A personal history of small-track stock car racing in New Hampshire and the surrounding region.
Sunday, September 04, 2011
The Owner
On the subject of track owners, my favorite one remains Keith Bryar, the founder of the 106 Midway Raceway in Loudon, NH. It later became Bryar Motorsport Park, and is now known as New Hampshire Motor Speedway. Keith’s greatest strength was knowing what he DIDN’T know, which was most everything about running a race track. He hired a flagman, a pit steward, a tech man, and checkers who knew what they were doing and stayed out of their way.
My father happened to be that pit steward, which is a topic for a later article. I can remember one time when there was a conflict of opinion between Dad and Keith. It was over the legality of a car driven by the great Paul Martel. Paul was quite possibly the best driver I ever saw, but he didn’t know which end of a wrench to use. The car he was busy winning a championship with turned out to be illegal by the rules of the day. It was built on the frame of an International Scout. The tech man figured it out and reported it to Dad, who sent him home for two weeks and ordered the car off the track.
When Keith heard, he went to Dad, complaining that Paul was very popular and lots of people would leave if he were kicked out. Dad’s reply was, do you want me to enforce the rules, or not? If not, get somebody else.
The story had a happy ending, but the point is that Keith Bryar decided to trust his pit steward. He was the expert, not Keith. My advice to track owners is, do the same. Your perspective is different from the flagman’s. His, I hope, is running that race as fairly as possible. Yours is how many people are in the stands? How many hamburgers will I sell? What about this car owner that’s helped me so much? What about his sponsor, who just bought a big billboard ad for the back stretch?
I’ve seen a lot of track owners in my over 50 years of involvement with dirt track racing in NH and the area. I am not going to start talking about who I thought was best, worst, or whatever. And I sure as hell am not going to start dragging skeletons out of the closet. I simply want to pass some advice along to the most important person at any track; the owner.
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