20th February 2005

All the Usual Suspects

Daytona lived up to it’s advertising tagline, “Great American Race.”

Gordon starts his “drive for five” with his third Daytona win. Defending NASCAR Champ Kurt Busch shows he still is a force, and all the usual faces were there at the end contending, Stewart, Martin, Earnhardt, and Johnson. And a few surprises, Scott Riggs fourth in the Valvoline Chevrolet, and LaPage in the Patron Dodge with a ninth place finish both had excellent days under the Florida sun.

Thoughts on the TV coverage: Did anyone but me notice the graphics as Fox gave the starting lineup? Notice anything odd about the Dodge entries. Fox’s CG department must be lazy or just stupid. They spent time insuring the graphics matched the new ‘05 paint schemes, but all the Dodges were images of 2004 bodies. Stupid!

Other non-surprises: Jimmy Johnson, Mark Martin, Kurt Busch, Sterling Marlin, Dave Blaney and Jeremy Mayfield all getting caught by NASCAR

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20th February 2005

I Have an Answer For This

White Supremacists Target NASCAR’s Daytona 500 Race for Major Recruitment Drive

One of the country’s largest and most virulent anti-Semitic and racist hate groups plans to undertake a major recruitment drive at the Daytona International Speedway during NASCAR’s Daytona 500 Race on Sunday, February 20.

Among other claims, the neo-Nazi National Alliance (N.A.) says it has arranged for an airplane to fly over the racetrack with a banner that reads, “Love Your Race” and promoting the group’s Web site. Members of the group also plan on handing out fliers in the parking lot near the nationally televised event.

My answer?

Two words: Stinger missle

Cross posted @ Cranial Cavity

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19th February 2005

Richard Petty

On the discovery of drafting at Daytona….

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19th February 2005

Another Notch in His Holster

Mark Martin became the winningest driver in IROC history, moving past the late Dale Earnhardt and Al Unser Jr. by taking the season-opening race Friday night at Daytona International Speedway. Martin earned his 12th International Race of Champions victory by passing fellow NASCAR Nextel Cup star Matt Kenseth on a restart with four laps remaining. Then Martin held off Martin Truex Jr. over the final laps and beat him to the finish line by a half-car length.

“The king of IROC won the race, and I’ll finish second to him anytime,” said Truex, the NASCAR Busch series champion making his IROC debut.

Bobby Hamilton, NASCAR’s truck series champion, was third. Kenseth ended up fourth after leading 31 of the first 36 laps in the 40-lap event.

Kenseth was in front when the race was halted for about 10 minutes after a multi-car accident that included IndyCar star Helio Castroneves, 19-time World of Outlaws champion Steve Kinser, Grand American Road Racing driver Scott Pruett and Champ Car’s Sebastien Bourdais.

Martin started the melee when he ran into the back of Kenseth, causing the 2003 Cup champion to slow up and sparking a series of crashes. Kinser ran into Pruett, who then spun into the wall and took Bourdais with him. Castroneves, second to Kenseth for much of the race, also was caught up in the mess.

Kenseth, the defending IROC champion, looked primed to win his third consecutive race. But World of Outlaws driver Danny Lasoski bumped him on the restart, forced him to wiggle and allowed Martin to drive by on the outside.

Martin held on from there to get the record.

“I thought about that on that restart. That’s pretty special,” Martin said. “If you race enough and you run good enough and you try hard enough, your day will come. It seems like I have bad luck all the time, but we didn’t tonight.”

Now, one of NASCAR’s most notable figures has a chance to make more history. He is tied with Earnhardt as the series’ only four-time champion. He’s in a perfect position to make it five after winning the opener.

There are three races remaining: at Texas on April 15, Richmond on Sept. 8 and Atlanta on Oct. 29.

It would be a perfect send-off for Martin, retiring from full-time competition after this season.

“I had a sad, sinking feeling before the race started that this might soon be coming to an end for me,” he said. “Time is limited in getting invited back to the series. … This experience probably means as much or more to me than anything I have ever done.”

Martin finished first or second eight times in the IROC series and strongly considering not accepting an invitation this season because he thought he might tarnish his record.

Instead, he just made it a lot more special.

“I had to think about it,” he explained. “I figured maybe if I do fail or flop, everybody will forget about it and focus on all the good things that happened to me. I’m off to a good start.”
Source: SI.Com
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19th February 2005

Environmentalists vs. NASCAR

You have to hand it to those boys from NASCAR. For years the race sanctioning organization has been urged by the EPA to remove the lead from the fuel used in its race vehicles. To which the organizers of what has become the most vibrant race series turned a deaf ear. Now, Clean Air Watch has joined the fray, sending a stern letter to NASCAR Chairman and CEO Bill France. In the letter Clean Air Watch claims:

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19th February 2005

A New Game in NASCAR

NASCAR has a game to play called TEGWAR, which stands for

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18th February 2005

Another Wreck-Fest in Daytona

Following on the heels of race two of the “Duel 150’s” is the crash mared Florida Dodge Dealers 250 for the Craftsman Truck Series. In something that was a less than a perfect ending, in a wild race that included several major crashes and two flipping trucks, Bobby Hamilton was standing on pit road and Jimmy Spencer was celebrating in Victory Lane. Then they switched positions.

Hamilton took the lead after a restart with one lap to go, but Spencer was back in front when an eight-truck wreck started. However, before the caution flag came out, Hamilton moved back in front.

NASCAR officials quickly changed the result, but not after Spencer had made his way to Victory Lane. Spencer smiled and shook his head after he was told the news. He put his steering wheel back on, and crew members begrudgingly pushed his car back to the pits.

Hamilton, meanwhile, just clapped his hands when told of the scoring change. Within minutes, his team was in Victory Lane, reveling in the win in the season-opening race for NASCAR’s truck series. The defending series champion picked up his ninth career truck win and became the series’ first driver to win from the last starting spot. But his comeback was overshadowed by several major accidents, including two in the final laps.

Spencer took the lead with seven laps remaining. He moved to the front just as Dennis Setzer bumped Chad Chaffin and sent him sliding into the infield. Chaffin flipped once and landed upright. Setzer, Terry Cook and Johnny Benson also were involved, but none of them was injured. Hamilton overtook Spencer after the restart, and as it turned out, he held on for the victory.

The frantic finish capped a chaotic night.

Pole-sitter Kerry Earnhardt and several other top contenders were knocked out midway through the 100-lap race.

Earnhardt lost control of his Chevrolet coming out of turn four on Lap 49, spun into the wall and started an eight-truck pileup. No one was hurt.

Just a few laps later, another accident involved five trucks, including race leader Mike Skinner.

Brendan Gaughan, who was demoted from the Nextel Cup series after finishing 28th in points last year, was fighting to get a lap back. He pulled alongside Skinner but lost control of his truck. He clipped Skinner and sent him into the wall.

“I don’t know what happened,” Skinner said. “Either he ran out of talent or brains or luck. I’m not sure.”

Problems weren’t confined to just the track, either. Brad Keselowski overshot his pit and slid into the back of Dennis Setzer’s truck, briefly pinning a crew member. After Keselowski’s truck was pulled backward, the crew member grabbed a gas can and swung it at Keselowski’s windshield. He then had to be helped over the wall with a bruised leg.

That was nothing compared to Rick Crawford’s ride.

Todd Bodine sideswiped Crawford early in the race, turning him sideways and sending him sliding toward the pits. Crawford’s truck flipped once before coming to a stop in the infield grass. “I made it spectacular,” he said.

Source: Seattle Times via AP

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17th February 2005

Duel 150 Thoughts

You just know NASCAR wouldn’t get through Speed Weeks without controversy. And it was a safe bet Kevin Harvick might be sitting smack in the middle of the largest one. But first the words of those effected, then my take.

Joe Nemechek “It’s frustrating because I know how much all these guys have put into this, and to have it taken out by someone like him, that’s stupid, “He just drives stupid,” Nemechek said. “He’ll get it back. It was totally uncalled-for what happened out there. Everybody is racing and he’s trying to turn people around in the middle of the corner.”

Jimmy Johnson “It’s a shame. He just tore up six or seven good race cars,” said Johnson, adding that team owner Richard Childress should fire Harvick and NASCAR should penalize him. “This is ridiculous, absolutely ridiculous.”

Mark Martin

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15th February 2005

It Drips With Irony

Former NASCAR Champion (2002) Tony Stewart has never been one to shy away from controversy. He has been involved in a number of altercations during his five-plus seasons in NASCAR’s top division, ranging from on-track skirmishes with fellow competitors to an incident in which he allegedly punched a newspaper photographer.

I find it too cute, by half, for six Busch Series events at least, he will be known as Mr. Clean.

Procter & Gamble Co. has entered into an agreement wherein NASCAR champion Tony Stewart will drive a Mr. Clean-branded race car.

The six-race agreement, with Kevin Harvick Inc., has Stewart driving the No. 33 Mr. Clean AutoDry Pro-Series Carwash Chevrolet in the 2005 NASCAR Busch Series. The schedule begins Feb. 19 at Daytona International Speedway. Following races are in Atlanta, Phoenix, Alabama, Richmond, Va., and Concord, N.C.

“Not only will I be cleaning my car, but I plan to ‘clean-up’ at Daytona as well,” Stewart said in a press release.

Does this mean his firesuit will be all white and devoid of sponsorship logos? Somehow I doubt it. But despite my satirical sniping from the sidelines P&G should be congratulated for not being timid. Making their sponsorship selection based on talent vice any public perception should be commended. As should P&G’s long standing NASCAR support through it’s Folger’s, Tide brands that have been carried by some of the sports best drivers.

Source: Cincinnati Business Journal

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14th February 2005

Irvan Launches Head Injury Website

Ernie Irvan, who retired from racing midway in the 1999 season due to severe head injuries, has launched a Web site dealing with the subject (Ernie Irvan’s Race2Safety) and offering advice for others suffering from such injuries.

”Every 24 seconds there’s another head injury in this country,” said Irvan, 46, winner of the 1990 Daytona 500.

”It’s an epidemic. People don’t realize how bad it is.”

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Jeff Gordon