Author: SM Staff

  • AJ Allmendinger, Bobby Labonte and David Gilliland Part Of Unusual Top Ten

    While it is most certainly early in the NASCAR season, with just two races under their collective belts, a few unusual names are present in the top ten in points.

    With Kyle Busch, his brother Kurt Busch and Tony Stewart forming the familiar trio at the top, AJ Allmendinger, driver of the No. 43 for Richard Petty Motorsports, sits in the fourth position in points.  Other relatively unfamiliar drivers, at least in the top ten standings, are Bobby Labonte who currently sits in the seventh spot, and David Gilliland, who rounds out the top ten.

    [media-credit id=41 align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]Of all the drivers new to the top ten, AJ Allmendinger seemed most surprised about being so high in the points this season. When Kerry Tharp of NASCAR introduced Allmendinger as fourth in the point standings, Allmendinger quickly asked “I am?”

    “I vote we just start the Chase right now,” Allmendinger said. “Right now. Starting now. Starting here.”

    Allmendinger was visibly excited to be so high in the points. But he also recognized that there is a great deal of racing left to do before he can truly celebrate.

    “It is still really early, just two races in,” Allmendinger noted. “But I feel like between Daytona and Phoenix we have had a good race car.”

    “We got through all the wrecks and have been a little bit lucky there,”Allmendinger continued. “This is definitely a lot better start than where we were last year at this point, but it is only two races in. We have to stay calm about that and can’t get too excited.”

    “I am happy with where our race team has started and if we can stay focused on getting through this weekend, which is a big one for us because we have really struggled here in Vegas,” Allmendinger said. “If we can get through this weekend we will have something to really build on.”

    Another surprising driver in the top ten is Bobby Labonte. While Labonte is a familiar name in the sport, he most certainly is another driver who is finding himself in unfamiliar territory in the point standings.

    Labonte, piloting the No. 47 for JTG Daugherty Racing, currently is in the seventh position in points and is quietly celebrating that feat.

    “Well a lot of hard work by the boys at the shop and we have had a good start to the season,” Labonte said. “It always builds confidence when you run good, have good finishes and get a good start to the season.”

    “I hope we can continue that,” Labonte continued. “I just know that watching the hard work that everyone puts into it and all the resources we have to work with, we are not leaving many stones unturned. It gives me confidence when you get to the race track that you should have all the stuff to put together when you get here.”

    Labonte noted that his good start to the season has already paid dividends when it comes to sponsorship and other support.

    “When you have a couple good weeks and things are starting off good, it helps out,” Labonte said. “Obviously when you get your name out there and your sponsor’s name out there, it definitely helps out.  All of our sponsors are happy about that.”

    “I think we are doing a lot of the right things and hopefully we can just continue that.”

    Another fairly unfamiliar name in the top ten in standings is David Gilliland, driver of the No. 38 for Front Row Motorsports.

    “Yeah, it is so far so good this year,” Gilliland said of his season beginning. “Front Row Motorsports is definitely off to a better start than last year.  I am really excited with everything we have accomplished so far.”

    Because of his performance to date, Gilliland has also been able to capitalize with additional sponsorship on the race car.

    “We have TM1 back as an associate sponsor for the second week and they are going to be a co-primary in two weeks at Bristol,” Gilliland announced. “We are excited to have those guys on board. They are one of the fastest growing companies in the heartland and they do a great job and we are happy to have them on board.”

    Gilliland is very much looking forward to the upcoming race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

    “I feel real good about this weekend,” Gilliland said. “Before we went to Daytona, this was the race that I was really looking forward to as far as our cars and motors and everything else. I feel like this can be a really good weekend for us.”

    While Allmendinger, Labonte and Gilliland may be relative strangers to the top of the heap in the points, they will have their work cut out for them to stay there. In the first practice for the Kobalt Tools 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Allmendinger finished 16th, Labonte practiced 26th and Gilliland was in 42nd.

  • Firestone leaving IRL after 2011 season

    Firestone leaving IRL after 2011 season

    Longtime series partner Firestone will leave the IndyCar Series after the 2011 season, after Bridgestone and the Indy Racing League did not renew the contract that expires after this year. Firestone is the series’ tire supplier and the series sponsor of the Firestone Indy Lights series.

    “It’s unfortunate to lose a great partner and ambassador for the sport like Firestone,” IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard said. “We are actively engaged in discussions with other tire manufacturers on opportunities to get involved in our sport as we prepare to debut our new car in 2012.”

    Firestone has supplied tires for the IndyCar Series since 1996.

  • Michael Waltrip Gets Slapped By Rib for New Tums Commercial

    Just when it seems Michael Waltrip could get no more exposure, with his new book and his singing and dancing in the new NAPA commercial with teammate Martin Truex, Jr., Waltrip has taken yet another starring role.

    [media-credit id=41 align=”alignright” width=”269″][/media-credit]Waltrip’s newest commercial gig involves taking some licks from a mechanical rib slapping his face and begging for his sponsor’s newest product, fast acting Tums.

    Ty Norris, General Manager of Michael Waltrip Racing, announced the new commercial partnership between MWR and sponsor Tums in the media center at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.  The commercials will not only be aired on television but will also be featured on the Tums Facebook page.

    “What’s really neat today is how some of our sponsors are taking us even deeper into the digital space,” Norris said. “What you don’t see a lot of is activating with NASCAR celebrities.”

    “As you might know Tums has been actively involved in racing for a number of years,” Kent Christiansen, Sr. Brand Manager of Tums, said. “The theme of our advertising is when your favorite foods fight you, fight back fast with Tums.  We are happy to say that we are leveraging the appeal of David (Reutimann) and Michael (Waltrip) and bringing that into our advertising.”

    The commercial will debut this Sunday during the Kobalt Tools 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.  The commercials feature both Michael Waltrip and David Reutimann “interacting with foods in an interesting way,” according to Christiansen.

    Christiansen emphasized that Tums has focused on its younger fans, who “spend hours of their time online.” There are actually seven videos that have been filmed that will be available to fans on their Tums Facebook page over the next few months.

    “We think this content is exciting for the NASCAR community,” Christiansen continued. “And we think it will be exciting for fans to check out on the Facebook page.”

    The first of the new Tums commercials shows a barbecued rib slapping Waltrip’s face several times as he tries to eat it, with Reutimann watching in amusement. The second commercial shows a giant double stacked cheeseburger chasing Reutimann at the track, pulling him out of his race car and pummeling him repeatedly.

    In the latter commercial, fans will actually be able to vote on whether or not Reutimann will take his Tums, with the votes determining the ending. As usual, however, in both commercials Reutimann does not utter one word.

    “I don’t know if you notice the recurring theme, but David has another commercial without a speaking part,” Waltrip said. “We’re going to work on that.”

    “I’m good not speaking,” Reutimann countered quickly to his boss.

    “I can’t get enough of that hamburger kicking my butt,” Reutimann continued. “It was a pretty unique from the rib that Michael was trying to eat to the hamburger. We ended up having to do several takes just because I couldn’t stop laughing.”

    “Even when the hamburger comes riding up, thankfully I was wearing my helmet,” Reutimann continued. “I couldn’t stop laughing all day. If it makes me laugh, I hope it will make others laugh too.”

    Waltrip advised that he had the hardest commercial to make by far.

    “There was a guy sitting behind me and there was a wire in that rib,” Waltrip said. “It took about a hundred takes or at least that’s what it felt like being beat in the face by that rib.”

    “Anyways, 25 years of racing a car and that’s what it’s come to,” Waltrip said with a chuckle.

    For his part, Reutimann concurred with his boss that the slapping rib was by far the most challenging commercial to make.

    “I was covered with that sauce and we had to do all those different angles,” Reutimann said. “I asked Michael to go out for ribs for lunch after that and he was not up for that.  The amount of sauce flying everywhere, it was a dangerous area to be in.”

    “Thankfully, we all got through it.”

    Waltrip, as he does so often and so well, took the opportunity to plug not only Tums but also some of his other endeavors, including the Comedy Garage program and his new book, ‘In the Blink of an Eye.’

    “Speaking of making you laugh, Michael Waltrip’s ‘Comedy Garage’ is in town,” Waltrip said. “I have a book out too.  Four weeks in a row it’s been on the best seller list.”

    Waltrip did become a bit more serious, paying tribute to his team’s partnership, now in its second year, with Tums.

    “As a team owner the thing I most like about this ad campaign is that this is the first year they’ve used our team in their commercials,” Waltrip said. “This commitment to Tums is a great sign and we appreciate their enthusiasm for our sport.”

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: VIVA LAS VEGAS, SEVEN COME ELEVEN, BABY NEEDS A NEW SET OF TIRES

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: VIVA LAS VEGAS, SEVEN COME ELEVEN, BABY NEEDS A NEW SET OF TIRES

    The elite of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series are making their annual visit to Las Vegas, the city that never sleeps at night, for this Sunday’s running of the Kobalt Tools 400. By the time the checkers falls on this race, we may be getting a clearer picture of the potency surrounding NASCAR’s new championship points structure. Las Vegas could turn out to be a case of who earned the points they needed and who now desperately needs any and all points they can find.

    THE STORY BREAKDOWN

    The current NASCAR Sprint Cup points standings has become a case of two brothers who also happen to be two Las Vegas favorite sons. Kyle Busch leads the standings over his older brother Kurt by three points. This could turn out to be one of the better story lines during Sunday’s race. First off, with NASCAR’s new 43 to 1 points breakdown, anything a driver can do to advance their points is now vitally important even during this still early stage of the season.

    Then there’s the matter of major bragging rights. Every driver in the world covets a win in his home town in front of his home fans. Also, let’s not overlook the Biblical Cain and Abel concept. These guys are brothers who spent a significant portion of their lives trying to out perform each other in every competitive scenario you could name. I’m not saying one is going to kill the other, as in the case of Cain and Abel, but one brother is not going to back down to the other when the green flag falls this Sunday afternoon.

    There are other interesting areas of the current points standings as well including the fact that there are only a 17 point separation between the top ten drivers. Pre Chase favorite Tony Stewart is tied for third with a surprising A J Allmendinger. Jeff Gordon, on the strength of his popular win at Phoenix last week, elevated himself to a tie for fifth with team mate Mark Martin. Former Cup champion Bobby Labonte leads a three way tie, with Ryan Newman and Juan Pablo Montoya, that covers positions seven through nine while the surprising David Gilliland holds down the tenth spot.

    While we all have a tendency to pay attention to which drivers are at the top of the charts, this new points structure also has us keeping a close eye on who are listed in the bottom half of the standings as well. It will be interesting to watch these teams to see what they can accomplish in terms of a rebound in their points status.

    This is especially true of Richard Childress Racing’s Kevin Harvick, Jeff Burton and Clint Bowyer. All three RCR drivers made the 12 man roster for the 2010 Chase for the Championship and all three were favored to be championship contenders this year. Following a blown engine and a 36th place finish at Daytona, Burton got caught up in the big crash last week at Phoenix and could only muster a 26th place finish. “The Mayor of the NASCAR garage” now finds himself 32nd in the points, 53 points out of first and more importantly 36 away from that all important top ten. This situation is going to require a lot of rebounding that will not be easy.

    Meanwhile Clint Bowyer started the season with a 17th at Daytona and also found himself caught up in the big crash at Phoenix where he finished 27th. He goes into the Las Vegas event 21st in the standings and 45 points from the top.

    However Kevin Harvick may be the one RCR shining example of how a rebound can work within the new points configuration. Harvick left Daytona, following a rare blown engine, 42nd in the standings. Following a strong run, a fourth place finish, at Phoenix last Sunday, Harvick jumped 20 positions in the standings. He’s still 36 points from the top but only 19 away from the top ten.

    ****************

    So, imagine yourself standing in front of the famed MGM Grand Hotel and Casino on the Las Vegas strip searching for a taxi cab to whisk you away to your next source of Vegas nightlife. All of a sudden there’s this low rumbling sound from a Chevrolet which greatly resembles a NASCAR Sprint Cup stock car although it does seem to have a lighted taxi sign on it’s roof. A second look inside of the car reveals the fact that the driver is NASCAR’s Tony Stewart.

    All of this fun was a special promotion last Wednesday night presented by Stewart’s sponsor Mobil 1 Oil. Stewart was out in one of his Stewart Haas Racing cars playing taxi driver. The car required a few modifications to make the promotion work such as passenger seats along with head and tail lights. Earlier in the day Stewart did some intern work at the local Lucky Cab depot to learn the ins and outs of transporting passengers. Some of those passengers included premiere magician David Copperfield as well as the ghost of Elvis. That would be one of those famed Vegas impersonators seriously in need of a tanning booth.

    ***************

    How much fun is Michael Waltrip having these days? The “almost” retired driver brought his well received “Michael Waltrip’s Comedy Garage” to Las Vegas for some stand up shows at the Mirage Hotel and Casino. Waltrip himself does a stand up set and recently said “I’m normally funny unintentionally, now it’s time to do it on purpose.” Waltrip has some strong allies in his Comedy Garage with the presence of stand up aces Henry Cho and John Repp.

    Waltrip is also enjoying his new found status as a best selling author. His book, “In The Blink Of An Eye,” remains number eight on the best seller’s list and has been very well received. Waltrip is looking forward to meeting his fans for a book signing Friday and Saturday night at the Mirage.

    But the new job title Waltrip cherishes the most is the role of grandfather. His daughter Caitlyn presented him with a grandson back on February 22nd.

    *************

    THE VEGAS BREAKDOWN

    To no real surprise the Las Vegas based World Sports Exchange, (WSE), has Jimmie Johnson sitting on top of their favorite rankings this week at 5 to 1 odds. When the Las Vegas Motor Speedway underwent its major reconfiguration, prior to the 2007 race, Johnson, and his #48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, just simply took all of the Vegas action. He has compiled four wins, in his last six starts, along with four top five finishes, five top tens along with an average finish ratio of 10.0. It’s no wonder that some observers call this speedway Johnsonville. There’s also a strong emotional tie for Johnson connected to Sunday’s race. Kobalt Tools is a long time team sponsor as well as the race sponsor. That combination generally makes a driver and team dig a little bit harder. Johnson with the element of extra motivation could turn out to be formidable on Sunday.

    Right behind Johnson, at 6 to 1, is hometown favorite Kyle Busch a former race winner. Busch is a threat to win a race anytime he straps himself inside of a race car. He also has the extra motivation of wanting another win in front of his hometown fans. Busch also has a healthy average finish ratio of 11.7 at Las Vegas.

    Third in the WSE rankings is Jeff Gordon, last week’s popular and emotional winner at Phoenix. Here’s another driver who will be bringing a lot of motivation to Las Vegas. Gordon is a former winner at Las Vegas and has compiled six top fives along with an average finish ratio of 13.3. But it’s the severe hiccups of NASCAR fan Courtney Sterner everyone will be on the look out for. The evening before Gordon’s last four Cup wins, Sterner found herself dealing with a severe case of the hiccups. In a telephone interview with the SPEED Channel on Thursday, Sterner said she had dined on Buffalo hot wings Saturday, got the hiccups and then Gordon won the next day at Phoenix. It makes one wonder if Gordon sent a case of spicy wings to her home this week.

    At 8 to 1 odds is Carl Edwards, a former race winner and a driver whom everyone is saying has a very good chance of winning Sunday’s Kobalt Tools 400. A bit of an off track dare devil, Edwards seems to be pumped up from his extra curricular activities. Last week, during a pre race promotional visit, he plummeted 885 feet, strapped to a cable, from the roof of the Stratosphere Hotel and Casino. I understand the view is breathtaking. Then on Thursday Edwards visited nearby Nellis Air Force Base and went on a wild, 9.1 G, ride with the famous Thunderbirds. Yeah, he’s pumped up for Sunday.

    Next on this week’s WSE rankings we have Denny Hamlin, 10 to 1, Tony Stewart, 11 to 1 and Kevin Harvick at 12 to 1. All of them are solid potentials. Hamlin has a 12.6 finish ratio at Las Vegas. He’s currently 14th in the championship standings, 22 points from the top, and will be looking to improve that status by Sunday afternoon. Stewart has a bigger mission in mind. Las Vegas is just one of two tracks where he’s never won at. He’s zero for 12 in Sin City and he’ll be looking to change that score. Also look for a hard charge from the aforementioned Kevin Harvick who will be attempting to dig himself out of his points hole.

    At 14 to 1 you will find Kurt Busch and Greg Biffle both, of whom, would make good long shot considerations. Kurt Busch is the other hometown favorite who really wants a win at his native Las Vegas. But to pull it off he’s going to have to improve performance numbers at intermediate sized race tracks. He currently has a 21.9 finish ratio at Las Vegas. Meanwhile Biffle has dealt with bad luck during the first two events of the season. He’s in a points hole, currently ranked at 28th, and he’s going to need a strong finish at Las Vegas to get his Chase contender status back in the right direction. Right behind this pair of drivers is Kasey Kahne’s Red Bull Racing Toyota who is ranked at 20 to 1 for Sunday’s race.

    If you’re the type who has nerves of steel, one who can handle the stress of a major long shot wager, then the WSE’s 25 to 1 category is right up your alley. This group lists five drivers who are win and points hungry featuring Clint Bowyer, Jeff Burton, Joey Logano, Matt Kenseth and Mark Martin. The standouts here include Burton, a two time Las Vegas winner, who has finished in the top five during two of his last three starts there. Kenseth, also a former winner at Las Vegas, would love to reinstate the former Roush Fenway Racing dominance at Las Vegas this Sunday. Martin could be the big surprise here. He has a win, six top fives and 10 top tens along with an average finish ratio of 12.8.

    The bottom portion of this week’s WSE listing is pretty much what was expected. Earnhardt Ganassi team mates Jamie McMurray and Juan Pablo Montoya are ranked at 30 to 1, followed by Ryan Newman at 33 to 1, Brian Vickers and Dale Earnhardt Jr. come in at 35 to 1 this week while David Reutimann finishes the list at 40 to 1.

    Now for the disclaimer: NASCAR wants us to remind you that these posted numbers are for information and entertainment purposes. They neither encourage, nor condone, the placing of wagers on their races. But for those of you who are going to do it anyway, the best of luck to you. A NASCAR race at Las Vegas is about as unpredictable as the dice numbers on a casino craps table.

    **************

    THE RACE BREAKDOWN

    The Kobalt Tools 400 is 267 laps/400.5 miles around the Las Vegas Motor Speedway’s 1.5 mile oval. Jimmie Johnson is the defending race winner from 2010.

    The race has 44 entries vying for the 43 starting berths. Nine of those teams are on the go or go home list meaning they are not guaranteed a starting berth because they are currently outside of NASCAR’s top 35 in owner’s points. These teams will have to rely on qualifying speed to make the race. One of them, Bill Elliott and Phoenix Racing, is guaranteed a starting berth based on Elliott’s past champion’s provisional status.

    The Las Vegas weather should be ideal for racing. Saturday’s forecast calls for partly cloudy skies and 70 degrees. Sunday, race day, calls for sunny skies and daytime highs of 73 degrees.

    The Las Vegas Motor Speedway opened in 1996. The first NASCAR Sprint Cup race was held in 1998 and won by Mark Martin. The speedway has hosted 13 Cup events that has sent eight different winners to victory lane.

    The track qualifying record, 188.719 MPH, was set in February of 2010 by Kurt Busch.

    The Las Vegas Motor Speedway has 20 degrees of banking in all four turns, and nine degrees on the straights, following a track reconfiguration project prior to the 2007 race. The front stretch measures 2,275 feet, the backstretch is 1,572 feet long. The pit road speed is 45 MPH. The speedway presently has seating for 142,000.

    The Kobalt Tools will be broadcast live by Fox Sports with the pre race show beginning at 2:30 pm-eastern. The race re-air will be on the SPEED Channel Wednesday, 12 pm-et.

  • Paul Menard’s Hauler Driver Jeff Icenhour Struts His Stuff on Vegas Strip

    Paul Menard’s Hauler Driver Jeff Icenhour Struts His Stuff on Vegas Strip

    One of the traditions of the Las Vegas Motor Speedway race weekend is the hauler parade right down the Las Vegas strip. Participating this year was Jeff Icenhour, hauler driver for Paul Menard’s No. 27 Menard’s Chevrolet, with whom I had the pleasure of riding with for the parade.

    Icenhour, a 43 year old from North Carolina, has been driving haulers for over ten years. He got his start after a connection made via his son turned into the opportunity of a lifetime.

    [media-credit name=”Photo by Gary Buchanan” align=”alignright” width=”246″][/media-credit]”A guy that used to be with the 32 car, my son and his son played football together,” Icenhour said. “So, I just stayed on to him until he helped me out.”

    Icenhour comes by his trucking skills naturally.  Much of his family has been in the trucking business and Icenhour even got his father involved, who is currently driving for the No. 43 team.

    “I started doing it before my dad,” Icenhour said. “I got my dad into it.”

    While he and his father share the trucking passion, Icenhour acknowledges that the lifestyle has his challenges. This is especially true since he has a wife and two sons at home as well.

    “It’s hard,” Icenhour said. “I have a wonderful wife. I couldn’t do it without her. She’s supportive so that’s great.”

    “My kids think it’s cool,” Icenhour continued. “They miss me and I miss them, but they still think it’s cool.”

    Icenhour, who is nicknamed ‘Cowboy” due to his passion for horses and his constantly-worn cowboy boots, is also feeling very fortunate to now be with Richard Childress Racing, a deal which came about for the 2011 season for he and his driver Paul Menard.

    “I am very fortunate to be here with Richard Childress Racing,” Icenhour said.  “I like Richard Childress quite a bit.”

    Icenhour is also fond of his driver, Paul Menard.

    “Paul’s pretty cool,” Icenhour said. “He’s not the high maintenance driver. He does it because he likes it and he doesn’t get caught up in it.”

    “From the time he came into Nationwide, I always liked that kid and pulled for him,” Icenhour said of his driver. “There was something I liked about him from the first time I saw him. He’s in some good equipment now so he will do well.”

    Although devoted to his driver, Icenhour has seen his share of ups and downs in his hauler driving career. Prior to coming to RCR, Icenhour drove for Evernham Motorsports and then Richard Petty Motorsports.

    Given his most recent employment, Icenhour knows the vagaries of being part of a race team.

    “Nothing is guaranteed in this business,” Icenhour said. “There is no such thing as job security. If they get rid of my driver or crew chief, I might be gone too.”

    While there may not be job security, the life of a hauler driver is most certainly varied, in addition to being demanding. Icenhour describes his role as not only having to be a great driver, getting some of his team’s most valuable assets to the track, but also as a jack of all trades, particularly once he arrives at the track.

    “You’re the gopher,” Icenhour said. “And sometimes the babysitter. It’s also my responsibility to make sure the boys eat and get fed.  Overall, I just look after them.”

    Icenhour has been hard at work since last weekend’s race.  He did not even get to return home in between, instead driving the hauler directly from Phoenix to Las Vegas.

    The day before the hauler parade, Icenhour spent most of the day getting his rig in tip top shape for the fans along the parade route to enjoy.

    “We got here Tuesday and Wednesday, we came out and polished on our trucks,” Icenhour said. ” I polished all the wheels and all the aluminum. That took pretty much all day.”

    Icenhour and the rest of the hauler drivers were in fine form as they took to the Las Vegas strip. Waving at the crowds along the way, the driver of the No. 27 hauler was only too happy to oblige with honking his horn as requested, much to the delight of the cheering fans.

    “Sometimes it’s a little aggravating,” Icenhour said of the parade, feeling especially sorry for those in traffic, inconvenienced by the parade. “But we need fans and we need to do whatever we can do to put fans in the seats.  If this helps, I’ll do whatever I can.”

    After driving down the length of the entire Vegas strip, engaging all of the race fans, Icenhour made the turn onto the interstate, along with the other haulers, to head toward the race track.  After pulling in ever so carefully and parking just inches away from Clint Bowyer’s hauler, Icenhour jumped out of his rig to start unloading his tool box.

    “We take turns and help each other unloading,” Icenhour said. “It may not be your teammates but we all help out.”

    “A lot of these hauler drivers, we’re like family,” Icenhour said of his hauler compatriots. “If one breaks down, someone will stop and make sure everything is cool. We help one another a great deal.”

    After stifling a bit of a yawn, surviving the hauler parade and the intricate parking in the NASCAR garage, Icenhour was ready to start fulfilling his duties at the race track.  He summed up his hauler driver experience as being his ‘dream job.’

    “You have to like it to do this,” Icenhour said. “It’s hard but it’s a good life. I am very fortunate to be here, I really am. This is the best job I’ve ever had.”

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: Morgan Shepherd – Mall Cop?

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: Morgan Shepherd – Mall Cop?

    NASCAR Nationwide Series driver Morgan Shepherd has often been described as an ageless wonder. At age 69 Shepherd is now in his 44th season as a NASCAR driver and, without hesitation, still continues to criss cross the country while hauling his #89 Faith Motorsports Chevrolet to the next stop on the Nationwide Series schedule.

    [media-credit name=”FMCM” align=”alignright” width=”286″][/media-credit]As impressive as that is, it’s also something that we expect to see each and every racing weekend. What we didn’t expect was last Tuesday’s news story that said Morgan Shepherd had turned crime fighter and actually helped police officers apprehend a trio of shoplifters.

    The scene was a Walmart parking lot in North Las Vegas just down the road from the Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Shepherd, and his wife Cindy, had just exited their rental car to do some shopping when all of a sudden three men came running out of the store with Walmart security officers in pursuit.

    From some comments via his “Faith Motorsports” official website, Shepherd relayed the next part of the story and said “I just got out of the car and then took off after them. I caught one of them just as he was going to hop a little wall at the end of the parking lot. I yanked him down and got on top of him.”

    Patrol units from the Las Vegas Police Department made very quick work at arriving on the scene to assist the Walmart security team and they were very surprised to find Shepherd sitting on top of a shoplifter. One of the patrol cars stopped in front of Shepherd to insure that he was okay. Shepherd asked for and received a set of handcuffs and told the officer he would continue to detain the suspect. “I cuffed him and again sat on top of him,” Shepherd said adding “the police officers showed up again and asked if I could hold him a little while longer while they ran down the others. I told them he wasn’t going anywhere.”

    Shepherd never once told the young suspect, which he described as being 18 or 19 years old, that he had been chased down and apprehended by a 69 year old man. Despite the gap in their ages, the youngster probably never had a chance of out running his elderly pursuer. Shepherd over the years has been described as being a fitness perfectionist. The biggest part of his daily work out is jogging. He’s also been frequently seen roller skating up and down pit roads during the weekends. The truth be known, Morgan Shepherd is probably in better shape than younger men more than half his age.

    During the course of their time together, Shepherd said that the young man pled with him to be let go and further explained that he had made the mistake of falling in with the wrong crowd of people. He also confessed that he was terrified over the prospect of going to jail. Shepherd, also a well known devout Christian, was moved and spent some time counseling him on the importance of making good choices and what happens when we indulge ourselves with bad choices.

    Shepherd also noted that there too much stealing going on in the world and private citizens needed to take a more proactive stance in helping to stop this particular crime wave. “So many people would just sit and watch those guys, (at the Walmart store), run away. People need to get up and help stop this type of stuff,” he noted.

    In the aftermath of this story, all three suspects were captured and taken into custody by the Las Vegas Police. Now completely finished with his law enforcement volunteer duty, Morgan and Cindy Shepherd calmly walked inside of the Walmart store to do their shopping.

    When the time comes for Morgan Shepherd to make the decision to hang up the helmet and retire from racing one has to wonder if retail security might not be a good direction for him to consider. Can you imagine Morgan Shepherd-Mall Cop? I can. I’m also betting that the Walmart store in Las Vegas would hire him in a minute.

  • Texas Twins

    Texas Twins

    Indy Car has announced that it has changed the format of the June 11Th race at Texas Motor Speedway from a single 550-kilometer race to two 275-kilometer races. Each race will give teams half the points, and bonus monies. Plans call for an hour between the two races to allow teams to work on the cars, also a blind draw by the drivers to determine their starting position for the second race will take place on a stage located on the front stretch of the speedway during this break.

  • The Clap Heard Around The World

    The Clap Heard Around The World

    Who would have thought that the second biggest story of the young NASCAR season would come not [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”281″][/media-credit]from the race track but from the media center and it all started with a clap.

    At the end of the Daytona 500, the world, fans and media alike watched a Cinderella story unfold. A 20 year old, won the Daytona 500, in his first attempt, just one day after his 20th birthday, while driving for the legendary Woods Brothers in a historical replica of the car driven by David Pearson in 1976, carrying the Hall of Fame induction proclamation for Pearson on it’s quarter panel. It was the teams first victory since 2001. The unlikely and miraculous occurrence was heralded world wide. It was front page news. It was on everyone’s lips, and on every single talk show, race oriented or not, for the entire week leading up to the next race on the schedule.

    The old school fans cried tears of joy for the Wood Brothers and this young man (Trevor Bayne) who said, “I knew they were going to gang up on me on the restart. I just asked God to please let us finish. I never thought I would win the Daytona 500.” The teleconference on Tuesday heard questions from media outlets not usually heard from. The Christian Voice and Christian outlets were in the cue with questions for the youngest winner ever of the Daytona 500 (beating a record his own hero, Jeff Gordon held).

    Seemingly, a new door had been opened for NASCAR; it had a new arena of fans. But what loomed ahead was in stark contrast to the joy and happiness that the world had seen. And it would garner the name Clap gate.

    At the end of the Daytona 500, several people in the Media Center clapped or cheered for the incredible Cinderella story that they had just watched occur. It was reported that the clapping lasted for about 5 seconds. The fall out from that show of appreciation and emotion violated the sanctity of the Media Center. Many long time members of the media corps claimed it made it hard to return to work and was distracting. Others called it a blatant show of favoritism and lack of unbiased reporting. It was an unprofessional showing of emotion after all. The complaints would lead to the termination of SI.com’s leading NASCAR reporter Tom Bowles, even though he was not alone in the act.

    Bowles attempted to explain his point of view in his regular blog on Frontstretch.com said, “Fact: I clapped, and then shook Trevor Bayne’s hand on the way out along with many assembled media in attendance. Analysis: I still wrote a well-reasoned, well-thought out post-race column on a variety of topics that would have happened if Bayne or Kyle Busch had won.”

    Bowles explanation was met with quick and sure response from a noted radio personality in his blog. But it wasn’t his opinion on the situation that caused the stir as many have suggested. Instead it was the assault on NASCAR’s new generation of media. The electronic one, the citizen’s journalists media corps as NASCAR has named it.

    NASCAR itself started the citizen’s journalists media corps in 2008. It was a chance to give common people the arena to voice their opinions and explain and support them reasonably. They found, to their surprise that many of their fans were talented writers and very, very knowledgeable of the sport and it’s workings. The citizen’s journalists media corps grew rapidly and as in all new things the cream rose to the top.

    As the economy and the electronic age replaced paper and ink publications, with the instant gratification, sources of .com sites that dealt strictly with racing, the need for the reporters that had covered the sport for those publications dropped. There were degreed journalists that were out of work. While there were Citizen’s media writers that were actively covering the sport where they had once been. The rivalry and bitterness was unavoidable. And the “schooled media” began to look down on the new comers.

    This, claims Dave “Godfather” Moody, is the basis for the issue. “Honestly, some of what passes for internet journalism is easy to look down upon. The online NASCAR media is an eclectic group that varies wildly in training, experience and (quite honestly) talent. There are many formally trained, extremely talented writers pounding keyboards for internet websites these days; breaking news, covering the sport and turning out insightful, timely commentary. There is also an overabundance of hacks who think a laptop and an attitude are all its takes to be a NASCAR journalist. Their blogs overflow with inaccuracy, typographical error, caveman grammar and misspelling, and do little to endear their ilk to the more established Media Center veterans.” Although, the Godfather’s statement holds much truth and merit, it also shows the breakdown in the professional preceptorship that exists within every organization.

    It’s a violation of unwritten rules of the media center and garage was the claim that brought “Clap Gate” to a head. What are the unwritten rules you ask? Good question. I asked and other than to present an unbiased view and presentation of the facts; no one could really give me an answer.

    There is a published list of conduct at the NASCAR Media site. Common sense things really, don’t ask for an autograph; don’t ask to have your picture taken with your favorite driver, use common respect when dealing with drivers and crew members. Things along those lines, common sense, it comes down to maintain a professional demeanor and attitude at all times. And all of that makes good sense to me. I get that. But I have this nagging insecurity that wasn’t there before. What are the unwritten unspoken age old rules? Who can I ask to tell me what they are? To who and when do they apply? I am citizen’s media so believe me if there is a rule I know it applies to me. But how can I keep from breaking it if I don’t know what it is?

    Let me give you a couple of examples, in 1998 after 20 years of trying Dale Earnhardt won the Daytona 500. Every single member of every single team lined up on pit road to shake his hand in congratulations. The press box cheered. It was headline news. No one lost their job. In 2001 on the last lap of the Daytona 500, Dale Earnhardt lost his life. Life Magazine published photos to illustrate the devastation on the sport including one of the press box and there were few dry faces in the picture. No one lost their job.

    Television media have been expressing their emotions from day one. In 1979, Ken Squire’s excitement over the fight between the Allison’s and Cale Yarborough could be heard and still can be to the world. When Dale Jarrett won the Daytona 500 his excited and proud father, Ned Jarrett cheered him across the line. It was understandable and made the sport real. Darrell Waltrip cheered his brother across the line to win his first race, the ill fated 2001 Daytona 500 and again as he repeated in the truck series race on the anniversary of that horrible day 10 years later. It was understandable it was family. It’s what we do it’s who we are.

    Every day we read “professionally prepared” pieces that show favoritism to drivers, teams, and makes. We read slaps and snipes at drivers on Twitter from journalists sitting in the media box. But the unwritten rules don’t seem to apply.

    It would appear that the unwritten rules only apply when you are not a member of what the National Motorsports Press Association calls, “electronic journalist (i.e., television or radio on-air reporters or producers)” or if you are not a member of the old guard media corp.

    Now I will grant you there were obviously, under currents that lead to Clap Gate. But to blame all internet journalists for a situation that in previous incidents was considered understandable and reasonable is simply biased. It is a violation of the very rule that supposedly was the catalyst of the situation in the first place, that Bowles showed bias and favoritism towards Trevor Bayne’s victory.

    It is important to note here, that NASCAR itself did not weigh in on Clap Gate. They had a winner and they knew it when it elicited the response that it did from younger and less experienced members in the media center. That excitement would be passed on to readers, watchers and listeners. And in truth that is what we do isn’t it? Tell the story so that our readers can feel it? Express the emotions of the day and the situation in a way that takes our audience to a place they didn’t have the opportunity to be. If we can not paint the picture of the day and the victory and all the things that it brings, are we really doing our jobs?

    Racing is a sport of passion. It always has been. Without passion there is no competitive fire. There is no unyielding drive. Without passion there is no need for speed. It becomes a calculating exercise in high speed chess. It’s why we hate fuel mileage races. It’s why fans continue to scream for action and expression from the drivers. It’s why those that view 5 time series Champion Jimmie Johnson as vanilla don’t like him. They can’t see, hear or feel his passion. It is the reason for “Have At It Boys”.

    If there is no passion in our reporting and our communication of the sport, then we have issued nothing more than a boring diatribe that is taking up bytes of computer space or killing trees unnecessarily. Perhaps if we take a really long and honest look at ourselves and the rules we have created and never written down, the standards by which we judge our work and others, we might find that it is that monotonous diatribe attitude that has contributed to the loss of interest in the sport. I find it a lot easier to accept the passion of someone who dislikes a particular driver or team than I do the run on of a passionless recounting of events.

    I was advised against writing this piece. It could ruin your future as a writer. You are being read now and accepted. I thought about it. And I asked myself this question if you run or avoid the heat of something you feel strongly needs to be addressed, when will you stop running? Would your heroes and the old school heroes of the sport have addressed their concerns or have walked away for fear of its impact on their futures?

    I can say with definite confidence that Rusty Wallace was never intimidated by the Intimidator let alone anything else that crossed his path. I can’t see Dale Earnhardt walking away from a slap in the face or a wrongful accusation. And my father never called any man sir or walked away from a fight. You have to at some point in your life and your career stand up for what you believe to be right. And I believe that unwritten rules and double standards are wrong in every single case. Level the playing field here. Put the rules on the wall so to speak. If I have to abide by them then I should be able to expect everyone to. If my writing is judged by published typographical errors and misspelled words. So should yours be.

    I am not a professional journalist. But I do have the guts to pursue that dream. To work hard to earn my stripes and to take my knocks and lessons as they come to me. If I am wrong I will admit it. If I believe I am right, I will stand on it. If you can prove me wrong I will post it publicly.

    I love racing. I love the passion. I respect the other members of the media corp. and I have great respect for my editors and fellow writers here. But the most effective state polices itself, and it can’t do so by eating its young or with rules that are a secret.

  • Favorites at Vegas and Cheering in the Press Box

    Favorites at Vegas and Cheering in the Press Box

    Who is the favorite in Sunday’s race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway? There is a strong possibility that it could be Jimmie Johnson. Johnson, despite his woeful showing at Daytona two weeks ago, rebounded at Phoenix and seems ripe for a repeat victory at the track. Of course, a rejuvenated Jeff Gordon has momentum and you can never count out Matt Kenseth, so it’s up in the air. Or is it?

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]The 2011 season has given us so many surprises, we can’t count on anything. If you had told me on February 1st that the Wood Brothers would win the Daytona 500, that not one Hendrick or Childress car would finish in the top three, Bobby Labonte would be a factor late in the race, and David Gilliland would finish third behind Trevor Bayne and Carl Edwards, I would have called for the men in the white coats. On top of that, if you had told me that Jeff Gordon, who hadn’t won in 66 races, would beat Kyle Busch to win at Phoenix, well…you get the idea.

    So, who’s going to win? Johnson won last year, Kenseth (and teammate Greg Biffle) have always been good here, and it’s the Busch brothers’ home track. And then there’s Kevin Harvick. He came so close last year. It’s not easy to call a winner, which is a big difference from the past few years. With multiple car wrecks being the rule at the first two races this year, it could be someone different, which would fit in with what would seem to be the pattern for the 2011 season. Maybe David Ragan?

    One thing is certain. With new television ratings better than last year and attendance at the track improving, maybe we’ve seen the end of what many considered a decline in the sport we all love. Maybe it has something to do with the results of the first two races. The measuring stick may be at Bristol in two weeks.

    I have covered NASCAR races as a member of the “citizen media corps” for the last 15 years. I’ve been in either the press box or media centers at eight different tracks, and I cannot remember a time when the media really applauded a performance. Oh, I can remember many times when emotions were shared, but never outright cheering. As excited as I was over Trevor Bayne’s winning the Daytona 500 in the Wood Brothers Ford, I found myself restrained at home on February 20th. It’s just second nature. I can still remember February 25, 2001, the week after Dale Earnhardt left us, and the dramatic Steve Park victory. As emotional as that was, there was no cheering in the press box. I also remember October 24, 2004, at Martinsville Speedway. It was the day that Ricky Hendrick and many others perished in a plane crash near the track. No announcement was made about the tragedy and only a radio transmission from a scanner heard that the winner (Jimmie Johnson) would not go to victory lane. Soon enough the news filtered in on what had happened. Unfortunately, for some reason, broadband internet was lost and there was no cellular service available. There was no cheering, but I’ve never seen a group of reporters so upset. The press box was in uproar. No cheering, but plenty of emotion. Is there a difference? I think not.

    Maybe those of us who do this as a hobby should learn a little decorum. I didn’t go to Daytona, but I’ll be at many tracks this year. I will, as usual, be professional and report the facts as I see them regardless of my point of view. I have my favorites, and it’s only human that I do, but cheering is not being professional. I hate that Tom Bowles lost his job, and I understand his emotions and the reasons for clapping. Maybe si.com was a little harsh in their decision, but whether you like a driver or do not, or really a situation, you are on the job. Maybe that’s something those of us who blog need to understand a little better. Lessons in life are sometimes hard.

  • SpeedwayMedia News and Notes

    SpeedwayMedia News and Notes

    This weeks Kobalt Tools 400 will be held at the one and half mile tri-oval Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The track saw it’s first NASCAR race in 1996 with the NASCAR K&N Pro Series west race won by Ken Schrader. The first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race was the Las Vegas 400 won by Mark Martin in 1998. Jimmie Johnson currently holds the record for most wins with four.

    This weeks Schedule:

    Practice
    3 p.m ET Friday on Speed

    Qualifying
    6:30 p.m. ET Friday on Speed

    Practice
    6:00 p.m. ET Saturday on Speed

    Kobalt Tools 400
    3:00 p.m. ET Sunday Fox

    News and Notes for Las Vegas

    *There have been 13 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at LMS.
    *With four drivers participating in all 13 races, Jeff Burton, Jeff gordon, Bobby Labonte, and Mark Martin.
    *Eight different drivers have won, led by Jimmie Johnson, Johnson has won four of the last six races at LMS including last season’s position.
    *Five of the 13 races have been won from a starting position of 20th or worse.
    *The deepest in the field that a race winner has started was 25th by Matt Kenseth in 2004.
    *In three of the last five races, the margin of victory was under one second.
    *Special guests this weekend: Singer Matt Gross will perform a pre-race concert and Kristen Hertzenberg from Phantom of the Opera will sing the national anthem.

    Some Mile Stones looking to be set at LMS this weekend

    *Kasey Kahne, coming off a sixth-place finish at Phoenix, is still looking for his 50th career top five.
    *Mark Martin’s next pole will be his 50th. If he does it, he’ll be th eighth driver in series history with at least 50 poles.
    *Paul Menard currently the Richard Childress Racing driver with the best points position (11th) will make make his 150th start this weekend.

    *The Sub Way Fresh Fit 500 at Phoenix International Raceway proved to as exciting as the Daytona 500. We saw our second different race winner in Jeff Gordon ending his 66-race winless drought. Gordon’s Phoenix victory on Sunday also made it career win number 83 – tying Cale Yarborough for fifth on the all-time list. On deck in the record books: Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip at 84 wins. If Gordon does win this weekend, it would be the first time since October 2007 that he won consecutive races (Talladega and Charlotte).

    *This weekend will mark the 50th Anniversary of Wendell Scott’s first start. To commemorate the 50th anniversary of Scott’s first star-March 4, 1961 at Fairgrounds Speedway in Spartanburg, S.C., every NASCAR Sprint Cup and NASCAR Nationwide Series will display a decal of Scotts photo this weekend at LMS. Scott, the African-American to win a premier series race, ran 495 career races in what is now the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

    *A.J. Allmendinger has opened up the season with finishes of 11th (Daytona) and ninth (Phoenix). Bringing glory back to the Iconic No. 43, currently fourth in points standing. thus putting the Richard Petty Motorsports No.43 back near the top of the points standings for the first time in more than two decades. The last time the No. 43 car was this high in the standings was Martinsville on April 26, 1987.

    Top 15 in Points Standing 2 of 36
    Rank Driver Points Behind
    1 Kyle Busch 80 Leader
    2 Kurt Busch 77 -3
    3 Tony Stewart 69 -11
    4 A.J. Allmendinger 69 -11
    5 Jeff Gordon 65 -15
    6 Mark Martin 65 -15
    7 Bobby Labonte 64 -16
    8 Ryan Newman 64 -16
    9 Juan Montoya 64 -16
    10 David Gilliland 63 -17
    11 Paul Menard 63 -17
    12 Carl Edwards 59 -21
    13 Jimmie Johnson 59 -21
    14 Denny Hamlin 58 -22
    15 Kasey Kahne 57 -23

    Notable Drivers outside of top 15
    Rank Driver Points Behind
    16 Martin Truex Jr 56 -24
    17 Dale Earnhardt Jr 55 -25
    21 Clint Bowyer 45 -35
    22 Kevin Harvick 44 -36
    28 Greg Biffle 33 -47