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W.R. 'Bob' Slack has passed away

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Motorama 2016, left to right: Junior Hanley, Bobby Allison and Bob Slack

HAMILTON, ON - W.R. 'Bob' Slack, the legendary co-owner and promoter of Cayuga Speedway passed away today after a short illness. He suffered a heart attack while dancing on Saturday night. Mr. Slack was 88.

Inducted into the Canadian Motorsports Hall of Fame with his wife Leone, the Slacks put on stock car races in front of massive crowds, often featuring some of NASCAR's biggest American stars.

In one of his final public racing-related appearances, Mr. Slack took part in a panel discussion at the Motorama Custom Car & Motorsports Expo in March of 2016, sitting alongside of Bobby Allison and Junior Hanley.

The family will share the arrangements once they've been finalized.

Inside Track extends its condolences to the family and friends of Mr. Bob Slack.

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PHOTOS: Taken at Cayuga Speedway (now Jukasa Speedway) in October 2014. Photos by Dave Franks. As serious construction was about to begin, Mr. Slack was at the track to talk about the past and the future. When it was time to go, Mr. Slack jumped into his Buick and turned some laps (at pretty good speed).

{gallery}Bob Slack Oct 2014 Dave Franks{/gallery}

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UPDATE: Below is the Slacks' induction write-up from 2002 from the Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame:

INDUCTED 2002 – SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTOR – STOCK CAR RACING

As Hall of Fame member Ernie McLean earned induction as the man who built stock car racing in New Brunswick, so Bob Slack, and his wife Leone, became known as the couple who built the “Charlotte of the North,” Ontario’s Cayuga Speedway. Commitment, dedication and hard work were the trademarks of Bob and Leone Slack. Their devotion and loving care, along with an emphasis on taking care of the fans as well as the competitors, established Cayuga as one of the premier short tracks in North America. As H.A. “Humpy” Wheeler, president and general manager of the Lowe’s Motor Speedway at Charlotte, put it, “If ever there were promoters who truly put the fans first, it was Bob and Leone Slack while at the helm of the Cayuga Speedway.” It was 1967 when Bob, known as the Lumber King of Caledonia, took over Cayuga, which had fallen on hard times. He said he knew nothing about racing, but he was a fast learner. Within three years, Bob and Leone were promoting the two biggest oval track events held in Canada to that point — the Thrush 200 and the Maple Leaf 250. It was the Slack’s who dreamed up the idea of bringing in top NASCAR stars to battle local and regional Canadian and northern U.S. stars. Bobby Allison was his first guest in 1972, and it’s a Cayuga tradition to this day. Others to take on the locals have included Dale Earnhardt, Buddy Baker, Donnie Allison, Rusty Wallace, Alan Kulwicki, Mark Martin, Bill Elliott and Sterling Marlin. And the locals learned well. Names like Hall-of-Famers Junior Hanley, Earl Ross and Don Biederman would refine their talents at the Cayuga oval and then head south of the border. The Slack’s were promoting pioneers, bringing in the ASA stock cars, the Big Rig racers and the Busch North series. Usually, Cayuga would mark the first, and sometimes only, Canadian appearance by major series. They even dared to bring the USAC sprint cars into what was stock car country and featured the likes of Gary Bettenhausen, Larry Dickson, Tom Bigelow and the late Rich Vogler. Amenities were the order of the day at Cayuga ? an up-to-date press facility, corporate suites and a new, massive grandstand with good food and good washrooms made Cayuga stand out as a first-class facility. The business downturn of the early 90s caught up with Bob and Leone and they sold Cayuga Speedway. But their legacy lives on, and current owners and promoters, Brad Lichty and Garry Evans, are the first to say, when confronted with a problem or the puzzle of a promotion, “What would Bob and Leone Slack do?”


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