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GNC Live Well Racing Crewmen Head Home
-Michigan Natives Gary Cogswell and Bryan Smith Return to Great Lakes State-
CONCORD, N.C. (August 13) - GNC Live Well Racing crew chief Gary Cogswell
and car chief Bryan Smith might not click their heels three times to get
there, but both agree, "There's no place like home."
Cogswell and Smith, who help field the No. 36 GNC Live Well Dodge Intrepid
for driver Hank Parker Jr. in the NASCAR Busch Series (NBS), are always glad
to get back to their home state of Michigan. The two will get a chance to
visit old haunts and catch up with old friends when the Busch Series visits
Michigan International Speedway (MIS) for the Cabela's 250 NBS event on
Saturday.
Cogswell, who hails from Eaton Rapids, has had a love affair with auto
racing dating back to his childhood in Michigan.
"When I was a kid, my dad worked on Super Modifieds at the old Lansing
(Spartan) Speedway," Cogswell said of his early exposure to racing. "While I
was attending Holt High School, I was always tinkering on cars and working
on engines. When I got older, I started helping a guy named John Donovan,
who raced at Spartan Speedway."
With his interest in all things automotive, it seemed natural that Cogswell
would make his living as a mechanic at car dealerships around Lansing, Mich.
"I worked at Bud Kouts Chevrolet and Capitol Cadillac to put food on the
table," Cogswell said. "I'd do a little drag racing at Onandaga Dragway on
Friday nights, so I'd finance that by fixing other people's racecars at
night during the week."
In addition to his short-track and drag racing experiences, Cogswell's
interest in motorsports was also fueled by visits to nearby Michigan
International Speedway.
"Michigan (MIS) is the first place I ever saw NASCAR racing," Cogswell
remembers. "That was back in the days of Richard Petty, Benny Parsons and
Cale Yarborough. They were all driving those boxy Monte Carlos and stuff. I
would sit there and watch them and think, 'I ought to do this for a living.'
I only thought about it for about 18 years before I did something about it."
In 1991, after much soul searching, the 36 year-old Cogswell made the
fateful choice to pack up his family and head for North Carolina.
"I didn't have any job leads when I moved to Charlotte," Cogswell said. "I
didn't know a soul, which was kind of scary. I had confidence in my
abilities as a mechanic, though. I figured that if I knocked on enough doors
and kept after it, I'd eventually get my chance."
Finding work at a Charlotte-area Chevy dealership, Cogswell began contacting
race shops, eventually accepting an unpaid position with Rypien Motorsports
and driver Chad Little. Cogswell would work all day at the dealership to
earn a living, then head over to the race shop to work on cars every
evening.
When sponsorship was found for the team, Cogswell became Rypien Motorsports'
first full-time employee, and never looked back. The Cogswell-Little
combination eventually yielded six wins and 25 top-five finishes in four
seasons of NBS competition.
Since that time, Cogswell has worked as crew chief for a number of
high-profile NASCAR drivers, including Mike McLaughlin, Johnny Benson, Matt
Kenseth and Buckshot Jones, before taking the reins of the No. 36 GNC Live
Well Racing team in September 2001.
The team, with driver Hank Parker Jr., visited victory lane for the first
time together earlier this season at Pike's Peak International Raceway in
Colorado.
With the Michigan NBS event on tap for this weekend, Cogswell says he'll try
to build in extra time in his itinerary to explore his home state.
"I think it's a gorgeous area," Cogswell said. "I tell people in North
Carolina that they don't know what a real lake is until they've seen one of
the Great Lakes. I took my wife, Jennie, to see Lake Michigan last year, and
I don't think she was prepared for it. It took her breath away."
Smith, a native of Lansing, remembers meeting Cogswell around 1991, when
they both still resided in the Michigan area.
"I used to work at a place called Bud's Auto Parts in Mason, Mich.," Smith
said. "Gary (Cogswell) used to come in and buy parts from me all the time. I
knew he had moved away to try and work in NASCAR, but I had no idea at the
time that I'd be following him a few months later."
Like Cogswell, Smith developed a love for cars and racing at an early age.
He found a kindred spirit in a nearby neighbor, Tim Fedewa, who would
eventually go on to compete in the NASCAR Busch Series.
Fedewa's father, Butch, was a local driver who raced Late Model Stocks and
Super Modifieds at area tracks. Smith's father helped the elder Fedewa
prepare his racecars, and the two sons became fast friends.
"Tim and I have known each other a long time," Smith says of his childhood
friend. "He and I traded a snowmobile and some cash to buy his first race
car. I grew up helping him work on his cars. He drove them and I fixed them.
It was that way for a long time."
Following his graduation from Holt High School, Smith earned an Associate
Degree in Automotive Service Technology from nearby Ferris State University
in Big Rapids, Mich. He worked at Sundance Chevrolet in Grand Ledge, Mich.,
while continuing to assist Fedewa in his racing career.
In 1992, Fedewa had made the jump to the American Speed Association (ASA),
and almost the entire team picked up and moved to the Charlotte, N.C., area.
Smith and his new wife, Penny, were among those who made the move.
Fedewa and Smith continued to work together, eventually ending up at the
three-team operation of Cicci-Welliver Motorsports, where Fedewa drove the
No. 36 NBS car with sponsorship from Stanley Tools. When Fedewa moved from
the No. 36 to the team's No. 66 entry following the 2000 season, Smith
elected to stay put.
"I was comfortable with the guys on the team and with my situation," Smith
said of his decision to part ways with Fedewa. "It's not like Tim and I were
mad at each other or anything. The 66 team was still intact from the season
before, so there was no need to go shaking things up by moving people
around. Tim just moved over about 20 yards across the shop floor from me.
We're still great friends."
Enter driver Hank Parker Jr. and a new sponsor, GNC Live Well, who have both
been with the team for the past two seasons.
While Smith, wife, Penny, and their two children may call North Carolina
home, most of his family still lives in the Michigan area. Each trip to MIS
gives him an opportunity to spend a little time with friends and loved ones.
"Dad doesn't live too far away from the track, so I'll stay with him and
just drive back and forth," Smith said of his sleeping accommodations while
in Michigan. "My mom, my sister and my grandmother all still live in the
area, so I can see them all in one visit. I get up here every year, so it's
not like the area has changed drastically from the last time I saw it.
Still, there's no feeling like coming home."
Cogswell, Smith and the rest of the GNC Live Well Racing team can be seen in
action in Saturday's Cabela's 250 NBS event at Michigan International
Speedway. That event will air live on TNT and MRN, Saturday, August 17, at
1:30 p.m. EDT.
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