The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Pair of NASCAR teams scrambling amid hauler issues at Kansas

- By Dave Skretta The Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, KAN. >> One hauler caught fire while traveling to Kansas Speedway, another went off the road when its driver had a medical emergency and wound up totaled at the bottom of a 60-foot embankment.

So much for wrecks only happening on the track.

The No. 47 team from JTG Daugherty Racing was busy Friday morning putting an engine into a backup car for Ryan Preece after its team transporte­r caught fire the previous day. The drivers in the hauler were not injured, though the team was unsure what could be salvaged of the cars.

Hendrick Motorsport­s loaned one of its test haulers to the NASCAR Cup Series team, and it was parked near the back side of the garage area to prepare for Sunday’s race at Kansas Speedway.

“Rookie stripes are on and it’s official. I’m very grateful for the safety of our truck drivers, and the hard work everyone has put in this week to get on track today,” Preece said in a tweet.

Less than 12 hours before the JTG fire, the transporte­r bringing Kaulig Racing’s cars to Kansas for Saturday’s Xfinity race went off a road in North Carolina. The hauler crashed through the guardrail, down an embankment and the trailer overturned before coming to a stop in a wooded area.

The North Carolina highway patrol said the crash, which occurred near Asheville, happened when driver Barry Sheppard had “some kind of medical issue.” Codriver Barry Collins attempted to right the truck before it ran off the side of the road and down the embankment.

Both drivers were taken to the hospital with minor injuries and later released.

“We haven’t assessed everything so I don’t know what we can salvage or can’t salvage,” Kaulig Racing president Chris Rice said. “Our main concern is our driver is OK.”

The team, which is fielding the No. 10 entry for Ross Chastain, said it would be using a backup car it had been preparing for Texas. All they managed to get out of the totaled truck were his fire suit and helmet because the rest of the wreckage was taken to an impound lot.

“If you work for Matt Kaulig, it’s never a considerat­ion of not bringing a car to the race track,” Rice said. “Our backup car is a car that Richard Childress Racing helped us with. But nothing in that trailer was able to come here besides the suit and his helmet.”

The wreck hasn’t even been the worst news for Kaulig Racing this season.

In July, the team learned the crew chief of its No. 11 car was found dead at his home after a race at New Hampshire. The medical examiner’s report released last month determined Nick Harrison had a combinatio­n of cocaine, oxycodone and alcohol in his system when he died.

“Never say it can’t be worse,” said Rice, who then revealed Friday that his beloved dog had gone missing Wednesday night — the night their hauler wrecked. The Lhasa Apso had saved his wife’s life 18 months ago when it woke her up in the midst of an allergic reaction to shellfish.

 ?? ORLIN WAGNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A crew member for JTG Daugherty Racing enters a back up hauler from Hendrick Motorsport­s during practice for a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan., Friday. The JTG race team had to switch haulers after an accident on the way to Kansas Speedway rendered their hauler unusable.
ORLIN WAGNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A crew member for JTG Daugherty Racing enters a back up hauler from Hendrick Motorsport­s during practice for a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan., Friday. The JTG race team had to switch haulers after an accident on the way to Kansas Speedway rendered their hauler unusable.

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