9th April 2008

Puzzle Me This NASCAR Experts

First the premise:

Every V8 Supercar Championship Series and Fujitsu V8 Supercar Series driver will be required to have a minimum $500,000 (465,000 USD) insurance coverage in order to compete in either category.

The board of V8 Supercars Australia has made the insurance mandatory as of next week’s third round of the Championship – the Hamilton 400 in Hamilton, New Zealand. The insurance will also include drivers who compete in the two endurance races of the year, the L&H 500 at Phillip Island and the Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000. (NOTE: the remainder of this news item can be read at my other “place of business“)

Now the question: Does NASCAR require its drivers to carry any type of insurance?

I know individual crew members get full benefits and 401(k) plans from their teams but drivers, to my best knowledge are responsible for purchasing their own life insurance. (along with health care and retirement but don’t get me started down that trail of woe - ed)

The assumption here is the drivers are on their own based on NASCAR’s extreme inability to take any responsibility and are quick to play the “drivers are independent contractors” card.

Not that I have any over-riding concern for people that own private jets and helicopters, arrive at races in million-dollar motorhomes and live in multi-million dollar McMansions at Lake Norman or, in at least one case, Manhattan.

Just curious is all, just curious.

posted in NASCAR, Nw Zealand V8 Supercars, V8 Super Cars | 4 Comments

18th March 2008

A Second Tasmanian Devil Headed to NASCAR

Owen Kelly will be leaving Australia this week (Tuesday) on a flight headed to North Carolina and his eventual home in Mooresville, NC.

Following in the footsteps of fellow Tasmanian Marcos Ambrose Kelly has signed a development contract with JR Motorsports with the eventual goal of competing alongside Ambrose in one of NASCAR’s top three series’.

Kelly, 30, raced in the last four rounds of the Australian V8 Supercar Championship last year and has been signed by Ford Performance Racing to co- drive at the Bathurst 1000 and Phillip Island 500 this year. Interestingly, Kelly may butt heads with Boris “Bobsled Hero” Said who has been signed by Paul Morris Motorsports to drive in the same two events.

Kelly’s not a total rookie to NASCAR style of racing, after testing successfully with another team last year. With help from Ambrose, Kelly drove four races for former NASCAR driver Robert Pressley in 2007 a similar category to the Late Model series he will race this year.

Earnhardt Jr. visited Australia in December and attended the final round of the Australian V8 Supercar Championship, in which Kelly was racing.

He later spent several days on the Gold Coast with Kelly’s then team owner Paul Morris, which included testing a V8 Supercar.

“We struck up a friendship on the Gold Coast and I told Junior what I had been doing last year, he invited me over, and it grew from there,” Kelly said. “I’m really excited about racing in America - it’s a huge opportunity,” he said.

Kelly is the son of former Tasmanian speedway legend Chas Kelly, who raced super sedans, sprintcars and Grand National sedans.

NASCAR fans be forewarned, if he makes it up the ladder to NASCAR’s top tier he’s a “Smoke” in the making. He will always tell you “how it is” rather than what he thinks you want to hear.


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posted in NASCAR, V8 Super Cars | 2 Comments

18th March 2008

V8 Engines, Music to the Ears!

There’s more than one way to skin a cat.

The Stone Brothers Racing team proves there’s more than one way to utilize the brute horsepower in their Ford Falcon. James Courtney, you ROCK!!

posted in V8 Super Cars | 0 Comments

13th March 2008

Who Wants NASCAR Qualifying to Change?

The loudest murmur (sometimes a roar) heard around NASCAR Nation are changes to occur in the current Sprint Cup qualifying rules.

NASCAR made a small change by allowing the go home crowd to qual as a group after the top 35 cars timed in. The idea being the go homers would be on equal footing between themselves in relation to weather and track changes.

I’ve got another plan, and never one shy about stealing um… borrowing from others, I’m taking my cue from Australia’s V8 Supercar Series. Their tin-top series is running in support of (some say the reverse) of this weekends opening F1 World Championship round at Albert Park.

They are running what’s being called ‘Red (GM) versus Blue’ (Ford) Sprint Gas V8 Supercars Manufacturers Challenge.

Billed as a fight between Ford and Holden the quickest driver from each team deciding the starting positions for the rest of their runners all weekend. As it happens things were nicely settled yesterday (Today U.S. time) with Holden and Ford alternating through the top seven runners ahead of the top-10 shootout and race one held on Saturday.

So, with all that in mind, what if…

Something similar were tried at a few special events in NASCAR. All-Star weekend at Charlotte might work and I think we all can agree Atlanta and Fontana needs something to give the fans a swift kick in the rumps to fill the seats.

The obvious difference are the presence of four manufacturers in Sprint Cup vice only 2 competing in the V8’s. Those four could be split by fastest time, for example:

Biffle’s Ford turns in a lap around Mythical Speedway in a time of 32.761 secs. Close behind is the Dodge of Labonte at 32.845 secs. Third quickest is the Toyota of “Jet Fuel” Mikey at 33.003 and bringing up the rear is the U.S. Army Chevy of Aric Almirola with a time of 33.098. (hey, don’t complain BowTie fans, Chevy out numbers the competition by 2-3 to 1 at each event. And besides this is nothing more than a Full Throttle Magical Mystery Tour. It’s my fantastical fantasy leave me alone!)

As a result of the times listed the field would be lined up with Fords filling each front row position (fastest to slowest), then all the Dodges, the Toyotas and finally all the Chevys. (Yeah, it sucks to be you doesn’t it Chevy fans?)

If you hadn’t figured it out by now the object of this nonsense is to forget the driver vs driver dynamic, team vs team or which sponsor has the most colors splashed across a hood, but to pit manufacturer - GM, Ford, Dodge and Toyota - against each other. With all the Poo flung about NASCAR Nation over Toyota’s entry into Cup it might be a winner.

Of course the kicker to this is this race in itself is a special qualifier. How drivers finish at Mythical Speedway is how they line-up for the race to be run later in the day.

Oh, silly me. I forgot to tell ya this was only a no pit stop 20 lap dash for the flag! To be followed by the “insert current sponsor name here ___” 500 at Fontana or the “whatever to hell you wanna call it” 500 at Atlanta.

And NASCAR could throw all caution to the wind (no pun intended, I think) and introduce the event at the “I’ve Fired all My Lawyers on Retainer 500″ at Kentucky Motor Speedway.

So what do you think?]

Anyone ready to partake in Full Throttle’s Magical Mystery Tour - “Presented by the Half-Vast Staff™ of Full Throttle and Boudreaux’s Butt Paste®” - or will you just sit there and let the train of innovation pull out of the station without you?


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posted in NASCAR, V8 Super Cars | 1 Comment

9th March 2008

Jim Beam Wins!

Will DavisonNo, not the T-Shirt Salesman NASCAR’s Jim Beam, the V8 Supercars Jim Beam and its driver Will Davison.

In a turn around from the first race, Ford drivers dominated the second race in the 2008 V8 Supercar Series at Eastern Creek today, finishing in the top three places.

The first Holden across the line was Ford defector Russell Ingall in his Supercheap Auto Racing Commodore VE. Race one winner, Garth Tander could only finish in ninth place.

The race and round win is the first for Dick Johnson’s team since 2001, breaking a seven year drought and highlighting the improvement and determination of a team well and truly on the rise in 2008.

Following on from a brilliant start in Saturday’s opening race, Davison jumped Garth Tander off the line to claim a race lead he never surrendered throughout race two, comfortably driving the number 18 Jim Beam Falcon to victory ahead of Mark Winterbottom.

Starting from pole for race three Davison had to deal with wearing tyres for much of the final race, eventually crossing in sixth position to seal the round win for Jim Beam Racing.

Today’s results catapult Davison to fifth on the 2008 V8 Supercar Championship points table after two rounds.

Steve Johnson finished 19th and 17th respectively and wasn’t able to find the speed he produced in the opening round of the Championship where he finished fourth overall at Clipsal.

Will Davison was estatic after his win: “Amazing effort by the entire team, this is a sweet victory and I am as pleased for everyone at Jim Beam racing as I am for myself.”

“We really lost our tyres in that last race so to hold on for the round win is a feeling I can’t quite describe it’s just unbelievable.

“Things are reall looking up for Jim Beam Racing, we are definitely going places this year.”

Meanwhile Steve Johnson reflected on his performance: “It was a bit of a disappointing weekend for me personally; however I’m thrilled for the team and Will.

“Hopefully we can sort things out and I’ll be back up front in New Zealand, I started the year well at Clipsal so there is no reason we can’t continue on in a similar fashion.”

However team owner Dick Johnson was more than happy: “It’s just an amazing feeling to have that buzz around the garage again; it was a well deserved victory for everyone and Will has done a brilliant job this weekend.

“It’s been a while between wins, I’m just extremely proud of the team, we have stuck together and this result is a testament to the hard work of everyone at Jim Beam Racing.”

Cross Posted @ Asian Motor Sports, race report for Eastern Creek’s third round can also be read at Asian Motorsports.


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posted in NASCAR, V8 Super Cars | 2 Comments

3rd March 2008

Ford Mutes its Stars!

“Ford mutes its stars!” - the headline reads.

WHAT! I thought that was the job of PCNA and NASCAR! You know that whole “make our drivers as plain-jane as, well… Plain Jane.”

What the hell is FoMoCo HQ silencing its drivers for? Don’t they know there are hard working “word-wonks” whose phony-baloney jobs at NASCAR depend on their ability to silence the nattering nabobs in firesuits?

Oh shoot… looks like I jumped the green flag! It isn’t NASCAR, nor the folks at Ford’s Dearborn HQ.

The speech squelcher’s reside in Victoria, Australia at FoMoCo’s HQ.

As a result of the recent dust-up and war of words Ford of Australia are telling their V8 Supercar teams to “Nip it in the bud!”

Specifically the “censor” is Ford’s Motorsport Manager Ray Price, “we’ve spoken to the teams about the incidents and we want clarity. There are always things said in the heat of the moment, Holden drivers as much as Fords drivers will have their say. What we need them to be is be mature and professional about it.”

Reportedly there has been a bit of phone tag between Ford officials and the three antagonists in an effort to cool their jets prior to this weekends Supercar round at Eastern Creek.


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3rd March 2008

Ashley Cooper Foundation Established

Fujitsu V8 Supercar driver, Ashley Cooper, succumbed last Monday to brain injuries received from a high speed racing accident at the Clipsal 500 meeting in Adelaide.

As terrible as this incident was for his partner, Casey, and their two young children Ella and Bailey, their families, friends, and motorsport fans; Ashley has provided the greatest gift of all

posted in V8 Super Cars | 0 Comments

26th February 2008

Eastern Creek Should be Fun!

NASCAR, take note what follows is what many fans think has been missing from America’s premier tin-top series. Trash talkin’!

The V8 Supercar Series last weekend featured both a war of sheet metal between the sports biggest stars and afterwards a war of words has ensued.

First the on track melee: The biggest incident occurred on lap 56 at Turn 10 of the Adelaide circuit. Craig Lowndes was attempting to pass James Courtney for second place when contact was made between the pair and Mark Winterbottom was caught up in the ensuing incident.

posted in V8 Super Cars | 1 Comment

25th February 2008

Do the Aussie V8’s have a “Dale Sr Moment?”

It took the death of NASCAR’s biggest star Dale Earnhardt Sr. in 2001 to add urgency to the sanctioning bodies efforts at producing a safer vehicle. The resulting car is getting its first full season test this year and at this point has generally received passing grades.

This past weekend saw the tragic death of Ashley Cooper from injuries he suffered when his vehicle crashed during the second-tier Fujitsu series at the Clipsal 500 meeting in Adelaide on Saturday.

It was the second serious accident in the Fujitsu Series following New Zealand driver Mark Porter’s death at Bathurst 1000 meeting in 2006.

The second death in less than 18 months has prompted V8 Supercars Australia chief Wayne Cattach to look at the possibility of a car design overhaul.

Although making no commitment he left open the possibility of a radical revamp of car design to make them safer through a purpose-built design rather than the current method of using production-based cars. Cattach said a similar solution to NASCAR’s could be looked at.

But he warned any change would involve heavy financial costs.

“I guess it’s really the cost of making that rather massive change,” Cattach said yesterday.

“If there was supporting evidence to do that, then I guess we would do it. At this stage there is nothing on the drawing board to affect that. Certainly we wanted to keep the cars in a form that gave our manufacturers the chance to market cars from them.

“In other words, not go down the NASCAR route, but have them as a silhouette of the road cars and have them have swinging panels and so on and so forth.

“That would be a very big exercise, to start with a clean sheet of paper, (but) it might be something that we need to consider.

“Certainly if we are in any way unsure about the strength and safety of our cars, well, that might be one option.

“But at this stage I wouldn’t draw that conclusion. I think the cars have, by and large, protected the drivers well.

“If you look at some of the colossal crashes we’ve had over time with very little injury, I think that’s a testament to the strength of the cars.”

Cattach said the tragedy would be fully investigated.

“We have had a preliminary look at the footage of the accident, and from what it appears, his car may have clipped the guard rail on entry to the corner.” “There is nothing that we can find that would indicate any failure of the seat, his HANS (head and neck support) device, the straps or the roll cage,” Cattach said.

V8 car safety came into question in 2006 when Mark Porter was killed at Bathurst with then Bathurst 1000 champion Craig Lowndes expressing concerns very similar to those heard in NASCAR when Dale Sr. died:

“Side impact is our worst nightmare because there is no crumple zone,” Lowndes said. “Front or rear impact isn’t bad because we have a large crumple zone. (On the side) there’s not a lot of room between us and the outside of the car. To have an incident like that (Porter-Clark) is pretty freakish . . . now we’ve got to figure out ways to prevent it.”

At the time Lowndes’ Triple Eight racing team went beyond then current V8 regulations and installed reinforced carbon fibre in the driver’s-side door.

Lowndes also expressed a desire to allow drivers to position themselves closer to the center of the vehicle (sound familiar? - ed) and adopting a driver safety cell like those in use in the German DTM car series. Essentially the cell is a pod-like structure that can be easily removed by rescue crews with the driver inside.

Ashley Cooper’s accident wasn’t the only serious one on the weekend, the V8 ute race in Adelaide had three drivers make trips to the hospital Sunday as the site of their crash was described as looking “like a war zone.”

It will be interesting to see what comes of any potential changes in V8 Supercar safety, will they go NASCAR’s route or remain with the current production based chassis? One thing is for sure it won’t be any time soon. NASCAR’s change took 5 years from a scratch pad drawing to the first prototype hitting the track for testing.

Interestingly, Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS), Australian Institute for Motor Sport Safety (AIMSS), Federation Internationale de l’Automobil (FIA), V8 Supercars Australia, the South Australian Motor Sport Board (SAMSB) and Monash University conducted research that monitored factors affecting the physiology of drivers, crew members and officials at Adelaide this past weekend.

While important in it’s own right they may all have a more pressing issue on their plate now.

Cross Posted @ Asian Motor Sports


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posted in Commentary, NASCAR, V8 Super Cars | Comments Off

24th February 2008

Ashley Cooper Loses Battle For Life

The Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS) has confirmed V8 Supercar driver Ashley Cooper has passed away in Royal Adelaide hospital.

Cooper 27, of Ulladulla in NSW, died following a crash in last Saturday’s Fujitsu development series race at the Clipsal 500 in Adelaide.

An experienced motor racing competitor, Cooper was critically injured when his vehicle impacted with a safety barrier at the exit of a corner at speeds of more than 200kph.

Cooper was quickly attended to trackside by the event’s senior medical personnel and subsequently transported to the Royal Adelaide Hospital by ambulance.

CAMS President, Colin Osborne, said that Cooper’s passing was something that would be felt by the entire Australian motor sport community.

“Firstly our thoughts and sympathies go to Ashley’s family and friends, particularly his wife Casey and two children and parents Alan and Maree,” said Osborne.

“It is always a very sad day when any member of the motor sport community is taken from us.

“The motor racing community involves a close knit group of competitors and officials and I know that everyone will be feeling the loss of Ashley.

“CAMS will conduct its own full independent investigation to determine the circumstances leading to the incident.

“In the mean time, CAMS and event officials are working with the relevant civil authorities to assist with their investigations.”

V8 Supercars boss Wayne Cattach said there were no indications of safety equipment failure in the crash. (first reports suggested seat mountings or five point harness failures may have contributed - ed)

Cattach defended current safety measures and street circuits, saying it was an unusual accident and he’d seen other drivers walk away from even worse-looking crashes.

“This one didn’t look all that bad to me,” he said.

“(But) at the end of the day, motor sport is a dangerous pursuit and we try and make it as safe as possible, but when you’ve got a 1350kg car travelling at say 260 an hour top speed, it’s a risky combination.”

It was the second serious accident in the Fujitsu series, following New Zealand driver Mark Porter’s death at the Bathurst 1000 meeting in 2006.

Cattach said he was open to recommendations to improve safety measures, throwing his support behind an independent investigation into Cooper’s death, as well as any police or coronial inquiries that may take place.

He said Cooper, the 2006 V8 Utes rookie of the year, was a highly-regarded driver who be sorely missed.

“We will do everything we can to support Ashley’s family at this time of need,” he said.

Cross Posted @ Asian Motor Sports

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