Yuma Sun

NASCAR City USA: Cup Series set for 2021 return to Nashville

-

It’s music to NASCAR’s ears: the stock car series is set to return to Nashville, Tennessee in 2021.

Nashville Superspeed­way will hold a Cup race for the first time next season, ending NASCAR’s decade-long absence from the track. The Nashville track is owned by Dover Motorsport­s, Inc., which has held Cup race weekends each year since 1969. Dover will give up one of its dates and move it to Nashville for an expected late June 2021 race weekend.

Nashville Superspeed­way held Xfinity and Truck events from 2001 until 2011.

The idea to return NASCAR to Nashville took root after a successful blowout last December for its season-ending awards celebratio­n. There were burnouts on Broadway, a party with country music star and NASCAR fan Blake Shelton and a NASCAR-themed night at the Grand Ole Opry. Buoyed by the excitement, Dover started discussion­s with NASCAR and its TV broadcast partners about running a race at the Superspeed­way.

“Especially after the awards banquet, it was, how do we get to Nashville as soon as we possibly can?” Dover CEO Mike Tatoian told The Associated Press. “It made it a fairly easy discussion that it was through Dover Motorsport­s.”

The 1.33-mile concrete track was built in 2001 by Dover Motorsport­s and hosted NASCAR and IndyCar events until 2011. The track is situated on approximat­ely 1,000 acres just outside Nashville, and currently has 25,000 permanent grandstand seats and lights for night racing.

There’s plenty of work ahead: Tatoian said giving the track a modern makeover would cost at least $8 million to $10 million and he’d like to fit capacity at the 25,000-50,000 mark.

He also expected to hire a full-time staff that will operate independen­tly of Dover. NASCAR eyed a date of June 20, 2021.

Tatoian said he’s hopeful the Truck, second-tier Xfinity Series and IndyCar could again find a home on the Nashville schedule.

Dover tried to cash in on the NASCAR boon of the late 1990s and early 2000s and had invested at one point more than $100 million in building the Nashville track to go with Dover’s portfolio and tracks it owned in the St. Louis and Memphis areas.

“The thought at the time 20-something years ago was that if NASCAR was going to have an expansion, which at the time was the right time to be thinking, we wanted to claim those markets,” Tatoian said. “It didn’t happen. It just never lended itself to move one of our races at that time. So in 2011, after 10 or 11 years of operating, we decided it was time to shutter the operation. But we held onto it, fortuitous­ly, just in case there was ever an opportunit­y in the future to do what we’re doing now.”

Dover has sold nearly 300 acres of property near Nashville Superspeed­way since 2018 for nearly $10 million.

The shift to Tennessee is one of the first major signs that NASCAR truly intends to shake up its traditiona­lly stale schedule. The sanctionin­g body is expected to make significan­t changes to its 2021 schedule, which could include more short tracks, mid-week races and doublehead­ers.

 ??  ??
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS APRIL 3, 2010, FILE PHOTO, Kevin Harvick takes the checkered flag at the finish line to win the NASCAR Nationwide Series Nashville 300 race at Nashville Superspeed­way in Gladeville, Tenn.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS APRIL 3, 2010, FILE PHOTO, Kevin Harvick takes the checkered flag at the finish line to win the NASCAR Nationwide Series Nashville 300 race at Nashville Superspeed­way in Gladeville, Tenn.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States