Teen who’s a patient at Shriners Hospital in Cincinnati will attend Cup race

SPARTA, Ky. — David Ragan will have a special guest with him when he hits the track this weekend at Kentucky Speedway.

Hunter Rogers, an avid NASCAR fan and patient at Shriners Hospital for Children — Cincinnati, will be cheering on the No. 55 from the pit box during Sunday’s Quaker State 400. The 13-year-old was burned as an infant and will visit the hospital regularly for scar revisions and treatments until he reaches the age of 21.

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Ragan, a Shriner and avid supporter of the hospital, was able to meet his guest of honor Thursday, when he visited the Cincinnati branch of the hospital. The Michael Waltrip Racing driver spent one-on-one time with Rogers, in addition to partaking in a variety of games and activities with the rest of the children.
 
The visit was part of Ragan’s awareness and fundraising initiative for the hospital, which Ragan named his official charity in 2008. He will continue to visit hospital branches throughout the United States and one lucky patient will be invited to accompany him at the race track following each gathering.
 
In 17 starts this season for three different race teams, Ragan has three top-15 finishes, including one fifth-place result at Martinsvillle.

Debate raised after Austin Dillon’s crash at Daytona

RELATED: NASCAR poring over data from Dillon’s Daytona wreck

SPARTA, Ky. — Jamie McMurray couldn’t see much. His No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet propelled wildly across the start-finish line under a shower of debris after being collected in the last-lap wreck that sent Austin Dillon’s airborne No. 3 into the catch fence in Sunday’s midnight Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway.

Judging by restrictor plate track history, McMurray expected that the steady rhythm of drafting was about to hit a sharp note in the race’s final whirl around the superspeedway.

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"When we came off Turn 2, there was a huge pack of cars and you’re gently pushing the guy in front of you and pushing him into the guy in front of him," McMurray recalled at Kentucky Speedway on Thursday. "And I think all of us knew heading into Turn 3 that when we came into Turn 4, it would not be gentle anymore. You’re just going to mash the gas and shove the guy as hard as you can and hope that you make it through the wreck because all of us knew there was going to be a wreck either before the finish line or afterwards."

But this wreck’s severity may have been a tad more than McMurray and the rest of the field anticipated. Brad Keselowski experienced a firsthand look at the scene outside his window net, as his spinning No. 2 ride smacked hard into Dillon’s upside-down vehicle seconds after the rest of cars cleared. It’s a difficult subject to talk about for the 31-year-old driver, as his Team Penske Ford slipped in oil around 200 mph, allowing driver control to fall to the wayside.

"Kind of the sad part is that I was honestly embarrassed that I hit Austin that long after the wreck," Keselowski said at Kentucky Speedway Thursday. "… There was just so much debris that even being as far behind as I was, you couldn’t slow down at 200 mph. And that was frustrating. I felt very, very lucky when I got out of the car, went to Austin, saw that he was OK.

"… Race cars are very, very well-designed and built for high impacts. They’re not ever going to be very well-designed for multiple high impacts. So, when I hit Austin the second time, yeah I saw his first impact and when I knew I was going to hit the second time, his odds were a lot lower walking away."

With the cars’ tight drafting and high speeds, the "Big One" has become synonymous with restrictor plate racing at Daytona and Talladega Superspeedway. And with the startling images of the wreck emblazoned in the minds of spectators and drivers alike, Dillon’s wild ride resurfaced the ongoing question: are restrictor plate races’ speeds safe enough?

For fellow Sprint Cup Series driver Greg Biffle, whose No. 16 ride was also caught up in the final lap frenzy, driver/spectator welfare is — and has been — the first priority. Despite Keselowski’s testimony that he wasn’t able to slow down in time to avoid hitting Dillon, Biffle doesn’t believe that slowing down the cars will mitigate the wrecks. Rather, he raises the point that the style of restrictor plate racing itself is what manifests into multicar melees.

"Your first reaction is that these cars are really safe," Biffle said on Thursday at Kentucky Speedway. "… These cars, when you get bunched up and one guy gets jammed underneath the other guy and you’re pushing these cars, they’re gonna get upside-down or flip up in the air no matter what speed we’re going. If we’re going 125 miles an hour when you jam a wedge underneath another one, it’s gonna pick it up in the air."

MORE: Dillon discusses how he is feeling | Exclusive video of wreck, 88 crew reacts

To Biffle, Dillon’s mangled No. 3 Chevrolet and smashed catch fence serve as proof of safety rather than a cause for alarm. Rather than shaking a finger in disapproval, the Roush Fenway Racing driver applauded the efforts of the industry and its strides to making the sport safer.

"It’s just a testament to how safe our sport is," Biffle said. "NASCAR has done an unbelievable job with SAFER barriers, and run-off areas, and paving areas. I think about how dangerous Pocono was and how safe of a race track it is now with all of the paving and the SAFER barriers they’ve done on the inside.

"I know it takes time for these tracks to react to these situations, but it just goes to show you that the engineering and what-not on that fence is what it needs to be and what it’s supposed to be and it did its job. The safety equipment did the job inside the car and the good thing is we can learn from that and try to make improvements if we can."

The incident still serves as a call to action for many drivers, as the sport continues to learn from past wrecks and on-track instances.

"… You hope that you can learn from it and figure out a way to keep the cars on the ground, contain them from the fans even better than what we have." McMurray said. "You look back in the years in the sport and everything that we have has evolved from something like that. NASCAR has done a really nice job of learning from their mistakes and learning from accidents on the track and hopefully we’ll learn from this one as well."

Repeat hopes more reasonable after Daytona, heading into Kentucky

Fresh off his best ever NASCAR XFINITY Series finish at Daytona International Speedway, Saturday night’s third-place driver Chase Elliott humbly and repeatedly insisted his result was as much about good fortune as it was strategy or maneuvering.

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"It was completely, just luck of the draw as to where I was running when those wrecks happened, that’s the reason we missed it, absolutely nothing I did," Elliott said. "We lucked into it.

"The thing about it is this race rewards the same points as the others and that can be really good or really bad. For us unfortunately it was really bad the first two times this season (at speedways), so really happy to finish today and getting a top five was really big."

The 19-year-old should give himself more credit, but he’ll gladly take that third place and move on to Kentucky Speedway, where he hopes to launch a real run for his second straight XFINITY Series championship.

Elliott’s work Saturday night in Daytona Beach moved him into second place in the championship standings, 34 points behind leader Chris Buescher entering Friday night’s race in Kentucky. It equals the JR Motorsports driver’s highest ranking of the season and puts him in good position to defend his title as he prepares to move up into the Sprint Cup Series in 2016, taking Jeff Gordon‘s seat in the No. 24 Chevrolet with Hendrick Motorsports.

It’s actually a familiar title scenario for Elliott.

Last year, he arrived in Kentucky ranked third, 11 points out of the championship lead. He cut that to four points with a 12th-place finish (and rough nights for his closest competitors) then took over the points lead three races later with a victory in Chicago.

Although Elliott has an impressive seven top-five and 12 top-10 efforts in 15 starts in the No. 9 NAPA Chevy, he is still looking for his first win of the season.

The series is two races into a challenging 16-week run of competition, and Elliott has five top-eight finishes in the last six races. Buescher’s best finish at Kentucky is seventh.

"The best way to gain points is to win races," Elliott said. "I am confident we can do that. We have to get after it and really do our job the second half of the season. If there’s any part that counts, this is it. So we need to get it done and capitalize. That starts this weekend at Kentucky where we had one pretty solid run the last time we were there.

"You’re coming into a long stretch, the second half of the season and it’s a lot of racing, a lot of hard weekends, a lot of traveling for your guys. But a lot of your luck is created before you leave (the shop) and we need to make sure we stay on top of that side before we leave and go out there and try to win some races."

See where every driver will pit at 7:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1

RELATED: Full starting lineup

When the Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying was cancled due to rain at Kentucky Speedway, the first 26 drivers in the field for Thursday’s UNOH 225 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) were set by owner’s points. 

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Two-time Truck Series champion Matt Crafton claims the pole for Thursday night’s race and also claimed the first pit stall off pit road with an open pit box in front of him. 

Tyler Reddick, driver of the No. 19 Ford, lines up second and chose the 14th pit stall with two empty pit boxes in front of him.

Ray Black Jr., who is lining up 15th, chose the first stall onto pit road with an open box behind his stall.

After slew of rain delays, drivers finally get practice round in

RELATED: Practice results

Originally, the first practice round for the XFINITY Series was scheduled for 2 p.m. ET at Kentucky Speedway, but due to tough weather conditions Thursday the on-track events for all three series were either canceled or rescheduled.

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Thus, the sole practice session for the NASCAR XFINITY Series drivers began once the rain stopped at 5 p.m. ET. The No. 28 Chevrolet of J.J. Yeley topped the event with a best speed of 174.967 mph (30.863 seconds).

Ty Dillon finished second (174.729 mph) following an emotional few days leading up to the Kentucky weekend after his brother Austin’s crash in the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona. 

Rounding out the top three was Brendan Gaughan‘s No. 62 with a fastest lap of 174.526 mph (30.941 seconds).

Next to complete the session were Keselowski (174.22 mph), Menard (174.137 mph) and Kyle Busch (173.896 mph) taking fourth, fifth and sixth, respectively. 

NASCAR XFINITY Series action continues Friday with Coors Light Pole Qualifying at 3:45 p.m. ET on NBC Sports Network (Follow live).

Air Titan 2.0 drying track for Camping World Truck race (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1)

GALLERY: Best photos from a rainy Thursday at Kentucky

After enduring a soggy day on Wednesday, NASCAR drivers across all three series were at the mercy of the weather once again on Thursday at Kentucky Speedway as rain canceled all Sprint Cup, XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series practice sessions along with Keystone Light Pole Qualifying for Trucks. NASCAR later said that XFINITY cars might get on track "if the track comes around in due time," according to a spokesman for the sanctioning body.

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Ten NASCAR Air Titans have been cirulating the track since 9:30 a.m. and are continuing their drying efforts in order to get the Camping World Truck Series UNOH 225 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) on track to race.

Since qualifying for the Truck race was canceled, the field will be set according to NASCAR Rule Book that states that the first 26 drivers in the field will be set by owner’s points. This means two-time Truck Series champion Matt Crafton will start from the pole position in Thursday night’s event, flanked by Tyler Reddick in the No. 19 Ford. Kyle Busch Motorsports teammates Erik Jones and Daniel Suarez will start second and third, respectively. 

Since Thursday’s Sprint Cup Series practice session was added to the schedule because two practice sessions on Wednesday were rained out, teams continue to wait for their first chance to test the new Kentucky rules package on the track.

The Sprint Cup Series has two practices scheduled for Friday, along with Coors Light Pole Qualifying. The XFINITY Series has qualifying and its race scheduled for Friday. Friday’s schedule had not changed at the time this story was published. 

MORE: Complete weekend schedule for Kentucky

Rain, weepers in asphalt cancel Truck Series practice, qualifying at Kentucky

RELATED: Track live weather updates | Updated weekend schedule

SPARTA, Ky. — Following Thursday morning’s canceled NASCAR Camping World Truck Series opening practice, the Keystone Light Pole Qualifying scheduled for Thursday at 5:15 p.m. ET was also canceled and the field for tonight’s UNOH 225 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) will be set according to the NASCAR Rule Book. 

MORE: See the full lineup

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According the the NASCAR Rule Book, the first 26 drivers in the field will be set by the series owners points. This means two-time Camping World Truck Series champion Matt Crafton will start from the pole position of Thursday night’s event, flanked by Tyler Reddick in the No. 19 Ford.

Kyle Busch Motorsports teammates Erik Jones and Daniel Suarez will start second and third, respectively.

The two scheduled NASCAR XFINITY Series practices — scheduled for 2 p.m. ET and 4 p.m. ET, respectively — are on hold, a NASCAR spokesperson announced.

A damp track and an assortment of "weepers" — water creeping up through the asphalt — also wiped out Wednesday’s on-track activity, an extended practice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series’ revised rules package. That practice was condensed and rescheduled for 11 a.m.-12:55 p.m. ET Thursday, but ultimately canceled. 
 
A fleet of 10 NASCAR Air Titan track-drying vehicles are on site at Kentucky to combat the wet weather this weekend.

Wreck ended race at Kentucky after truck damages fence

RELATED: Crafton lauds NASCAR’s safety, call to end race | Crafton wins at Kentucky

SPARTA, Ky. — A dramatic crash and damage to a catch fence punctuated NASCAR’s second straight national series race Thursday night at Kentucky Speedway.
 
This time, it was Camping World Truck Series regular Ben Kennedy at the center of the melee, still running on adrenaline but unscathed after the wreck that abbreviated Thursday’s UNOH 225 with five laps remaining. Just three days ago in the wee hours of Monday morning, Austin Dillon had a terrifying ride after the checkered flag in the Sprint Cup Series’ most recent race at Daytona International Speedway.

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Kennedy’s Red Horse Racing No. 11 Toyota dented several support poles after it became airborne at the entrance to Kentucky’s Turn 1, riding the top of the energy-absorbing SAFER barrier before finally coming to rest. Though Dillon’s crash may have been slightly more violent in its severity, there was a common theme in both hard hits: Gratitude from the principle drivers that they emerged unhurt.
 
"I guess I was on top of the wall," Kennedy said. "I remember being up on the wall for quite some time. I didn’t really see much. I just saw a bunch of dust and debris flying. I came down, and the ride from the wall to the ground was pretty hard, but I’m OK. Thank God for everything that NASCAR has done to keep this sport safe, ’cause for me to get out of my car on my own power after a hit like that is pretty incredible."
 
Almost bound as brothers by their similar crashes, Dillon stopped by the Red Horse Racing hauler after the race was halted to check on Kennedy, who said he was fine despite the intensity of the wreck. The same couldn’t be spoken for Kennedy’s No. 11 entry, which was sheared at both ends.

RELATED: Drivers talk about Daytona speeds |  NASCAR poring over Dillon wreck data

Kennedy’s truck collided with the No. 92 Ford of David Gilliland at the end of the frontstretch in the late stages of the race, scheduled for 150 laps. Gilliland said a miscommunication between spotters led to the contact, which turned Kennedy’s truck to the right, where it was struck by the oncoming truck of John Wes Townley, causing the No. 11 Tundra to lift.
 
Kennedy’s truck struck the support of the catch fence and ripped fence netting away, but no injuries to fans in the grandstands were reported. It finally came to a halt after scraping along the top of the Steel and Foam Energy Reduction (SAFER) barrier in Turns 1 and 2.
 
After getting initial reports about Kennedy’s condition, Red Horse team owner Tom DeLoach was breathing relief.
 
"Whew, at least my driver’s OK. We can rebuild a truck," DeLoach said. "I’m proud of what the guys do. It’s really the trucks that we build, but NASCAR’s come up with a lot of innovation on the safety side. We’re adhering to that, and it’s keeping our drivers safe. So I have no complaints when it’s protecting my driver."

NASCAR officials said they made the decision to shorten the race based on the estimated time required to make repairs to the catch fencing. Speedway workers were already mending the retaining fence and checking the SAFER barrier less than an hour after the race’s conclusion, and a NASCAR spokesman said that repairs would be in place in time for on-track activity to resume Friday morning.
 
Kentucky Speedway president Mark Simendinger said that no debris went into fan areas and that he was "encouraged by the integrity" of the fence after the crash. The grandstand seating at Kentucky, Simendinger said, is elevated by design in the interest of improving both fan safety and sightlines.
 
Though lap speeds for the Sprint Cup Series at 2.5-mile Daytona are roughly 20-25 mph faster than the truck series’ speeds at the smaller, 1.5-mile Kentucky track, the Kennedy crash occurred at one of the fastest points on the circuit. The speed combined with the larger factor of the physics involved in how the three trucks came together contributed to Kennedy’s truck lifting off the surface.
 
Though the two incidents involving the catch fence occurred in less than a week’s span, Crafton called the two events simply a "perfect storm." Gilliland was also hesitant to label the two crashes a trend.
 
"I’m upset that that whole deal happened at the end. You don’t ever want to be a part of anything like that," Gilliland said. "… It’s super-scary. There’s no trend to it; it’s just racing. I think we all kind of know the dangers when we buckle in, and NASCAR does a great job with the safety. They look at everything, and they’ll look at this and see what could’ve been done different or whatever and go from there — same thing that we did with last week’s wreck."

Rain washes out two days of practice at Kentucky

RELATED: Rain wreaks havoc Thursday | New rules for several tracks this season

SPARTA, Ky. — Making a dry run with the new NASCAR Sprint Cup Series rules package has yet to materialize in two days of trying at Kentucky Speedway. There’s been scarcely little dry — dry anything — to speak of in general.

Rain-related delays played more havoc with the 1.5-mile track’s schedule Thursday, washing out an extended Sprint Cup practice for the second straight day and throwing an even bigger question mark onto the preparation and running of Saturday night’s Quaker State 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, PRN, SiriusXM). With zero track time thus far and relatively little data to go on, how the new lower-downforce package will perform in race conditions remains the subject of speculation and educated guesses.

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"To some extent, it’s an educated guess every week, right?" Dave Rogers, crew chief for the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 Toyota driven by Denny Hamlin, told NASCAR.com. "You’re always trying to make your car faster and be better than the next guy. With the package change, it makes it more difficult. The less downforce is definitely going to load the four springs differently, and it changes a lot of things, but at the end of the day, the entire field is playing by the same set of rules and the same situation, so they’re going to hand the checkered flag to the team that is best prepared on Saturday night. It is what it is."

Sprint Cup teams expected to get their first full-fledged session Wednesday with the new reduced downforce setup, where aerodynamic rules changes — a shorter rear spoiler and an altered front splitter and extension panel — were expected to make cars more difficult to drive, requiring more driver input and potentially promoting more side-by-side racing. But persistent rain and the presence of "weepers" trickling from the track surface scrapped the pair of two-hour sessions.

Thursday’s schedule was overhauled to allow for a one-hour, 55-minute Sprint Cup session, but ongoing weather woes thwarted that plan, raising the prospects of a congested schedule on Friday, when the forecast also includes potential precipitation.

"I think we could probably race this package without testing it," Greg Biffle said. "I doubt whether that will happen. I think that we’ll at least end up getting some practice. I think we’ll need some practice on the race track to race this package because we have gotten as close as we can with the setup and the springs and the shocks and the wedge and the front swaybar as we could possibly get, but I think we’re gonna need at least an hour practice session to get it, ‘OK, it’s not spinning out and I’ve got it fairly decent.’ Now, do we need four hours of testing and then an hour-and-a-half of practice and qualifying and all that? No, we don’t need all that, but we do need some track time."

The idea of some track time would be as welcome as blue skies over the Bluegrass State, for drivers, crew chiefs and NASCAR officials alike. Without the benefit of laps and the associated data, all sides are feeling the effects of the time crunch on a busy weekend with all three NASCAR national series occupying the same race track.

"I really don’t know. It’s really a tough spot for them to be in, too," Cole Pearn, crew chief for the Furniture Row Racing No. 78 Chevrolet driven by Martin Truex Jr, said of NASCAR’s contingent. "I think general consensus from a lot of other teams is they wanted to stay with this, just because we’re here, we’ve done all our prep work for this, we’d be better off. We’ve tested it at Charlotte; other teams have tested it at other tracks, so it’s not like it’s totally unknown. I don’t know. It’ll be a curveball."

While teams have had time to adjust to the new rules, the tires provided by Goodyear specifically for the Kentucky race had already been produced by the time the new rules package was announced last month. The tire-setup combination is expected to be more fine-tuned for the Labor Day race at Darlington Raceway, where a similar rules package is scheduled to be used.

Meanwhile in Kentucky, Sprint Cup teams kept their eyes looking skyward, left to wait another day to get out on track.

GALLERY: Best photos from a rainy Thursday at Kentucky

"We all want to get out there and run and try to see what this package is about — first of all, for curiosity, but second, just to try to get your car handling the best you can," Rogers said. "You know whenever you take downforce off, you’re not going to improve handling. They’re going to be a handful to drive. Then this is a situation where we took the downforce off but we didn’t really bring any more tire back to compensate. So everybody’s curious to see how it’s going to play out, but then there’s things like gear ratio and did we select the right gear, what’s the pace going to do with laps, and really NASCAR needs to see that as much as everyone else so they can make rules accordingly.

"But there’s nothing you can do about it. We’re fighting Mother Nature and sometimes it is what it is and you’re not afforded the luxuries you’d like. But like I said, we’re all in the same boat, but we’ll make the best of it and see what we can do."

Baker announced on Tuesday he has inoperable lung cancer

It’s difficult to write something personal about someone you’ve really only known professionally.

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And that’s the case with Buddy Baker. I’ve known Buddy for years but truthfully I don’t "know" him. And the fault in that, if there is any, is mine.

Record books and media guides and the Internet can provide you with the following, that Baker won 19 times in NASCAR’s premier series and a slew of poles (38) in a career that ran the better part of three decades. You don’t need to know the man to know that he was a success on the race track.

You don’t need to know the man to know that he was equally successful in the television booth, where he ventured when his driving career had ended and The Nashville Network (TNN) as well as CBS came calling. Baker was folksy, he was genuine and he was a perfect fit.

Those same qualities helped him launch yet another career, this time on radio. Since ’07, he’s been heard on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, most recently as co-host of the program "Late Shift."

Those broadcast efforts gave folks a glimpse into Buddy Baker. Fans who came to know Buddy through his TV and radio work probably feel as if they do know Buddy and they’re not entirely incorrect.

All of this comes to mind because on Tuesday evening he told listeners that he was stepping away from the microphone for health reasons. Baker has inoperable lung cancer.

I remember bits and pieces from the late ‘60s when Buddy’s run with Ray Fox was coming to an end and a new one with Cotton Owens was beginning. I remember the stops with Petty Enterprises, the K&K No. 71 Dodge and the No. 15 of Bud Moore, too. And all that took place before he hooked up with car owner Harry Ranier and engine builder Waddell Wilson and finally won the Daytona 500 after 18 years of trying.

He was "Leadfoot" and the "Gentle Giant" but until he finally pulled into the winner’s circle at Daytona, he’d also been "Bad Luck Buddy" due to the number of occasions when he won, as he often recalled "the Daytona 450" or some other number that always fell just short of the race’s 500-mile mark.

It was probably 1985 and Bull Frog Knits. That might have been the first time I met Buddy and he was every bit as big as we’d always been led to believe. At six-foot six, Buddy didn’t climb out of a race car. He came out in a collection of elbows and knees.

He and partner Danny Schiff had teamed up to field a green and white No. 88 Oldsmobile and for the next five years Baker made less than 100 starts. The results were mixed.

It was a particularly bad wreck at Charlotte that sidelined Baker, and in August of ’88 he underwent surgery to have a blood clot removed from his brain.

He not only recovered, but he raced again and in ’92 made what would be his final start in NASCAR’s premier series.

Highlights? He won the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway three times with three different teams.

He won the Southern 500 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway.

He won at Talladega on four occasions. He won at Atlanta and Texas World Speedway and Nashville and Ontario, Calif.

And in 1980, he won the Daytona 500.

His victories came with seven different organizations; more than half the owners for whom he drove are already enshrined in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

He won before radial tires, power steering and engineers.

"We never had luxury of car that would turn in the corner, we had to make it turn … trial and error mostly," he once said. "We had to do that at the race track; we didn’t have the engineers and things like that."

Add "driver coach" to the list of items on Baker’s resume. It’s an often-overlooked part of his career.

When team owner Roger Penske wanted someone to help a young Ryan Newman as he began to work his way into NASCAR, Penske turned to Baker.

When Brendan Gaughan was giving Sprint Cup a try in ’04, Baker got the call.

Baker proved to be an excellent coach; he didn’t get too excited when working with youngsters.

In ’04, Gaughan was making his first Sprint Cup start at Darlington. He hit the wall, by his own admission, roughly a dozen times.

Finally Baker came on the radio to provide a bit of advice.

"After I’d hit the wall like the 12th time," Gaughan said,  "… Buddy came over the radio and said, ‘Hey man, why don’t you give that wall a rest for a few laps?’"

"Do not shed a tear. Give a smile when you say my name," he told listeners Tuesday evening.

The smiles will continue to come easy. Baker often left listeners grinning, whether in person or across the miles and miles of airwaves.

You don’t need to know Buddy Baker to understand he had a lasting impact on the sport.

Here’s hoping we haven’t heard the last of him.