| JEFF
PURVIS PREPARES TO DRIVE A RACE CAR AGAIN WITH A NEW ATTITUDE AFTER
HIGHWAY ACCIDENT
CLARKSVILLE,
TN –
After a highway accident
six months ago left him seriously injured, National Dirt Late Model
Hall of Fame inductee Jeff Purvis is now back to his day-to-day
routine running his scrap metal business in Clarksville.
He is preparing to drive a race car again, but his attitude is
different.
Purvis is recovering from a broken neck for the second time in
four years. The first neck
injury occurred during a NASCAR Busch Grand National event at
Nazareth
,
PA
in 2002.
This second injury occurred on
August 5, 2006
while Purvis, his crew, and
members of his family were traveling to a StormPay.com Dirt Late Model
Series race in
Eastaboga
,
AL
.
“It’s one thing to wreck in a race car when no one is with
you, but it’s another thing to wreck when your family is with
you,” Purvis said. “It
really makes you think about where your priorities are in life.
It’s like if I wasn’t racing, maybe we wouldn’t have been
in that situation at that time.”
Purvis was by himself when he had his near-fatal wreck in a
race car at
Nazareth
,
PA.
It was a wreck Purvis said he has no recollection of, or the
entire weekend around it. It
was a wreck that took him over two years to recover from.
The highway wreck was different.
Purvis can recall every detail of what occurred inside the
transporter during the wreck.
“The wreck probably took eight seconds to happen from start
to finish,” Purvis said. “But
it seemed like minutes. Time
seemed to slow down, and to totally describe what happened could take
hours.”
Purvis, his wife Margo, his 16-year-old son Clay, his crew
chief Matt Angel, Angel’s brother Rocky, and crew member Ben Britt
were riding in the race team’s toterhome, a semi tractor with living
quarters attached, that was pulling the race team’s trailer loaded
with the race car, spare parts, and equipment.
They were traveling southbound on I-65 near
Cullman
,
AL
.
“Margo and I were sitting on the couch, Ben was sitting at
the table across from us, Clay was sleeping in the bunk above the cab
of the truck, Matt was driving, and Rocky was to his right in the
passenger seat,” Purvis said. “Ben
had just got up to get a bottle of water out of the refrigerator when
I heard the tire blow. I
immediately knew it was a left front because the hauler immediately
veered to the left and into the median strip.”
While it was Jeff Purvis the racer that immediately knew what
the problem was due to his experience and instinct, in the next split
second, all of that changed. The
fate of Jeff Purvis and those around him were now in God’s hands.
They were now passengers of fate.
Fate doesn’t care that you’re in the National Dirt Late
Model Hall of Fame. Fate
doesn’t care how many World 100s you’ve won.
Fate doesn’t care how many NASCAR races you’ve won.
Jeff Purvis couldn’t get out of this wreck with a quick jerk
of the steering wheel, or a quick jab of the brakes.
There was only one thing Jeff Purvis wanted to do, and knew he
had to do at this time. Fate
had caused the racer instincts – with all of the fame and success
– to leave, and for the most important instinct Jeff Purvis had to
take over. Jeff Purvis’
instincts as a father took over.
“I knew I had to get Clay out of the bunk over the cab of the
truck because if the truck got upside down, that would not be a good
place to be,” Purvis said. “He
was asleep when everything started, and we were all yelling for him to
get out of there. I jumped
up, went for the front of the truck, and lifted my arms up to pull him
out.”
Purvis said at that instant, things got worse, as the truck and
trailer hit the side of a crossover culvert in the median strip.
“When we hit the culvert, the truck made a sudden stop, and
Ben, who was behind me at the refrigerator, came flying forward,”
Purvis said. “When he
hit me, I broke my back, but him hitting me prevented him from going
straight through the windshield. After
we hit the culvert, the truck started going up and it was real
quiet.”
This is another situation an experienced race car driver knows.
When you’re going up and it gets quiet, you know you’ve
left the ground and you’re airborne.
“I was still trying to get Clay out of the bunk even though
we were airborne, and even though my back was broken,” Purvis said.
“About the time we landed in the northbound lane of the
interstate, we simultaneously hit a northbound car and the guardrail.
That was a big hit, and that was when I broke my neck.”
The thing that Purvis feared, the truck getting upside down,
was beginning to happen, as the hauler got up on its side after
hitting, and going through the guardrail.
“I was still trying to get Clay, and we were on our side,”
Purvis recalled. “I
remember looking over at Margo, who was pinned against the side of the
toterhome. She asked me if
it was over, but I knew we were still carrying a lot of speed.
I told her no, and it was about then that we started hitting
trees.”
The big rig had hit a culvert, another vehicle, and a steel
guard rail, but was still moving.
Purvis said the trees were no match for the rig.
“The trees stopped the rig pretty quickly, and the last
movement I remember was when the truck rolled back down on its wheels
because that’s when I knew I was hurt,” Purvis said.
“When the track landed on its wheels, Clay rolled out of the
bunk on his own. It was
about then the rig caught fire.”
Purvis said Matt Angel began helping everyone out of the rig in
quick order. Purvis was
the most seriously injured person in the wreck with a broken neck,
broken back, and a bad cut on his head.
With the truck on fire, there was no time to strap Purvis to a
backboard to immobilize his body to protect his injuries.
“There were trees and branches everywhere inside the
toterhome, and it looked like a tornado went through there,” Purvis
said. “The pain I felt
when I jumped from the truck to the ground was pretty intense.
Someone had stopped with a travel trailer, and they got me in
there where I could lay down until the medics got there.”
All of the occupants in the rig escaped with their lives, but
the rig, and all of its contents, including the race car and the
equipment, were totally destroyed and burned to the ground.
It’s been six months since that fateful day, and Purvis said
Margo, Clay, Matt, Rocky, and Ben have all recovered from their
injuries. As for himself,
Purvis said he feels the after effects everyday, but he’s O.K. with
that.
“I’m doing pretty good, but I’m sore everyday,” Purvis
said. “I’m just glad
to feel it because it could have been a lot worse.
I’m still here, I go to work everyday, and I’m very
thankful that everyone else is O.K.”
Purvis has lots of fans, and the number one question they ask
is whether or not Purvis will race again.
Purvis said this is also a question he has asked himself during
the last six months. In
the last six months, Purvis has had a lot of time to reflect on his
life, his family, and his career.
“When you go through what I went through with my family
riding down that interstate, racing doesn’t seem that important,”
Purvis said. “After it
happened, I blamed myself for putting them in that position, and if I
wasn’t going to a race, we might not have been there.
I’m still able to come to the scrap yard, and run it.
That’s what puts food on our table, and clothes on our
back.”
Even though Purvis has put more emphasis on his business, there
is still a big place in his heart for racing, not just in his heart,
but now Clay has been bitten by the racing bug.
“I still love racing, and I still want to drive a race car
again,” Purvis said. “But
I think my priorities about racing are changing because Clay now wants
to race,” Purvis said. “I’ve
told him I’ll help him as long as he realizes his priorities are
here working with me at the scrap yard.
This will be his someday, and I want him to take an interest in
it. As long as he comes
here to work, I’ll help him with his racing.”
Purvis said he is going to prepare a crate late model for Clay
to drive in StormPay.com Weekly Racing Series competition during the
2007 season.
As for himself driving a race car, Purvis said he will climb
behind the wheel of a dirt late model again in March, and said he is
going to take someone with him.
“The StormPay.com Dirt Late Model Series Director Mike Vaughn
asked me to drive their two-seat dirt late model at
Deep South
Speedway
in
Loxley
,
AL
on March 16-17 to benefit the
American Cancer Society,” Purvis said.
“These are two things I really believe in, and I think it’s
pretty neat that when I drive a race car again, I can take somebody
with me to share the experience.”
Purvis was one of Vaughn’s biggest supporters when the latter
began the StormPay.com Dirt Late Model Series in 2005 when it was
called Crate Racin’
USA
.
Purvis finished sixth in the 2005 point standings, and was
seventh in the 2006 point standings at the time of his accident.
“The StormPay.com Dirt Late Model Series and affordable crate
late model engines have come along just at the right time,” Purvis
said. “Super Late Model
racing was becoming too expensive for the average weekly racer, and
that’s where drivers come from to race nationally.
I started out as a weekly racer, and if I had to start racing
now, there is no way I could do it with the engines as expensive as
they are. I believe in the
StormPay.com Dirt Late Model Series and what it is trying to
accomplish in the industry.”
There is also a very special place in the heart of Jeff Purvis
for the American Cancer Society, and its cause.
“My wife Margo is Vice President of the American Cancer
Society Chapter here in
Clarksville
, and we’re both very active
in this cause,” Purvis said. “All
of the money they collect goes to research in trying to find a cure
for cancer. I want to cure
it. I’m no doctor or
scientist, so they’ll have to find it, but if I can play a role to
help them, I’m more than happy to do it.
I’m thankful that I have the ability to do something that can
raise money.”
Fans will be able to bid for rides with Purvis in the special
two-seat dirt late model at
Deep South
Speedway
in
Loxley
,
AL
on March 16-17.
“Although we hated that Jeff, his family and his crew were
involved in the highway accident, we’re happy that everyone is O.K.,
and that Jeff is ready to get back behind the wheel of a race car
again,” Vaughn said. “We
have always been appreciative of Jeff’s support of the StormPay.com
Dirt Late Model Series, and we’re happy Jeff has decided to join us
in an effort to raise money for the American Cancer Society.
We’re also looking forward to working with Jeff in launching
Clay’s racing career this season.”
While the after effects of what happened to Jeff Purvis on
August 5, 2006 are still felt by him when he gets up in the morning,
it has also given him reason to be thankful for his family, his
friends, and his fans.
“I hurt when I get up in the morning, but it hurts so good
because I’m still alive to feel it,” Purvis said.
“I thank God that I’m still alive, Margo and Clay are still
alive, and Matt, Rocky and Ben are still alive.
I am also very thankful for all of the friends and race fans
that checked on me, and have asked about me over the past six months.
There have been thousands of visits, phone calls, E-mails,
cards, letters, and Internet responses from all over the world.
We are so thankful for each and every one of them.”
As far as racing goes, even though he will drive again in the
two-seater charity runs and help his son Clay launch his career, the
question still remains whether or not Jeff Purvis will race
competitively again. According
to Purvis, it’s not as much of a priority as it used to be.
“After what me and my family went through in the wreck, I’m
so thankful that we’re still alive, and I can come to work and
provide for them,” Purvis said.
“I have a good and successful business that can provide for
my family and give Clay a good future, and that’s the main priority.
I still love racing, but after the wreck it’s just not as
important as it used to be. I’d
like to race competitively again because I wasn’t hurt on the track
this time, and if the time and place is right, I might do it again,
but right now, there is no plan to do so.”
Jeff Purvis is still alive thanks to God’s grace.
He is still alive to provide for his family, and to contribute
in the fight to cure cancer. In
everything that has happened to Jeff Purvis since 2002, should he ever
be called by God to become an Evangelist, what a testimony God has
given him to share with others.
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