In 2021, Daison Pursley was racing a midget car in Arizona when his entire life changed. Battling another driver for a chance to make it to the next round, he crashed, his car flipping several times in an accident that left the then-17-year-old with a broken neck, his C4 vertebra completely shattered. At the hospital, doctors rushed him into surgery. Pursley woke up to learn that he was now an āincomplete quadriplegicā ā a term for partial paralysis in all four limbs.
Pursley, blessedly, doesnāt remember much from that horrifying moment.Ā
āI got caught up against the fence with another car into (Turn) 3 on a really fast track for midget cars,ā he says. āI went end-over-end several times. I donāt remember the wreck, really ā I was knocked out.ā
Pursley does remember the long road heās traveled from then until now.Ā
Pursley in the hospital
āI was paralyzed completely after surgery,ā he says. āItās been years of rehab. āNow, my left side is definitely a little bit weaker than my right. As far as getting inside of a race car, I donāt really notice it at all, but if you ask me to pick up a quarter off the ground with my right or left hand, you would definitely see it.ā
You heard that correctly: a few years after breaking his neck and waking up to be told he had paralysis, Pursley is back to racing. āThereās been a lot of doctors, and everyone, just tell me Iām a miracle,ā he says.Ā
This week, heās behind the wheel of a midget racer again, taking on the Chili Bowl in Tulsa, Oklahoma. But the road ā or, maybe, the dirt track āĀ that Pursley took to get here has been filled with anything but easy laps.
āSome people are luckyā
It took about a week for the feeling to come back in his right leg, remembers Pursley. Slowly, he regained sensation throughout his entire body. But the one thing that was strong from the moment he could talk: his will to get back into a race car.Ā
āAs soon as that ventilator came out, he was telling us, āWhen I race again, when I race again,'ā remembers his mother, Shawnda. āDid we believe he was going to race again? No, not at that hour. We were just hoping he was having a little bit of hope.ā
Shawnda stayed by her sonās side through the hard days in the hospital and beyond. āDaisonās determination was so huge that I knew we had to get him into the best places to continue his healing process. It was a journey that I wish upon nobody āĀ but it is not a journey I would tell you I wish we didnāt take. Everything that has happened, has happened for a reason.ā
Pursley during his recovery
Pursley, of course, had to build himself back up. But he also discovered he had more people in his corner than he anticipated. He heard words of encouragement from friends and family, of course ā and new friends, too. Justin Grant (2022 USAC sprint car champion) and NASCAR driver J.J. Yeley reached out. So did strangers.Ā
āI say it every time: Thank you isnāt enough for the people that ā whether it was on Facebook, the racing community ā reached out and helped,ā says Pursley. āMost people have no idea how much it meant to me when they would just reach out and send, like, āGet well soonā or whatever kind of message. It meant a lot to me.āĀ
āAnd thatās what drove me to get out of bed and climb back into one of those animals out there,ā he says, pointing at the track in Tulsa.
One person in particular helped Pursley understand what lay ahead for him as he laid in that hospital bed.
āA good source that we had was Dr. [Terry] Trammell with IndyCar,ā says Pursley. āHe reached out to us and told us to get in touch with Robert Wickens during the early stages, because we didnāt know what it was going to look like.āĀ
Robert Wickens suffered a crash in IndyCar at Pocono in 2018 left him paralyzed from the waist down. Wickens was able to get back behind the wheel of a race car one day, albeit with hand controls. Pursley knows that even with all the hard work he put in, his own comeback wasnāt a given.Ā
āSome people are lucky,ā says Pursley.
Back on track
Whether it was luck, determination, a higher power, or some combination of the three that helped put Pursleyās harrowing accident in the rear view, heās now the one back in the driverās seat. He had to recalibrate himself at first: āRunning too hard,ā as he puts it, when he got back on track after being given the all-clear to race again. Then, having to ātame it down a littleā ā only to realize he needed some of that edge.Ā Ā
āAlmost like a year or so I felt it took me to get back to where I was comfortable in the car and making the decisions that I really wanted to.ā
Pursley believes the crash made him a better racer. āPeople say, from the outside, that I am a way smarter racer now,ā he says. āAt first, I think it was like, āOh, Iām going to prove these people wrong. Iām not scared. I can do this.āā
He proved that sooner than anyone could have anticipated.Ā
Pursley during the 2024 USAC season
āI remember waking up in the hospital ā and I donāt exactly remember how [many] days it was, but my parents told me about my broken neck and [I] couldnāt move,ā he says. āAnd I was like, āWhoa, does this mean I canāt run the Chili Bowl?āāĀ
His accident happened in November, and no, he would not be ready to race again only two months later. But 14 months? Yes.
Pursley was back in Tulsa for the 2023 running of the Chili Bowl Nationals. He was back again in 2024, making his way through the soup from the D-Main to finish fourth in the main event.Ā Ā
āGrowing up here [near Tulsa], itās just one of the biggest races that Iāve ever laid my eyes on,ā says Pursley. āIāve been coming up here since I was four or five years old. This place is just special. This place is just a place that I want to win. I want to have one of those little Golden Drillers that everyone talks about. Iāve been close. Iāve done everything but win.ā
Heās got a real shot this weekend: Because the Toyota-powered driver wheeled way to a second-place finish in the Wednesday night prelim, heās locked into the main event. All he has left to do is take home the trophy.Ā
Itād be a hell of a comeback story for Pursley, if he didnāt already have one.
Read Also:
NASCAR CupTy Gibbs is getting his hands dirty in his first Chili Bowl start
NASCAR CupBellās 2025 balancing act with NASCAR and his long-awaited return to the dirt
In this article
Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

