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The real race is under way well before the green flag (cont'd)
You become as road savvy as an urban planner, more familiar with street grids than a cartographer. You find obscure, alternative ways in, like the 19-turn backwoods path in Atlanta, the dirt-road passage through the swamps and palm groves at Homestead, the route past the little barbecue shack at Talladega. You couldn't describe these detours if you wanted to. You don't know the street names, only inconspicuous landmarks like a gas station or a white picket fence. You learn through experience that you can leave a little later at Bristol because so many people camp, where to get off Las Vegas Boulevard at Las Vegas, how to avoid the main drags at Daytona and Kansas. It begins to resemble a science.

But still, there are some times where you can't avoid it, like the aforementioned episode at Martinsville that unfolded last year. There are going to be some mornings when you hit the wrong button on the alarm, all your back routes fail you, and you're just stuck on the same road as 70,000 other people, having to fight your way in. I have three such episodes that immediately come to mind:
Sonoma, last year. I stayed in Vallejo to do a column on Jeff Gordon's hometown, and had an easy commute on Friday and Saturday along a pretty two-lane road skirting San Pablo Bay. I mentioned to a California writer where I was staying. His response: "So, you're going to leave Sunday at 5 in the morning, then?" Sure enough, on Sunday I came to a dead stop about two miles from my hotel, blocked by all the traffic coming from Oakland and Sacramento. So I backtracked, taking a 90-minute detour through Napa and Sonoma, picking my way through the vineyards to Infineon Raceway. Note to self: Next time, stay on the other side of the track.
Charlotte, 2002. Night races are deceiving. You think you can leave a little later, but you can't. I decided to have breakfast with a friend on the morning of the 2002 Coca-Cola 600, and I paid for it by sitting in traffic for nearly four hours, the longest it's ever taken me to get to a track. My noon departure time was much too late for a 5:30 race. The murderous slog up U.S. Highway 29 was exacerbated by worries that my car was overheating, fears that led me to keep the air conditioner off. Now, every time I go to Lowe's Motor Speedway, I take another way in. And I'm there before noon.
Daytona, 2005. The problem here wasn't getting to the track, but getting back. It was about 2 a.m. when Tony Stewart finally won the rain-plagued Pepsi 400, so those of us working for daily newspapers didn't have much to write. About 90 minutes later, I tried to leave the racetrack. I've never had a worse experience in an automobile. Traffic was gridlocked. It was so humid that windows kept fogging up, and it was difficult to see the cars on either side of you. Hour after hour passed. I had the radio at full blast trying to stay awake. By the time I got back to my Lake Mary hotel room, it was 6:30 and daylight. Perhaps not coincidentally, I haven't been back to the 400 since.
In no other sport does just getting to the event require such a cagey test of will. But that's race traffic, which you disrespect at your own peril. It's always there, every Sunday, thwarting the best attempts of tracks to manage it or visitors to circumvent it. There are times where it feels like some living, breathing thing, a wild animal that must be wrangled into submission. Those who love racing challenge it head-on, but in reality they have no other choice. Racetracks will change, cars will change, drivers will change, but race traffic will always be there. Like the cockroaches, it will outlast us all.
The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer.