Albuquerque Journal

Wallace is making strides early in season

- BY DAN GELSTON

DOVER, Del. — Darrell Wallace Jr. was a budding photograph­er his first few years at the track, snapping away with his Canon 60D to show an insider’s view of NASCAR.

The hobby is on hold. Wallace fills his social media feeds with photos shot on his mobile phone. The fancy camera still has the lens cap on.

“I just don’t have time for it now,” Wallace said. “This Cup schedule, it takes all your time away.”

Wallace’s career has come into focus this season in his first full Cup season and he finds himself on the other side of the camera as one of the sport’s media darlings. The 24-year-old Wallace has given Richard Petty Motorsport­s a needed dose of enthusiasm and plenty of optimism with the kind of results that show perhaps better days are ahead for the famed No. 43 car.

“He can be as good as anybody,” Richard Petty said.

High praise coming from a Hall of Fame driver who was at NASCAR’s first race.

Better known as “Bubba,” Wallace would at least like to be better than 22nd in the standings when the season comes to a close. But making it to Cup and having the security of a ride is a victory itself following a career full of fits and starts through the developmen­tal ranks. Wallace made his second-tier Xfinity debut in 2012 and made his first four Cup starts last year for RPM as a fill-in for an injured Aric Almirola.

“You hear to so much about him, you’d think he’s been here forever,” Petty said.

Wallace has maximized his exposure through his nearly 173,000 Twitter followers, a docu-series on the Facebook Watch show page that ran around the Daytona 500 and the natural attention that comes as one of the few black drivers in NASCAR history. He is already the best of the bunch and hasn’t been distracted by the added scrutiny that comes along with his slice of history.

“I’ve enjoyed it, from on track stuff to off track stuff, getting a lot more attention and kind of growing your brand,” Wallace said.

The Alabama native flirted with contention in a few races and led laps at Bristol (six) and last week at Talladega (five) but failed to build those runs at the top into a top-10 result.

Still, Wallace was second in the Daytona 500 and put the sport on notice that he was no ordinary rookie.

“I think that set the bar high for outsiders looking in,” Wallace said. “For us, we were just like, great race, that means nothing, let’s go to work.”

Racing against the big boys has meant some adjustment­s. The biggest surprise?

“Just how aggressive this sport is,” Wallace said. “It’s a challenge. Once you get to this level, you have to be the aggressive one.”

Wallace will start 26th in Sunday’s race at Dover.

RPM believes it has a winning combinatio­n with Wallace — now they need a checkered flag or two to prove it.

“When he gets his stuff together and we get our stuff together,” Petty said, “we’re going to be pretty good.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States