Monday, March 30. A Mexican restaurant in North Carolina called Casa Azteca. Birthday party — family, friends, a big TV screen that lit up with Brent Crews' face and played music and made everyone dance. "Super chill," Crews told reporters Friday. "It was great to have all of my family and my friends there."
Asked if he enjoyed a margarita during the celebration, Crews shut it down before the question finished. "Not at 18. My parents would… I would not be at the race track this weekend, I promise you that."
Six days later, he was leading the North Carolina Education Lottery 250 at Rockingham Speedway.
Brent Crews is eighteen years old. He grew up in Hickory, North Carolina — a town with a .363-mile oval in the middle of it that the sport calls the Birthplace of the NASCAR Stars. Ralph Earnhardt built championships there. Bobby Isaac learned the craft that took him to a Grand National title on that surface. We wrote the whole story. The short version: a kid who grows up in Hickory grows up next to racing. It is in the air. It is in the water.
On Saturday, Crews took it to Rockingham.
Before March 30, he wasn't legally allowed to compete on oval tracks longer than 1.25 miles in the O'Reilly Auto Parts Series. NASCAR's age rule — seventeen-year-olds can race road courses and short ovals, but the bigger tracks require a birthday first. Rockingham is 0.94 miles, just over the line. Which means Saturday was Crews' first race at this oval class. His first crack at a track that chews through tire compounds and demands patience over everything else.
He qualified 10th on a 38-car grid. That is not luck.
Then the race started. Corey Day ran away with the first two stages — swept both wins, led 118 laps from the pole — and then Rockingham collected its usual toll and Day's tires gave out. Into the vacuum, Crews moved. Got to the front. Led real laps against real competition in his FIRST race at this distance. His JGR teammate William Sawalich, who won his first O'Reilly Series race in the 18 car Saturday, watched a teenager in the 19 car run up front like he'd been doing this for years.
Then Crews' rubber went the same way Day's did. Twenty-sixth place. That's the number. It's the wrong number to focus on.
What Rockingham took from Crews was a result. What Rockingham showed everyone watching is that the kid can drive. The speed is real. The instincts at the front of a race are real. Tire management at this oval distance is something you learn — and now Crews has his first lesson on file.
Look at the résumé before NASCAR even let him through this door. Youngest winner in Trans-Am Series history. Youngest TA2 champion ever, at fifteen years old. The GoPro Motorplex in Mooresville as his proving ground. ARCA wins. CARS Late Model Stock Tour miles. A JGR development program that doesn't hand seats to kids who haven't earned them. This is a kid who climbed.
And now he's eighteen, he's running a full JGR program in the O'Reilly Series, and he just led laps at Rockingham in his first start at this oval class.
Bristol is next — April 11, Dash 4 Cash, $100,000 on the line. Sawalich goes there as a winner. Crews goes there with one more race of oval experience than he had a week ago, and a very clear understanding of what Rockingham's abrasive surface does to tires over a long run.
The kid from Hickory celebrated his birthday at Casa Azteca. Six days later he was leading a national series race at The Rock. He didn't get the result Saturday. But folks, he's just getting started.