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Easley Won't Be Thrown Off Track
Dan Kane & Rupen Fofaria,
News & Observer
May 10th, 2003
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Gov.
Easley climbs out of Jimmy Johnson's #48 car at
Lowe's Motor Speedway in Charlotte |
Gov. Mike Easley walked away from
a high-speed crash Friday at Lowe's Motor
Speedway, got into a second race
car and raced some more at speeds up to 160 mph.
No big deal, said NASCAR driver Kenny
Wallace. "I don't think it's dangerous," he
said.
But Rep. Mickey Michaux, after hearing
of the wreck, said a governor should be more careful.
"I think if I was governor, I'd
be a little more circumspect," said Michaux, a
Durham Democrat. "I don't think I'd be in a race
car. But hey, you take a chance crossing the street."
As for Easley, he said his only injury
was a bruised ego. "I was getting ready to come
into the pits when it got loose in Turn 2 and spun,"
Easley told speedway officials. "I guess I should
have come in a lap earlier. It was quite a ride."
He could not be reached for further
comment.
The crash occurred Friday morning as
Easley, driving a Chevy race car retired by Hendrick
Motorsports, practiced in preparation for an education
fund-raising event scheduled May 17 before The Winston.
Easley, whose first time behind the
wheel occurred at Lowe's last October, had completed
more than 10 laps before the accident, according to
accounts provided by speedway officials and the Governor's
Office.
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| Gov.
Easley after getting into the wall on turn #2 |
On his 12th or 13th lap, his car fishtailed
as he drove out of the second turn. As he tried to correct
it, he oversteered to the left, and his steering wheel
locked up. The car skidded out of Turn 2 and toward
the retaining wall. The left-front end of the car made
contact with the inside wall, and the car bounced off
the wall and then struck again on its left-rear side.
The impact heavily damaged the car, crushing its engine.
Speedway officials said that the emergency
crews rushed to the scene, but Easley was already climbing
out of the car, unhurt, when they arrived.
Cari Boyce, the governor's spokeswoman,
said Easley still planned to participate in next week's
fund-raising event. Backing The WinstonSponsors are
pledging money for every lap Easley makes at speeds
of 160 mph or more. The money goes to Communities In
Schools, a nonprofit group that works to keep kids in
school.
The spin is also intended to show his
support for keeping The Winston at the speedway in Concord.
The all-star event draws an estimated $ 75 million --
based on a 1999 study -- to the three counties surrounding
the track.
Lowe's only has a one-year commitment
from NASCAR officials, who are weighing a plan to rotate
the event among several tracks.
"It's an important race to the
community," NASCAR driver and North Carolina-native
Kyle Petty said. "I think it's great that the governor's
a NASCAR fan, but really I just admire him for trying
to keep the race here."
Rep. Karen Ray, a Mooresville Republican,
praised Easley for emphasizing The Winston's importance
to the local economy. Her company manufactures race
car safety equipment, including some of the foam padding
in the wrecked car.
"It says a lot for him in his role
as governor that he's taking such a hands-on role in
promoting the industry," Ray said.
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| Easley
autographes the car before it's towed away |
Easley may in fact be the first sitting
governor to race around a track. Two governors, including
former North Carolina Gov. Jim Martin, have ridden in
race cars driven by professional drivers, but they didn't
take the wheel.
Safety at high speeds
Lowe's and other tracks allow fans to
buy the experience of
racing around the banked asphalt.
At Lowe's Richard Petty Driving Experience,
fans go through a short instructional course and are
then allowed to lap the track, alone, at speeds exceeding
150 mph. Easley's quickest lap around Lowe's on Friday
was unofficially clocked at 163 mph.
Still, two fans have died in such courses,
including one at Lowe's in 1997.
Easley's car was equipped with a device
known as a restrictor plate that kept it from going
faster than 180 miles per hour, Boyce said. He wore
a head and neck safety harness, one of the devices that
became mandatory after Dale Earnhardt died of a basilar
skull fracture when he hit the wall at Daytona International
Speedway on Feb. 18, 2001.
Easley also turned the car toward the
foam-padded interior retaining wall when he lost control.
"This was a situation where everything
that needed to be done, safety-wise, was done, and he
was fine," speedway spokesman Scott Cooper said.
"If there was no HANS device and no soft-wall there,
he would've been hurt pretty bad. He wasn't, though.
He was laughing and joking."
Political ramifications
Political observers said the mishap
could cut both ways for the governor, who is up for
re-election next year.
Voters might appreciate a governor with
the nerve to zip around a racetrack, or they might find
it foolhardy.
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| Gov.
Easley heads back on the track in Terry Labonte's
#5 car |
"We are a state with NASCAR racing,
and he's down there on a track doing racing, so there's
a certain amount of people that will resonate with,"
said Thad Beyle, a UNC-Chapel Hill political science
professor. "But I can't imagine many people in
the medical profession who will think that this was
a great idea."
Beyle expects Republicans are scrambling
to get footage of the wreck for the governor's race.
Already, the political spin is in full
tilt now that everyone's assured the governor is in
good health.
Boyce said Easley's crash shows "he
will go to the wall for us."
Former Carolina Hurricanes President
Jim Cain, a Republican who may challenge Easley, joked:
"I always suspected Mike Easley would hit a wall
when he tried to move right."
Actually, liberals are the ones who
ought to be worried. Easley was making a left turn.
Here are some driving tips for Turn
2 from two Winston Cup drivers:
"I think he was probably on the
gas too hard, so that would be a start. He should maybe
let off [the accelerator] a little sooner next time."
-- STERLING MARLIN
"Like the announcer at your
local racetrack tells you, 'Ladies and gentlemen, be
careful on the way home, and leave the fast driving
to the race car drivers.'"
-- KENNY WALLACE
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