The culture wars of car racing

As Nascar's audience loses interest in the sanitized sport, an ex–Nascar star packs in crowds for dirt racing — the circuit's crude, dangerous, anti-PC challenger

Tony Stewart.
(Image credit: Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images)

The air was heavy with exhaust and motor oil at Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carolina as I waited for Tony Stewart to arrive. Charlotte was hosting the 2017 championship weekend for the World of Outlaws, the premier dirt-racing series in the country, and all 60,000 tickets had sold out well in advance. Stewart, the ex–Nascar star, was late — running on "Tony time," a handler told me — so I went for a walk along the dusty pit road to look at the scores of race cars lined up. "You'll probably have to run at some point," I was warned. "And remember: The cars can't turn right." Their larger right-side tires help them around a loop that only bends left, and indeed make it nearly impossible to turn right.

The crowd was young and middle-aged, mostly male and almost entirely white. There were lots of graying goatees and wraparound sunglasses and T-shirts that read "Grabbin gears, drinkin beers, slappin rears" and "God made, Jesus saved, racetrack raised." Until recently, Nascar distanced itself from dirt-track racing. It was a holdover from the sport's Southern past and emblematic of the backwoods image it has spent decades trying to shed. But today, dirt racing is to Nascar a little like mixed martial arts is to boxing, a rough-edged insurgent counterculture that's proud of the pain it deals out.

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