Browning charged
with saving "The Lady In Black"
PETE
IACOBELLI Associated
Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - New Darlington Raceway
president Chris Browning won't paint any doomsday scenarios for the
region or state about life without NASCAR racing.
"I'm probably, regrettably, in the best position of anyone to
speak firsthand of what the consequences can be," Browning, the
former head of recently sold North Carolina Speedway at Rockingham,
said by phone from his new office Tuesday.
Despite Browning's efforts the past 12 years, NASCAR took one,
then the other, of The Rock's two longtime race dates to satisfy
larger tracks in less saturated markets. So he's understandably wary
of some seeing him as the "Grim Reaper" of fading Southern
racetracks.
"That's why I think I need to be proactive in speaking to
legislators and officials and politicians," Browning said. "So many
businesses in North Carolina just took (The Rock) for granted. They
thought nothing was going to happen. Well, it happened and it
happened pretty quick."
To prevent the same demise at Darlington - its Nextel Cup profile
was slashed from two races to one for 2005 - Browning will convene
with anyone who'll listen about the historic tracks.
One meeting will definitely involve Gov. Mark Sanford. Browning
said North Carolina officials didn't seem serious about helping
Rockingham until it was too late.
Darlington and Browning, who took over for Andrew Gurtis last
month, will find an interested supporter in Sanford, said the
governor's spokesman Will Folks.
NASCAR's announcement in May that Darlington would only have one
race next year "certainly hit the governor's radar screen," Folks
said. "He's very knowledgeable of what that means and keenly aware
of the economic development ramifications."
Darlington Raceway sits in the heart of the Pee Dee region, one
of the state's most economically depressed. University of South
Carolina studies have shown NASCAR race weekends can pump up to $25
million into the area.
Darlington's case also has a grass-roots push. A recently
announced fan group, Fanz to Support the Darlington Raceway
Tradition, is attempting to sign up as many members as possible (the
$5 fee going to charity) to show NASCAR's leaders racing interest
remains vital and strong in South Carolina.
"They tell us we can go see races in Charlotte and Atlanta," said
Bob Henry, the group's president. "I don't want to go to Charlotte
and Atlanta. I want to stay right here."
Henry recently signed up country music artist Keith Bryant as the
organization's spokesman. Bryant's song "Tradition Sure Runs Deep"
off his latest album starts out, "We've got a family tradition here,
it's been around for 50 years."
Bryant says the song is about NASCAR racing, but easily
translates to its oldest superspeedway in Darlington, where NASCAR
first raced in 1950. "I'm proud if we can help keep racing at
Darlington," Bryant said by phone.
Browning says he'll have to convince fans, trade associations and
businesses to purchase Darlington tickets earlier than ever so he
might have power with leaders at NASCAR and track owner
International Speedway Corp. to pursue things like adding seats,
improving the garage area and updating or rebuilding luxury
suites.
Henry says sales are what corporations understand best. "They
won't ignore us if we can do that," he said.
Whether Browning - or anyone - can grow Darlington is the big
question. The facility lost a race despite its first Southern 500
sellout last Labor Day and capital improvements like SAFER barriers
and a soon-to-debut lighting system.
And next year, Darlington's lone event comes on Mother's Day
weekend, long the circuit's sacrosanct downtime.
But Browning says he took the job with confidence that NASCAR
leaders were committed to Darlington's future.
"Am I concerned?" Browning says. "Yes, I'm concerned, but I'm
excited too about what we can do
here." |