Lime Rock, AARP raise $170K to help feed the elderly

LIME ROCK — It was a day of lighthearted fun for a serious cause, but not without a heavy layer of surrealism. That goes for racing fans, as well as NASCAR drivers who have never driven at Lime Rock Park before — or taken laps with someone’s grandmother riding shotgun.

The Sept. 18 visit by Jeff Gordon, arguably NASCAR racing’s most popular driver, with teammate Kasey Kahne, team owner Rick Hendrick and Crew Chief Alan Gustafson, had fans in a frenzy. They paid $24 (Gordon’s car number) to attend an interview session, and they bought hot laps with the four team members, with a ride from Gordon going for $2,400.

It was all part of Lime Rock Park’s effort to aid AARP’s Drive to End Hunger campaign, which is aimed at helping feed seniors through grants, meal donations and other support. AARP just announced it will sponsor Gordon and Hendrick Racing for a fifth year. Lime Rock chooses a charity to support each season; this year’s Drive to End Hunger was a natural fit. Other local businesses including The Lakeville Journal supported the Sept. 18 event. LaBonne’s market in Salisbury also helped, by giving shoppers an easy way to donate to the cause as they bought their groceries. 

$170,000 raised for AARP

The season’s goal at Lime Rock was to raise $96,000. Those funds are designated to stay in Litchfield County and neighboring counties in New York and Massachusetts. Lime Rock had already raised about half that amount as the racing season was drawing to a close. The Sept. 18 afternoon event, followed by dinner and an auction at the Falls Village Inn,  blew the goal out of the water with $170,000 raised to date. That includes an anonymous $100,000 donation.

Among those at the interview event was young Donovan McCray of Cornwall, who was there with his family. He is a big Gordon fan. He wore the red “hero” T-shirt he earned when he and his mother, Jennifer Kenniston, helped pack 24,000 meals for seniors at a special event at the track on July 5. 

“I’m a big Jeff Gordon fan,” Donovan said. “That’s how I heard about the Drive to End Hunger, and why I wanted to help.”

That pretty much summed it up for the more than 400 fans who came out that day. As the appointed hour for the arrival of the racers came, and went, Donovan paced back and forth, watching the hillside overlooking the track. He had to wait only a little longer while the Hendrick team landed on the athletic fields at nearby Housatonic Valley Regional High School. There they were almost mobbed by screaming girls, presumed to be the soccer team, who recognized Gordon and teammate Kahne.

Hungry, and scared

During the wait, Lime Rock Park owner Skip Barber shared some sobering thoughts with the audience. 

“Nine million Americans over 50 go to bed at night not knowing where their next meal is coming from,” Barber said. “Nine million. And that is getting steadily worse, not better. So we are really hoping to make an impact. We’re talking hundreds of thousands of meals, and thank you. Your coming in today helps with that.” 

AARP’s vice president for special events, Cyril “C.B.” Wismar (whose roots are here and who still has a home on Music Mountain in Falls Village), said that,  to combat the issue, AARP decided to show up in an unexpected place: in a sport that has millions of fans. Since Gordon’s no. 24 car became the Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet four years ago, he said, AARP has raised more than $17 million in the Drive to End Hunger. As large a number as that is, Wismar said it “just made the barest dent in the issue.” 

AARP President Lisa  Marsh Ryerson spoke about the tragedy of the situation — and called Gordon, Kahne and  their fans “true hunger heroes” and thanked the Lime Rock Park staff. She was leaving the next morning for Florida, where the Miami Dolphins would help pack a million meals.

Wismar asked the team the questions their fans hungered for, including their thoughts on the NASCAR Chase for the Sprint Cup. The guys also took the opportunity to tell some mildly embarrassing stories about each other. 

More seriously, Gordon was asked how he felt when he learned that the sponsor for his car was going to be a cause, not a product.  

“To me it was one of the easiest calls or meetings I ever had,” Gordon said, talking about all the work done by NASCAR and his own foundation. 

“When I found out I could go out and race competitively every weekend and represent an amazing organization like AARP — and that I could then take it a step further and give back to those fighting senior hunger, I couldn’t think of a cooler way to get behind the wheel of a race car.” 

Team owner Hendrick spoke about his upbringing on a farm in rural Virginia, where neighbors depended on each other to survive. 

Kahne said he is inspired by Gordon as a driver and as a person. 

“I see that car every week. You know, the AARP car. It’s always out in front of me,” Kahne said to gales of laughter from an adoring audience.

On the track, Hendrick and his team all got a crash course — well, make that a quick lesson — in the challenging Lime Rock course, before taking long lines of fans for three-lap spins. 

Liam Dwyer, a military veteran amputee from Litchfield who won an IMSA race at Lime Rock in May, showed Gordon the track. 

There were photos after every ride, and a chance to ask Gordon how he was handling those right turns, which are not found on a NASCAR oval track (where there are only left turns). Lime Rock has only one left-hander, not counting the new uphill turn. 

“I’m figuring it out. I’m getting used to it,” Gordon said with a big grin.

The hot lap portion seemed to be the highlight of the afternoon for the majority of the fans. 

In honor of his car number, fans payed $2,400 to ride with Gordon; it was $500 to ride with Kahne and Gustafson. 

Originally, Gordon was the only driver scheduled to do the hot laps, but after all the available slots for him quickly sold out Kahne and Gustafson were added.

Even better than expected

One lucky participant was a woman named Peggy, who came from Vernon, Conn.

Peggy had been a Gordon fan since they day he first started in NASCAR and has never missed one of his races. 

“He seemed so clean cut, a gentleman and I just felt like he was a good driver. He was gonna go somewhere,” Peggy explained when asked why she chose Gordon over the other drivers. 

Peggy’s family pooled together the money to buy the hot lap — not for a birthday but just as a present because she deserved it. 

She was accompanied by her granddaughter, Lindsey Thomas, and other family members, who all described the experience as “awesome” and everything they expected and more.

Peggy seemed unfazed by the high speed of the car ride or her proximity to her favorite driver. She said after her lap that she even took the opportunity to ask Gordon how his family was as they raced down the Sam Posey Straight at roughly 135 miles per hour. 

She said Gordon responded by saying, “I must be doing something wrong. Am I boring you if you’re asking about my family?” 

Barry Cone of New Hartford said he was just as excited about the prototype Camaros they drove in as he was with being in the car with Gordon. 

“These cars stick better than I ever would of thought. It was unbelievable,” Cone said. “I wanted to see how he could handle these cars. It was unbelievable. The whole experience was double what I expected. I didn’t think we’d go through the turns that fast and stick that well.”

To get a taste of a hot lap with the Hendrick team (and to donate to the Drive to End Hunger), go to the Lime Rock Park website at www.limerock.com. 

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