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Marc Davis hopes to move up in the NASCAR ranks when he turns 18.

Davis wants to be known as driver, not black driver

Gibbs' young talent says he still has something to prove

By Raygan Swan, NASCAR.COM
April 19, 2007
05:57 PM EDT
type size: + -

Marc Davis is racing in Phoenix this weekend looking to shed his poster-boy-for-diversity image and prove he's earned his place in the sport.

The young, well-mannered black teen will make his intermediate track debut Thursday night in NASCAR's Grand National Division West Series race at the Phoenix International Raceway.

joegibbsracingoil.com

Davis eyes Cup

Joe Gibbs Racing development driver Marc Davis is 16 years old, and he has his eyes on one goal: the Nextel Cup Series.

Coming off a spectacular 2006 season in Late Models with six wins, Davis has been compared to a young Jeff Gordon and Cup veteran Mark Martin has said he is the "real deal."

The window of opportunity is open and blowing a strong breeze for the 16-year-old development driver signed with one of NASCAR's most successful operations, Joe Gibbs Racing.

Now it's up to Davis -- a graduate of NASCAR's Drive for Diversity program -- to get on the gas and blaze his own trail.

His father and manager, Harry Davis, values the opportunity NASCAR's Drive for Diversity program has afforded his son. He also understands the color of his son's skin is what NASCAR hopes will draw a new segment of fans and drivers to a sport traditionally dominated by white men.

"But the big picture is Marc Davis the NASCAR driver not Marc Davis the diversity driver," he said. "It's not a black NASCAR or a white NASCAR, it's just NASCAR."

His son agrees and wants to be judged based on his talent, not his ability to put black faces in the grandstands.

"I'm grateful for the opportunity, but it does get to a point where I just want to be known as the development driver for Joe Gibbs, and if I can open the door for more minorities to race then great, but I have to make it first," Marc Davis said.

And when the racer describes his daily routine, with eyes wide and optimism teeming, "making it" won't be an issue. His determination to succeed is evident.

In January, Davis transferred to Mooresville Christian Academy, a high school in Mooresville, N.C., with hours conducive for racing -- no classes on Fridays.

Every day after class, Davis heads to the Joe Gibbs Racing shop in Huntersville, N.C., for an hour of weight training or cardio, depending on the day. The workouts are followed up by hours at the JGR Busch Series shop to hang with the crew.

"I want to show I care and learn more about the engineering aspect of the cars," said Davis, at PIR this week donning an old, beat up JGR baseball cap, a pair of Electric brand sunglasses and some gray Nike SB Dunks. (Continued)

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