NASHVILLE — Michael Waltrip, a former NASCAR driver whose career included two Daytona 500 victories, has joined the ownership group of the Nashville Kats, a founding franchise of the Arena Football 1 league.
The Kats announced the 62-year-old Waltrip joining the group Friday along with his craft beer company, Michael Waltrip Brewing. The ownership group already includes former NFL coaches Jon Gruden, 61, and Jeff Fisher, 67, with the latter the majority owner and team president, as well as the AF1 commissioner.
Gruden coached the Oakland Raiders from 1998 to 2001, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 2002-08 and the Oakland Raiders from 2018-21, while Fisher coached the Houston Oilers from 1994-96, the Tennessee Oilers from 1997-98, the Tennessee Titans from 1999-2010, the St. Louis Rams from 2012-15 and the Los Angeles Rams in 2016.
Gruden’s first season in Tampa Bay culminated with the Bucs winning Super Bowl XXXVII in their first appearance in the NFL’s title matchup. Fisher led the Titans to Super Bowl XXXIV to cap the 1999 season, and it remains the franchise’s lone appearance in the big game.
Waltrip drove in NASCAR’s top-tier Cup Series on a full-time basis from 1985 to 2009 and continued to race occasionally through 2017. He won the Daytona 500 — the prestigious season opener often referred to as “NASCAR’s Super Bowl” — in 2001 and 2003.
“We now have three living legends attached to the Nashville Kats — Jeff Fisher, Jon Gruden, and Michael Waltrip — all with the ultimate goal to win championships and raise the AF1 to its ultimate potential along with any team associated with the AF1,” Bobby DeVoursney, the CEO and managing partner of the Kats, said in a team release announcing the move.
Waltrip’s brewery now is the team’s official craft beer. The team also plans a “Waltrip Winner’s Circle” fan zone for the upcoming season.
The Kats, who played in the Arena Football League last season, will face the Southwest Kansas Storm in the AF1 semifinals Sunday at F&M Bank Arena in Clarksville.