Yates, 4 others elected to Hall of Fame
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Robert Yates still remembers a college professor telling him he’d never make anything of himself.
It turns out his professor was wrong.
Yates’ 40-year career in auto racing culminated with his selection to the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Wednesday, an achievement that left him in tears.
Yates, 74, admitted he wasn’t the smartest guy, but said “I knew how to work on cars.”
Yates, a NASCAR Cup champion as both an engine builder and owner, was voted in along with threetime NASCAR Cup championship crew chief Ray Evernham, drivers Red Byron and Ron Hornaday Jr. and broadcaster Ken Squier. Hornaday and driver Alan Kulwicki tied for the fifth and final spot, and Hornaday won the tiebreaker.
Yates was an overwhelming favorite, selected by 94 percent of the voters.
He grew up in Charlotte and couldn’t play baseball and football because of a heart murmur.
“So I worked on engines,” Yates said.
While Yates’ passion was engine building, he achieved most of his notoriety as an owner, with his drivers winning 57 Cup races.
After providing the power behind Bobby Allison and Cale Yarborough with his engines, he started his own racing team in the late 1980s. Success came quickly with driver Davey Allison winning the 1992 Daytona 500, while finishing third in the standings. Dale Jarrett would win two more Daytona 500s and a Cup Series championship for Robert Yates Racing.
Yates is currently battling liver cancer, but said being selected into the Hall of Fame left him feeling like grabbing a jack, jumping over a pit wall and changing a tire.
“I may not sleep a wink,” he said with a wide smile.