Thursday, July 18, 2013

71 and Still Racing

Charlie Pierce reports on Morgan Shepherd:
At the end of his afternoon, Morgan Shepherd hung around in the cool precincts of the infield garage. He had not won, but he had not expected to win. He hadn't won a race on this circuit since he won in Atlanta in 1993. He did not run at the front of the field, but he had not expected to do that, either. He had not even finished 100 laps and, if he would tell you the truth, he also probably had not expected to finish that many at all. Not that he didn't sound like every other driver who didn't win Sunday. He lifted the brim of his battered cap, looked across the way at his car as they were packing it up, and he talked about the things that went wrong in just the same way that all the other drivers do.
"We had a great engine," Shepherd said. "But the front end of the car just got to bouncing up and down. There was just something off on the chassis and it made the car hard to turn. Of course, we didn't have a chance to test it on the track or anything."
But starting the race was his best moment. By starting the race, Morgan Shepherd won. He is 71 years old. He first raced on a NASCAR track at about quarter past the first Nixon administration. Sunday, as he roared past the starting line — and even the lowliest stock car roars the first time it comes around the grandstand — he became the oldest person ever to start a Sprint Cup race. When he began racing, NASCAR hadn't discovered yet that there were pockets of high-octane yeehawing all over the country. They didn't run races in Vegas or, heavens to Cale Yarborough, New (by God!) Hampshire. They ran on tracks like the Hickory Motor Speedway and the Asheville-Weaverville Speedway, and North Wilkesboro. "They had Daytona," said Shepherd, who also drives on the Nationwide circuit. "But the rest of them were places like that.
That is pretty impressive.  Back when grandpa hit 71, we didn't really want him driving, let alone in a NASCAR race. 

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