Jayhawk tour: NASCAR driver and Emporia native Bowyer visits KU facilities

By Gary Bedore     Aug 24, 2010

Richard Gwin
NASCAR driver Clint Bowyer exchanges helmets with Kansas football coach Turner Gill during a tour of the Anderson Family Football Complex on Tuesday.

NASCAR superstar Clint Bowyer sat at the desk of Bill Self on Tuesday afternoon, and, with a big smile on his face, signed a driver’s helmet for Kansas University’s basketball coach.

“It’s a lot more comfortable,” Bowyer said, comparing Self’s seat to the one in Bowyer’s famed race car No. 33.

“Actually, I felt not near as safe in it as I do in my car, I can promise you that. I was waiting for him to walk in and be like, ‘Who the hell is this guy? Beat it, boy,”’ Bowyer added.

Rest assured, Self — he was in Kansas City at a meeting of the National Association of Basketball Coaches — would have been as happy to see Emporia native Bowyer as were Jayhawk football coach Turner Gill, basketball assistant Danny Manning, women’s basketball coach Bonnie Henrickson, associate AD John Hadl and the many other KU staffers who met Bowyer during tours of KU’s football and basketball facilities.

“I was looking forward to going into Allen Fieldhouse and seeing the basketball side of it. I’m a big basketball fan,” said Bowyer, who, after meeting KU’s players in the locker room, hit one of two free throw attempts on the famed fieldhouse floor.

“It’s very interesting to learn how everything gets to what you see on game day,” added the 31-year-old Bowyer. He attended Flint Hills Technical College after graduating from Emporia High. “It’s no different from our sport. On race day, there’s a lot that goes into that. To be able to learn how a football program works … what makes a football program successful and basketball program … that was pretty cool.”

Bowyer’s tour started at KU’s Anderson Family Football Complex where Bowyer presented Gill a racing helmet and received a football jersey — with No. 33 — and a football helmet in return.

Upon entering the complex, Bowyer was handed some more KU gear by an equipment manager.

“I appreciate you wearing that KU stuff. That’s good,” Gill said to Bowyer, a sixth-year veteran of the Sprint Car Series, who wore a Jayhawk logo on his car during the 2008 season following KU’s national championship victory over Memphis.

“Keep sending it. That makes me proud,” responded Bowyer, who now lives in Winston-Salem, N.C.

“It’s pretty easy when they are winning. I jumped on the bandwagon a long time ago,” said Bowyer, who attended some KU basketball games as a youth, but hasn’t been back for a game in many years.

He promised to be on hand for a home game this season.

“A lot of my friends went to KU. When I moved to North Carolina and realized how many North Carolina fans were there, I was like, ‘Boy is this going to be good. This is an opportunity to be different.’

“I’ve thought I was going to get thrown out of a couple bars one way or another the last couple years. We’ve had a lot of fun with it. I take a lot of pride in KU.”

Bowyer headed to Allen Fieldhouse after inspecting the turf at Memorial Stadium.

Danny Manning presented Bowyer a No. 33 basketball jersey, then director of basketball operations Barry Hinson took over as tour guide — the first stop Self’s office.

Hinson showed Bowyer a 2008 NCAA title ring. Next, he introduced Bowyer to women’s hoop coach Henrickson, who informed the racer that her family members were huge racing fans.

Henrickson posed for a photo with Bowyer that she planned on shipping to relatives back in Minnesota.

In the KU men’s locker room, Bowyer visited with walk-on Jordan Juenemann, who told Bowyer he was “a big fan.”

Markieff Morris, who first indicated he was “a big Jeff Gordon fan” shook Bowyer’s hand as did Tyshawn Taylor, who told Bowyer, “good luck with that dangerous driving, man.”

“I don’t know how dangerous it is — sometimes,” Bowyer responded.

The tour concluded in front of the Phog Allen statue in front of the building.

With two races left in the “regular season,” Bowyer ranks 12th in the 2010 Sprint Cup Standings. Each year, 12 drivers earn the right to race for the championship. Bowyer will race next on Sept. 5 in Atlanta.

He’ll be back for the Price Chopper 400 on Oct. 3 at Kansas Speedway.

“I’m a Kansas kid. I wish we could race at home every week,” Bowyer said. “Everybody in the garage loves coming to Kansas Speedway.”

Notes: KU’s Select a Seat program for basketball tickets began on Monday. Some of the ticket-buyers watched as Bowyer posed for pictures at the Phog Allen statue. … Former KU guard Xavier Henry was spotted on campus Tuesday, a week after his brother C.J. announced he was leaving the Jayhawk team. Xavier Henry, who has yet to sign his rookie contract with the NBA’s Memphis Grizzlies, was to play pick-up basketball with the KU team Tuesday. … Braxton Ogbueze, a 6-foot point junior point guard from United Faith Christian Academy in Charlotte, N.C., tells Rivals.com he will make an unofficial recruiting visit to KU, possibly for Late Night in the Phog. The No. 56-rated player in the Class of 2012 says he’s received scholarship offers from KU, Clemson, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest and others.

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