Eldora
Speedway
NASCAR
Camping World Truck Series
coming to Eldora
Inaugural Mudsummer Classic marks
another historic first in Speedway’s 60th Season Celebration
ROSSBURG,
OHIO (Nov. 28, 2012) –
Eldora Speedway and NASCAR announced today another milestone event in
the
legendary half-mile oval’s rich history as the 60-year-old track will
play host
to the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series in 2013. The Inaugural
Mudsummer
Classic on Wednesday, July 24 will mark the first NASCAR-sanctioned
National
Tour event held on dirt since September 1970 in Raleigh, N.C.
“Eldora
typically hosts 10
different touring series each year, and we’re very proud to have NASCAR
join
the list of series that will compete at our track,” said Tony Stewart,
the
three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion and owner of Eldora
Speedway.
“NASCAR’s history began in the sands of Daytona and on the dirt of the
Carolinas, and having the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series on the dirt
at
Eldora brings that history back to a new generation of fans, as well as
Eldora’s own fan base.
“The
same fans who come to watch a
dirt Late Model, a World of Outlaws Sprint Car or USAC Midget might not
be the
same fan who takes in a NASCAR race. But by bringing NASCAR to their
world, at
one of the most well-known dirt tracks in the country, will make the
Inaugural
Mudsummer Classic a must-see for fans of dirt-track racing and NASCAR.”
“We’ve
been looking at getting the
trucks back to short tracks – to the roots of racing including the dirt
– and
we’re excited to announce our 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
will race
at Eldora,” said Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR senior vice president of
racing
operations. “The door-to-door racing that our truck series is known
for, plus
Eldora’s popularity and Tony’s dedication to putting on great shows for
the
fans, is a perfect fit. We’ll have a maximum starting field of 30
trucks at
Eldora. More details on the race format are still being developed.”
NASCAR
has had a little known
representation at Eldora since the early 1970s in the form of concrete
footprints from the late Bill France, Sr., acquired by Eldora Speedway
founder
Earl Baltes just days before a Daytona 500. The brazen idea to
acknowledge
France came from Baltes’ admiration of France and his commitment to
auto
racing.
“Bill
France was a real special
man,” reflects Baltes, who sold his beloved track to Stewart in
November 2004.
“NASCAR was big at the time – still is – and I thought having a small
remembrance of it at Eldora was neat, but this is even better. I guess
I never
thought I would see the day that NASCAR and the vision created by Bill
France,
Sr. would ever be here.”
Since
its opening in 1954, Eldora
Speedway has proved to be the frontrunner in motorsports growth and
stability.
The first USAC National Sprint Car Series event held at the facility
took place
on April 22, 1962, and was won by Stan Bowman. In 1978, the World of
Outlaws
Sprint Car Series brought the thrill of winged Sprint Car racing to
Eldora
Speedway, with Bobby Allen winning the first-ever event on April 16,
1978. In
the Late Model ranks, the first annual World 100 was won by Bruce Gould
in
1971.
Eldora
shocked the Sprint Car
fraternity with the $50,000-to-win Kings Royal that made its debut on
July 28,
1984 with a win collected by Steve Kinser. The presence of Late Model
racing
was bolstered with the creation of the Dirt Late Model Dream and its
$100,000
top prize, a revered amount first won by Freddy Smith on June 11, 1994.
The
new millennium brought forth
the highest paying race in the history of short track racing and The
Eldora
Million on June 9, 2001. Late Model driver Donnie Moran became the only
grassroots driver to ever earn $1 million in a single race.
In
2005, Stewart and the Eldora
Speedway staff announced they would begin a new tradition, one that
would bring
mainstream interest into the heart of short-track racing. Featuring
some of the
biggest names from NASCAR, NHRA, INDYCAR, the World of Outlaws Sprint
Car
Series and extreme sports, the annual Prelude To The Dream saw some of
the
largest crowds in the track’s history and raised more than $4 million
for
charity.
With
that event on hiatus for 2013
to allow for an expanded 19th annual Dirt Late Model Dream that will
now
encompass three days of racing, the Inaugural Mudsummer Classic
featuring the
stars of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will write yet another
chapter
in Eldora’s impressive history.
Initial
talks between Eldora
Promoter and General Manager Roger Slack and NASCAR Officials in
mid-September
led to a quickly organized two-day test in October with Stewart and
Austin
Dillon, the 2011 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Champion and 2010
World 100
Fast Qualifier. The two drivers tested identically-prepared Chevrolet
Silverados from Richard Childress Racing.
Adult
tickets are priced at $36 and
Children (12 & under) are just $12.
All reserved seats are $4 more.
Advance
ticket holders to the 2012
Feed The Children Prelude to the Dream will be given the opportunity to
purchase the same seats they had for this year’s Prelude to the
historic
running of NASCAR’s return to dirt while also retaining renewal rights
to the
next scheduled Prelude To The Dream. Notices will begin going out
immediately
with instructions on how they can begin doing so online or by phone
beginning
at 10 a.m. EST on Saturday, Dec. 1 through Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2013.
Tickets
and campsites will go on
sale to the public on Saturday, Jan. 5, 2013 at 10 a.m.
Complete
ticket and campsite
information for the Inaugural Mudsummer Classic and other Eldora
Speedway major
events can be found at the track’s website www.EldoraSpeedway.com, or
by
calling the ticket office (937) 338-3815 during normal business hours.
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