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Sam Hornish Jr. didn’t even have his official NASCAR license or “hard card” when he received a call from Joe Gibbs Racing last week asking if he’d like to drive the team’s No. 18 Toyota in the Iowa Speedway XFINITY Series event on Father’s Day Sunday.
After the deal was formalized last Wednesday afternoon for the 36-year-old to make his first NASCAR start of the year — five months into the 2016 season — the former XFINITY Series championship runner-up hastily arranged to take the NASCAR mandated drug test. Fortunately, he had turned in all his other medical paperwork before the season started “just in case” he got the phone call as he did last week.
Lastly came the job of quickly packing all his racing gear. Some of it was at the family home in Ohio where the Hornish family was last week, and other parts of it were in the family’s North Carolina house.
“I didn’t want to put all my eggs in one basket, I knew I couldn’t carry-on everything, but I did put some things in there in case my checked bag got lost,” Hornish shared with NASCAR.com this week, his voice still exhilarated for what turned out to be a thrilling victory at Iowa — with no preparation other than the event’s scheduled time on the track.
“It was huge especially after the year we had last year, just to get the opportunity was fun,” Hornish said. “I knew with the strength of the 18 car there was opportunity. I was a little bit nervous just because you get into that kind of race car and having been out of the car as long as I was, you just kind of wonder if everything is going to work out the way you think it should.
“I don’t know how it could have been much better.”
The best part for the 2006 Indianapolis 500 winner was that it was the first time his young family was all in attendance to see him hoist a trophy.
“Ever since first Father’s Day in 2008 and Addison was just a baby, I remember waking up at Michigan — my first year in the Cup Series –and she was sitting there on the bed,” Hornish recalled. “I remember thinking how cool it would be to take her to Victory Lane. The other races I won my family (wife Crystal and including his other two children Eliza and Sam Hornish III) they didn’t happen to be there. Even my dad, who was there, was driving my bus for me so he’d leave the track when the race started.
“It feels good you won, but you want to share it with somebody. I can’t remember how many times in the XFINITY Series I finished second and the kids were there. I remember thinking, am I ever going to be able to make this happen?”
Even thinking about it half a week later makes Hornish emotional.
Many have wondered when the talented driver will give NASCAR another shot after he nearly won the XFINITY Series championship but struggled to post good results in four full Cup Series seasons with the Team Penske and Richard Petty Motorsports operations and several half-season efforts in between.
Having had NASCAR success — challenging for the 2013 XFINITY crown — and won three IndyCar championships and an esteemed Indy 500 ring, Hornish said this week that he is most proud of having his children present with him in Victory Lane.
The time out of the car Hornish has spent in a most unusual — yet exceedingly gratifying way.
He is a devoted member of a prayer group in Charlotte, North Carolina. And in May, he and his father made a long-awaited 11,000-mile road trip to Alaska. It was something the two had talked about doing for half a decade but always put on hold because of racing. Now he had the time.
“A lot of other people were saying, ‘Too bad you’re not getting any wheel time,’ and I told them, ‘Man I’m getting some wheel time,’ ” Hornish shared with a laugh. “I did close to 11,000 miles of driving during the month of May.”
Perhaps the most surprising and interesting thing Hornish has done out of the race car is find a place in the classroom — as a substitute teacher.
He’s taught physical education to first-graders and a music class — yes music — to students from kindergarten to eighth grade.
“Most of the kids just know me as Addison’s dad,” Hornish said.
And right now, that feels pretty good.
Even before he drove to Victory Lane last weekend, Hornish had secured two XFINITY starts for Richard Childress Racing and he will be in the No. 2 Chevrolet at the next Iowa race and the series’ second Kentucky stop.
“That’s what I know right now and in a lot of ways, I hope there will be more,” Hornish said. “At this point in time, one of the hardest things is explaining to people, I could be out there racing right now, if I didn’t want to run well. I’m fortunate that I can be choosy.”
And he added — his voice unmistakably filled with emotion, “After everything that happened last week, it’s like you got the ice cream sundae with whipped cream and the cherry on top.
“I keep thinking how blessed I am all those things got to happen. Without getting too sentimental, I kept thinking to myself for the past six to seven months, if I could just win a race and have them there, that’s all I need.
“Then I can be happy about everything I’ve done, whatever the ups and downs were.”