Racing toward
a dream
By Rodika Tollefson KP News
Somewhere on the Key Peninsula, a young man hopes to
someday race cars in NASCAR.
“That’s been my dream since I was little,” AJ Butler
says.
It’s not so far fetched. This Key Peninsula Middle
School sixth-grader, who calls himself an average student,
has already conquered many tracks and races. Just on a
slightly smaller scale.
AJ started riding dirt bikes at age 5. His father,
Frank Butler, was an avid racer who had raced in a NASCAR
division. The family traveled around to watch him race.
Then Frank decided to quit due to injuries — and AJ got
his own racing start.
Three years after doing dirt bikes, AJ and his dad
“wanted to do something different,” and switched to
quartermidgets. These are the miniature versions of actual
midget racers, at about onequarter scale. At least twice a
week, they drive to Graham for practice. Almost every
weekend during the summer, they drive as far as British
Columbia and Portland to competitions — and even to Las
Vegas once a year, for the nationals.
AJ says the best part is when he wins, when he takes
“the last corner and the checker’s thrown.” He wins quite
often. This year in Vegas, he placed eighth in his class
of 88 racers. That wasn’t his personal best. Two nationals
prior, he placed sixth.
That’s when AJ got a new quartermidget. It was a
promise: If he did well, they would move to better
equipment. Mom Debbie, who wasn’t so sure about the whole
quarter-midget racing deal at first, was the one who
insisted on the purchase. Now she can often be spotted
putting air into the tires before a race.
And that’s how they all go about it. Mom, dad, AJ. The
youngster’s the only one driving the cars, but it’s pretty
much a family sport. AJ says his success is due 75 percent
to his father. Frank helps him scale the cars, work on the
shocks, air the tires, make sure the driver is
comfortable. In this sport, the prep work, “setting up the
car,” is 50 percent of the battle. The rest is driver
skill and knowledge — and here too, Frank plays an
integral role.
“It takes more than one person to make a good team. It
takes the whole family,” Frank says. “Any child and family
can do this.” Adds AJ, “It pulls us together, and makes us
a better family."
Quarter-midget racing
Boys and girls ages 5 to 16 can drive the open wheel
race cars. Safety rules are strictly enforced, and
include belts and buckles, arm restraints, racing
clothing, helmets, gloves, neck braces, car roll
cages, and more.
To learn more about quarter-midget racing, visit
the Quarter Midgets of America association online at
www.quartermidgets.org, or the Little Wheels
Quarter Midget Association at
www.little-wheels.org. |
AJ says he focuses on racing “every day a lot.” But
academics come first. No good grades, no racing — that’s
the rule. He says he used to get in trouble more often in
school, but racing has taught him discipline and has
motivated him to get better grades. Some kids at school
tease him about his racing, he says, “but it doesn’t
change anything.”
For the family, his passion for racing is a huge
commitment. On the track, that commitment frequently pays
off, along with his own devotion. A racer who skipped the
novice category and went to compete straight into senior
ones, AJ describes part of his strategy: At home, he often
plays racing video games to practice in two dimensions. At
practice before a race, “a good driver will watch those
who know the track.” During the race, “You have to focus
ahead…and the next corner ahead.”
The team also thinks ahead, to the big picture. Even as
they have to scale down on the number of races this year,
unless they can find a sponsor, they know the goal. Keep
racing as long as it’s still fun, and shoot for the club
championship. Last year, after adding up all the ribbons,
trophies and points, he missed the champ mark by three
points.
Beyond that goal— NASCAR, some day. “It will take a lot
of racing…and getting a lot of records, and hopefully
doing my best,” AJ says.
In our state, NASCAR doesn’t have as much exposure.
Fans have to travel far to watch, and sponsors are not as
eager. “Having NASCAR come to Washington would be huge,”
son and father say.
Their wish could come true. After pulling out of a
proposal to build a NASCAR track in Marysville this
winter, International Speedway Corp. confirmed in April
they were still looking for a site within 30 miles of
Seattle. Reports said a Kitsap property, near the
Bremerton National Airport, was among the top contenders.
If such a track were built, by then AJ may be almost
ready for it. In the meantime, he’ll occupy his time with
getting better. Racing in two different categories, he
sometimes gets really tired—but not tired enough.
And then, there is that dream.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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