Austin American-Statesman

Smith: Hall wait worth it

Stock car pioneer has had a few days to let honor sink in.

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Bruton Smith said reaching the NASCAR Hall of Fame was worth the wait.

“Well, we spent a year and a half, two years waiting,” the 88-yearold Smith said Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway. “But it finally happened.”

Smith, founder and head of Speedway Motorsport­s Inc., said he had kind of given up on his chances of reaching the hall a couple of years back, but found himself tickled by his inclusion.

“It’s amazing the reaction about this,” he said. “That’s pretty special.”

Bruton Smith built SMI into one of the country’s premier owners of race tracks. Charlotte Motor Speedway, an SMI property, hosted the CocaCola 600 on Sunday.

Smith said he has realized the past few days what his inclusion in the hall meant to SMI person- nel.

“I have about 15,000 employees and I think that we heard from an awful lot of them,” said Smith, who spoke from his suite at the speedway.

The congratula­tions have come from all over, Smith said. There were billboards on I-85 and a large infield logo celebratin­g Smith’s accomplish­ment.

“That’s amazing,” he said.

Smith’s son, Marcus, said his father was happier than he expected at the honor. When word came down he was among the hall’s five newest members “it was certainly very special for him and certainly very special for all of us,” he said.

Others making the hall were two-time Sprint Cup champion Terry Labonte, 1970s modified champion Jerry Cook and the late drivers Curtis Turner and David Isaac.

Bruton Smith has not felt well much of the past week and kept a low profile during Charlotte’s two weekends of racing. The SMI head did not attend the hall announce- ment Wednesday.

Bruton Smith was a maverick promoter and track owner who wasn’t afraid to mix it up with the Frances, the first family of NASCAR racing. Still, it was NASCAR Chairman Brian France who kicked off Smith’s cause with the panel of Hall of Fame voters.

One power play came in the mid-1990s when he bought a half-share in the Sprint Cup venue in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, then helped shut the track, citing disrepair, and moving its two races to two SMI race tracks.

Smith’s empire includes eight tracks that host 12 Sprint Cup races.

Sprint Cup champion Kevin Harvick was part of the voting panel this year. He said probably the can’t-miss moment of next year’s induction ceremony in January will be Bruton Smith’s acceptance speech.

Marcus Smith concurred.

“It should be pretty neat,” Marcus said. “He’s got a great way with words and he always surprises us.”

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