ESPN’s Outside the Lines to Examine Diversity in NASCAR
Excerpts from Sunday's Outside the Lines:
"It's a hostile work environment. It took a lot of emotional blows. I would have to gear up in the morning to get prepared for that." — Mauricia Grant, NASCAR's first African-American official whose job it was to inspect cars, call penalties and supervise the pit box.
"On any given day there is some thing — or some action or somebody — that does something that could be perceived as insensitive." — Max Siegel, the President of Global Operations for Dale Earnhardt, Incorporated
"There are a lot of apprehensions because you have the people — sometimes it's the 'old schoolers,' some of the older gentleman that are in the sport — that say women aren't supposed to work on race cars, they don't know what they're doing, they doubt you." — Katie Muir, a 24-year-old shock specialist for the #88 car in the Nationwide series.
"I can tell you from my 20 years I didn't have that feeling, I never was harassed that way. You know no one ever touched me inappropriately or did anything out of the ordinary. I demanded respect." — Lisa Smokstad, a tire specialist for Hendrick Motorsports in the Sprint Cup Series.