No. 1 Ganassi crew’s car-ride celebration years in the making for team
Daniel Shirey
CONCORD, N.C. -- Kurt Busch's first victory of the season last weekend came with the usual trappings. The trophy. The checkered flag. A playoff spot. The burnout. An emotional post-race interview.
One element of the celebration, though, stood out as different amid the late-night hoopla at Kentucky Speedway. The jubilation level for the Chip Ganassi Racing No. 1 team seemed particularly high, especially when contrasted against the heartbreak of a storm-related defeat the previous weekend at Daytona. Plus, many of the crew were cheering their long-awaited first win at NASCAR's top level.
But the festivities took on a decidedly old-school aura after the post-race interview, when one by one, a half-dozen crewmembers piled onto Busch's No. 1 Chevrolet for a triumphant ride back to the pits.
[caption id="attachment_202387" align="alignright" width="434"] Kurt Busch dives into his Kentucky win celebration. | Daniel Shirey/Getty Images[/caption]
It was a celebration that had been in the works for at least two years.
PHOTOS: Old-school celebrations
"Just one day out of the blue, we were having a little group meeting," said car chief Ryan Bergenty, who rode the No. 1 Chevy's passenger-side door. "It was just the guys and I, and we were going through pre-race stuff for the weekend. Something just popped into my head -- a little throwback, a little old-school kind of racing. We're all racers, right? We all like the old-school celebrations and stuff, and celebrations nowadays have gotten pretty mundane -- just burnouts, right?
"So it just popped in my head, I said, 'I tell you what, when we win a race, I promise we'll ride on the race car,' and they all just kind of had that little fire."
Those initial flames simmered for nearly two seasons until Kurt Busch outdueled his brother, Kyle, in a fender-scraping Saturday night shootout at the Kentucky course. It's the passion that prompted interior mechanic Matthew House to occupy the driver's-side door ledge, opposite a fist-pumping Bergenty. It's the desire that drove shock technician Bryce Seales to find a perch on the rear decklid alongside hauler driver Scott Woodfin and underneath mechanic Jon Ellis. And it's the motivation that coaxed front end mechanic Nick Case into rushing to retrieve the checkered flag, then snagging the only spot left: the hood.
Honoring the celebrations made famous long ago by names such as Petty, Allison and Waltrip sparked a post-race stir, one that rivaled the buzz created by the bare-knuckled finish. But it also provided one of the season's most searing images from one of the garage's most tight-knit teams. Here is the story of the six men who made that ride.
The Petty Enterprises crew pushes Richard Petty's car to Victory Lane following his 200th career NASCAR Cup win in the Firecracker 400 at Daytona International Speedway. | Photo by ISC Images & Archives via Getty Images[/caption]
Case (front end mechanic): "It may have been a rain delay, we were hanging out in the hauler and we see one of the flashbacks of everybody riding and said, 'Hey, we need to do that.' But it's kind of like, you joke about winning the Powerball. You know, what would you do with all the money."
Bergenty (car chief): "In the sport, everybody's always pushing, right, and everybody wants to win. And so you always have to have little goals, you have to have big goals, you have to have personal goals, you have to have team goals. ... That's a way that I saw a little reaction to put a little pep in the step of everybody and keep the ball rolling as a team to keep shooting for the same goal. And so, it's been hit and miss a couple times over a couple years talking about it."
Woodfin (hauler driver): "For me personally, getting on that car was just absolutely awesome because I've been a race fan since I was 6 years old and watching the old-school guys do that and watching Richard Petty pull into Victory Lane with all his guys on it, it was just something I was in awe of as a kid."
Ellis (underneath mechanic): "For me, this entire crew is a bunch of old-school racers. I mean, that's what we grew up watching. It just happened, just living in the moment."
House (interior mechanic): "I think it came about that everybody grew up watching NASCAR and the Southern style. Everybody rode on the car. It was just great. Everybody, it was what you grew up watching -- all the old-timers, the originals, they loved it and would climb on the car. So we wanted to relive that, and felt like that was something we wanted to do. ... So I always remember playing with the TV remote and watching the race, and you see that. As you get older, you're like, 'Man, that's what I love. That's what I want to do.' "
Behold, the Kentucky winner. | Photo by Daniel Shirey/Getty Images[/caption]
Bergenty: "Definitely Kurt gets a lot of credit for that, but it's definitely something that we've had. It wasn't so much bringing more to the table, it was the reassurance. Our group's really pushing, like I mentioned before. Our group's really refined details. Our group every week is just pushing really hard and not missing anything, and so when you are in this sport, it's a complete team thing. You need the road crew, you need the shop crew, you need the marketing group, you need the driver, you need the pit crew -- there's so much that goes in. Ultimately, Kurt has probably the biggest factor in the outcome of it all, so we all had the attitude and the fire, it was just like putting a cherry on your ice cream. It was just that little bit extra that honed our focus in a little bit better."
House: "I think his determination in every day, every minute when he gets at that car is we're going to win. We're going to be up front, no matter what. People see that things affect him, he may get upset, but I don't really see he's getting upset, I see that's just will and desire."
Seales (shock technician): "Certainly when he came here, we were all really pumped because we hadn't had a really good year for different reasons in 2018, had a pretty good year in 2017, and he's motivated every single race. And we got really close there a few races during the year; we just knew that it was going to come our way. And you know at the end of the race when there's 10 to go, he's the right driver to get it done."
Ellis: "You know what you're getting when you get Kurt Busch. It's wide open, all the time, and he's going to bring the best out of you. It was a big confidence booster."
Bergenty: "What I think Kurt's done is, Kurt doesn't lift. Kurt's very on the gas, every day. It's just gotten everybody to where if you were six days on, one day off, now we're seven days on. It's pushed us and everyone's accepted that role, that sense of pressure."
A celebration that was years in the planning. / Photo by Daniel Shirey/Getty Images[/caption]
Bergenty: "Once everybody just got out there and we were congratulating Kurt and stuff, and everyone's adrenalin's going because it was a heck of a race, I just kind of looked over at one of the guys and said, 'Remember what I told you a couple years ago?' He said, 'No way!' I said I promise you we'll do it. So we just kind of spur of the moment hopped on and see you later."
Case: "I wasn't really sure if we were going to do it, but right after we jumped off the wall, (Bergenty) said, 'Let's go out there.' Oh, OK. We're going to do it."
House: So we all talked about it, about hopping on the car and getting on the car, but we've never seen anyone execute it in this modern era. ... To be honest with you, when we hopped on the car and it was a celebration and we were waving at the fans, for just a moment, I kind of got tunnel vision. Just in the zone, we had just won, you're riding on the car, no one's done this in years. It's great, the best moment."
Ellis: "I was just going to get on the car. It didn't matter where. But we were all standing there and Kurt was getting ready to get back in the car, and Ryan, our car chief, was like, 'Let's hop on.' Just found a spot and rode 'er out."
Case: "We were all pretty excited so everybody started getting on the car, and someone's like, 'The checkered flag!' We looked up and the officials' waving 'em. All right, be right back. So I sprinted up and grabbed that and came back. Well, everybody had already piled on the car, so I'm like, the hood, that's the last place, so I'm sticking my hand in the airbox and let's go."
Seales: "There's been a lot of different photos on the media, and when you really look at it, if you look at the emotion of all the guys on there -- probably except for me because I'm busy hanging on -- but I think it really stands out. You've got Nick with the flag, you've got Jon-Jon just hand in the air and you can see the emotion and the excitement, and for some of those guys their first win, and certainly my first win in Cup as well. Yeah, to finally do it, you let it all hang out and celebrate. It was great."
Bergenty: "So when we kind of jumped on the car, Nick's got a flag, Jon-Jon's clapping, I was giving a little fist bump, then when we pulled away, you could hear the crowd. The crowd was excited, so for us that's the most important part. Without our fans, our fan base and the guys that are cheering on Kurt and our team, we're not much. For us to be able to perform like that week in and week out so they have something to cheer for, like I said, it's important to me personally, but it's important to our group to interact and give back to our fans when we can win races."
Woodfin: "The crowd was going nuts. It was amazing. I was fighting back tears the whole time. It ranks right up there with kids being born, for me. That's how awesome it was."
Ellis: "Winning's hard in this sport, so enjoy it. When it happens, take full advantage of it because you don't know when your next one is going to be. What we do next, I don't know. We'll see when it happens."
Bergenty: "The fans deserve it, Monster and our sponsors and partners deserve it. The guys deserve it. It's been a long couple years for us, and then since then, those guys are going to have a picture that they're going to blow up and I'll make sure they get to hang up in their house. It's a memory that they'll have forever, and it's pretty cool. It really is."