Ray Hendrick's Hall of Fame Nod: The Man Who Proved Racing Anywhere Meant Something
Hendrick wasn't a one-series guy—he ran modifieds, short-tracks, dirt, asphalt, whatever was there. That approach to racing, the willingness to compete in anything with wheels, built a career that NASCAR finally recognized. It's the anti-specialist play that somehow became the most authentic resume in the sport.
Hall of Fame voters finally getting it right: the guys who raced everything matter more than the guys who perfected one thing.