Daily Press

First-ballot selection Kenseth heads Hall class

- By Steve Reed

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Matt Kenseth was doing yardwork when wife Katie came outside with her phone in hand, letting him know he’d just been selected to the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

A short while later, Kenseth “celebrated” the night by cooking dinner for his daughters.

“I never really thought about it,” the even-keeled Kenseth said on a conference call about his chances of making the Hall of Fame.

Fellow driver Hershel McGriff and crew chief Kirk Shelmerdin­e were also selected to the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Wednesday. Mike Helton was named the Landmark Award winner for outstandin­g contributi­ons to the sport.

They will officially be inducted into the Hall of Fame in a ceremony on Jan. 20.

Kenseth was a first-ballot selection, Shelmerdin­e was voted in on his third try on the modernday ballot, and McGriff made the pioneer ballot on his seventh try.

The 50-year-old Kenseth, who recently ran the Boston Marathon, drove 18 full seasons on the

NASCAR circuit before retiring in 2020 with 39 Cup victories and 20 poles. He’s 21st on the career victory list.

“I never looked forward (to the Hall of Fame) when I was racing and I never really looked back at some of the wins that I had,” Kenseth said. “It was always the next race and what can I do better the next race?”

He called the selection an honor, saying “I am really grateful for everything this sport has done for me and my family.”

Kenseth reached almost every major milestone in NASCAR.

He won the Daytona 500 twice, the Coca-Cola 600 and the All-Star race. He also captured the 2003 Cup Series championsh­ip, capping a dominating season in which he led the points standings for the final 32 weeks of the season. He made the NASCAR playoffs in 13 of 14 seasons and finished runner-up twice.

The 94-year-old McGriff gained his first victory at the 1950 Southern 500 in the NASCAR Cup Series’ second season, when he was 22. His final NASCAR race was at Tucson Speedway in the Pro Series West in 2018 — at age 90.

He had the longest driving career ever in NASCAR.

“Racing has always been in me,” McGriff said. “It has always been about the sport.”

McGriff started 85 races in parts of 28 NASCAR Cup Series seasons, capturing four wins — all of those coming in 1954.

He was one of the best drivers in what is now known as the ARCA Menards Series West. Competing in parts of 35 seasons, McGriff won 37 races — third on the all-time West Series wins list.

The 64-year-old Shelmerdin­e worked as a crew chief from 1977-92 and won 46 races with 15 poles and helped Dale Earnhardt capture four Cup Series championsh­ips (1986, ’87, ’90, ’91). Over his 16-year crew-chief career with Earnhardt, Chesapeake native Ricky Rudd, James Hylton and Richard Childress, he won 46 races and posted top-10 finishes in more than half his starts.

Shelmerdin­e said he was “in shock” that he got in, saying he thought “it would be a few more years before it happened.”

Helton was the first person outside of the France family to be named NASCAR president.

 ?? TERRY RENNA/AP ?? Matt Kenseth, foreground, pictured celebratin­g a victory in a NASCAR Sprint Unlimited race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway in 2015, has been elected to NASCAR’s Hall of Fame.
TERRY RENNA/AP Matt Kenseth, foreground, pictured celebratin­g a victory in a NASCAR Sprint Unlimited race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway in 2015, has been elected to NASCAR’s Hall of Fame.

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