CONCORD, N.C. — Being a two-time champion in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series has its share of perks for Matt Crafton. But besides the laurels, there’s also a certain amount of responsibility, one that involves helping the next generation of drivers learn their way.
For the third straight season, Crafton has helped preside over the series’ rookie orientation meetings, joining series director Elton Sawyer in providing insights for the truck tour’s new crop of talent.
In recent years, the duty has fallen to the reigning series champion, which Crafton achieved with consecutive titles in 2013 and 2014. But with last year’s champ, Erik Jones, shifting to the NASCAR XFINITY Series full-time this season, Crafton was asked back.
“If it’s something where I feel I can help the rookies and possibly make it better racing, that’s what it’s all about,” said Crafton, who’s back on top as the series’ points leader after last weekend’s victory at Dover International Speedway. “I remember being a rookie and going to some of these places and not having a damn clue what I was doing or what to expect on some new race tracks, so if you can give them a little bit of insight as a group and then I always tell them at the end, if you ever have any questions, they’re always free to ask me whatever they need to ask me in the trailer afterward. It’s part of it.”
It’s been 15 years since the 39-year-old Crafton was a truck series newbie, almost as long as the lifespan of some members of this year’s rookie crop. When Crafton was on the other side of the first-year drivers’ orientation, he learned from a rotation of the series’ pioneers — Ron Hornaday Jr., Mike Skinner, Todd Bodine.
Times may have changed over the course of Crafton’s career, with the driver roster seemingly skewing younger. But it’s also tilted to an even more ambitious and talented class in one of NASCAR’s most competitive divisions.
“Just to think they’re racing in the Camping World Truck Series at 16 years old like they can do, it’s nuts,” Crafton says. “It’s just crazy the amount of pressure that’s on these kids. The thing is, they’re in great, great equipment. I can honestly say, everybody always says each and every week that, ‘oh, there’s such a great group of rookies out there.’ There’s been a great group of rookies a lot of years in the Camping World Truck Series since I’ve been here, but not all of them have always been in great equipment.”
On this damp Thursday morning, Sawyer and Crafton hold court in the suites over Charlotte Motor Speedway‘s pit road. A group of 15 young drivers — some true rookies and some who were preparing for their first start on the 1.5-mile track — circled around, awaiting direction over the racket of the Air Titans drying the pavement.
Before diving into a discussion about race procedure, Sawyer singled out John Hunter Nemechek, attending his last required rookie meeting at Charlotte — the last track missing from his truck series portfolio. “I thought Elton was going to bring me a cake this week, a certificate or something for graduating,” the 18-year-old Nemechek joked later. “He said he forgot, so I may have to get a cake in to him that says ‘Race Director’ or something on it.”
Sawyer emphasized the high notes from the crew chief’s handout, providing watch-outs about gamesmanship on restarts and other procedures. But he also ceded plenty of time to Crafton, who answered a question from ThorSport Racing teammate Rico Abreu about the blend zone off pit road and how hard he could hustle back onto the race track.
The inquiry led to a detailed description from Crafton about one of the most finicky tracks on the circuit. In vivid terms, Crafton explained the speedway’s character, how much the groove widens in time, how delicate side-by-side racing can be, and what he called the “gnarliest” transition as trucks dive into the Turn 1 banking.
“When we go to a new race track, it’s just learning the basics of the things that we need to look out for, especially here,” says 18-year-old rookie William Byron, who became the series’ newest first-time winner two weeks ago at Kansas Speedway. “He’s talking about the transitions and just things to watch out for in the race. It’s good to have a broad perspective of what it’s going to be like racing here. It gets you a little bit more comfortable.”
Even Nemechek, already a two-time truck series winner on intermediate-sized tracks, has seen the benefits.
“It was a good experience. They all helped every time you went,” Nemechek says. “… Any veteran that you can get and talk to and listen to that you know is going to shoot you somewhat straight when you come to a new place, it can only help you — from race trends to how to get on and off pit road to the characteristics of the race track.”
Crafton’s 366 career starts — an all-time series best — count as an encyclopedic amount of experience, and the back-to-back titles speak to his success. But the longtime veteran says he still finds time to pick up on things from the cub drivers with single-digit starts on their record.
What does he learn?
“Some of these kids nowadays, they just know more than we do,” Crafton says with a playfully satirical grin. “I have a daughter who’s 3 and she already knows more than me.”