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Benson Goes Home For Dad’s Hall of Fame Induction
#10
Valvoline Pontiac driver Johnny Benson did not arrive at
Richmond International Raceway until early Friday morning.
Instead of going to the track on Thursday as he does most
weekends on the NASCAR Winston Cup circuit, Benson made a
whirlwind visit to his hometown of Grand Rapids where he
watched his father John Benson’s induction into the
45-member Grand Rapids Sports Hall of Fame on Thursday
night. Benson flew to Richmond on Friday when practice and
qualifying begin for Saturday night’s 400-lap race.
The
elder Benson enjoyed a long racing career and posted more
than 75 victories including 1966 National Supermodified
Championship in Oswego, N.Y. - the "crown jewel" of the
modified series at the time. He also started and continues
to operate Benson Speed Equipment in Grand Rapids. Benson
ran only one Winston Cup race in his career preferring local
racing that didn’t involve the travel commitments or time
away from the family.
The
younger Benson followed in his father’s footsteps working in
the race shop selling parts and even welding. By the time he
was 19 years old it was time for him to replace Dad as the
family racer and he began working his way through late
models earning track championships. He went on to the
American Speed Association where he won the rookie of the
year award in 1990 and the championship in 1993. He went to
NASCAR where he won rookie of the year titles in Winston Cup
and the Busch Series as well as Busch title in 1995.
Today the 64-year old Benson works in his race shop during
the week and spends weekend watching his son race in NASCAR.
Joining Benson in the 2001 class include two-time world
boxing champion Roger Mayweather, former baseball pitcher
Dave Rozema plus three other local sports figures.
On Dad’s
Hall of Fame Induction:
“I think its pretty cool that my Dad’s being recognized in
the Grand Rapids area for doing a lot to promote racing. You
know he has raced up there for a lot of years and has a lot
of fan support. I laugh, because he still has a ton of fan
support even today. He signs as many autographs as I do when
I go back up there. It’s going be a pretty neat deal for me
and everyone else and I’m sure it’s going to be a neat deal
for my Dad.”
Benson
Comparing His Career To His Father’s:
“The
difference between what he has done and what I am doing is
that what I have done has been in the eye of the public a
lot more than his stuff. He has done the same things as far
as winning track championships and all that. It’s just that
he didn’t want to do the travel thing. He wanted to say in
town and raise his family. He ran Winston Cup once and that
was enough for him. He had a chance to run Indy cars and
didn’t want to do it. He’s had a lot of opportunities that a
lot of drivers don’t get but he decided it was best to stay
home, live a normal life and stay involved in racing. I
chose to take a different route than he did. I wouldn’t
change it and I don’t think he would do anything different
if he had a chance to do everything over again.”
John
Benson Sr.:
“If I
would have made racing a full-time job, I could have made a
living out of it. But I wanted to be home and watch the kids
grow up, and I didn’t care about traveling all over to
tracks after working all week for 44 years with the
railroad. Most of the good drivers running in NASCAR today
don’t do it for the money. They do it for the competition;
to prove they can run with the best of them. That was why I
drove. I didn’t race for money, and I didn’t care to go
big-time. I just enjoyed the local racing and the fun of
it.”
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