the entire racing atmosphere . As earlier posts have mentioned it was always brutally hot for the Firecracker 400 , so making it a night race was a logical move . But it wasn't changed because of the heat , it was changed to increase television ratings .
I do know that the fans " experience " here has changed a lot over the past decade or so . There were always chances to see the drivers and car owners all over town leading up to the races . They stayed in local hotels , they ate at local restaurants , some frequented the local bars . They even went to the beach with their families . They did radio interviews at local businesses . All of that changed with the new NASCAR . Now , drivers pretty much stay in their motorhomes at the track . When they do interviews , they're mostly done at the media center at the track or the tv talk shows at the track . NASCAR seems to feel that keeping the drivers at the track means the fans will stay there and spend money . So local businesses are suffering . Many of the drivers , car owners , sponsors , sports writers , and tv personalities still make the trip to Genes Steak House during races , but that's about it .
 
Naw that was a very popular saying from my youth, its from Macbeth "Sail on McDuff, or close, something to do with cannons I think, cant remember. Means something like, doing a good job, carry on.

I grew up in a different neighborhood I guess. ;)

lol! Me too. Johali tries to bring a little class to the forum and we all get confused.
 
The most surprising one of all imo was the 85 Firecracker 400. A big upset in 85 because Awesome Bill was dominant on most any track over a mile.



Greg Sacks won in a Gary Nelson prepared car that Smokey Yunick would have been proud of, Bobby Allison left Digard afterwards. I don't blame him, they were giving there best cheater stuff to others.



Digard went on to greatness afterwards with Willie T Ribbs (not a fictional character)
 
"Lay on, Macduff,
And damn'd be him that first cries, 'Hold, enough!'"
They are Macbeth's last words, meaning "go for it, Macduff, let's fight to the death!", before Macduff kills him in combat.
 
"Lay on, Macduff,
And damn'd be him that first cries, 'Hold, enough!'"
They are Macbeth's last words, meaning "go for it, Macduff, let's fight to the death!", before Macduff kills him in combat.

Thanks TRL. Now I'm in tears over here!

What are the odds that 2 Mac's would end up fighting to the death?
 
"Lay on, Macduff,
And damn'd be him that first cries, 'Hold, enough!'"
They are Macbeth's last words, meaning "go for it, Macduff, let's fight to the death!", before Macduff kills him in combat.

I knew somebody on here would know it or look it up, way to go TRL. :D
 
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