New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Rain swamps Bristol dirt track, postpones race to Monday

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BRISTOL, Tenn. — NASCAR’s hyped return to dirt is instead a muddy mess on hold at least until Monday.

Torrential rains flooded campground­s and parking lots surroundin­g Bristol Motor Speedway and created a rut for NASCAR far deeper than anything the Cup Series drivers encountere­d on the track.

NASCAR canceled all Sunday activity because even if Bristol’s converted dirt track could eventually be readied for night racing, the entire facility was a swampy mess. Grandstand seats that had been covered in dust were caked in mud, while pit road and the apron around the 0.533mile bullring held several inches of standing water.

After 21⁄2 inches of rain fell across “Thunder Valley,” NASCAR made an atypical decision to call an early washout. The first Cup Series race on dirt since 1970 was reschedule­d for 4 p.m. Monday; trucks were set to run at noon.

Somewhere, Tony Stewart likely was having a hearty laugh at Bristol’s expense.

Stewart successful­ly hosted seven Truck Series races at his Eldora Speedway dirt track in Ohio, but when Fox asked NASCAR to put a dirt event on the Cup schedule, the date instead went to the concrete bullring at Bristol. An incensed Stewart declined to bring the Trucks back to Eldora this year out of spite and has sat back and watched from afar as Bristol attempted to tackle the challenges of a dirt race.

He openly fretted that a bad show at Bristol would damage the future of NASCAR dirt racing — and NASCAR itself seemed to admit it was a valid concern.

“We need this show to be great,“Scott Miller, NASCAR’s vice president of competitio­n, said Saturday.

Stewart, who has insisted Eldora can successful­ly host the Cup Series, declined to comment Sunday

when reached by The Associated Press.

“I’m not getting my hands dirty,” he said.

In fairness to Bristol parent company Speedway Motorsport­s, its CEO has been unafraid to take risks and spend considerab­le money in an effort to bring new energy into the sport. Marcus Smith converted centerpiec­e Charlotte Motor Speedway into a hybrid oval and road course “roval” that in three years has become one of the more popular events on the

NASCAR schedule and last season added IMSA sports cars to enhance the weekend experience.

So Smith was all-in on offering Bristol for the Cup experiment on dirt, and his staff spent six months converting the concrete oval with 2,300 truckloads of red Tennessee clay. The track was ready in time to host the Bristol Dirt Nationals a week ago, when Super Late Models, Sport Mods, Modifieds and 602 Late Models raced largely without issue.

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