Motorsport News

Greg Van Alst Finishes 6th After Dropping to Part-Time Status

2024 ARCA Berlin Greg Van Alst, No. 35 Van Alst Motorsports Ford (Credit: Zack Silver/ARCA Racing used with permission)

BROOKLYN, Mich. – Greg Van Alst finished sixth in the ARCA Menards Series race at Michigan International Speedway and unofficially stands 71 points out of the lead.

Yet in two days, Van Alst and his self-owned team will skip Sunday’s (Aug. 18) race at the Illinois State Fairgrounds.

“Doesn’t matter,” Van Alst told Frontstretch about where he stands in the points. “They don’t pay enough in points to justify.”

Van Alst has one top five and seven top 10s this season, yet the grind of the year has taken its toll on his organization.

“At the beginning of the year [the races] are spread out, so they’re easier for teams like ours,” he continued. “When you get into the summer months, you start running back-to-back-to-back [and] it makes it tougher.”

While he only has two DNFs, Van Alst estimated those two wrecked racecars took away three races worth of his season’s budget.

Furthermore, Van Alst has fielded Isaac Johnson in a second part-time entry, the No. 34. Johnson has two top 10s in four starts with one more in the works.

“Yeah, if we could bring two cars, the No. 34 is a rental car program like every other car in here, right,” Van Alst said. “Every other car in here is a rental. The No. 35 is not. So, it brings no outside funding at all. I’m not knocking what everybody else does, but that’s what it is. When the No. 35 shows up, it takes money out of what I have, and I only have so much available.”

Indeed, the lack of sponsorship has contributed to Van Alst’s decision to switch to part-time status.

“I guess there’s a misconception in the world that this stuff is easy to do,” he said. “It’s not easy to do. If it was easy there’d be a lot more people here.”

While some organizations have fielded a second entry — often a start and park one — to help fund their seasons, Van Alst does not view it as financially worthwhile.

“I’ll never say no, but at the end of the day it takes X amount of dollars to put a car on the racetrack and most of these deals aren’t enough to put a car on the racetrack,” he noted. “There are guys who want to do it for $5,000. F*ck, I could go build a fence and make more money than that.”

Van Alst Motorsports is a small organization based out of Indiana. It lacks manufacturer support and big-dollar sponsorship, and its members work full-time jobs. The pot finally reached its boiling point.

“At the end of the day, it…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at …