Mike Beam lives by a different credo these days.

“If you can drag it in here, we’ll work on it,” Beam told RACER.

The ‘here’ is Statesville, North Carolina, where GMS Fabrication is buzzing and thriving. However, this time a year ago, the operation was a few days away from being included in an announcement that GMS Racing and its fabrication shop would be closing its doors at the end of the season. Beam, the president of the operation, was looking at retirement.

But that didn’t last long.

GMS Racing did shutter its three-truck operation, which ended one of the most successful organizations in the Craftsman Truck Series. Maury Gallaher, the team founder, was putting all resources into his Cup Series operation. The company was undergoing continued changes to elevate its program, and 2024 was bringing a switch to Toyota.

By October, as things began winding down, Beam and Gallagher had another conversation. Gallagher admitted he didn’t want to see his longtime partner walk away from the sport.

“He said, ‘If you want to continue the fab shop, you definitely need to look into it because I know how much you enjoy that,’” Beam said.

Beam thought it over. He knew he was past traveling to the racetrack but wasn’t cut out to be at home all the time. Nancy, Beam’s wife of 46 years, likely w asn’t ready for that either.