CONCORD, N.C. — Eddie Gossage, the longtime head of Texas Motor Speedway and an old-school promoter mentored by stock car racing's pioneers, has died, Speedway Motorsports announced Thursday night. He was 65.
Gossage stepped down three years ago after 25 years as president of the track in Fort Worth, Texas. In all, Gossage spent 32 years working for Speedway Motorsports, learning the art of selling tickets, packing grandstands and turning races into must-see spectacles from company founder Bruton Smith and longtime executive Humpy Wheeler.
''There was nothing too crazy for Eddie,'' IndyCar team owner Bobby Rahal said Friday. ''There was nothing too extreme for Eddie in terms of promotions at the races. He was a promoter. You don't see that often anymore. Most people, yeah, they rent the track out and that's it, and then complain about not enough spectators coming or something. He was a promoter.''
Gossage had worked for Miller Brewing Co. in motorsports management before joining Speedway Motorsports in 1989. He was still a young public relations director three years later when, during a news conference to promote NASCAR's first nighttime All-Star race — appropriately billed ''One Hot Night'' — one of his stunts literally set Smith's hair on fire.
Smith was tasked with throwing a giant light switch rigged by Gossage to highlight the speedway's new lighting system. But it shorted out and sparks flew, and Gossage once recalled, ''I thought I was headed for the unemployment line for sure.''
''But for some reason, Bruton kept me around," Gossage said several years ago, "and it wasn't long after that he gave me an opportunity I could have only dreamed of.''
Smith had begun buying land in North Texas, and he sent Gossage from Charlotte to Fort Worth in 1995 to oversee the project as general manager. Texas Motor Speedway opened two years later for its first NASCAR race, and soon it became one of the premier entertainment facilities in the country, along with a centerpiece of the Speedway Motorsports portfolio.
The 1,500-acre complex includes the 1.5-mile superspeedway, 194 luxury suites, 76 condominiums, a nine-story Speedway Club, office space and the 11,000-seat Texas Motor Speedway Dirt Track.