| ESPN.com: E60 | [Print without images] |
Cindy McCain doesn't remember all the details. It might have been six years ago. Maybe seven. But this much, at least, McCain recalls with perfect clarity: She was watching television with her oldest son, Jack, when footage flashed across the screen of race cars skidding sideways as though they were on ice.
Looks kind of cool, McCain thought to herself, but how'd they do that? For most people, the curiosity probably would have ended there. But McCain, the wife of the Republican nominee for president, Sen. John McCain, is anything but ordinary. Although a wide swath of the public views her as reserved and distant, she is actually quite the opposite in private. When Cindy McCain, 54, encounters something that intrigues her, she embraces it with the zeal of a toddler on Christmas Eve. And so McCain began to learn as much as possible about this mysterious driving technique. It turned out it was called drifting and had origins tracing back to the mountains of central Japan in the early 1990s. Months after first seeing drifting on television, McCain traveled to Japan with Jack, now a senior at the Naval Academy and an avid fan of motorsports, to take drifting lessons with a top instructor. "I love it," McCain said, though she described herself as a below-average drifter. "I'm probably a little too cautious with it because it is abnormal from what you're taught when you're taught to drive. You're taught to keep control of your car. Everything you were taught in driver's ed, forget. That's what drifting is about."![]() | |
| Jack McCain, left, shown with his father, John, this past December, helped get his mother, Cindy, involved in drift racing. |
In an exclusive interview with E:60's Lisa Salters, Cindy McCain credits her son, Jack, with helping her to recover from a stroke in 2004 by pushing her to drive race cars.
Watch "E:60" at 7 p.m. ET Tuesday on ESPN.
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| Cindy McCain suffered a stroke in April 2004. After she left the Barrow Neurological Institute at St. Joseph's Hospital in Phoenix, she began a course of physical therapy. |
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| Drift racing, or "drifting," refers to a style of racing in which a driver intentionally skids the back of a car through turns, as shown in this 2006 drifting exhibition at the Toyota Grand Prix on the streets of Long Beach, Calif. |