Columbia Regional Sports Council: Buddy Baker Adds Luster to the Love Chevrolet Spring Festival at the Columbia Speedway

Buddy Baker Adds Luster to the Love Chevrolet Spring Festival at the Columbia Speedway

Waxing Frenzy, Lizard’s Thicket and Citadel Broadcasting.

Baker, a son of the two-time national champion Buck Baker, was one of the more spectacular competitors the sport has ever known becoming the first driver to break the 200 mph barrier in a Ray Fox prepared Dodge at Talladega Super Speedway on March 24, 1970. Before that, he competed in his first career race on the half-mile clay oval.

Although Baker has retired from a racing career that spanned 34 seasons, he operates the Buck Baker Racing School. He has worked as one of the more colorful TV commentators and currently hosts a call-in racing show on Sirius satellite radio channel 128. In fact, on his program, he’s stated, “Columbia Speedway was a spectacular place to be, that’s the first track I ever raced on. My dad and I had some kind of great races there against some of the best. I’m looking forward to being there again. I just wish they were still racin’ there. I left there embarrassed lots of times.”

Baker, who scored 17 major speedway NASCAR victories, and 19 overall, is a member of the South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame, the National Motorsports Association Hall of Fame, the International Motorsports Hall of Fame and the Charlotte (Lowes) Motor Speedway Court of Legends.

Other former racers to join Baker at the Spring Festival include Ned Jarrett, “L’il Bud" Moore, Charlie Glotzbach, Haskell Willingham, Paul Lewis, Brownie King, D.K. Ulrich, Neil “Soapy” Castles.

The mission of RacersReunion.com is to help raise awareness and funds for former competitors who need medical or financial assistance.

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