Harry Scott didn’t set out to own the most teams competing in NASCAR, but that’s pretty much the situation the Raleigh, North Carolina native finds himself in today.
Scott currently fields eight teams in NASCAR — two in the Sprint Cup Series through his HScott Motorsports organization, one XFINITY Series team in collaboration with fellow Sprint Cup owner Chip Ganassi and five NASCAR K&N Pro Series East teams with co-owner/driver Justin Marks.
Last year, driver Ben Rhodes captured the K&N Pro Series East title while driving for Scott’s group.
“My goal eventually is to have one of these K&N drivers come all the way with me or with an affiliated organization — come from our K&N East operation to XFINITY and on up to Cup. That would be a pretty special thing,” Scott told NASCAR.com earlier this season.
This weekend’s racing program at Richmond International Raceway will see each of Scott’s teams in action as the three-quarter mile track hosts K&N East, XFINITY and Sprint Cup events.
Drivers William Byron and Scott Heckert headed into Thursday night’s UNOH 100 at RIR first and second in points with teammates Dalton Sargeant (fourth), J.J. Haley (sixth) and Rico Abreu (seventh) also in the top 10.
Brennan Poole, who has split seat time with Sprint Cup driver Kyle Larson and Marks in the No. 42 XFINITY Series entry, will make his 14th start of the season in Friday’s Virginia529 College Savings 250.
Saturday’s Federated Auto Parts 400 will include HScott Motorsports drivers Justin Allgaier and Michael Annett.
That’s quite a lot to keep up with for an owner who began his NASCAR efforts less than seven years ago by partnering with then-Nationwide Series owner Todd Braun and Braun Racing.
“I’ve always been interested in racing, always been a race fan, always been attracted to it,” Scott, founder of AccuDoc Solutions, a medical billing services provider, said. “Growing up in Raleigh I wasn’t in the racing scene, I didn’t grow up in it. My father was a physician. The first real inside exposure that I had was with Todd and that group. I was introduced to them in Daytona in February of 2009. We built a friendship and then we built a partnership in 2010.
“It was almost an internship. I had the ability to get the exposure; they welcomed me. It was a really good opportunity to get the experience that prepared me for what it’s become today through a series of other opportunities.”
After Braun ceased operations, Scott joined forces with team owner Steve Turner, who fielded XFINITY, Camping World Truck Series and K&N teams. The union, though, was already dissolving in the fall of 2013 when the opportunity for Scott to become a Sprint Cup team owner surfaced.
Scott had been considering such a move, “but not necessarily at that point,” he said.
Former team owner James Finch was looking to unload his Phoenix Racing operation, and Scott was an interested party.
“Everything happens for a reason,” Scott said. “I’m very pleased that I took the jump and took the risk. In an ideal situation for me, it was probably a year or two earlier than what I had expected. But it’s worked out really, really well.”
The fact that he wouldn’t have to build a team from the ground up was enticing, and less costly. Phoenix Racing also already had working arrangements in place with Hendrick Motorsports (which had also provided engines to Turner Scott) to supply engine and chassis.
Primary sponsor Brandt had expressed an interest in moving into Sprint Cup as well.
“All those things kind of came together in September of 2013,” Scott said. “It was an opportunity that I really couldn’t turn down.
“The key to being able to do all this are the relationships that we’ve been able to forge with Hendrick, with Chevrolet, with Stewart-Haas now, they provide us some engineering support, and our sponsor relationships. Without all of those things, there’s no way we could compete and do what we do. It was almost a perfect storm so to speak.”
The association with Ganassi made sense on two fronts — Scott had the available XFINITY Series operation from the earlier Turner-Scott affiliation and Ganassi needed a feeder series for the development of driver Kyle Larson.
An expected two-year program for Larson, however, was cut in half when the opportunity to put the youngster in the No. 42 vacated by Juan Pablo Montoya surfaced. But the team remains in place, another stop on the racing ladder where drivers can continue to gain experience.
“It’s a good fit for both of us because (Ganassi) provides us with a lot of support technically; we lease space in their shop and it also allows Chip to stay close to Larson’s racing … Obviously they’ve got an interest in making sure he’s in the most competitive equipment he can be in. As we both do.”
His Sprint Cup teams, Scott said are “paying our dues.” Allgaier, in just his second full season, is 30th in points while Annett, who joined HScott in January after a ’14 season with Tommy Baldwin Racing, is 36th.
Scott is among the younger Sprint Cup Series team owners at 49 and hopes to be around “as long as I’m able to do it physically.”
“I’m not in it for the short term,” he said. “I’m trying to build this the right way. Some of these guys have got 20, 30 years head start on me. It’s hard when you’re competing against them every week to keep it in perspective. You want to be as competitive as you can, but you also don’t want to be naïve enough and get disappointed when you’re racing a Hendrick organization, or Joe Gibbs or Stewart-Haas. …
“I didn’t come into the Cup series thinking I was going to light the world on fire immediately, because it just doesn’t happen, I don’t care how much resources you have. It’s not just resources. It’s people, it’s time, it’s experience, and you can’t buy experience.”
Scott sees the ownership landscape changing, and says he hopes he can assist others the way owners today have helped him. He listens, he is given advice and he learns.
“I take all that to heart,” he said of conversations with Hendrick, Ganassi and others. I’m glad they’re here.
“There will come a time where hopefully I’m in their position giving the advice and I can give back to the sport, help young teams coming along … and that would be my ultimate goal — to bring some of these young drivers along too. That would be really fulfilling.”