Crew chiefs break down how they predict the amount of fuel left in their tanks

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The white flag was out as Dale Earnhardt Jr. led the field across the start/finish line at Las Vegas Motor Speedway earlier this year.
 
And Earnhardt knew his car was running dangerously low on Sunoco Green E15.
 
Halfway through the final lap, his car began to slow. Brad Keselowski swept past to collect the win, while Earnhardt coasted across the line in second place.
 
"We weren’t supposed to make it," the Hendrick Motorsports driver said afterward. "We were a lap short. We tried to save as much as we (could) … make it work, but it didn’t work. We knew we were short. It’s not a shock to us to run out."
 
Four months later, teammate Jeff Gordon ran out of fuel under caution at New Hampshire Motor Speedway as the field prepared for a green-white-checkered finish.
 
Denny Hamlin (Joe Gibbs Racing), running second, was called to pit road during the caution by crew chief Darian Grubb, who knew Hamlin didn’t have enough gas to make it to the end of the race.
 
And Stewart-Haas Racing‘s Kevin Harvick, also low in the tank, began to run out just as the field took the green flag for the final time.
 
"We knew we were very close," said Gordon, whose car was pushed to pit road and refueled before the final restart. "That (fuel) pickup is in the right side (of the fuel cell) … I was scuffing my tires and I think I took just enough fuel out of the pickup and I could never get any back in there. … We might have run out anyway."
 
• • •
 
With reams of information at their fingertips, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams have a pretty good idea of just how much fuel their cars have in the tank at any time, as well as the car’s fuel mileage during each race.

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How do they know?
 
• The standard fuel dump can weighs approximately 95 pounds when filled with 12 gallons of racing fuel;
 
• A gallon of racing fuel weighs about 6 pounds (the actual weight will vary depending on temperature);
 
• The dump cans are weighed before and after refueling the car during pit stops to get a precise measurement of fuel consumption.
 
If a can weighs 30 pounds after a pit stop, then 10.8 gallons of fuel were dispensed into the car (95 lbs.– 30 lbs. = 65 lbs., and 65/6= 10.8)
 
To determine fuel mileage at that point, a team would divide the amount of fuel replaced into the number of laps completed since the last fuel stop – for instance, if it had been 45 laps, then 45/10.8 = 4.15 mpg.
 
Because of a number of variables that impact mileage — is the driver out front in clean air or battling traffic?, for instance) — it’s impossible to know exactly how much fuel is in the tank or how far a driver can go before his car begins to sputter.
 
It’s an educated guess, but a guess just the same.
 
• • •
 
Among the various track sizes found on the 36-race Sprint Cup Series schedule, eight are 1.5-mile venues. So fuel mileage should be approximately the same at each one, right?
 
Approximately, yes. But approximately can sometimes be the difference in speeding across the finish line first, or coasting across in 10th or lower.
 
"It changes. At every track you go to, it changes," said Rodney Childers, Harvick’s crew chief.
 
The reasons are numerous. Some 1.5-mile tracks are faster than others — at Texas Motor Speedway and Kentucky Speedway earlier this season, the pole-winning speeds varied by nearly 7 mph. And faster speeds mean an engine is burning fuel at a faster rate.
 
Running a race during the day versus running one at night also impacts fuel mileage; cooler conditions under the lights often mean higher speeds with, again, engines burning fuel at a faster rate.
 
Driving styles differ, too, and charging deeper into a turn before easing off the gas pedal can also use more fuel.
 
Even the racing surface (abrasive versus smooth) plays a role, impacting tire wear, which in turn affects fuel mileage.
 
"(At) some places that don’t have much falloff (in speed), your race fuel mileage would be the same, or close to the same, that it was in practice," Childers said. "At other places where the falloff is a lot, your fuel mileage is often way better than what it was in practice."
 
What does practice have to do with calculating fuel mileage?
 
Everything.
 
The process begins before the cars are on the track. Prior to fueling the cars, the fuel dump cans are weighed. That weight, as well as the time and temperature, are noted on the outside of each fuel can.
 
Temperature affects the weight of the fuel — "the warmer the fuel is, the lighter it weighs," Len Wood, co-owner of Wood Brothers Racing, said earlier this year during a break at one NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stop.
 
"If it’s a 60-degree day at Richmond, and you come to Talladega where it’s 85 degrees, your fuel is going to be 60 degrees at one place and 85 at the other … so you have to adjust for that.
 
"If (temperature) stayed the same, say you ran all 1.5-mile tracks — 20 laps, that’s 30 miles. That doesn’t matter if it’s Kansas or Charlotte or Las Vegas. But that has nothing to do with it. It’s how much you’re on throttle at those tracks and things like that, yeah, that’s what makes it different."
 
Teams begin charting fuel mileage during opening practice each weekend. When a driver heads back to the garage for adjustments, the car is often refueled. And the amount of fuel that’s been used is carefully noted.
 
"I’ve already done three (fuel) checks here in the last 50 minutes," Wood said. "When you come in and change tires, that’s when you typically add fuel during practice.
 
"If you were going to run one set of tires at Texas for 35 laps during practice, then you would only get one (fuel) check at the end. But if you stopped with 15 minutes to go and said, ‘Let’s throw a set of tires on and see what we’ve got,’ say you’ve run 24 laps and go out and run 12 more, then you figure each one of those separately. In that case, I typically would add them together and average them."
 
In addition to figuring mileage based on how much gas a team is putting in the tank, electronic control units also provide information that can help a team determine fuel mileage.
 
"So after practice," Childers said, "you have two different figures you can look at.
 
"Then you’ve got to look at past history — ‘Every other time we’ve been here, our mileage has been two-tenths better than it was in practice.’ Kind of bank on that a little bit.
 
"But you really don’t know for sure until after your first pit stop or first two pit stops. By the time you get toward the end of the race you’re pretty confident on what you’ve got."
 
Of course, just as the competition on the track changes during the course of a race, fuel mileage can change as well.
 
"The thing than can kind of mess you up a little bit," said Childers, "is if you ride around 20th most of the day and the next thing you know you get up there in the top four in clean air. The lap times are almost a second a lap faster than what you were running (in the pack), and your mileage goes way down. You’ve got to be a little careful.
 
"It’s kind of up to the engineers and the crew chief to almost remind each other, ‘Hey, we’re way faster right now and our mileage isn’t going to be as good. We probably need to knock a couple of laps off just to be safe.
 
"It’s not easy, but the tools just keep getting better and better."

 

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21 Means 21 Pole winner Erik Jones gets first pit pick

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Kyle Busch Motorsports drivers Erik Jones and Darrell Wallace Jr. chose the first two stalls off of pit road, heading into Turn 1.

Points leader Matt Crafton and his ThorSport Racing teammates Johnny Sauter and Jeb Burton will pit in the third through fifth stalls.

Brad Keselowski Racing trucks picked the sixth and seventh stalls for Ryan Blaney and Tyler Reddick.

Red Horse Racing is next with German Quiroga in the eighth stall and Timothy Peters in the ninth stall.

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Mason Mingus rolls off fifth on FOX Sports 1 at 5:10 p.m. ET

Track Qualifying Record: Ken Schrader, 7/24/13, 19.709 seconds, 91.329 mph

# Trk Driver Team
1 13 Jeb Burton Estes/Carolina Nut Company Toyota
2 03 * Michael Affarano Won-N-Done Chevrolet
3 51 Erik Jones ToyotaCare Toyota
4 9 Chase Pistone # NTS Motorsports Chevrolet
5 35 Mason Mingus # Call 811 Toyota
6 99 Bryan Silas Sany Chevrolet
7 77 German Quiroga Net 10 Wireless Toyota
8 88 Matt Crafton Ideal Door/Menards Toyota
9 50 TJ Bell American Lineman Chevrolet
10 10 * Jennifer Jo Cobb Koma Unwind Relaxation Drink RAM
11 8 John H. Nemechek MD Anderson Cancer Center Toyota
12 2 * Austin Dillon(i) American Ethanol Chevrolet
13 30 Ron Hornaday Jr. Exide Chevrolet
14 08 Korbin Forrister Azzkikr Chevrolet
15 05 * John Wes Townley Zaxby’s Toyota
16 54 Darrell Wallace Jr. ToyotaCare Toyota
17 3 * Ty Dillon(i) Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
18 0 * Joe Cobb Koma Unwind Relaxation Drink RAM
19 02 * Tyler Young # Randco/Young’s Building Systems Chevrolet
20 17 Timothy Peters Red Horse Racing Toyota
21 52 * Ken Schrader Federated Auto Parts Toyota
22 07 * Jared Landers CPS/Dyan-Gro Chevrolet
23 14 * Michael Annett(i) TMC Transports Chevrolet
24 6 * Norm Benning Watt’s Truck Center Chevrolet
25 19 Tyler Reddick # Broken Bow Records Ford
26 32 Kyle Larson(i) Glad Chevrolet
27 98 Johnny Sauter Smokey Mountain/Curb Records Toyota
28 21 Joey Coulter Allegiant Chevrolet
29 20 Gray Gaulding # Gemini Southern Chevrolet
30 80 * Jody Knowles Clayton Signs Ford
31 63 * JR Heffner A. Collarusso/Mittler Bros./LG Seeds Chevrolet
32 29 Ryan Blaney Cooper Standard Ford
33 82 * Cody Erickson Performance Auto Chevrolet
34 31 Ben Kennedy # Heater.com Chevrolet

Heat race winner Jeb Burton to line up next to polesitter Erik Jones

RELATED: Heat qualifying races results

1. Erik Jones
2. Jeb Burton
3. Ron Hornaday Jr.
4. Ryan Blaney
5. Johnny Sauter
6. Darrell Wallace Jr.
7. Joey Coulter
8. Tyler Reddick
9. Matt Crafton
10. Ken Schrader
11. Kyle Larson
12. Mason Mingus
13. Ty Dillon
14. Timothy Peters
15. T.J. Bell
16. JR Heffner
17. Gray Gaulding
18. John Hunter Nemechek
19. Austin Dillon
20. Bryan Silas
21. Ben Kennedy
22. Michael Affarano
23. Chase Pistone
24. German Quiroga
25. Korbin Forrister
26. John Wes Townley
27. Tyler Young
28. Jody Knowles
29. Norm Benning
30. Michael Annett

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Jones, Wallace, Larson in first heat race; see all five lineups

RELATED: Erik Jones claims 21 Means 21 Pole

Qualifying Race 1
RESULTS
(bold name equals transfer to main event)
1. Erik Jones
2. Darrell Wallace Jr.
3. Kyle Larson
4. JR Heffner

5. Jody Knowles
6. Ben Kennedy
7. Joe Cobb

Qualifying Race 2 (bold name equals transfer to main event)
RESULTS
1. Jeb Burton
2. Joey Coulter
3. Mason Mingus
4. Gray Gaulding
5. Michael Affarano

6. John Wes Townley
7. Cody Erickson

Qualifying Race 3
RESULTS
(bold name equals transfer to main event)
1. Ron Hornaday Jr.
2. Tyler Reddick
3. Ty Dillon
4. John Hunter Nemechek

5. Michael Annett
6. Chase Pistone
7. Jennifer Jo Cobb

Qualifying Race 4
RESULTS (bold name equals transfer to main event)
1. Ryan Blaney
2. Matt Crafton
3. Timothy Peters
4. Austin Dillon

5. Norm Benning
6. German Quiroga
7. Jared Landers

Qualifying Race 5
RESULTS
(bold name equals transfer to main event)
1. Johnny Sauter
2. Ken Schrader

3. Tyler Young
4. T.J. Bell
5. Bryan Silas
6. Korbin Forrister

Last-chance Race
RESULTS
(bold name equals transfer to main event)
1. John Wes Townley
2. Tyler Young
3. Jody Knowles
4. Norm Benning
5. Michael Annett

6. Cody Erickson
7. Jennifer Jo Cobb
8. Joe Cobb
9. Jared Landers (withdrew)

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Fans can enter sweepstakes to win VIP experience

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (July 22, 2014) — As the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup™ picture comes further into focus, NASCAR® announced today that Chase Grid™ Live Sponsored by Toyota and Sprint will make its debut in downtown Chicago on September 10-11. The free outdoor fan fest located on North Michigan Avenue, will culminate with a two-hour live show featuring all 16 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers, just days before the momentous Challenger Round debuts at Chicagoland Speedway.

"There’s no better way to introduce our new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup format than by inviting our fans — the most loyal in sports — to be a part of the celebration," said Steve Phelps, NASCAR chief marketing officer. "We are fortunate to have partnered with two world-class brands in Toyota and Sprint to provide an unforgettable fan experience as we embark on this significant moment for our sport."

In conjunction with today’s announcement, fans can now visit www.NASCAR.com/ChaseGridLive to enter the Chase Grid™ Live Sweepstakes. The Grand Prize package includes an all-inclusive trip to Chicago for a VIP experience at Chase Grid Live, two VIP access to all three national series races at Chicagoland Speedway, a ride in the Toyota Camry Grand Marshal car before the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race, and $1,000 spending money. Fans can enter the Chase Grid Live sweepstakes through August 29. 

"Toyota is proud to once again partner with NASCAR and Sprint in Chicago for this annual celebration of the Sprint Cup Series championship contenders," said Ed Laukes, vice president of marketing, performance and guest experience, Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.  "With this season’s new Chase format and 16 worthy competitors vying for the championship trophy, this is an event Chicagoans and NASCAR fans will certainly want to attend.  Being from Chicago, I know it’s a great venue and knowing NASCAR it will definitely be a must-see event."

Throughout the two-day fan fest, ESPN will feature live segments with many of the 16 drivers competing in the Challenger Round and various other NASCAR personalities making appearances on-site. Fans in attendance will be treated to custom content that will be featured on Sprint Vision, a high definition 18 x 32.4 foot screen; Toyota Camry NASCAR Sprint Cup show cars; and a special in-show tribute by NASCAR and Toyota to the nation’s servicemen and women.

For the fourth-consecutive year the NASCAR Chase for the Sprint Cup begins at Chicagoland Speedway. For tickets to the September 12-14 race weekend, visit www.ChicagolandSpeedway.com or call 1-888-629-RACE (7223). Single-day tickets are available.

The first race for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup from Chicagoland Speedway will air live on ESPN at 2 p.m. ET on Sunday, September 14. The race will also be broadcast on the WatchESPN app, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, with additional coverage on NASCAR.com.

 

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Defending Brickyard winner might be waiting for another special moment

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Lost in a season brimming with news about multi-race winners, breakthrough stars and surprising struggles, Ryan Newman has methodically and rather quietly put himself in contention for a second consecutive Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason berth.

It’s a far cry from the headline-making path to the Chase he experienced last year.

Newman was at the center of attention for several newsworthy reasons in 2013 and much of it wasn’t his doing — from good friend Tony Stewart not renewing his contract at Stewart-Haas Racing to NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France putting Newman in the Chase after a controversial outcome at Richmond International Raceway initially cost him a place in the postseason.

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But there was a highlight in the middle of that strange summer run that was every bit Newman’s work — a hugely popular win from the Coors Light Pole position in the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

After dramatically winning the pole for that race — as the final car to make a qualifying lap no less — the quick-witted Indiana native smiled and joked that he’d just "waited for a special moment" to provide his storybook moment.

Late the next afternoon, the crowd in the grandstands on either side of Indianapolis’ famed front stretch was on its feet — the cheers audible even over the roar of the cars’ engines — as Newman took the checkered flag.

It was a big moment in a place where that’s saying a lot, and the significance was not lost on Stewart, who acknowledged afterward that his friend had endured a couple months of emotional "extremes."

Interestingly, throughout the period of uncertainty Newman faced last year, he remained upbeat and calm — his well-known sense of humor serving him well, and the 2008 Daytona 500 winner’s equally well-known ability behind the wheel serving him best of all.

It was something legendary team owner Richard Childress had long recognized in Newman, and now only a few months into their partnership, Newman is on pace to reward Childress’ faith.

It’s just been a lot more workmanlike than showman-like this season, and Newman is probably fine with that.

He is coming off two top-five finishes in the last three races in the Richard Childress Racing No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet SS, with a season-best third coming last month at Kentucky.

Although he’s led only 10 laps in 19 races, Newman is one of only three drivers ranked in the top 10 of the current Sprint Cup Series standings without a DNF.

He’s ranked seventh in overall points, and when the standings are configured to reflect the current Chase field, Newman is 13th — still safely inside the 16-driver cutoff. He’s 25 points ahead of 14th-place Clint Bowyer and nearly 50 points ahead of the 16th-place driver, Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender Kyle Larson.

If Newman were to defend his Brickyard title this weekend and score that all-important victory — he would jump well inside the top 10 in the Chase rankings. Of the five drivers with one win this season, Newman has more points than all but championship leader Jeff Gordon.

And he has victories on three (Indy, Pocono and Michigan) of the remaining seven venues that will determine the 16-driver Chase field.

"I think those places can be special for us," Newman said. "Ultimately, we try and win at all the races, but this sport is so competitive and it’s difficult to get to Victory Lane and even tougher to get there multiple times.

"This Caterpillar team just needs to stay focused and keep doing what we are doing. Kentucky was big for us to be able to get that ice-breaker of a top-five out of the way. You really can’t expect to win a race by running 11th, 10th and seventh. But when you are in the top three, you are proving that you have a chance. I believe that’s the direction this team is headed."

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High line dominated inaugural event, but this year could be different

Drivers and fans alike felt plenty of energy in the atmosphere surrounding the inaugural NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event at Eldora Speedway. What the drivers felt to a greater degree was the inherent tension in running a race with so much uncertainty.
 
Truck teams unlocked some of the mystery of racing on dirt during last year’s first running, but for their return visit Wednesday night, many are expecting at least a fair share of the unknown in the second annual 1-800-CarCash Mudsummer Classic (9 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).
 
"It’s going to be wild, crazy, wrecking," said Jeb Burton, who finished 18th at Eldora last year and ranks 11th in series standings this season. "… I just wish points weren’t involved because so many things can happen. Hopefully we can have a good run there."

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With the dicey nature of big, lumbering trucks on narrow tires, drivers — especially those with little dirt-track experience — tiptoed early on to run the first 54 laps without a caution period during last year’s debut event. It wasn’t without obligatory short-track scrapes and bumps along the way, but for the most part the race was cleanly run until the intensity picked up in the closing laps.
 
This year, some drivers aren’t so sure there will be a repeat.
 
"I called this a year ago after the race. I said now that everybody’s got one of these races under their belt, I’m scared to think of how brave they’re going to be this time going back," said Johnny Sauter, a dirt-track newbie at Eldora last season and Burton’s teammate at ThorSport Racing. "I think setups will have evolved a lot, I think obviously everybody’s got a lot better idea of what they needed or what they should’ve tried last year. … The racer in me, forget everything else, I just think about some of the moves that I saw and what some of the other competitors saw when they went home and rewatched the race, just how brave they’re going to be."
 
When drivers call up the year-old footage, they’ll be reminded of how the high line became the preferred groove as race day progressed. The majority of drivers rode the cushion, making frequent contact with their trucks’ right-rear fenders against the outside wall, so much so that most trucks showed signs of damage — cosmetic or more — before the main event ever went green.
 
Ryan Blaney, son of Eldora master Dave Blaney and the 15th-place finisher last year, said that while he was looking forward to getting his Brad Keselowski Racing-owned truck dirty again, he was hopeful more racing grooves would open up at the Western Ohio half-mile. This spring, speedway owner Tony Stewart said his staff removed some of the banking from the outer edge of the racing surface, blending it into the middle of the track in hopes of creating a second line and potentially a third.
 
"So unlike a pavement track that you can’t make any changes to it, but a dirt track like that, we have that opportunity to try to tune the race track and make it better and more competitive," Stewart said. "So we did do that, and that was something that right after the event, after getting the first one done, we were able to look at that and say maybe we can tweak the race track and make a difference. So we’ll see if those changes work."
 
Some teams hope to remove some of the uncertainty with recent tests at non-NASCAR dirt tracks. Kyle Larson, John Hunter Nemechek and Kyle Busch Motorsports drivers Darrell Wallace Jr. and Erik Jones were among those taking their trucks to the half-mile clay of Wythe Raceway in Rural Retreat, Virginia, to prepare in the weeks leading up to Eldora.
 
"I’d say I made about 200 laps and got more and more comfortable as we went along, but could’ve probably used about 200 more," said the 18-year-old Jones, the series’ most recent winner who will be making his first career start on dirt.
 
Much like the equalizing superspeedway events at Daytona and Talladega, the close-quarters racing and the fickle nature of Eldora’s unfamiliar surface have the potential to produce turmoil in bunches. It’s why drivers still consider the Mudsummer Classic a wild-card event on the 22-race schedule.
 
"We’re still going to be cautious," said Timothy Peters, who ranks seventh in the series standings entering Wednesday night’s race. "It was fun for the fans. We finished sixth and still had to re-do our whole truck. That’s probably going to be the norm going back into it, just seeing how we can keep our equipment safe for the longest, if that makes sense. We’re still going to be cautious, but it’s still an educated guess any way you look at it."

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Owner/’proud father’ jokes his job is to ‘get in (employees) way’ ahead of race

Last year’s experience in hosting NASCAR’s first national series race on dirt with a full-time staff numbering in the single digits qualified as an eye-opener for Eldora Speedway owner Tony Stewart. Even though the three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champ has the benefit of playing host once before, he says it doesn’t make the second time around a breeze.
 
For all the effort and the hard work from his capable employees, Stewart says his own role is clearly defined.
 
"My job is to show up and worry and get in their way," Stewart joked Monday, deftly handling NASCAR’s weekly teleconference as he drove through his boyhood stomping grounds of Rushville, Indiana, on the way to the half-mile track in Western Ohio. "So I’m a couple hours from there now, and I’ll get there and be a pain in their butt when I get there. I’ll act normal, I’m sure."

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Stewart and company will welcome the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series back to the historic bullring Wednesday for the second annual 1-800-CarCash Mudsummer Classic (9 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1), the 10th of 22 races this season, and still the only national series event that veers off the more conventional paved surfaces.
 
The novelty of racing on dirt was just part of what made the inaugural race a rousing success. Perhaps a larger factor was the connection fans made with stock-car racing’s roots before the so-called modern era. Whatever the reason, it’s what had the track’s patrons yelling their thank-yous to Stewart from behind the catch fencing last year, long after Austin Dillon had hoisted the golden shovel as the first Eldora winner.
 
Though he purchased the track from legendary owner Earl Baltes in late 2004 and is credited with planting the seed for the dirt-track racing concept with NASCAR’s brass, Stewart insists that he’s simply carrying on Eldora’s tradition of hosting headline-grabbing, big-money events for sprint cars and late models alike.
 
"The success of Eldora isn’t at all due to what I’ve done with it, it’s due to what Earl and Berniece Baltes had done for the first 50 years of the race track," Stewart said. "He was always a promoter that was able to take ‑‑ he was willing to take — big risks and big gambles and promote big events. He didn’t promote races; he promoted big events. Basically, all we’ve had to do was follow that blueprint and that vision that Earl has always had, and that is something that’s been important to us from day one. We’ve tried to run the racetrack the way he would want to run it and he would want us to run it."
 
As proof, Stewart said he still consults with the 93-year-old Baltes on a regular basis.
 
"He’s still as big a part of Eldora as anybody. It’s one of those places that’s always been successful because of the way he ran it.  I think a lot of promoters across the country, if they’d had the opportunity to be around him very much, would realize that blueprint for success."
 
For now, the promotion and planning remain a balancing act. The inaugural race required several one-time expenditures and improvements to bring the rural facility up to the standards mandatory for initially hosting a NASCAR national series race.
 
While those plans didn’t need repeating this year, it didn’t make the task at hand any less daunting.
 
"Anybody that thinks that putting on a single NASCAR event is easy, let’s just open the gates," Stewart said. "People think you start working I think a week ahead of time to get ready for stuff like this, and it’s been a very large, eye‑opening experience for me to see what the Eddie Gossages and … everybody at (track ownership groups) ISC and SMI and everything has to do to put on an event each week. It takes months and months of work, and so many details."
 
With NASCAR’s traveling circus about to descend on his Field of Dreams, Stewart says his prime concerns are the same as any track owner — weather and making sure the event goes off without a hitch. Ticket sales have been brisk, with just under 1,000 reserved seats remaining and a lawn area available for Wednesday’s walk-up crowds.
 
Thus far, ticket-buyers have come from 45 states, five Canadian provinces, Australia, Great Britain and Sweden to partake in the Mudsummer Classic’s second running. When Stewart isn’t worrying or, as he puts it, getting in the way, he’s able to enjoy watching another big Eldora event come together much in the way Baltes did before him.
 
"It’s about as close to being a proud father as I can imagine being."

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