Who Is Bubba Wallace? |
The New York Times
2020-06-12
He is the only African-American driver in NASCAR’s top-flight racing series, and this week got the organization to bar the Confederate flag at its events.
Bubba Wallace, who instigated NASCAR’s banning of the Confederate flag, is the racing series’ only black driver. That has put him in the spotlight in a sport whose owners, drivers, crews and fans have historically been predominantly white.
What is the history of black drivers in NASCAR?
Wendell Scott was the pioneer, driving on the circuit from 1961 to 1973. Despite regularly facing discrimination, he won a race in 1963 in Jacksonville, Fla., that remains the only one at NASCAR’s top level to be won by an African-American driver. Scott died in 1990.
Although a handful of African-American drivers got into a race or two over the years since, no other black driver had a full-time ride in NASCAR’s top series until Wallace…
Read the entire article here.
Tags: auto racing, Bubba Wallace, Darrell "Bubba" Wallace Jr., Darrell Wallace Jr., NASCAR, National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, New York Times, The New York Times, Victor Mather, Wendell Scott