Drive
for Diversity member Edwards makes history on Daytona 500-winning
pit crew
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[February 24, 2018]
As a kid growing up in Baltimore
or even a college student leading the High Point University (N.C.)
basketball team, Derrell Edwards says he would never have predicted
that his greatest sporting honor would be celebrating a Daytona 500
triumph in NASCAR racing's most famous victory lane.
"It's been surreal for me actually,'' said Edwards, who last Sunday
became the first member of NASCAR's Drive for Diversity program to
be a part of the winning Daytona 500 pit crew is and believed to be
the first African-American to win the race as an over-the-wall crew
member.
"Without any background of NASCAR it hasn't sunk in to the point it
would if I had been a racer all my life. But as an athlete, I've
been an athlete all my life so it's definitely the biggest thing
I've ever felt.
"I've won championships in college and in high school but this is
those things on steroids."
"It's an exciting feeling and to do it with a special group of guys
we have this year, has been just unbelievable, honestly," he
continued. "It still hasn't sunk in fully yet, it's been sinking in
day by day by day. Actually one of the veteran tire changers told
me, 'Honestly, you won't really understand what you've done for
another 20 years.'"
Edwards works as a jackman and tire carrier for Austin Dillon's
iconic No. 3 Chevrolet this season, a year after joining the Richard
Childress Racing organization as a crew member on Paul Menard's
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series team.
The 26-year old found his way to the sport after a celebrated
collegiate career that culminated with leading the High Point
University men's basketball team to a season championship as a
senior.
A conversation about a pit crew opportunity at NASCAR Hall of Famer
Childress' team that same year piqued Edwards' interest in the
sport, which he concedes he hadn't really followed before.
He earned an internship with RCR in the spring of his final year of
college, then spent a year learning the craft in the ARCA Series
after he graduated. Then came the opportunity to step up to the
Xfinity Series (with RCR's Brendan Gaughan) and gain some limited
experience at the Monster Energy Series level before getting hired
to work fulltime with the Menard car in 2017. Edwards has been
actively involved in the Drive for Diversity program for the last
two years.
Listening to Edwards speak about his time in NASCAR, it's obvious
that his rise in the sport is more than a selfish pursuit. He is
genuinely excited about what his accomplishment may inspire in
others, as well as what it validates in himself.
"I wouldn't have dreamed this or written this down in a million
years that I'd be in NASCAR,'' Edwards said. "But opportunity
presented itself.
"I never really regret too many decisions I make. This is definitely
one of the best I've ever made in my life. I believe it's happening
for a reason and I'm getting this platform for a reason and it's
probably a story that needs to be shared and told to kids that are
back in places like Baltimore where I'm from, that think there isn't
any hope.
"I really want to pride myself in getting this story out there and
being able to share it with some kids back home and all over the
U.S. -- that if I can, they can."
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Edwards' enthusiasm is sincere and inspiring. He isn't just someone
who wants to make a difference. He is making a difference.
And the 2018 Daytona 500 was a significant turning point for the
sport in some ways. Not only did Edwards make history with his work
on the winning team, but the race's runner-up finisher, Darrell
Wallace Jr., became the highest finishing African-American driver
ever in the 500.
"I feel like it's happening,'' Wallace said excitedly. "Timing is
everything and this is perfect timing.''
"Some people just feel like they may not have a chance to even be a
part of NASCAR but I'm living proof that from my culture as a
minority you can get into it and be successful, as well,'' Edwards
said. "It's showing that NASCAR has no problem with it. And that's
what I love. It'll be great for NASCAR to get these different
viewers in, more people interested and getting into the sport
itself."
And, as Edwards points out, even the "lucky penny" that his driver
Dillon was given the week before the race -- and carried in his car
during Sunday's 500 -- was given to him by 11-year old
African-American fan Jordan Wade, from Bradenton, Fla.
Afterward, Dillon wrote a letter to Wade's elementary school teacher
to ask for an excused absence for the youngster.
"Please allow Jordan to be excused from the last two days. He was
crucial in our Daytona 500 victory."
It all just seemed to connect for Edwards.
"Even Jordan, who handed Austin that penny before the race, it's
awesome to see him all over TV as well,'' Edwards said. "He's
definitely going to have some kids think they can get into NASCAR
and have a chance as well. I thought that story was awesome.''
And the larger story here -- important, historic milestones in the
sport -- will be celebrated for decades thanks to Edwards, and all
those who he hopes to inspire.
"Not just me, but anybody to win the first of anything or to be the
first at anything is a cool deal,'' Edwards said. "I think it is a
pretty big deal."
"I've actually been getting tons of calls from friends and even
media back home. My friends and everyone there, they know I'm in
NASCAR and on a pit crew, but now that they see I've won the Daytona
500.
"I feel special to be able to do that for the sport. That's always a
goal of mine. I love what (pit crew coach) Phil Horton has done with
Drive for Diversity.
"And I can say there will definitely be some different viewers
watching NASCAR on Sundays, for sure."
--Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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