ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: THURSDAY, October 6, 1994                   TAG: 9412010030
SECTION: SPORTS                    PAGE: B1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: BOB ZELLER STAFF WRITE|
DATELINE: CONCORD, N.C.                                 LENGTH: Medium


IRVAN BACK, WITH A WARNING

IN HIS FIRST VISIT to a garage since a life-threatening accident 46 days ago, Ernie Irvan urges NASCAR to slow speeds.

Ernie Irvan came to Charlotte Motor Speedway on Wednesday, visiting a NASCAR Winston Cup garage for the first time since nearly losing his life in a crash in Michigan 46 days ago.

And the message he repeated several times was forceful: Slow the speeds in NASCAR racing.

``I would, obviously, probably be sitting here at Charlotte Motor Speedway getting ready to qualify if we were going 20 mph slower,'' Irvan said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon. ``Obviously, I think the speeds are too fast.''

Noticeably thinner and wearing a patch to protect his injured left eye, the 35-year-old NASCAR Winston Cup star's visit to this 1.5-mile speedway came on a perfect autumn afternoon.

One after another, drivers, mechanics and car owners came in a steady stream to say hello and shake Irvan's hand as he stood next to his Ford Thunderbird and chatted with crew members.

Leonard Wood stopped by, as did Barry Dodson and Jack Roush and Richard Childress and Tony Glover, Irvan's old crew chief, and dozens of others, obviously delighted to speak to a man who came so close to paying the ultimate price for competing in the sport he loves.

And later Irvan met with the media for only the second time since his devastating accident during a morning practice Aug. 20 at Michigan International Speedway, which left him with critical head and lung injuries.

``We don't need to go that fast to put a good show on, and we don't need anybody else injured,'' he said. ``What's going to happen if somebody else gets injured, say Dale [Earnhardt] or Rusty [Wallace] or somebody else like that? How are we going to sell tickets? I don't think we can afford to lose any more drivers, or emotionally, I don't think a lot of people can take anybody else getting injured.

``I want everybody to learn from what's happened to me. NASCAR's doing that. I really want the speeds to slow down.''

Irvan said one of the biggest challenges in his recovery is the injury to his left eye.

``My left eye is just going to take some time for healing,'' he said. ``We don't know. Evidently, my eye was injured all the way to the back of my skull. You get with one doctor and he thinks it might be three months. You get with another doctor and they tell of times it's taken two years. We don't know.''

Irvan said he and his wife, Kim, pray every night that his recovery will be complete enough so he can return to racing. But he seems to accept the possibility it might not happen.

``I've raced all my life,'' he said. ``I was racing when Kim met me, and I probably never would be happy unless I'm racing. But I think I'm going to race again, for sure.

``I feel real fortunate to be alive and do the things that I can do, and the biggest thing I've got to realize is that if God never wanted me to race again, there's something else he wants me to do. So I'm going to have to do that, and that's going to be something I have to live with.''

Irvan said he feels ``pretty good,'' but has to rest every couple of hours. He was released from the Charlotte Institute of Rehabilitation on Friday, but continues outpatient rehab three times a week. He also works out five days a week. He cannot yet drive a car, but said he has driven his tractor and taken his daughter, Jordan, for rides.

He said he gets ``tremendous headaches, '' especially at night. ``I had a lot of skull fractures and they're still healing,'' he said. And he has a broken eardrum, which he said will be repaired in a few weeks by outpatient surgery .

``I sure would like to be feeling a lot better,'' he said. ``But I guess that some of the things I've got to think about is that it's 40-something days from the accident and knowing that Kim had to put up with the doctors walking in and giving me a 10 percent chance of living. I feel like we've made leaps and bounds in the last 40 days and I sure hope in the next 40 days I can do the same.''

Irvan said the support from fans has been unbelievable.

``I've been on the hate part of this sport, for sure, and now I'm kind of on the love part of this sport. It's just phenomenal what [the fans] have done ... ''

Keywords:
AUTO RACING



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