Hall of Fame to honor Baker's vast
contributions
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[January 22, 2020]
To a whole generation of NASCAR
fans, Buddy Baker was for years the gentle voice and big personality
on television race broadcasts and a popular SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
show. He loved to laugh and lift the audience and his knowledge of
the sport was second-to-none.
He had that enviable perspective because he was such an important
force as a NASCAR driver -- winning 19 times despite running only
two full seasons in 35 years of NASCAR Cup Series competition. He
hoisted a Daytona 500 trophy, won four Talladega Superspeedway
races, was the first to turn a 200-mph lap (in testing) and steered
cars for an A-list of owners -- many NASCAR Hall of Famers in their
own right -- running the gamut from Ray Fox to Petty Enterprises to
Bud Moore and the Wood Brothers.
And on Jan. 31, seven years after helping induct his champion father
Buck Baker into the NASCAR Hall of Fame, the late Buddy Baker will
have his own place there alongside Joe Gibbs, Bobby Labonte, Tony
Stewart and Waddell Wilson as the 2020 NASCAR Hall of Fame
inductees.
"I've always been proud to call Buck Baker dad," Buddy Baker said as
he emotionally spoke at his late father's 2007 NASCAR Hall of Fame
induction. And now the Bakers will be joined again permanently among
the sport's most celebrated legends.
Buddy Baker passed away from cancer in August 2015 but his love of
the sport and the sport's adoration of him is clearly evident from
drivers he competed against to fans that adored him to the media he
worked alongside.
"I don't know if it's possible to separate the driving portion of
his career from the TV portion of his career because it's all a part
of the Buddy Baker story in racing," longtime NASCAR television
announcer Allen Bestwick said of his former broadcast partner.
"You could put (fellow NASCAR Hall of Famers) Ned Jarrett and Benny
Parsons in that category with Buddy. When the sport was rocketing
through the growth period, they were the people that were the
experts that educated people who were watching at home in their
living room and newer to NASCAR. They were the people who gave them
enjoyment and introduced them to the characters and the stories.
"And people that came into the sport during the tail end of his
driving career, maybe did not understand what a force Buddy Baker
was in his driving career."
One of the most noteworthy characteristics of Baker's driving career
was that he was so successful despite running only partial schedules
for 33 of 35 years, including the majority of the time in the 1970s
when he established himself as a renowned force on some of the
sport's most iconic tracks in Daytona, Talladega, Darlington and
Charlotte.
He was particularly good on the superspeedways at Daytona and
Talladega, which during the peak of Baker's career in the 1970s,
were still considered relatively new forms of competition.
Before the late Dale Earnhardt's famously fickle relationship
pursuing a Daytona 500 trophy, Baker was the poster child for near
misses in the sport's most famous event. The 1970s were a classic
heartbreak storyline at Daytona for Baker, who for example, led 156
of the 200 laps in 1973 only to suffer an engine blow with 10 laps
remaining. He finished runner-up in 1971 by 10 seconds to Richard
Petty. Baker was third in 1977.
During a 20-year period from 1967-87, Baker had 14 top-10 finishes
in the Daytona 500, highlighted, by his win from the pole position
in 1980. That February afternoon Baker led 143 of 200 laps and his
average speed of 177.602 mph remains one of the fastest Daytona 500s
in the 61-year history of the "Great American Race."
In 64 total races at Daytona International Speedway, Baker earned an
amazing 31 top-10 finishes and is in rarefied company to have won
both the Daytona 500 and the 400-mile mid-season race at the track.
His work on the Talladega high banks was no less impressive. He won
three straight Talladega races in the 1975-76 seasons -- the first
to string together that many wins on the sport's biggest track. He
added a fourth trophy there the same year he won the Daytona 500
(1980).
"In the early era of superspeedway racing -- which we kind of forget
that a lot, that these tracks were just built in the '60s -- they
were a brand-new thing," Bestwick said. "And Buddy was so good at it
and adapted so quickly to it. He was one of the dominant forces of
the big tracks when the big tracks became 'a thing.'
"That was new ground for everyone. And Buddy was a master at it."
Perhaps one of Baker's most important contributions to the sport as
a driver was his work with no trophy on the line: testing tires, and
specifically, developing tire inner liners. It was high-speed,
high-danger work but Baker was willing to do it because he knew the
outcome would potentially save so many lives. And it has.
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"All the things he did, developing the (tire) inner liner, I mean
blowing out tires and hitting the wall on purpose in tests -- those
are just things people don't do anymore," three-time Cup Series
champion Darrell Waltrip recalled of Baker, someone who was both
friend (off-track) and foe (on-track).
"So, he was a rare breed and a really great race car driver. When it
came to Daytona and Talladega, especially, I'd take him over
anybody. He was that good."
In all, Baker earned 19 Cup Series wins, celebrating in Victory Lane
at least one time in 11 different seasons. He won 38 pole positions,
including a career-best six poles in 1980. He finished with an even
700 starts finishing top five in 202 races and top 10 in 311 races.
He only competed fulltime in the 1976 and 1977 seasons. Perhaps his
best season statistically came in 1973 when he ran 27 of 28 races
and finished in the top-five a personal best 16 times, and top 10 in
20 of the 27 races. He won twice and earned five pole positions that
year.
His best finish in the Cup Series championship was fifth in 1977.
Three times he finished in the top 10 in the championship without
running a full season's slate of races. His final trophy hoist came
fittingly enough at Daytona International Speedway in the summer of
1983, when he scored a 29-second victory over Morgan Shephard.
Baker's run of surpassed expectations and shake-your-head
achievements essentially came to an end following a severe head
injury in 1988 after competing in the prestigious Charlotte Motor
Speedway 600-miler. Baker was involved in a crash but didn't realize
the extent of his injury immediately after the race. Three months
later, he required emergency brain surgery.
While Baker made a few more random race starts, he soon discovered a
second career -- broadcasting.
Fellow NASCAR Hall of Famer Waltrip appreciates Baker's unique place
in NASCAR lore. Both Waltrip and Baker moved from the driver's seat
to the television commentating chair after their racing careers and
then blossomed in the heyday of NASCAR's big media personalities.
"A lot of people don't even know I drove, they think all I've done
is television," Waltrip said. "It's fascinating to me, but that's a
fact. I'll mention something I did back in my heyday, and someone
will say, 'I didn't know you did that. I didn't know you drove.'"
Ask any of the numerous radio and television broadcasters Baker
worked with what it was like to call a race alongside him and
inevitably they smile. There is always a warm laugh. Not at Baker
but because of Baker. He had such a way of putting people at ease.
He was candid in his broadcast descriptions, oftentimes eliciting a
"that is exactly what I was thinking" feeling from his audience.
His tall 6-foot-5 stature may have given off an intimidating vibe,
but Baker was actually unfailingly warm and kind to people and had a
way of putting people at ease. His presence on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
was a key connection between Baker and an adoring audience that
respected his past and appreciated his present.
"He had a connection with people and a passion for the sport,"
Bestwick said.
"Broadcasting really, to go on television, is a whole new world from
driving a race car," Bestwick added. "Nowadays, guys grow up being
media-trained. That didn't exist back then. But Buddy's love for the
sport and his natural enjoyment and his gregarious nature at the
racetrack was able to shine through on television.
"People can tell right away if you're faking it or you're real and
Buddy was as real as they got. He loved the sport, he loved talking
about it and he loved being around it. And that all came across
through television and radio."
The connection between Baker and NASCAR fans was absolutely real. So
real, that in the summer of 2015, he decided to share his most
personal news with his adoring media audience. He revealed his
cancer diagnosis during his final SiriusXM NASCAR Radio show.
"Do not shed a tear," Baker calmly asked of his audience. "Give me a
smile when you say my name."
He died a month later on Aug. 10, 2015, at the age of 74. But in
these next weeks -- especially as the sport celebrates Baker's
achievements on-track and off -- there will indeed be not just
smiles, but wide grins saying his name and remembering his great
presence in the sport.
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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