Blaney refuses to sit idle as NASCAR season approaches
Send a link to a friend
[January 25, 2018]
Ryan Blaney's mantra is a simple
one.
"I would rather make other people happy than myself," Blaney said
this week at the Charlotte Convention Center during the NASCAR Media
Tour hosted by Charlotte Motor Speedway.
The most striking thing about that comment? Blaney means it.
If he is asked to do something to raise the visibility of NASCAR
racing, Blaney is there. That includes a recent guest appearance on
NBC's "Taken," voicing the character Ryan "Inside" Laney in the
movie "Cars 3," and a cameo role as a pizza delivery boy in the
movie "Logan Lucky."
Not all drivers are as generous with their time, but Blaney is a
24-year-old who already can see the big picture. When he's sitting
idle, he feels guilty about it.
"There are resting days, for sure, but you have to think of the end
game," said Blaney, who recently cut his hair and shaved his face to
conform to the clean-cut image at Team Penske, where he'll drive a
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series car this year.
"I would rather make other people happy than myself. If I have to
sacrifice time, it's just time. It really doesn't mean much to me
personally. I would rather do something meaningful for the sport
than to go sit on my couch. I don't feel like I am doing anything
then and feel I could be more useful somewhere else."
Even if it's a task he doesn't relish or a market he doesn't think
is particularly fertile, Blaney makes himself available, unless an
appearance interferes with his driving duties.
"I say no every now and then. The only times I say no, really, is
when I have my job to do, if it will interfere with things like
that. If it is just me, I try to take personal days, too, but that's
for vacation. Very rarely do I say no to things just to sit on my
couch.

"I can do that at night, and I can do that when I retire. I want to
do as much as I can right now to make it work and make other people
happy and make this thing the best it can."
Blaney's generosity with his time has its payoff. When he was
filming "Taken," for instance, he got an inside look at the
intricacies of television production.
[to top of second column] |

"Yeah, the Taken thing up in Toronto for NBC was really cool,"
Blaney said. "We were there for two days, and we filmed all at
night, so we would film from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. for two days straight.
It was maybe 15 degrees in Toronto and snowing, and we were just in
a little tent for like 12 hours waiting to film your deal.
"I wasn't in it very long, but I was out there the whole time. I
like doing that stuff. I have always been fascinated and curious of
that side -- TV and movies. I compare it to NASCAR where, until you
see it first-hand, you don't know how much work goes on behind the
scenes and how many people are involved to make one little scene of
a movie.

"You don't realize how many people are involved to put a race car on
a track either. I think that's a cool thing we have in common with
that industry. Hopefully, I get more opportunities to do that in my
spare time or offseason."
It's particularly gratifying when Blaney can see immediate results
from his efforts.
"Yeah, when I won the fall XFINITY race at Dover, it was a neat
thing," Blaney said. "NBC makes you get out and talk on the
frontstretch, which I think is really cool, talking face to face
with fans right after you take the checkered flag, and your emotions
are at the highest. I saw a young fan standing by the fence, and I
gave him the checkered flag through the fence.
"He and his mother came down to Victory Lane afterward, which was
really cool. I feel like those little things you can do to get face
to face with fans and make a memory. That's the biggest thing to me,
making a memory for them that lasts a lifetime. I feel like that was
a pretty cool moment, and I was fortunate to have that moment with
him. Hopefully, there are many more like that."
--Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |