Bowman Gray Stadium

Bowman Gray Stadium is a NASCAR sanctioned quarter-mile asphalt flat oval short track and longstanding football stadium located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It is one of stock car racing's most legendary venues, and is referred to as "NASCAR's longest-running weekly race track". Bowman Gray Stadium is part of the Winston-Salem Sports and Entertainment Complex and is home of the Winston-Salem State University Rams football team.[1] It was also the home of the Wake Forest University football team from 1956 until Groves Stadium (now Truist Field at Wake Forest) opened in 1968. Bowman Gray Stadium was a popular venue for high school football in the 1970s and 1980s. Parkland and R.J. Reynolds High Schools shared Bowman Gray Stadium as their home field for high school football until the two schools built their own facility (Deaton-Thompson Stadium) in 1994.

Bowman Gray Stadium
"the Madhouse"
Opening Night, Bowman Gray Stadium, April 2011
Location1250 S Martin Luther King Jr, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27107
Capacity17,000
OwnerCity of Winston-Salem
OperatorNational Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC
Opened1937
Major eventsNASCAR Grand National (1958–1971)
NASCAR K&N Pro Series East (2011–2015)
Whelen Southern Modified Tour (2005-2016) (Series folded in 2016)
1/4 mile flat oval
SurfaceAsphalt
Length0.25 miles (0.40 km)
Banking0 Degrees
Race lap record12.965 seconds (Tim Brown, Team 83, 2016, Modified Division)
Bowman Gray Stadium
The Madhouse, Home of the Modifieds
Map
Location1250 S Martin Luther King Jr, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27107
Coordinates36°4′58″N 80°13′20″W / 36.08278°N 80.22222°W / 36.08278; -80.22222
OwnerCity of Winston-Salem
OperatorDale Pinilis
Capacity17,000
SurfaceTurf
Construction
Broke ground1936
Opened1937
Tenants
Winston-Salem State Rams (NCAA) (1956-present)
Wake Forest Demon Deacons (NCAA) (1956-1967)

History

The stadium was built in 1937 as a public works project to provide jobs during the Great Depression. The first event at the new stadium was a football game in the fall of 1938 between Wake Forest College and Duke University. In the beginning, the stadium's sole use was for collegiate football until trotter horse racing was added on the 0.250-mile dirt oval. The first auto racing at Bowman Gray was a type of midget car racing on the dirt quarter mile track from 1939 through 1949. The track was paved in 1947, after a promoter got the City of Winston-Salem to agree to pay to have the track paved in exchange for restitution of payments through a percentage of future income from races. However, after the track was paved the promoter fled before any payments were made to the city.[2] Stock car racing at Bowman Gray Stadium was started by Bill France Sr. and Alvin Hawkins, two men who were founding fathers of NASCAR. The track was NASCAR's very first weekly track and the very first paved track that NASCAR raced on. The track would run weekly NASCAR sanctioned events during the summer months.

The first NASCAR-sanctioned event took place on May 18, 1949, and was won by Fonty Flock.[3] The track was opened by NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. and Alvin Hawkins, and remains operated by members of the Hawkins family to this day.[4] By the end of the inaugural Bowman Gray season 11 races had been run and five more were rained out. Tim Flock won the track championship with a season that included four wins.

As the racing had become extremely popular at the track, an additional 7,000 seats were added in 1953, raising the seating capacity from 10,000 to 17,000.[5]

The track has hosted numerous series throughout the years including the NASCAR Grand National Series (now NASCAR Cup Series), NASCAR Convertible Division, NASCAR Late Model Short Track Division (now NASCAR Xfinity Series), NASCAR Grand American, Dash Series, NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour, NASCAR Late Model Sportsman Division, and NASCAR K&N Pro Series.[6] The first Grand National event took place in 1958 and it was won by Bob Welborn.[7] Other winners include Glen Wood, Rex White, David Pearson, Richard Petty, Bobby Allison, Junior Johnson and Marvin Panch.[7] Richard Petty won his 100th race at the track. The Grand National Series first raced at the track in 1958 and hosted a total of 29 Grand National races through 1971.

Motorcycle races were run on a temporary dirt track at the stadium in 1970 and 1971. The stock car races were run first in the events before construction crews would lay dirt down during an intermission for motorcycles races the same night.[6]

Bowman Gray's nickname, the "Madhouse", is largely attributed to the racing antics that take place on the tight, quarter mile bull ring. In 2014, Bowman Gray's promoter, Gray Garrison described the events at BGS as part racing, part religion, and part wrestling.[8] While this is partially the reason for the nickname, it actually originated from a qualifying format the track used in the 1950s called the "mad scramble."[4]

In 2015, Bowman Gray celebrated its 1,000th NASCAR sanctioned race [9]

On November 14, 2018, it was announced that the Stadium would get a $9 million renovation. It will begin in 2019, with construction starting in 2020 and ending in 2022. It will include new restrooms, a track resurfacing, and a new name for the football field titled "Rams Field At Bowman Gray".[10]Currently, the track features four divisions: the modifieds, sportsman, street stock and stadium stock. The modifieds are the featured division at Bowman Gray, the division started in 1949 and the all-time wins list features some of the best NASCAR drivers including Lee Petty, Ralph Earnhardt, Ned Jarrett, Richie Evans, and Jerry Cook.

The football history of the stadium is also quite storied. Wake Forest University played home games in the stadium from its move to Winston-Salem in 1956, until the 1968 season when Groves Stadium (now Truist Field at Wake Forest) opened. Players such as Brian Piccolo, the 1964 ACC Player of the Year who led the nation in rushing and scoring, played their home games in Bowman Gray. Piccolo later became famous as the teammate of Gale Sayers with the Chicago Bears, and the subject of the 1971 film Brian's Song. The Winston-Salem high schools of R.J. Reynolds High and Parkland High also played their home games at the stadium in the late 1960s through the 1980s.

Today

Bowman Gray's weekly racing tradition continues as part of the Whelen All-American Series, with races Saturday evenings from the end of April through August.[11] The track can seat 17,000 people in the stands, with an additional 2,000 standing-room around the wall above the seating areas. The weekly races during the year normally have an average attendance between 12,000 and 15,000 per night. Many events are standing room only, as some events have had estimated crowds of more than 23,000 show up.[6]

Weekly races include the modified, sportsman, street stock and stadium stock divisions. Bowman Gray is also a part of the special events including classic modified coupes and East Coast Flathead Ford Racing Association (ECFFRA), monster trucks, demolition derbies, chain races, skid races and INEX Legends Car and bandolero races. The History Channel show MadHouse was taped at the track during the 2009 season. The showed aired in January 2010 and ran through April 2010. On October 29, 2018, a new show titled "Race Night At Bowman Gray" aired on Discovery Channel. The show focused on the Modified Division. After the first few episodes, the show was moved to the Discovery Go App, after fear of cancellation. The show would later go on to eventually be canceled.

Spectators listen to the officials during the races on frequencies 461.200 MHz, 463.625 MHz, and 466.600 MHz on a scanner or "race radio." Many, if not all of the drivers also communicate via a two-way radio during the race. Most of them use a frequency between 450 and 470 MHz, but there are exceptions.

On October 11, 2021, NASCAR announced that they will be running a tire test at Bowman Gray for the Next Gen (NASCAR) car, in preparation for the 2022 Busch Clash, now in the L.A. Coliseum with a track layout similar to the Madhouse. This was the first time in over 50 years that NASCAR Cup Series cars ran on the legendary track.

For the 2022 racing season, along with the other previously announced renovations, new concession stands and drains in the apron of the turns were added to help remove water in the event of rain.

In July 2023 the stadium played host to baseball for the first time as the Winston-Salem-based Carolina Disco Turkeys hosted Albemarle's Uwharrie Wampus Cats and the Winston-Salem Moravians in a series of games featuring independent teams.[12]

On March 21, 2024, NASCAR announced that they had acquired the lessee of the track and would begin managing racing at the facility through 2050.[13]

Past NASCAR Cup Series winners

YearDateDriverTeamManufacturerRace distanceRace timeAverage speed
(mph)
Report
MilesLaps
1958May 24Bob WelbornJulian PettyChevrolet37.515040.407
1958Aug 22Lee PettyPetty EnterprisesOldsmobile5020039.258
1959Mar 30Jim ReedJim ReedFord5020043.562
1959Jun 27Rex WhiteRex WhiteChevrolet5020041.228
1959Aug 21Rex WhiteRex WhiteChevrolet5020044.085
1960Apr 18Glen WoodWood BrothersFord5020043.082
1960Jun 26Glen WoodWood BrothersFord5020045.872
1960Aug 23Glen WoodWood BrothersFord5020043.389
1961Apr 3Rex WhiteRex WhiteChevrolet37.515045.500
1961Jun 10Rex WhiteRex WhiteChevrolet5020042.714
1961Aug 9Rex WhiteRex WhiteChevrolet37.515042.452
1962Apr 23Rex WhiteRex WhiteChevrolet2710843.392
1962Jun 16Johnny AllenFred LovettePontiac5020045.466
1962Aug 18Richard PettyPetty EnterprisesPlymouth5020046.875
1963Apr 15Jim PaschalPetty EnterprisesPlymouth5020046.814
1963Jul 13Glen WoodWood BrothersFord5020044.390
1963Aug 16Junior JohnsonRay FoxChevrolet5020046.320
1964Mar 30Marvin PanchWood BrothersFord5020047.796
1964Aug 22Junior JohnsonBanjo MatthewsFord62.525046.192
1965May 15Junior JohnsonJunior JohnsonFord5020047.911
1965Aug 28Junior JohnsonJunior JohnsonFord62.525046.632
1966Apr 11David PearsonCotton OwensDodge5020051.341
1966Aug 27David PearsonCotton OwensDodge62.525045.928
1967Mar 27Bobby AllisonJ.D. BrackenChevrolet5020049.248
1967Aug 12Richard PettyPetty EnterprisesPlymouth62.525050.893
1968Aug 10David PearsonHolman-MoodyFord62.525042.940
1969Aug 22Richard PettyPetty EnterprisesFord62.525047.458
1970Aug 28Richard PettyPetty EnterprisesPlymouth62.525051.527
1971Aug 6*Bobby AllisonMelvin JosephMustang62.525044.792
  • In 1971, the Grand National Series allowed drivers to choose a smaller car from the Grand American division, which ran smaller pony cars, like the Ford Mustang which Bobby Allison chose for the race, alongside cars like the Chevrolet Camaro and AMC Javelin. Allison's usual car was the Ford Galaxie, but for this race at the shortest paved track on the schedule, he chose a shorter-wheelbase car with a much smaller engine, 302cui, 5.0ltr. V8 versus the Galaxie's 427cui, 7ltr V8. The shorter wheelbase allowed much better handling on slow, narrow short tracks like Bowman-Gray, but gave Allison an advantage that was seen as unfair by his competitors, such as second-place runner Richard Petty, whom filed an official complaint with NASCAR officials at the close of the race. NASCAR officials agreed, and stripped Allison of his win and prize money. However, instead of declaring Petty the winner, NASCAR left the race without an official winner. To this day, Allison reports his win count as 85, despite his official win total being 84. In motorsport series with different classes of cars in the same event, there are different class winners per race (a procedure similar to what NASCAR used for later combination races). In this case, Allison, in a Grand American car, would be classified as the overall race winner and Grand American class winner, and Petty, in a Grand National car, would be classified as the Grand National class winner. Petty would have 201 wins under this classification.

Past NASCAR Convertible Series Winners

YearDateDriverTeamManufacturerRace distanceRace timeAverage speed
(mph)
Report
MilesLaps
1956Aug 3Curtis TurnerPete DePaoloFord37.5150
1957Apr 22Curtis TurnerPete DePaoloFord351400:58:4235.775
1957Jun 22Bob WelbornBob WelbornChevrolet37.51500:57:4638.95
1958Apr 7Bob WelbornJulian PettyChevrolet37.51500:52:0343.228
1959May 23Glen WoodWood BrothersFord502001:09:1743.300

NOTES:

  • Apr 22, 1957: Race shortened from 150 laps to 140 due to rain.

Track Champions

  • 2020 season was canceled due to COVID
YearModified ChampionSportsman / Amateur ChampionStreet Stock / Hobby ChampionStadium Stock / Blunderbust Champion
1949Tim Flock
1950Jimmie Lewallen
1951Billy Myers
1952Bobby Myers
1953Billy Myers
1954Glen Wood
1955Billy Myers
1956Pee Wee Jones
1957Pee Wee Jones
1958Pee Wee JonesBill Scott
1959Pee Wee Jones
1960Pee Wee Jones
1961Glen WoodRobert BerrierShorry Riggins
1962Perk BrownLeon Russell
1963Billy HensleyBubba Beck
1964Ken Rush
1965Carl Burris
1966Ken RushBill Covington
1967Pee Wee JonesRalph Brinkley
1968Perk Brown
1969Perk BrownAl HillWendell Edwards
1970Don MillerAl Hill
1971Max Berrier
1972Max BerrierAl Hill
1973Ralph BrinkleyAl Hill
1974Ralph BrinkleyAl HillMax Martin
1975Billy HensleyAl HillMitchell Warden
1976Ralph BrinkleyBill WilderKen Cheek
1977Paul RadfordJimmy JohnsonBen JordonTimmy Canard
1978Paul RadfordJimmy JohnsonTony HulinSherman Dalton
1979Don SmithJimmy JohnsonBen YoungRoger Craver
1980Ralph BrinkleyBilly KimelSherman DaltonDale Ward
1981Ralph BrinkleyJimmy JohnsonSpider KimelDale Ward
1982Ralph BrinkleyJimmy JohnsonBilly DugginsG.R. Merritt
1983Satch WorleyDink OsborneDanny TrivetteDean Ward
1984Johnny JohnsonSpider KimelDanny TrivetteDean Ward
1985Satch WorleyPhillip HillLarry EubanksRicky Gregg
1986Ralph BrinkleyBill WilderDavid AdamsChris Ward
1987Ralph BrinkleyKenny MabeRicky GreggFrank Ward
1988Phillip SmithJimmy JohnsonKenneth StimpsonMark Faust
1989Phillip SmithRicky GreggBarry EdwardsDean Ward
1990Junior MillerRicky GreggRonnie CliftonDean Ward
1991Don SmithMike MillerBarry EdwardsRob Neely
1992Junior MillerRicky GreggBryan WeathermanBrent Weaver
1993Junior MillerTodd HuntBryan WeathermanTommy Neal
1994Robert JeffreysGene PackTim McGlameryTommy Neal
1995Robert JeffreysGene PackTim McGlameryRandy Moore
1996Tim BrownWillie NewmanRik NewsomCharlie Curry
1997Tim BrownDavid AdamsRusty HarpeRonnie Bassett
1998Tim BrownDavid AdamsKyle EdwardsMatt Hill
1999Burt MyersJason BrownMack Little IIIRandy Moore
2000Junior MillerJason BrownMack Little IIIJohnny Burke
2001Burt MyersBarry EdwardsJason MyersMitch Gales
2002Tim BrownRonnie CliftonKyle EdwardsCharlie Curry
2003Junior MillerRonnie CliftonSteven BerrierKenny Bost
2004Tim BrownRonnie CliftonJohnny ArnderKenny Bost
2005Tim BrownRonnie CliftonSteven BerrierKenny Bost
2006Junior MillerRonnie CliftonSteven BerrierA.J. Sanders
2007Burt MyersRonnie CliftonJohn McNealMichael Wells
2008Tim BrownRonnie CliftonRyan NelsonJohnny Burke
2009Tim BrownRonnie CliftonDavid SumnerDale Barneycastle
2010Burt MyersKyle EdwardsMatt CotnerJason Keaton
2011Burt MyersRobbie BrewerJohn McNealChris Lawing
2012Tim BrownDerek StoltzBilly GreggCharlie Curry
2013Burt MyersMack Little IIIDoug WallChuck Wall
2014Danny BohnTaylor BranchChase HuntChuck Wall
2015Tim BrownZack CliftonDerrick RiceChuck Wall
2016Burt MyersTommy NealDerrick RiceA.J. Sanders
2017Burt MyersDerek StoltzJacob CreedWesley Thompson
2018Burt MyersKevin NealSpencer MartinWesley Thompson
2019Burt MyersJustin TaylorBilly GreggChuck Wall
2021Tim BrownTommy NealBilly GreggBrandon Brendle
2022Tim BrownTommy NealBilly GreggA.J. Sanders
2023Brandon WardChase RobertsonChristian JoyceA.J. Sanders

Modified and Sportsman car counts were thin during the latter part of the 1950s and the track combined the two and let the V6s run with the V8s and named it the "Modified-Sportsman Division". Leading into the 1968 season, the track dropped the Sportsman cars and title, hence officially named the featured division as the Modifieds.

The Amateur Division was the support division to the Modified-Sportsman and ran from 1950 to mid-1958, where the division dissolved and the track picked up the Hobby Division.

The Claiming Division was tabbed as a third weekly division in 1964. It was a division that cost only $99 to run, it was so popular that the track had to cut the fields down to two races with ten cars apiece. The division ran from 1964 to 1972. The track changed the name to what is now the Sportsman Division.

The Hobby Division, which was the predecessor of the Street Stock Division, ran from mid-1958 to 1974. Then the following year, the division was renamed to the Street Stocks.

Bowman Gray ran Blunderbust races as a fourth division from 1977-1989 until they replaced that division with the Buzzbomber Division in 1990. The following season, the track kept the cars, but changed the division to what is now the Stadium Stock Division.

Gallery

See also

References

External links