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Shige Hattori, Racer And NASCAR Team Owner, Dies In North Carolina Crash

Shige Hattori, Racer And NASCAR Team Owner, Dies In North Carolina Crash

Forbes07-04-2025

HOMESTEAD, FL - NOVEMBER 16: Brett Moffitt, driver of the #16 AISIN Group Toyota, crew chief Scott ... More Zipadelli and team owner Shigeaki Hattori pose for a photo after winning the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Championship at Homestead-Miami Speedway on November 16, 2018 in Homestead, Florida. (Photo by)
Shigeaki 'Shige' Hattori, the Japanese-born racer who made the unlikely journey from open-wheel hopeful to championship-winning NASCAR team owner, was killed Saturday morning in a three-car crash on I-77 northbound in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. He was 61.
The accident occurred around 9:15 a.m., just outside of Huntersville — a suburb north of Charlotte and very much in the heart of NASCAR country. According to a release from the Huntersville, NC, police Hattori was behind the wheel of a 2025 Toyota Crown when he crossed the center line and collided with oncoming traffic. The crash remains under investigation, but officials have stated that neither speed nor impairment are believed to have been factors.
The news was confirmed Monday by Hattori Racing Enterprises, the team he founded and led for nearly two decades:
'We are heartbroken to confirm that Shigeaki 'Shige' Hattori was pronounced deceased on the morning of Saturday, April 5, in Huntersville, N.C., following a motor vehicle accident. He was 61.'
DAYTONA BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 18: Shigeaki Hattori, driver of the #9 Aisin/Aisin AW Toyota, is ... More kissed by Deborah Renshaw (L), driver of the #8 Easycare Service Contracts Dodge and Kelly Sutton, driver of the Team Coaxone Chevrolet, prior to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Florida Dodge Dealers 250 on February 18, 2005 at the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona, Florida. (Photo by)
'Shige was known for his relentless drive, focus and competitive spirit. Team ownership through HRE and Hattori Motorsports had become both his passion and his life's work. He had a unique gift to constantly inject a light-hearted attitude and one-of-a-kind sense of humor into his race teams that will never be forgotten. We'll miss you dearly. Farewell, Shige.'
NASCAR later issued a statement of its own:
'Shigeaki Hattori was a passionate racer and highly successful team owner, but beyond all his team's statistics – which includes a NASCAR Truck Series championship – Shige was a genuine, beloved member of the garage who worked tirelessly to lift our sport and his people. We are deeply saddened by his tragic passing. NASCAR extends its thoughts and prayers to his family and many friends.'
In a sport that thrives on big personalities and bigger budgets, Hattori was the sort of figure who earned respect the old-fashioned way — through perseverance, hustle, and an unshakable belief that he belonged. And, against the odds, he did more than just belong. He won.
Born in Okayama, Japan, Hattori began his racing career on the open-wheel circuits of his home country before taking a giant leap across the Pacific to chase his dreams in America. He landed in the Indy Lights series in 1995, won twice, and made the climb to CART and the Indy Racing League. His résumé won't set any speed records — 26 IRL starts, 28 laps led, a best finish of sixth at Texas — but it's a testament to his tenacity. The man had guts.
Shigeaki Hattori of Japan is helped out of his car after qualifying 19 May 2002 at the Indianapolis ... More Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, IN. The 86th running of the 500 will be held on 26 May. AFP PHOTO/Ann MILLER CARR (Photo by - / AFP) (Photo credit should read -/AFP via Getty Images)
In 2004 and 2005, he even tried his hand behind the wheel in NASCAR's Truck Series — a fish-out-of-water moment for a Japanese driver in what was then a very Southern, very V8 world. But it was team ownership, not driving, where Hattori found his true calling.
In 2008, he founded Hattori Racing Enterprises (HRE), a plucky little outfit that over the next 15 years would become a staple of the NASCAR Truck Series garage. The team earned 14 wins in total — many with Brett Moffitt and Austin Hill — but their crowning achievement came in 2018, when Moffitt delivered Hattori his first and only NASCAR championship.
It was an underdog story so improbable it practically begged for a movie adaptation. A Japanese businessman with a Formula Nippon background, running Toyotas in NASCAR, taking on the juggernauts like ThorSport and Kyle Busch Motorsports — and winning. Not with flashy sponsors or million-dollar facilities, but with razor-sharp strategy, solid engineering, and one very determined team owner at the helm.
Hattori's approach was all heart and hustle. He wasn't just calling the shots from the hauler — he was hands-on, sleeves-up, and fluent in every facet of racing life. Those who worked with him speak not just of his racing mind, but his humor, his warmth, and a work ethic that bordered on legendary.
DAYTONA BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 18: Shigeaki Hattori, driver of the Aisin/Aisin AW Toyota, poses for a ... More photo prior to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Florida Dodge Dealers 250 on February 18, 2005 at the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona, Florida. (Photo by)
In many ways, Shige Hattori was the embodiment of the American dream — not because he was born here, but because he arrived with nothing and still managed to climb to the top of one of America's toughest sports. He came to race, he stayed to build, and he left a legacy.
Motorsports, like life, doesn't always reward the most deserving. But for once, in 2018, it did. Shige got his championship. And now, tragically, it's time to say goodbye to a man who lived for racing — and, more than most, helped redefine what it meant to be a racer in America.
And now he's gone. Taken not by a wall at Daytona or a mechanical failure at 200 mph, but by the same random, cruel chaos that takes too many lives on American roads every day.
Godspeed, Shige.

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