Veteran NASCAR driver and current FOX analyst Clint Bowyer is married to Lorra Bowyer. The couple tied the knot in April 2014 and have been together since then. Lorra and Clint Bowyer have two children together; nine-year-old Cash Aaron Bowyer and seven-year-old Presley Elizabeth Bowyer. In this article, we will learn more about Clint Bowyer's wife, Lorra.
Born Lorra Podsiadlo, Lorra Bowyer is a native of Penn Yan, a village in New York state. She has been with Clint Bowyer since the latter was a full-time NASCAR driver and continues to be there for him through thick and thin even today when he calls races as a full-time NASCAR analyst.
Lorra Bowyer is an expert when it comes to living in the NASCAR lifestyle. Being the wife of a former NASCAR driver, Lorra has had to travel throughout the country with her kids. Needless to say, those trips were not always the easiest. One such trip was to Talladega Superspeedway, during which both her kids fell seriously ill. Cash had even started throwing up on the airplane.
Remembering the not-so-easy trip to 'Dega, Lorra said in an interview as reported by fanbuzz.com,
"Then, a little while later, Presley starts throwing up... I start throwing up. So all three of us are sitting in this 40-foot motorhome puking in bathrooms. I'm trying to clean after Presley's puking, getting the bleach out. I'm throwing up."
Lorra's unwavering support also extended to Bowyer's career in the booth. Lorra cheered on while her husband sat behind a Cup car as a full-time driver for the last time in 2020. In October that year, Bowyer announced that he would join the FOX Sports booth. Grateful for all that NASCAR has done for the Bowyers, Lorra took to Instagram and wrote,
"So grateful for everything NASCAR has done for our family! Blessed!"
Clint Bowyer promises NASCAR return after dismal Nashville outing
Clint Bowyer competed in Friday's NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at the 1.33-mile racetrack in Nashville, Tennessee. However, his P17 finish following a Stage 2 crash was not exactly how he had expected it to go.
Reflecting on his run, the American said,
"We fought loose in the whole time from the word go and I know from a lot of years of experience that’s hard to overcome."
"You fix that and it hurts something else and that something else is usually exit. We just kind of fought back and forth. I stalled it on pit road," he added.
Although unsure about what happened to his number 7 Spire Motorsports truck in Stage 1, the speedster promised a comeback and said,
"I will be back. I promise you there’s no way in hell I’m ending on that note."
Nevertheless, it was his first time driving in NASCAR's national series since his retirement.