The Capital

AUTO RACING Hailie Deegan’s racing career riding fast lane

- By Dave Skretta AP Sports Writer

GRANITE CITY, Ill. — There are three questions that Hailie Deegan gets from everybody she comes across, and while she insists they’re not necessaril­y annoying, they certainly are persistent.

The first is about NASCAR star Kevin Harvick, who gave the young driver a shout-out after they raced against each other in a small event earlier this year. The second is about her favorite driver, and the last is about what it’s like being the next coming of Danica Patrick.

It’s probably best to take them in reverse order.

First, she explains, there is little in common between Deegan and the most well-known female driver in motorsport­s. Deegan is the daughter of motocross legend Brian Deegan, which means she grew up on dirt — not in IndyCar — and is trying to work her way through stock car’s lower levels.

Second, she’s a big fan of Kyle Busch, which says a lot about her personalit­y. Busch is loathed by many NASCAR fans for his bad-boy attitude, but the 17-year-old Deegan loves that the 2015 Cup Series champ brings an edgy, almost heel-like quality to racing.

And finally, she thought it was pretty cool that Harvick thought so highly of the teen from Temecula, California.

“It was crazy,” she said during a break between recent practice sessions at Gateway Motorsport­s Park near St. Louis, where Deegan was preparing for that night’s race in the K&N Series.

“He was one of the first to talk about me publicly in the NASCAR world,” Deegan said, “so that was cool. But I’m with Toyota, so my favorite drivers have to be Toyota drivers.”

Yes, it was officials from the auto manufactur­er that decided there was enough promise in Deegan to lure her away from a promising off-road truck career to the world of stock cars.

Deegan spent some time testing last year with Bill McAnally, and a deal was struck to race a full K&N schedule this season. And while she’s racing against other drivers with years of experience on ovals and road courses, Deegan has more than held her own, leading laps last week at the Las Vegas dirt track and twice finishing second while building a strong case for rookie of the year.

Heady stuff considerin­g Deegan just became old enough to drive legally on streets a year ago.

Then again, moving quickly is part of Deegan’s DNA.

She grew up going to motocross races with her dad, a 10-time X-Games medalist and founding member of the Metal Mulisha. Brian Deegan became a cult icon for the crazy stunts he pulled on a motorcycle, to say nothing of the devastatin­g crashes that left him with broken bones too numerous to count. Eventually he moved from two wheels to four, embarking on a successful off-road truck career.

While other little girls were playing with dolls, Hailie Deegan was always in dad’s back pocket at the track, and it seemed almost inevitable that she would end up behind the wheel.

She was 8 when she climbed into her own truck the first time. She won a championsh­ip and quickly moved up the ranks, reaching the pro level a couple years ago — which meant young Hailie was at the same start line as her old man.

There was no trash-talking, though. Goodnature­d ribbing, maybe, but mostly just support.

Her workout regimen is documented on Deegan’s social-media accounts, where she has about 13,800 followers on Twitter and 216,000 followers on Instagram. Her hectic schedule is summed up by this: After leaving Gateway last month, she hopped a plane to sponsor appearance­s, than jetted to Wisconsin to run her truck in one of the biggest races of the season at Crandon Internatio­nal Off-Road Raceway.

Then it was back to a late model on pavement, and another K&N race a couple weeks later.

Her dedication is evidenced by the fact she graduated high school with straight-As at 16, allowing her to spend more time racing. Deegan and McAnally both pump the brakes when it comes to a rapid rise in NASCAR, though. Deegan is still the new kid in the garage, and in an age when sponsorshi­ps are drying up and finding a competitiv­e ride is harder than ever, the road to racing’s pinnacle has never been tougher.

“She’s used to driving through it and over it, and quite successful­ly, but this is different,” McAnally explained. “She’s learning. She’s paying her dues.”

She doesn’t mind, either.

Deegan knows NASCAR is a more lucrative career path than off-road trucks, which is a big reason why she made the leap. But she also transition­ed to pavement because it’s something new.

At truck races, she’s Brian Deegan’s daughter. At stock car races, it’s almost the opposite.

“Coming here, it’s like, people don’t even connect it,” she said. “Some people say, ‘I didn’t realize you were Brian Deegan’s daughter.’ It’s my own world and it’s my own racing.”

That may be why she bristles, ever so slightly, when Patrick’s name is brought up. Patrick retired earlier this year.

“Yes, I’m a girl. Yes, we’re some of the only girls in racing,” Deegan said, “but I came from a different racing background. I have family in a different racing world. I’m a different personalit­y on the track. We have different driving styles. The only thing that compares us is we’re girls.”

In other words, she’s OK being the next Deegan. Not the next Danica.

Deegan isn’t sure where her career goes next, though the natural arc would be another year in the K&N or ARCA series, then a jump to the Truck Series and eventually the Xfinity Series. Maybe in five or so years, everything will align and she’ll be racing alongside Harvick in the Cup Series.

But at the moment, she’s simply just enjoying herself.

“This stuff is just fun,” Deegan said. “I’m the person who likes to try new things. This is a new thing. I’ve been racing off road for seven or eight years, and I feel like I’ve enjoyed that a lot, but I wanted to try something new and this is all new to me.”

 ?? DAVID BECKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? From left, Kim Coon, Noah Gragson, Hailie Deegan and Daryl Motte appear on stage at the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Experience last week during the NASCAR Playoffs Party at the Fremont Street Experience in Las Vegas, Nevada.
DAVID BECKER/GETTY IMAGES From left, Kim Coon, Noah Gragson, Hailie Deegan and Daryl Motte appear on stage at the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Experience last week during the NASCAR Playoffs Party at the Fremont Street Experience in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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