Words matter. These are the best Racetrack Quotes from famous people such as Lynsi Torres, Charlie Kimball, Chantal Sutherland, Art Rooney, Maureen O’Hara, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
My dad took me to the racetrack for the first time when I was 2 or 3… Anything with a motor, that was in my blood.
It takes more than driving to become an IndyCar driver. Gone are the days when drivers show up Friday morning and go home Sunday night. We’re all integral to our partnerships, commercially, motorsports. We’re as much champions in the boardroom as we are on the racetrack.
I have a great race team, great grew members, awesome health care team, endocrinologist, nutritionist, and of course family and friends. It truly is a team effort, both when you are dealing with diabetes in regular life and also on the racetrack.
I’m just so lucky – my office is a racetrack. That is something I’m very thankful for. It’s exciting, and it’s challenging, and there are a lot of emotions and nerves that come with it, but right there before the gates open, before that minute and a half or two minutes of the race, it just hits you.
Sportswriters. They were all my friends. They were racetrack guys and so was I.
Making movies is just like betting on horses at the racetrack.
When I started the label, I stopped racing. Even though I have a better chance of getting hurt walking outside and falling down the stairs, if I had gotten injured on the racetrack, people would be going, ‘What is this guy doing?’ So I had to grow up a little bit.
Somehow when I am at the racetrack, I don’t really realise what is happening and I just focus on the job.
If he’d just crowded me down to the side of the asphalt, I’d have been OK. But when he ran me completely off the racetrack, I lost it.
Unlike my grandfather or my brother, I’ve actually been able to make some money at a racetrack.
My father was a racetrack bookie.
I have a picture of Texas Motor Speedway with highlighted areas of the racetrack where there are no SAFER barriers – and it’s an overwhelming amount of spots.
I’m a pretty intense person at the racetrack, but when I’m not thinking about my race car or in the garage doing my job, I’m pretty laid back, and I like to be organized and do normal things.
Even when we’ve been winning, we still look at things that we could have done better, whether it be on the racetrack, on pit road, just little things to maximize our day.
I’m a typical dirt racer that wants to go try different lines. When the line goes to the top of the racetrack, I feel like I’m a little bit better.
I see all these professional photographers out at the racetrack, and there’s all these people across the world, taking really cool pictures and you’re like, ‘Man, I want to create that!’ I had that mindset when I first grabbed a camera.
What makes us a bit nervous is, in this instant age, to release something that might take more than one listen. Where everything is instantly judged on YouTube or something! It’s a bit like releasing a horse and cart on a racetrack.
I don’t usually socialize a ton with other people when I’m at the racetrack.
I’m a car fanatic and each morning I wake up with a smile on my face, whether I’m commentating on the Formula One or at Silver Hatch racetrack in Roary the Racing Car.
There’s no better benefit than being out on the racetrack, learning what’s going on with the track and the tire and all that stuff. To me, that’s a big influence.
You need always to balance your tasks at the racetrack and at the factory. Still the factory is important where we are developing the car, preparing the cars.
My dad raced so we were out at the racetrack late at night on Saturdays, getting up early on Sunday morning going to church.
With horses, familiarity breeds comfort. If you haven’t been around horses for a while (or ever), the best thing to do is to go to the racetrack, a horse show, a rodeo, or some other horsey activity, and watch the horses. Familiarize yourself with the way they move and behave themselves.
I always said when I was in Late Models, all I ever wanted was when I pull out on the racetrack, people feel like I’m the guy to beat.
I’ve hit a couple barriers out there on the racetrack growing up. There’s definitely been some flak in the way. I’ve been able to handle that the best I could, ignore it, use that as motivation.