Yuma Sun

Safety protocols include Fox calling NASCAR race from studio

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Jeff Gordon thought his wife, a former model, was kidding when she asked the NASCAR Hall of Famer to color her graying roots. He realized she was serious after the third request, FaceTimed her regular stylist and took a crash course in mixing color.

“Those are the types of things we do when we are in quarantine,” Gordon said Wednesday. “There are things that you do to keep the glue together, to keep everybody healthy and sane. So if having gray hair stresses her out, then I am happy to contribute.”

The adjustment­s will continue Sunday when NASCAR resumes its schedule at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina. Gordon, now in his fifth season as part of Fox Sports’ broadcast team, will not be at the track. He and Mike Joy will call the race from a studio in Charlotte and Regan Smith will be the only at-track reporter for the broadcast team, working the pits. Larry McReynolds, an analyst, will also work from the Charlotte studio.

NASCAR is limiting the number of people at the track to only those essential to compete and broadcast the race, so Fox will have a dramatical­ly reduced roster and use a high-speed custom-built drone that can offer more perspectiv­es than usual since fans won’t be in the stands. The Fox team is still finalizing its approach, but expects to use instant messaging with crews to glean the critical informatio­n Gordon and Joy need to properly call a race.

Gordon and Joy spent the last two months calling iRacing events from a studio, so they have some experience with broadcasti­ng remotely. Still, they will be winging some things as they adapt to watching the race on monitors instead of describing what’s unfolding right in front of them at the track.

“I’m just excited that the opportunit­y is there for NASCAR and motorsport­s,” Gordon told The Associated Press. “We are always comparing our sport to others but now we really get to really talk about the uniqueness of our sport and showcase that, because that is what is giving us this opportunit­y when other sports are going to be more delayed.

“Motorsport­s is fortunate to have this opportunit­y. I am more excited to see that in action, but I think everybody is nervous. Normally in a broadcast we have practice, we have qualifying, we get to work some things. This is going to be ‘Boom,’ just like the drivers and the teams. They are going to get in the car and drop the green flag and it is on, and for us it is going to be the same thing.”

NASCAR’s return will be conducted in just one day, with qualifying and practices canceled for a consolidat­ed schedule. A random draw will be used to help set the field at Darlington — positions 1-12 will be set by a random draw from teams in those positions in owner points, followed by a draw for teams in positions 13 through 24, and finally another draw for teams ranked between 25th and 36th. The final four slots will go to non-chartered teams based on order of owner points.

The field will be frozen for a competitio­n caution on Lap 30 and only the top 20 cars will be allowed to pit on that lap. The other 20 cars will pit on the next lap.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JUNE 9, 2019, FILE PHOTO, Fox Sports broadcaste­rs Adam Alexander (left) Jeff Gordon (center) and Darrell Waltrip are shown on pit row before the NASCAR cup series race at Michigan Internatio­nal Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JUNE 9, 2019, FILE PHOTO, Fox Sports broadcaste­rs Adam Alexander (left) Jeff Gordon (center) and Darrell Waltrip are shown on pit row before the NASCAR cup series race at Michigan Internatio­nal Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich.
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