Beer
- The "Unofficial Fuel" Of NASCAR
Since
1959, several petroleum companies have served as the 'Official Fuel of
NASCAR.' If there ever were an 'Unofficial Fuel' of the sport, it would
be beer.
Beer
has played an integral part of auto racing since the first competitions
at the turn of the 20th century. While
there were no beer sponsorships back there, plenty of the product was
consumed by the daredevil hell-raising types that populated the sport.
It's
a tradition that still exists today. If you don't believe it, check out
the pit area at any short-track across the country after a race. You’ll
see plenty of drivers, crewmembers and fans celebrate the time-honored
tradition of popping a cold one as they bench race the evening's events.
While
beer has always been a competitor and fan beverage of choice, the frosty
malt, barley and hops liquid didn't make its way to the corporate side
of the sport until the late 1960's. That's when the cost of racing started
to escalate and having a sponsorship became as much of a priority as was
having a helmet.
Racing
- especially NASCAR - was a perfect fit for marketing beer. Ironically,
it wasn't the big beer companies like Budweiser and Miller to lead the
way, but rather smaller brewers like Falls City and Carling who were among
the first to sponsor cars in NASCAR.
Larry
Smith was one of the first drivers to have a full-time beer sponsor when
he carried Carling to the then NASCAR Grand National Rookie of the Year
title in 1972. And while there is no official record, it is thought Carling
was also one of the first beer companies to go to Victory Lane in a NASCAR
race when Earl Ross won the Old Dominion 500 at Martinsville Speedway
on September 29, 1974.
It
was the only win of Ross' career in NASCAR's top division.
Later
that year, Cale Yarborough, Ross' teammate at Junior Johnson Racing, took
the Carling brand to Victory Lane at Bristol, Nashville, Darlington and
North Wikesboro Speedways.
Meanwhile,
others like West Coast NASCAR racers Hershel McGriff (Olympia Beer) and
Bill Schmitt (Old Milwaukee) also carried beer sponsorships to the sport
in the 1970's.
Yarborough
and Johnson however continued to be the mainstay of beer sponsorship at
NASCAR's top level teaming with Busch Beer for the 1979 and 1980 Winston
Cup seasons. Ironically, the appropriately named Tim Brewer was the crew
chief for Yarborough back then.
The
1979 season also marked the debut of beer event sponsorships with the
Busch Clash, a 50-mile sprint at Daytona featuring pole winners from the
previous season. The inaugural 1979 race - which today still exists as
the Bud Shootout - was won by Buddy Baker in a Harry Ranier-owned Oldsmobile.
If
there was a watershed mark for beer sponsorship in NASCAR, it had to be
the 1982 and 1983 seasons.
In
1982, Busch Beer lent its name to the new NASCAR Busch Grand National
Series. Sponsoring the former NASCAR Late Model Sportsman Series proved
to be a viable marketing vehicle as Busch continued as the division's
title sponsor through the 2007 season.
The
success of Busch's NASCAR marketing efforts in the late 1970's and early
1980's led to a flood of team beer-related sponsorships for the 1983 season.
That year, Terry Labonte's Billy Hagan's Chevrolet came to Daytona with
Budweiser beer logos on the hood and quarter panels while Miller
High
Life joined the fray on Bobby Allison's DiGard Chevy.
By
the end of the decade, both brands became identified with NASCAR sponsoring
the likes of top stars Darrell Waltrip, Neil Bonnett and Rusty Wallace.
Beer
companies also jumped heavily into NASCAR race title sponsorships in the
1980's as Miller High Life, Miller Lite, Miller Genuine Draft, Budweiser,
Old Milwaukee, Busch, Coors, Coors Light and others all lent their names
to NASCAR events over the next 20 years.
The
team, race and 'Official Beer of NASCAR' sponsorships poured untold millions
of dollars into the sport. In 2008, a single deal saw Coors Light ink
a five-year, $20 million agreement giving the brand exclusive access to
NASCAR logos in its beer advertising, packaging and promotion. The deal
also gave longtime Pole Award sponsor Budweiser the boot as the entitlement
company of the award presented at each and every NASCAR touring division
event.
In
addition to the money it has spent, support by the beer industry of NASCAR
has helped create unequalled recognition of the sport with the masses
thanks to television and radio commercials, in-store point of purchase
displays, and contest giveaways.
That
kind of exposure has helped grow the number of companies participating
in NASCAR-related marketing projects today to more than 400. It is estimated
they spend a combined $2.5-3 billion annually.
The
association of beer and NASCAR has also created party culture that has
turned races into a bacchanal of brew. NASCAR events today are "happenings"
- full-tilt, brew-fueled intimate gatherings of a few hundred thousand
speed seekers. Only Germany's annual Oktoberfest gatherings draw more
beer-drinking patrons than NASCAR events.
Throughout
history, beer has been credited with everything from building the pyramids
to getting mankind through the Dark Ages. Even the first settlements in
America are attributed to the Pilgrims having to stop at Plymouth, Mass.
instead of going on to the original destination point in Virginia because
they ran out of beer.
If
you believe Henry Ford invented mass production, you're wrong - the beer
industry did a decade earlier with the first automated bottling assembly
line.
The refrigerator in your house - and all the cold or frozen products in
it - have roots in the beer brewing industry as it was the first to create
modern cold storage units for its products.
So
it should come as no surprise that beer has been and today is more than
ever a driving force of NASCAR. It is the 'Unofficial Fuel Of NASCAR'.
One look at the history of sport, and the number of empty beer cans in
the stands after a NASCAR race, is proof enough of that.
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