Drag racing veteran Steve Earwood honored as Promoter of the Year

(Photo courtesy Steve Earwood)
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NASCAR may have left Rockingham Speedway more than a decade ago, but across the street, Steve Earwood and Rockingham Dragway have been doing just fine for more than two decades.

To further illustrate that, Earwood, who purchased the drag strip in 1992, continues to rack up accolades and awards for being one of the most innovative track owners and promoters there is.

At the recent Performance Racing Industry show in Indianapolis, Earwood received the prestigious Professional Drag Racing Association’s 2015 Promoter of the Year Award.

In March 2016, Earwood will receive yet another prestigious honor when he is awarded the Founders Award as part of his induction into the “Big Daddy” Don Garlits International Drag Racing Hall of Fame in Ocala, Fla.

Earwood has turned “The Rock” into a multi-use facility that starts with drag racing as its primary base, but has also branched out to a number of innovative uses for the track, including two-legged racing (as in humans running and walking on the track), concerts and fireworks spectaculars.

Earwood is a drag racing industry veteran. Prior to purchasing the race track, he was national media relations director for the NHRA when the organization experienced some of its largest growth from the mid-1970s into the 1980s.

Earwood has twice earned the International Hot Rod Association’s Promoter of the Year (2001 and 2008). He’s also a founding member and reigning chairman of the North Carolina Motorsports Association, and serves on North Carolina’s Governor’s Motorsports Advisory Council.

He also was a high-ranking executive at the Texas Motorplex, Atlanta Dragway and was a public relations consultant to team owner Raymond Beadle and driver Rusty Wallace’s 1989 NASCAR Winston Cup championship effort.

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Winner Josef Newgarden earns $3.666 million from a record Indy 500 purse of $17 million

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INDIANAPOLIS — The first Indy 500 victory for Josef Newgarden also was the richest in race history from a record 2023 purse of just more than $17 million.

The two-time NTT IndyCar Series champion, who continued his celebration Monday morning at Indianapolis Motor Speedway earned $3.666 million for winning the 107th running of the Greatest Spectacle in Racing.

The purse and winner’s share both are the largest in the history of the Indianapolis 500.

It’s the second consecutive year that the Indy 500 purse set a record after the 2022 Indy 500 became the first to crack the $16 million mark (nearly doubling the 2021 purse that offered a purse of $8,854,565 after a crowd limited to 135,000 because of the COVID-19 pandemic).

The average payout for IndyCar drivers was $500,600 (exceeding last year’s average of $485,000).

Indianapolis Motor Speedway owner Roger Penske, whose team also fields Newgarden’s No. 2 Dallara-Chevrolet, had made raising purses a priority since buying the track in 2020. But Penske but was unable to post big money purses until the race returned to full capacity grandstands last year.

The largest Indy 500 purse before this year was $14.4 million for the 2008 Indy 500 won by Scott Dixon (whose share was $2,988,065). Ericsson’s haul made him the second Indy 500 winner to top $3 million (2009 winner Helio Castroneves won $3,048,005.

Runner-up Marcus Ericsson won $1.043 million after falling short by 0.0974 seconds in the fourth-closest finish in Indy 500 history.

The 107th Indy 500 drew a crowd of at least 330,000 that was the largest since the sellout for the 100th running in 2016, and the second-largest in more than two decades, according to track officials.

“This is the greatest race in the world, and it was an especially monumental Month of May featuring packed grandstands and intense on-track action,” Penske Entertainment president and CEO Mark Miles said in a release. “Now, we have the best end card possible for the 107th Running of the Indianapolis 500: a record-breaking purse for the history books.”

Benjamin Pedersen was named the Indy 500 rookie of the year, earning a $50,000 bonus.

The race’s purse is determined through contingency and special awards from IMS and IndyCar. The awards were presented Monday night in the annual Indy 500 Victory Celebration at the JW Marriott in downtown Indianapolis.

The payouts for the 107th Indy 500:

1. Josef Newgarden, $3,666,000
2. Marcus Ericsson, $1,043,000
3. Santino Ferrucci, $481,800
4. Alex Palou, $801,500
5. Alexander Rossi, $574,000
6. Scott Dixon, $582,000
7. Takuma Sato, $217,300
8. Conor Daly, $512,000
9. Colton Herta, $506,500
10. Rinus VeeKay, $556,500
11. Ryan Hunter‐Reay, $145,500
12. Callum Ilott, $495,500
13. Devlin DeFrancesco, $482,000
14. Scott McLaughlin, $485,000
15. Helio Castroneves, $481,500
16. Tony Kanaan, $105,000
17. Marco Andretti, $102,000
18. Jack Harvey, $472,000
19. Christian Lundgaard, $467,500
20. Ed Carpenter, $102,000
21. Benjamin Pedersen (R), $215,300
22. Graham Rahal, $565,500*
23. Will Power, $488,000
24. Pato O’Ward, $516,500
25. Simon Pagenaud, $465,500
26. Agustín Canapino (R), $156,300
27. Felix Rosenqvist, $278,300
28. Kyle Kirkwood, $465,500
29. David Malukas, $462,000
30. Romain Grosjean, $462,000
31. Sting Ray Robb (R), $463,000
32. RC Enerson (R), $103,000
33.  Katherine Legge, $102,000

*–Broken down between two teams, $460,000 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing, $105,500 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing/Cusick Motorsports