Author: SM Staff

  • The Case of the Mysterious Disappearing Fans Solved

    The Case of the Mysterious Disappearing Fans Solved

    With the new rumored changes to the points and Chase system in NASCAR, people once again want to talk about what happened to NASCAR’s numbers. How will the changes affect the television ratings and the ticket sales numbers? Will the new changes have the desired effect of bringing back the loyal and diehard fans to the track and in front of their television sets weekly? Just as important is the question where did they go and why?

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]I believe that responsibility lies not only with the business model of NASCAR it’s self but with the changes in the type of fan and the type of drivers that compete in the sport. The old school, diehard, knowledgeable fan, who researched, asked questions and learned the sport. They were also being diehard in their loyalty to their driver got tired of being treated as though they were stupid. They got tired of being traded for marketing dollars and having the sport itself slide for the sake of money.

    That financially profitable business model that was created by NASCAR, carried over to everything. To the price of the hotels and merchandise, to the price of the race tickets, to the number of commercials in a TV broadcast. It was a business model that the teams copied, after all everyone wanted their piece of the pie. It was a model in which the fans became a commodity much like the inventory of cars and parts in their shop.

    There were warnings from within. Drivers cautioned that the true blood of the sport was a mixture between the loyalty of the fans and the fierceness of competition and to lose either would have disastrous results. Still the model moved forward making millions of dollars as it did, but at the same time alienating long time fans and enthusiasts.

    The knowledgeable and long time fans shook their heads and faded away much like the real stories of their heroes. The commercialized and romanticized NASCAR fans took their place, the ME generation. The generation of what it’s in it for me. What do I get? It’s ok to hate a driver, it’s ok to wish him bad. Wrecks are great, if they die so what; they get paid the big bucks to take that chance. These appear on message boards throughout the internet. Their loyalty changed from week to week. Whoever was winning, as long as they weren’t winning too much. How much was too much? To that there was no consistent answer.

    The next generation of drivers was different as well. Gone were the strong men with iron wills. The courage and daring of moon shiners and fighter pilots. Men, who could build the car, could and did work on the car, and knew it inside out. The magicians of speed faded into history and their stories became romantic tales of daring and magic.

    In their place came pretty poster boys and marketing images that had no substance and no reality. What you saw was all there was. There was no personality. There was no style or substance. It was a facade of a man created by a marketing puppeteer to sell the sponsor products and the sport.

    Like a movie façade the man behind the image was often unaccommodating and distant. He was a business owner with multiple corporations and the driver you saw was actually nothing more than a corporate image meant to entice you to support of products and merchandise.

    The dedication of driver to fan began to disappear. The standards of the King and his devotion to his following became legend and few if any paid heed to the dominance that fan base provided him in times of difficulty.

    The slick and shiny new NASCAR driver met with approval from the master puppeteers named NASCAR because the sport had changed. It was now about control about changing and rewriting history to avoid offending the sensitive. Sensitivity training and “diversity studies” became the order of the day. Not race cars, speed and technologies that would extend the sports survival into the next centuries.

    The drivers were just the starting point. The next stop was erasing the brand identity of the manufacturers that for years had kept the sport afloat. And they did so with total arrogance stating, the sport would survive even if the manufactures represented did not.

    To make their point, NASCAR engineers were given the task of creating a NASCAR car. The Car of Tomorrow it was called. All the cars would be the same, creating a “level playing field” and eliminating the advantage of factory support and dominance.

    The arrival of NASCAR’s car spoke loudly to fall of the sport and its fans. But it also spoke loudly to the men behind the poster boy smiles. Suddenly they were at risk. Their well scripted and planned roles of villain and hero began to fall apart. The heroes couldn’t fill the shoes of the men of the past. They didn’t know how. They were created on paper and their reality was that the 43 most highly paid male super models frankly didn’t have the skills. And the few that did were unacceptable to the new fan. They were, “Neanderthal throw backs”, “spoiled brat”, “jerk with a steering wheel”.

    The “general fan” does not like Kyle Busch or Tony Stewart or even to a degree Juan Pablo Montoya. It really has little to do with their demeanor or their behavior. It has more to do with their raw ability. They are not the slick paper politically correct set. They are a throwback to a simpler time when people could do the math and know where their favorite stood in the points. Where the goal and path to reach it were easy. Do it better. Do it faster and accept no road block in your way. Bring back the trophy and ultimately the championship.

    For all their cries of we need another Dale Earnhardt, they don’t really want one. Not that any of this generation of drivers could ever fill his shoes. But should one come along that could stand beside him, they would reject him as being too cocky and irresponsible.

    Even though the man in black was the defining hero that changed not only our sport but our world he too fell victim to NASCAR’s polishing rag. His name used to promote and describe as though it were an adjective yet few of the new fans knew him as anything but Sr. Truth is he was not a senior. He was Dale Earnhardt. His son was Junior. But he was never senior. He was Dale. He was the Intimidator. He was the man in black. He was a lot of expletives if he was not your favorite driver. But he was never Senior.

    As in the growth of all things NASCAR’s new business model hit its snag. Its new fans were not interested in why or how. The patient support that the sport had enjoyed for over 50 years was suddenly gone. The new generation of fans wanted what they had been promised.

    When it was not forth coming immediately from NASCAR they created it themselves with irresponsible postings across the internet of unsubstantiated rumor and flat fiction. The fan bases now thoroughly ensconced in the new NASCAR model defended the action as “freedom of speech” and encouraged the activity to the point that across the board, old school fans began to whisper amongst themselves about the fall of the proud and the greedy.

    They began looking for the “new hero”. Sadly it would not be the Legacy of the greatest hero our sport had known. But who would it be? Would he come from the west and a land of glitter and glamour or would he come from another series with the strength and the will to stand like Wyatt Earp? Or would it be a woman who would charm and comfort them back to their seats?

    Truth is the story has no ending as of yet. There are changes coming and the sands of time are still shaping the challenges and the faces of the future. What difference will it make to change the way the points are awarded? Will that change the fact that barring some horrific and unanticipated disaster that Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus will once again be right there taking on all comers? NO. It means that we are rewarding those that are too lazy to learn how the points system works and are too uneducated to do the math.

    Then we have the change to the chase. Rumor is 10 points spots and 2 winners spots. Now let’s say that we have 4 teams with 2 wins apiece. All 4 of them are separated by 1 point. They can’t award those positions by points because that is what they are trying to get away from in the first place. If they do award it on the basis of points then what was the point in changing the system. Brian France gets egg on his face and one more time NASCAR takes a hit in lacking foresight.

    So what do we do put all four out there in an all star prelude type race and say the top two go on and the last two don’t? How many cars do you think will still be drivable after the 1st turn on the green flag? Let us not forget here that the Cup Champion’s purse money last year was over 7 million dollars and that didn’t include contingency money. It didn’t include Champion’s purse share. I have the greatest confidence in my favorites that they have the talent to make it happen. But I am realistic as well, that is a lot of money.

    By changing the points system and the Chase, all NASCAR is doing is saying here we understand you aren’t smart enough to understand so we are going to make it easy for you. How many times will NASCAR play the fans as stupid and insult their ability before people say enough. Or maybe they already are saying enough and that is why the ratings are dropping and the seats are starting to be noticeably empty.

    The question stands who will lead us from the ruins of greed based control model that trades loyalty for dollar signs and knowledge for rumored speculation and irresponsibility. Who will be the track wise Hercules who will rise above the wrongs? Dramatic yes, but Hollywood couldn’t have written a better script of disaster and drama. Probably because this is not and never has been a polished sport. It is and always has been a fast paced chess game where men’s lives and the lives of their families and fans hang in the balance.

    NASCAR’s numbers are gone. But they and their teams erased them themselves. Can they be recovered? Only time will tell.

  • Indy Car, Prepared for 2011?

    With the 2011 season looming just on the horizon, the premier form of open wheeled racing in North America appears to be more prepared than ever to get things started. This series has taken notice, asked some questions, and made a few changes to their overall program with the intent of giving the race fans, the paying customers, if you will, more value for their dollar.

    The first and most obvious change is the name. No longer know as the Indy Racing League, this series has now been christened as “Indy Car”.  This change came to be after research by Indy Car officials indicated there were a significant number of people that were unfamiliar with the Indy Racing League, but were well aware of what an Indy Car was. Now that the differences between the IRL and CART have been resolved it only made sense to rename the series to something the race fan could relate to.

    In what is seen as another positive change for 2011, Indy Car has revised the schedule to include races in Brazil, Japan, and two stops in Canada. The series also added a new venue with the addition of the Baltimore Grand Prix, a temporary street course in downtown Baltimore, Maryland. Indy Car will also return to New Hampshire Speedway after a 13 year absence, and a return to the historic Milwaukee Mile is slated for mid June. Chicagoland, Kansas, Watkins Glen, and Homestead-Miami will not host events during the 2011 season. These revisions allow Indy car to be exposed to new markets, and allow opportunity for growth, and additional revenues for race promoters, as well as Indy Car.

    With a few exceptions, the teams, drivers, and sponsors have remained pretty much unchanged. It is certain that Team Penske and its’ line up of Ryan Briscoe, Helio Castroneves, and the 2010 runner up Will Power will be a force to be reckoned with in 2011. Andretti Autosport will field cars for Marco Andretti, Ryan Hunter-Reay, Danica Patrick, and of this writing it is uncertain who will replace Tony Kanaan who signed with DeFerran-Dragon Racing and will team with Raphael Matos. Chip Ganassi has expanded his racing empire with the formation of Service Central Chip Ganassi racing. This team will see Graham Rahall, and Charlie Kimball slated as the primary drivers. The Target Chip Ganassi team should remain without major changes, Scott Dixon, are signed for 2011, and Dario Franchitti will defend his title. Dreyer-Reinbold will be back with Paul Tracy, Justin Wilson, Ana Beatriz, and the return of Mike Conway. Team owners said they will be happy to see Mike back in the car, and fully recovered from his injuries suffered on the last lap of the 2010 Indy 500. Long time USAC star and team owner Sara Fisher will relinquish driving duties in 2011, and hand the keys over to Ed Carpenter.  JR Hildebrand , a veteran of Indy Light competition has been secured by Panther Racing to replace Dan Wheldon in the #4 National Guard Car. Dan is rumored to be talking with Chip Ganassi, but there have been no formal announcements made as yet. Other teams to watch are HVM Racing with Simona De Silvestro behind the wheel. Fazzt Racing with Bruno Junqueria, and long time veteran Alex Tagliani. KV Racing will come ready with Mario Moraes, Takuma Sato, and E.J. Visio in their stable.  You can never rule out the five car team of Conquest Racing, or The teams of A.J. Foyt, Bryan Herta, Dale Coyne or Newman-Haas.

    With the revised schedule, and the majority of talent still in place, there is no reason to believe that the 2011 Izod Indy Car series will be any less exciting than in 2010. Last season saw two, three, and even four wide racing on the high speed, high banked ovals. The Indianapolis 500 was one of the most watched sporting events worldwide. The Street and road course races drew huge crowds. The innovative TV packages with patented “Side by Side” coverage that allowed viewers to never miss a minute of the action was a first in the industry. Overall, it’s easy to see why this is the Premier open wheel racing series in North America.

    So, don’t hesitate, the first race of the season is almost upon us. The Honda Grand Prix in Saint Petersburg, Florida is set for March 25th through March 27th and would make a great excuse to visit the sunshine state, and get out of the cold, all while enjoying the stars, and cars of Indy Car.

  • NASCAR May Be Returning to Simplicity With Points Change

    NASCAR May Be Returning to Simplicity With Points Change

    The complex incremental scoring system of points for NASCAR may be out the window in favor of a simpler system.  It may just be that the winner of the race will get 43 points and each finisher after that will get one point less.

    An Associated Press release stated the upcoming changes had not been finalized and the source of information, who had been involved in the discussions, wished to remain anonymous.

    [media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]The current point system has been in place since 1975.  It gives 175 points to the winner and decreases incrementally in five to three points down to 34 points for the driver who finishes 43rd.  In addition five-point bonuses are awarded for leading a lap and leading the most laps.

    The proposed system will still award bonus points for the lap leaders and race winners, but it has not been determined exactly how many points it will be.

    All the chatter about Brian France changing the Chase to an exotic playoff system also appears to have fallen off the radar.  Apparently NASCAR has listened to drivers and teams who really don’t want the changes.

    The rumors of expanding the Chase to 15 drivers did not play well with drivers or fans.  It appears the Chase will basically remain with top 10 drivers following the 26th race.

    The remaining two positions in the Chase will go to the drivers who have the most wins and are outside of the top-10 positions.

    Preseason testing begins this Thursday at Daytona International Speedway.  NASCAR president, Mike Helton and vice president of competition, Robin Pemberton will discuss some of the planned changes for 2011 during a press conference with the media on Friday.

    Any major changes will be announced by Brian France next week during the annual media tour in Charlotte.

    It appears NASCAR has listened and found answers in good, old-fashioned simplicity.  Those who are critics of the Chase will still have it, so their complaining will continue.

    As for the possible change in points, it should be more fan friendly with the ease of the points calculation after each race.

    There will be more changes announced regarding NASCAR policies in the coming days, but for now it appears NASCAR is working toward a cleaner points system and a Chase that encourages wins.

    Exotic changes to the sport don’t bode well with the players or the fans and now it appears that will not be an issue.

  • NASCAR Tinkers While Fans Check Out

    NASCAR Tinkers While Fans Check Out

    NASCAR continues to tinker with at least two of its top three series at the risk of alienating more fans.

    Why do they do this? The fans of the Sprint Cup Series had just become accustomed to The Chase, the Lucky Dog, the Shotgun Start, and (unfortunately) the Car of Tomorrow (which properly should be called the Car of Today) in the Sprint Cup Series and what do they do? Talk is they are going to revamp the points system. You know the one created by Bob Latford in 1975 that rewarded consistency over the entire season. What they’ve come up with, according to the Associated Press, is a system that would give the winner of the race 43 points. Each position thereafter would receive one less point than the position ahead of it. In other words, the team/driver that finished second would receive 42 points and the third place team/driver would get 41 points. Last place would yield 1 point.

    The problem with all of this is that these changes are manufactured to attain a goal that takes us far away from the traditions of the sport. Take the Nationwide Series for instance. According to drivers who already applied for their licenses, they have to choose only one series to run for the championship. No more running for the Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series the same season. The point of this is to eliminate the championship going to a Sprint Cup regular, but guess what? It may happen anyway.

    If you look at the list of probable Nationwide Series entrants, one name just jumps out at you. Elliott Sadler. Yep, the guy who has been a regular on the Sprint Cup Series for a long time. He even has three wins in Sprint Cup competition, driving for the Wood Brothers, Robert Yates Racing, and the Ray Evernham, George Gillette, and Richard Petty Motorsports teams. Last year, he decided to leave RPM and wound up in the Nationwide Series driving for Kevin Harvick Motorsports, one of the most powerful Nationwide Series teams. He will run for the championship and has to be the odds-on favorite. Imagine that.

    The rumored points system would attempt to make a closer championship race, giving the fans what Brian France calls a “seventh game experience.” Funny he would use a baseball term; I always thought the NFL was the target. Regardless, it would mean that a top driver can have a bad day, win the next week, and not be so far behind in the series standings. Other changes could be ten drivers qualifying for the Chase with the two top winners, if they are not part of the top ten taking positions 11 and 12. Once again manufacturing the close finish might have the same appeal to fans that those other ideas in my first paragraph (with the exception of Shotgun Starts) did. They will be yawning. As I’ve said before, most of the older base of fans will consider it a bastardization of their sport, younger fans will continue to turn the channel because they don’t know what the rules are, and both will eventually watch the NBA, MLB or the NFL. And they will wonder why.

    If we look at the history of the last decade, NASCAR had a good product that was growing year after year. Television ratings were high and crowds at the track were large. Things started to decline before the Great Recession of 2008, and that event and the constant changes designed to “make things better” turned the base fan away. They haven’t returned. And with gasoline prices rumored to be $4.00 per gallon by May, look for more of the same.

    Where does all of this leave us? I’ve long had a problem with Sprint Cup drivers and powerhouse teams (Childress or one of his farm teams, Roush-Fenway, Penske, Gibbs, and Hendrick) dominating the Nationwide Series, but was this the answer? Nationwide Series races are not as well attended as Sprint Cup races, but you can bet the absence of Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski, and Kyle Busch won’t help any. This will all play out, but I don’t have a good feeling about it. The new points system, if rumors are true, may make for a close finish or it may be a runaway. So, nothing has changed except confusion to the fan base. From 2004 until today, NASCAR has been confusing its fans. Yes, the economy is bad, but people resist change. It confuses the young and confounds the old. And the beat goes on.

  • Steven Wallace to Run the Daytona 500, Sam Hornish Jr. Without Cup Ride? No Way!

    Steven Wallace to Run the Daytona 500, Sam Hornish Jr. Without Cup Ride? No Way!

    Folks, the headline may be hard to believe—but it is true. Well, okay, most of you would believe the second half of the headline, but not the first half.

    As reported by Fox Sports on Saturday, Sam Hornish Jr. will not be racing anything in the Cup Series for Penske Racing or anybody come Daytona or during the year.

    His crew has been shrunk to either join the Nationwide teams or strengthen Brad Keselowski’s Cup team.

    This would equal no surprise, as Hornish hasn’t done anything in Cup except cause wrecks and incidents that have many people questioning why he was even in the series to begin with. Let’s face it—in 108 starts, he only has two top fives and eight top 10s. If you can’t get it done in that time, then how much time do you want?

    NASCAR is a performance-driven business, and if you can’t get it done, you’re cut. Just ask Scott Speed, as he was booted from Red Bull Racing despite “contract terms” and “discussions” when he finished outside the top 20 in points.

    Hornish has only lasted as long as he has with Penske due to their IZOD IndyCar success, as Hornish won 19 races, had 62 top fives and 80 top 10s in 116 starts. It’s the situation of being the teacher’s pet, but the teacher has run out of excuses to keep the principal from intervening.

    So what happens in NASCAR when you don’t do well? Simple—you go down and run one of the two lower divisions, or you face the music and leave the series. Some drivers who have stepped down have found success and have loved it there—namely Ron Hornaday and Todd Bodine. The Camping World Truck Series has become home to drivers with this scenario and now has fans tuned in for the high-octane drama.

    However, Dario Franchitti also faced the music but went back to IZOD IndyCar instead after his NASCAR experiment failed and won the championship. Some drivers are only fit for one form of motorsports, while others can adapt across the board, like Tony Stewart.

    Hornish has taken the road of going down to the Nationwide Series for 2011, as he will run at least 10 races for Roger Penske, including the season opener at Daytona. Hornish will have no excuses for those 10 races, as Penske had two cars in the top five last year in points, so we know they have a good program. It’ll all be up to the driver and for him to prove that he belongs in NASCAR.

    The second half of the story, though, is where the shocker hits—the owner’s points from the No. 77 car that Hornish drove will be used by Steven Wallace for the season-opening Daytona 500. With the No. 77 being 30th in points, therefore in the top 35, that will lock Steven into the race. What is wrong with this picture?

    EVERYTHING ABOUT IT! Steven has yet to even find success in the Nationwide Series and has caused too many wrecks to count. Many fans have already expressed their thoughts towards Rusty Wallace in telling him to take his son out of the car and put his money in someone who can drive, such as his niece Chrissy Wallace.

    His stats speak towards what the fans are saying, as in 157 starts he only has four top fives and 29 top 10s. He also has seven DNFs in his past 12 Nationwide Series restrictor plate starts. Now, we’ll be nice and say that he has been improving each year, yet not enough that it warrants him being allowed to run the biggest race of the year in the top series.

    Rusty also said that he thinks Steven will be the Sprint Cup Series champion in 2015—delusional much? Doesn’t he see what we see in the fact that Steven can’t even call himself a top Nationwide Series driver?

    Folks, last year’s Daytona 500 was almost ruined in the headlines by a pothole. Luckily, Jamie McMurray won it in emotional fashion and stole the headlines.

    With Wallace starting this year’s Daytona 500 and the harm that he could cause, we may need another dramatic win to steal the headlines. Without it, we could see a lot of hate mail floating across the web over another ruined Daytona 500.

    Penske Racing has obviously made some interesting choices since the conclusion of 2010 with choosing to attempt to find Hornish sponsorship rather than Justin Allgaier and now allowing a wrecking ball to run the biggest race of the year. Thankfully, there are people like Steve Turner who help those in need (Allgaier), and hopefully somebody like him will save us from doom in the Daytona 500.

  • What Could Have Been?

    What Could Have Been?

    As you may have noticed from my previous articles, I’m no fan of the Chase system. This article will detail what would have happened if we had the old points system, but with the 10 extra bonus points for wins feature from 1975-2006 because as you know, NASCAR implemented the extra points for wins following the end of the 2006 season, so repeating what happened from 2007-2010 is irrelevant. I’m going to call my points system, Ryan’s System.

    1975 Ryan’s System Champion:Richard Petty (Petty won by over 842 points in my system and by 722 under the system back then. Petty won 13 races to 1 by second place finisher, Dave Marcis.)

    1976 Ryan’s System Champion:Cale Yarborough (Won 9 races. Richard Petty had just three to finish second and was behind by 275 points)

    1977 Ryan’s System Champion:Cale Yarborough (Won 9 races again. Petty won 5 races this time around, but this time found himself behind 425 points. Better luck next year King.)

    1978 Ryan’s System Champion:Cale Yarbrough (3rd and Final Championship in a row. Beat Darrell Waltrip by 519 points.)

    1979 Ryan’s System Champion:Darrell Waltrip (Oooh ouch. Petty is not a 7-time champion anymore, but a 6-time champion. Waltrip wins a 9 point nail biter. Now, that is exciting stuff.)

    1980 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Earnhardt (First championship for The Intimidator. 9 point victory over Cale who was going for his 4th.)

    1981 Ryan’s System Champion:Darrell Waltrip (No question about it. He won 12 races. Second-place finisher Bobby Allison had 5.)

    1982 Ryan’s System Champion:Darrell Waltrip (Same story. No question about it. Waltrip 12-Allison 8)

    1983 Ryan’s System Champion:Bobby Allison (Bobby gets revenge and both have 6 wins, but Allison wins by 47.)

    1984 Ryan’s System Champion:Terry Labonte (Labonte only won 2 races yet still won by 55 points. Evidence that the system works on consistency as well.)

    1985 Ryan’s System Champion:Bill Elliott (Elliott edges Waltrip. Waltrip would have had an 101 point win, but Elliott had 11 wins to Waltrip’s 3 and won the title. Sorry Darrell.)

    1986 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Earnhardt (Won the title easily)

    1987 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Earnhardt (3rd Championship. Made it look easy.)

    1988 Ryan’s System Champion:Bill Elliott (Two titles in four years for Elliott. Held off Wallace by 24 points.)

    1989 Ryan’s System Champion:Rusty Wallace (22 point win for Wallace over the 3-time champion Earnhardt.)

    1990 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Earnhardt (Cruised easily to his 4th title.)

    1991 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Earnhardt (5th title. 4th title in 6 years. Amazing performance.)

    1992 Ryan’s System Champion:Bill Elliott (3rd title. Apologies to the late Alan Kulwicki, but he lost out by 20 points.)

    1993 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Earnhardt (6th title ties Richard Petty for most all-time.

    1994 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Earnhardt (7th title. The best NASCAR driver of all-time.

    1995 Ryan’s System Champion:Jeff Gordon (This kid beat the best of all-time in just his third year? Very impressive.

    1996 Ryan’s System Champion:Jeff Gordon (Beats out teammate Terry Labonte by 43 points for his second career championship.

    1997 Ryan’s System Champion:Jeff Gordon (3rd title in a row ties him with Cale Yarborough for most titles in consecutive seasons.)

    1998 Ryan’s System Champion:Jeff Gordon (4th title in a row and only 27 years of age and now has the record for himself.)

    1999 Ryan’s System Champion:Dale Jarrett (Heck at least someone other than Gordon won.)

    2000 Ryan’s System Champion:Bobby Labonte (First title. Holds off the best of all-time to win it.)

    2001 Ryan’s System Champion:Jeff Gordon (5 titles in 7 years is still mighty impressive.)

    2002 Ryan’s System Champion:Tony Stewart (Former open-wheeler wins his first title.)

    2003 Ryan’s System Champion:Matt Kenseth (Held off Jimmie Johnson for his first title.)

    2004 Ryan’s System Champion:Jeff Gordon (6th title in 10 years. Won by 17 points.)

    2005 Ryan’s System Champion:Tony Stewart (2nd title.)

    2006 Ryan’s System Champion:Jimmie Johnson (He did it! By 14 points, but he did it!)

    Now, you know that NASCAR implemented the 10 extra bonus points after this year. 2007 belonged to Jeff Gordon for his 7th title to tie him with Dale Earnhardt for the most championships all-time. Carl Edwards got his first in 2008. Jimmie Johnson took his second title in 2009 and finally Happy Kevin Harvick is a champion finally. So, looking at this article…who is the best of all-time? If you want to go by wins, you have to go with Richard Petty because he won 200, but if you want to go by championships you have to go with either #3 or #24 and Gordon will be King once he wins another title. Yes, Gordon won 4 in a row and that record cannot be broken until at least 2013. I have provided you with the evidence. What do you guys think of it?

    Email me at therhino.ryan@gmail.com or facebook me. Thank you.

  • One of a Kind: The Daytona International Speedway

    One of a Kind: The Daytona International Speedway

    This piece was originally published two years ago on a blog. With the recent changes to the speedway and the 10 year anniversary of Dale Earnhardt Sr.’s death, it has been revised for reposting.

    She stands on the stretch of land between Interstate 95 and the notorious Daytona Beach.

    She emanates beauty, strength, power, and glory.

    Dreams have both been made and broken on her high banks, and her spectators, the loyal followers and patrons, have witnessed history and heartbreak.

    Since 1959, they have come to this 2.5-mile oval in awe and in no need to contradict her. She is a piece of sacred American land, joining the company of The Alamo, Gettysburg, The White House, and even Elvis’ Graceland.

    She is important, she is rich, big, and beautiful, she is the attention getter that is the Daytona International Speedway, and she is my home away from home.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]They call her the “World Center of Racing,” NASCAR auto racing. She was born in 1959 when NASCAR founder Bill France had a vision of her and knew that she was the next great sports venue.

    But before his vision could become a reality, NASCAR’s grandest stage was the Daytona Beach course, just down the road from where she would be built.

    But soon enough, from the dirt of what became a man-made lake that sits in the middle of her, and straight from the ground she arose, all 480 acres of her.

    She became Speedway Boulevard’s eye catching and most glorious structure. It is easy to spot her from all directions miles away.

    The sun beams brightly on her long sweeping straightaways, 3,800 in the front and 3,000 in the back, during the daytime. Over a thousand lights illuminate her distinctive steep banked corners of 31 degrees. She is one of a kind, a magnificent facility.

    Many have come to walk along her green grass and sit among her multi-colored grandstands.

    They have come to get an up close and personal view of their heroes and their powerful machines, thanks to her state of the art garage area and newly expanded fan zone.

    They have come from near, the Floridians proud of their home coliseum. They have come from far, be it half way around the world or half way across the country.

    From all along the coast, they have all come with their excitement and expectations. They make the trip of a lifetime; they make the trip with hopes of leaving happier and satisfied.

    They come for not just a couple of hours like other sporting events, but for days and even weeks.

    She becomes their home away from home, as they set up camp on her infield with motor homes and tents, which are decorated with decals, flags and everything in-between, everything that shows their NASCAR spirit.

    It’s a spirit that has been carried over to the unwritten dress code when attending any of her events as a way to show where loyalties lie.

    She is not a place where designer clothes are worn, only solid colors, because she is a place where they are happy to look like racecars.

    And when they are not watching those cars battling her, they water ski, swim, and fish on her 29-acre Lake Lloyd. However, it is not an intrusion on her space, it is what she likes, it is what she wants, and it is why she was born.

    I, too, have walked through her gates on many occasions. I have stood in amazement at her size, which appears to reach the stars. She easily made me feel humble, grateful and happy all at once.

    I have come and observed her when she is quiet, the calm before the storm, when there is not a car, truck, crewman, or other fan in site.

    It is the time when she sits undisturbed under a blanket of lights. But I have also come and observed her at her best, in the heat of the battle.

    It is because of the impending battle of NASCAR’s greatest drivers that others and I become drawn to her, like a moth to a flame.

    Drawn to the history of the events that she hosts: the first race of the year which is NASCAR’s biggest event and most important, plus it also pays the most.

    During the months of February and July, she becomes the center of the NASCAR world as well as the second largest city in Florida.

    Drawn to the excitement she produces by having 43 cars going 190 mph just inches from each other and her white walls that will ruin the driver’s day with one touch.

    Drawn to the accidents that may happen at any time she decides to strike out at an unsuspecting, the accidents that make us hold our breaths. Clint Bowyer and Ryan Newman have each felt her wrath by flipping into the frontstretch grass.

    Drawn to her wonderful weather, the sun/advertisement plane filled days and starry firework-filled nights.

    She is the only place where gasoline and burnt rubber are welcome smells. When the wind blows she gives a picture perfect shot of the giant American flag flying on her infield and of the checkered flag that will wave for the last driver standing.

    Richard Petty met with her a record seven times during February and she broke Dale Earnhardt’s heart for 19 straight years. Only a special few have danced with her through the years, and for some of them it has made not only their career but their life.

    I’ve stood among the thousands of others in her grandstand and asked her to welcome our favorite drivers into the winner’s circle.

    I have journeyed through the tunnel under turn three to her infield and have felt like I was being swallowed whole.

    I must have appeared like I was an ant trying to navigate my way through her giant world filled with maze after maze consisting of towers and garages.

    Now the clock has begun to turn in anticipation of a new year. The excitement is building and everyone is getting anxious about what’s next.

    Anxious about what she, the Daytona International Speedway, has in store for both the fans and the drivers. Right now she sits empty and quiet, however the sound of car engines are approaching from the distance.

    She’s finally resting now after seven months of getting a facelift. The dynamic and characteristics will forever be different once the green flag falls this season. New memories will be born as others are put in the 1978-2010 history book.

    Her walls are getting a fresh coat of paint and the grass is being groomed for the “Great American Race.” She is going to make sure it lives up to the hype: it will be important, rich, big and beautiful but it will also be sad.

    She’s ready to welcome a new driver into the hallowed ground of victory lane but also ti help us remember another one. It has been 10 years since the death of Dale Earnhardt and the loss of a fans champion. I will gather with thousands if not millions around the globe and remember and black and white car.

    I will shed a tear or look to the heavens with three fingers held high. I, like others, will remember the past before looking toward the future.

    Racing has gone on but has never been the same. Daytona has remained close in the fans hearts and memories, but again, hasn’t been the same. As she awakens and wipes the dust off the gates for the competitors and fans it is with remembrance in mind.

    And with a mustached grin ready to shine down from overhead.

    Because as Jacqueline Kennedy once again, “So now he is a legend when he would have preferred to be a man.”

  • Jeff Gordon: NASCAR’s Best All-Around Driver Ready to Win More Championships

    Jeff Gordon: NASCAR’s Best All-Around Driver Ready to Win More Championships

    Throughout the years, the NASCAR racing Gods have always shown a great deal of generosity whenever the time has come to hand over the reins to the sport’s next big superstar. Whether it be every 10, 20, or even 30 years, there will always be a driver who will step up to the challenge that takes him beyond the normal realm of just being labeled as, “One of the guys.”

    NASCAR garages from around the country are oozing with such talent, and it’s usually from these same garages where a driver will emerge who can defy the odds and take his racing career to the next level.

    In a sport where some of the biggest names who have graced our asphalt gladiator rings have come from the south, in walked California native Jeff Gordon who felt ready to accept the challenge knowing the rewards would be worth its weight in gold. Gordon knew he would be facing a long and strenuous uphill battle, with his biggest clash being the fans who couldn’t find it in their hearts to accept a driver who was not born with the “southern blood” running through his veins.

    Not long after his first Winston cup start, “the perfect storm” had already started brewing and Gordon found himself in the midst of its stranglehold. Along with the storm came the black cloud of doubt as driver after driver begin doubting Gordon’s ability to compete at a level he was not used to, which resulted in his tendency to push the cars too hard and crash. None of this stopped the California native from reaching the goals he set before himself, and before long Gordon made his first visit to victory lane during the 1994 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

    Gordon was well on his way to NASCAR stardom and it was attributed to the extra work he was willing to put in knowing that greatness can only be measured by the amount of enthusiasm that a driver can carry through all the hardship. Words alone cannot describe the amount of respect that he has earned throughout his very lucrative racing career and to say that he is anything less is absolutely ludicrous.

    Gordon has shown how an everyday run-of-the-mill California boy can come into a sport that was dominated by the good old boys from down south and dominate every aspect of their beloved sport.

    Gordon was truly an one-of-a-kind driver when he first entered what was then the Winston Cup Series, and one of his many characteristics that played a big role in him being successful was the methodical way he could pick apart his competition. Gordon learned patience along the way, which helped him to keep his composure with the result being the 82 victories he has in his win column.

    When you look back at his career, which is continuing to stand the test of time, how can a fan not take to heart what Jeff Gordon has endured, while racing against some of the great drivers from the past, as well as the present. There is no other driver in the garage today, who comes close to the accomplishments that Gordon has already garnered and his numbers speak for themselves.

    Gordon leads all active drivers with the most victories, and is currently sixth on the all-time winners list, and with one more victory he will tie Cale Yarborough in addition to Darrell Waltrip and Bobby Allison who are only one win away from the number three spot.

    Will Gordon ever win 200 races or will he reach the seven championship milestone? Probably not, but with 15 short-track wins, 12 restrictor-plate wins and a record nine road-course wins, along with Homestead-Miami as the only track he hasn’t won at, these stats alone make him one the most versatile and greatest drivers of our time.

    As father time continues to slowly creep up on one of NASCAR’s most prolific drivers, the drive for his fifth championship picks up where it left off after another disappointing and winless season.

    During the off-season team owner Rick Hendrick announced that Alan Gustafson, crew chief from Mark Martin’s No. 5 GoDaddy.com team would take over for Steve Letarte, with Letarte moving over to teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. Gordon responded about the change saying that, “This just shows the kind of commitment we have at Hendrick Motorsports. You don’t make a move like this without hoping you’re making all the right ones. I feel really good about what we’re doing, and I feel like we’re going to win more championships. Things like this, led by Rick, are what get you there.”

  • Camping World Truck Series Notebook: Fontane, Mattioli, and Bodine

    Camping World Truck Series Notebook: Fontane, Mattioli, and Bodine

    As the days continue to count down to the Camping World Truck Series opener, more and more teams are making announcements so lets get you up to speed.

    Chris Fontaine to make Daytona Debut

    Chris Fontaine is set to make his first Daytona Truck start when he pilots the No. 84 Toyota Tundra for Glenden Enterprises on February 18th. Fontaine has raced at Daytona before, but never in the Camping World Truck Series. He ran the i-Power DASH race in 2004 where he finished 15th after starting 17th. It will mark his 25th career start in the NCWTS.

    Fontaine has restrictor plate experience as last October at Talladega, he led a total of 15 laps.

    “I learned a lot about drafting, a lot about the side draft, who I can work with, who will work with me and when to go to the outside. I learned a lot about the restarts and a lot about coming to pit road at those speedways,” Fontaine said in the press release. “So, a lot of the things I didn’t know and was nervous about, I don’t have to be this time so I can concentrate on doing the best that I can do, and concentrate on what is going on instead of worrying. I feel a lot of confidence going into the race and I am really, really looking forward to it.”

    Fontaine has yet to determind if he will run the entire schedule as he says, “We are going to take it one race at a time.”

    Chase Mattioli to Run Full-Time in Trucks in 2011

    Chase Mattioli announced that he will be running in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series full-time in 2011, starting at Daytona. Team and details to be announced in the coming weeks.

    Bodine to Run Cup, Nationwide and Truck Races at Daytona

    The 2010 Camping World Truck Series Champion has been racing in NASCAR for 24 years, but has never competed in all three of NASCAR’s top divisions at Daytona in one weekend. 2011 is going to mark a change as the veteran is going to race in all three.

    For the Camping World Truck Series race on February 18th, Bodine is going to race the No. 30 truck for Germain Racing as he starts his quest of defending his title.

    For the Nationwide Series race on February 19th, he will be the car that Michael Annett’s drove to a 14th-place finish in the 2010 Owner’s Standings.

    “Obviously the truck is what we do, but given the Germains had a top-30 Nationwide team and it’s locked into the race, why wouldn’t you run it?” Bodine told NASCAR Online. “My speedway record is pretty good, so they wanted me to drive it.”

    For the Sprint Cup Series on February 20th, he will be attempting to qualify the No. 64 car, owned by Larry Gunselman, into the field. Bodine tested with Gunselman’s team for two days last month at Goodyear’s tire test and said, “We’re going to race the whole race.”

    Bodine has 11 top-five and 17 top-10 finishes in 37 career starts at Daytona with two victories.

    Bodine has seven consecutive top-five finishes in Daytona Truck events, including four in a row of either first or second. He has also showed his restrictor plate track dominance at Daytona’s sister track Talladega Superspeedway in the Truck Series as he has two wins and four top fives in five starts.

    In 238 Sprint Cup Series starts, Bodine has seven top fives and 21 top 10s.

    In 324 Nationwide Series starts, Bodine has 15 wins, 90 top fives, and 160 top 10s.

    In 165 Camping World Truck Series starts, Bodine has 21 wins, 82 top fives, and 106 top 10s.

    There is sponsorship in place for all three programs, which has yet to be announced.

  • Tony Stewart May Be Tanned But Not So Relaxed After Australian Adventure

    Tony Stewart May Be Tanned But Not So Relaxed After Australian Adventure

    By his own account, Tony Stewart was looking forward to his second year in a row of spending his NASCAR off season down under.  Unfortunately, this year’s Australian adventure did not turn out quite as Stewart had planned.

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]”Last year was a first for me,” Stewart said.  “I spent three weeks down in Australia racing and having fun.  Best thing I could’ve ever done.”

    Stewart had an excellent adventure last off season, with his World of Outlaws driver companion and tour guide Donny Schatz.  Both Stewart and Schatz spent their time in Australia sight seeing, as well as fitting just a bit of racing into the mix.

    “I ended up racing four nights,” Stewart said.  “We had planned for five nights, but one of the races got rained out.”

    Stewart deemed himself “terrible” the first night out racing last year.  “The second night I was a little better but not much,” Stewart said.  “We got better every night so that was the biggest thing for me.”

    In fact, Stewart had such a great time last year that he decided to return to Australia in the most recent off season, this time for a month.  His plans were to leave December 15th, 2010 and return on January 15th, 2011, just in time to do some NASCAR testing on the new surface at Daytona.

    “It’ll be fun,” Stewart predicted of his time down under this off season.  “I’ll come back tan, relaxed and ready for Daytona.”

    Unfortunately, Stewart’s time in Australia was not at all relaxing and he ended up leaving what he thought would be his off season paradise with a cloud of trouble hanging over his head.  The problems came after an altercation allegedly between Stewart and the Sydney Speedway co-owner Brett Morris over a disagreement about the track conditions.

    The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Stewart threw his helmet at Morris after fighting over the track conditions at the Sydney Speedway.   Reportedly Morris retaliated by giving Stewart a shiner to take back to Daytona.

    Stewart was also reportedly detained for a short time by the local police for questioning.  After his questioning, he was then released for his flight back home to the United States.

    “Tony was simply questioned about the alleged incident, and after the questioning, he returned to his hotel, got a good night’s rest and is currently en route to the States,” Mark Arning, a spokesperson for Stewart told ESPN.com.  Also according to Arning, “No charges were filed.”

    Ironically, although Stewart left with a blackened eye, his driver Donny Schatz, ending up winning Saturday night’s race in Australia.  This was Schatz’s sixth career win in his Australian racing career.  He has four World of Outlaws titles under his belt as well.

    Stewart has had his share of anger management issues in the past.  In fact, earlier in his career as far back as his rookie year, Stewart was mixing it up with other drivers on and off the track.

    In 2002, Stewart had a much-publicized disagreement with a photographer at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  Although he was put on probation by NASCAR, Stewart went on that year to win his first Cup championship.

    Stewart’s volatility on and off the track continued.  In the years following, Stewart had altercations with drivers like Brian Vickers, that resulted in a fine and more NASCAR probation, as well as some serious disagreements with the likes of Matt Kenseth, Jeff Gordon, and Kyle Busch.

    In 2008, Stewart got into it with an official at a USAC race.  He pulled the headset off of one official’s head and then shoved another official who had the misfortune of trying to talk with him about the prior incident. Stewart was fined and had to pay restitution to both officials for their equipment and gear.

    Since that time, a different, calmer and seemingly wiser Stewart has seemingly emerged.  This “new” Stewart appeared on the surface to be more at peace after moving back home, purchasing Eldora Speedway, and becoming a NASCAR team owner.

    Yet apparently, the old demons have continued to plague Stewart.  Or perhaps the track owner in Stewart simply got the better of him and he just had to object to what he deemed inadequate conditions at the Sydney Speedway.

    Either way, Stewart may be tanned but certainly not relaxed as he wings his way to Daytona testing.  And he certainly will need to continue to battle his aggression demons as he bids Australia adieu and returns to rev his engines in preparation for the start of the NASCAR 2011 season.