Author: Tucker White

  • NASCAR Announces Update to Concussion Protocol

    NASCAR Announces Update to Concussion Protocol

    NASCAR announced tweaks to the concussion protocol that goes into effect starting this weekend at Daytona International Speedway.

    The biggest change is in regard to drivers that are required to visit the infield care center. If a driver who sustained damage to the car from an accident or contact goes to the garage, and thus retire from the race, he/she must proceed to the care center for evaluation. This previously was only mandatory for drivers who couldn’t drive their cars back.

    Two other additions made were to diagnostics testing for concussions and on-site neurologists.

    Care center’s will now use the Sports Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT-3) diagnostics test to do clinical assessments for concussions.

    American Medical Response (AMR) will have a neurologist on-sit at select NASCAR events during this season to continue development of the concussion protocol.

    Jim Cassidy, NASCAR senior vice president of racing operations, said the sanctioning body is working “closely with the industry to ensure our concussion protocol reflects emerging best practices in this rapidly developing area of sports medicine. We will continue to utilize relationships we’ve had for years with leaders in the neurological research field who helped to shape these updates.”

  • NASCAR Streamlines Penalty Structure

    NASCAR Streamlines Penalty Structure

    The old multi-tiered penalty structure in NASCAR is now a simplified dual-tiered structure and the consequences for failing inspection are more defined.

    Instead of a six-step penalty grid, P1 through P6, the penalty structure is now a two-step grid that ranges from Level 1 (L1) to Level 2 (L2).

    The lower level deals with minimum heights, weights, the Laser Inspection Station (LIS), gear ratios and lug nut violations, when 17 or fewer are secured. The higher level concerns “major safety violations,” telemetry or traction control usage, breaching of the testing policy and tampering with the “holy trinity” elements of the car: engine, fuel and tires.

    L1 infractions call for a penalty of 10 to 40 points in all three national touring series.

    In the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, in addition to the points penalty, an L1 infraction results in a fine of $25,000 to $75,000 and a one to three-race suspension for the crew chief or team member(s) responsible for the infraction. L2 infractions in the Cup Series carry a 75-point deduction, call for a six-race suspension and a $100,000 to $200,000 fine.

    In the XFINITY Series, fines are scaled back to $10,000-$40,000. But it carries the same one to three-race suspension for a crew member responsible for the infraction as it does in Cup. An L2 violation in XFINITY has a $50,000-$100,000 fine but carries the same six-race suspension as Cup.

    An L1 violation in the Camping World Truck Series results in a one or two-race suspension and a $5,000 to $20,000 fine. An L2 violation results in a four-race suspension and a $25,000 to $50,000 fine.

    Post-qualifying failure of the LIS results in disallowance of time. Post-race failure is an L1 violation resulting in a loss of 35 points, a three-race suspension for the crew chief and $65,000 fine.

    A missing lug nut results in a $10,000 fine for the crew chief. Two missing doubles the fine and leads to a one-race suspension. Three or more is an L1 penalty with a $65,000 fine and three-race suspension for the crew chief and 35-point deduction.

    Per Zack Albert of NASCAR.com, “‘Encumbered’ finishes…will remain in effect this season for post-race L1 and L2 violations. The rules allow a victory to stand in the event of an infraction, but a winning team will be stripped of the benefits associated with the win.”

    The series directors now have discretion to issue a list of pre-race penalties ordered by severity: “Loss of annual ‘hard card’ credential, loss of practice time, loss of pit selection position, tail of the field penalty, a green-flag pass-through on pit road after the initial start, a green-flag stop-and-go in the pits after the start, and lap(s) penalty,” per Zack Albert of NASCAR.com.

    NASCAR will continue taking select cars and trucks to their R&D Center in Concord, North Carolina for their weekly Tuesday inspection after every race.

    NASCAR issued the update to the deterrence system for all three national touring series to move officiating towards penalizing infractions that occur during a race weekend.

    “Our goal was to be able to, more like football or basketball or any sporting event to where we could officiate and police within the event,” Elton Sawyer, NASCAR vice president of officiating and technical inspection, said to NASCAR.com. “I think the real message is that we want to get these infractions, the smaller infractions, we want to get them corrected at the race track.

    “It’s very similar to a 15-yard penalty. If you can get three 15-yard penalties and you can still win the game or drive down and score a touchdown, then good for you. If we can issue these penalties and you lose pit selection or you start at the back or a drive-through (penalty), and you can still come back and win the race, well then we feel like what that infraction was, the penalty fits the crime.”

  • Analyst Kligerman on taking part-time ride: ‘Why not?’

    Analyst Kligerman on taking part-time ride: ‘Why not?’

    ABINGDON, Va. — Asked why he’d take a part-time ride despite his work as an analyst, Parker Kligerman responded “Why not.”

    Speaking to the media at the shop of NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team Henderson Motorsports, Kligerman expounded on his reason for taking the aforementioned limited ride.

    “It’s fun. I still enjoy racing,” he said. “Even though I have a day job, I say this is my weekend job. For me, it only helps that job, and vise-versa. The coolest thing is just getting to go race and have fun.”

    He added that his crew chief Chris Carrier was instrumental in “why this came together the way it did.”

    “[Chris and I have] always talked about trying to get back together to go racing after our ARCA days,” he added.

    “When this whole deal came together late last year, it made sense.”

    With his role as an analyst for NBC, “partial makes sense.”

    Secure rides in any of the three national touring series haven’t come easy for the driver of the No. 75 Henderson Motorsports Toyota, who’s sharing the ride with Caleb Holman. Since his first NASCAR start for Team Penske in the XFINITY Series at Kansas in 2009, he’s run only three complete seasons in any series. He was hired to drive the No. 30 for Swan Racing in the now Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, but found himself out of a ride when the team terminated operations eight races into the season. Towards the end of 2014, he was hired as a driver analyst by NBC Sports.

    While it’s his primarily focus. He’s also “tickled to death” that he can do his “day job” with all his traveling and still run eight to 10 races a season.

  • NASCAR Implementing New Policy on Damaged Race Vehicles

    NASCAR Implementing New Policy on Damaged Race Vehicles

    Say goodbye to the days of damaged cars and trucks returning to the track down double and triple-digit laps looking like modified cars.

    As first reported by Lee Spencer of Motorsport.com and Kenny Bruce of NASCAR.com, the sanctioning body is implementing new procedures affecting wrecked vehicles in all three national touring series this season, called the Damaged Vehicle Policy.

    Teams may no longer replace damaged body parts that are the result of contact or an accident. Repairs, such as fixing sheet metal, will still be permitted. They only have five minutes to do repairs, however. If the repairs take more than five minutes or the car goes to the garage, the car is retired from the event and won’t be allowed to return.

    If a car on the clock is busted for speeding, 15 seconds is docked from their five-minute time. Also, if a car on the clock requires more crew members than the six NASCAR allows over the wall to make repairs, the car will be removed from the race.

    Teams may correct mechanical or electrical failures, that aren’t a result of a wreck or contact, on pit road or in the garage without penalty or being subject to the five-minute clock.

    Damaged cars are still required to maintain minimum speed.

    Previously, teams could spend as much time as desired to repair their cars and send them back out onto the track, provided they continued to meet minimum speed. This often led to cars returning to the track with either no hood covering, thus looking like a modified, or covered all in black parts with no sponsor decals.

    “We have a lot of cars that are going back on the track that end up in 38th position, for instance, that probably don’t need to be out there from a safety and competition aspect,” said Scott Miller, NASCAR senior vice president of competition. “Because they always tend to bring out more yellows with stuff falling off.”

  • The White Zone: FOX is giving the Daytona 500 the wrong vibe with ‘Daytona Day’

    The White Zone: FOX is giving the Daytona 500 the wrong vibe with ‘Daytona Day’

    “A letter to FOX Sports…”

    Dear FOX Sports,

    STOP TRYING TO MAKE “Daytona Day” A THING! IT’S NOT GOING TO HAPPEN!

    Sincerely,
    Tucker White

    *Reading a book*…*Looks at the audience* What?

    Okay, I have more to say.

    FOX Sports brought their “Daytona Day” ad campaign back this year to promote the 59th running of the Daytona 500. It’s as cheesy and silly as you’d expect and tries to give off an atmosphere of a party environment for NASCAR’s biggest race. You can find it on YouTube at “Happy #DaytonaDay! | The Daytona 500 on FOX” if you wish to check it out ( and if you missed it during the Super Bowl).

    Here’s the problem FOX. You’re giving off the wrong mood.

    A party atmosphere works if you’ve just finished a particularly hard 40-hour week at the office and need a few drinks. The type of people “Daytona Day” appeals to might tune into the Daytona 500 for a “party event,” although it’s worth noting that last year’s race was down 14 percent in ratings and 15 percent in viewership compared to 2015 despite this ad campaign (Sports Media Watch), but it won’t draw them in long term. Doing so is vital for the long-term sustainability of a sport that’s been on a downhill slide in television ratings and at track attendance for a decade now.

    The way FOX should go is making every race, especially the Daytona 500, feel like a truly epic event. What I mean by that is an ad campaign that makes the hair raise off your skin and sends shivers down your spine.

    The music for it shouldn’t be corny. It should be performed by an orchestra and sung by a choir.

    The song should also be high energy, such as “Dies Irae” and “O Fortuna.”

    And the best part is that all these classical songs are public domain. You don’t have to clear it with anyone over copyright for usage.

    FOX, if you wish to have your own song for the occasion, that would also work. It should be something along the lines of one of the classical songs I listed or another high energy song, such as “Duel of the Fates.”

    Or how about tap into the creative well that is YouTube. There are a number of YouTubers who make NASCAR related videos either for fun or as their living. Some of them make promos for races that are on par, or sometimes better than what FOX and NBC are producing.

    You don’t believe me? Then check out this video by a user named Balto Racing.

    I mean this with 100 percent sincerity when I say that this promo Balto made for the 2014 Daytona 500 is hands down the best NASCAR promo I’ve ever seen. Everything from the music and visuals just screams NASCAR with this.

    Now as someone who consumes other forms of mass media when I’m not covering NASCAR, I know marketing is not an exact science and what I’m talking about is subjective. Everybody has their own likes and dislikes.

    But the way we counteract that is doing the equivalent of “making your character interesting and identifiable,” and not trying to be “hip” and “KEWL!” In other words, the promos should make NASCAR races seem epic and larger than life, not the latest fad.

    BOTTOM LINE: FOX, you’re going about promoting the biggest race in NASCAR wrong, but it’s an easy problem to solve.

  • The White Zone: Let’s see where these new ‘enhancements’ go

    The White Zone: Let’s see where these new ‘enhancements’ go

    Alright NASCAR, you’ve peaked the interest of this skeptic and I’m curious to see where these new “enhancements” lead us this season and beyond.

    If you haven’t heard by now, the sport announced some rather radical changes – or “enhancements,” which is one of a few new buzzwords that are now part of our lexicon – which, in short, include segment-based race events for all three of the national touring series.

    It was confusing as hell to learn and I just barely understand it now. I plan to better understand it by the time I head to Atlanta Motor Speedway to work my first race this season.

    But for now, it sounds like an idea that’s worth giving a chance. So let’s give it a chance.

    If you haven’t already jumped straight to the comment section to call me a “paid shill for NASCAR,” hear me out.

    I’ll start right off the bat by saying it’s gimmicky and contrived. This is something I’d expect to see done in the All-Star Race. In fact, some elements of this have been done in the All-Star Race such as the segments.

    I also wish NASCAR wouldn’t have added these “enhancements” to events like the Daytona 500, the Coca-Cola 600 and the Bojangles’ Southern 500. These three events are the crown jewel races and should stay gimmick-free, especially Darlington Raceway, who’s tagline is “the tradition continues.” Yeah, nothing says tradition like a 500-mile race at a track like Darlington with a bunch of contrived elements.

    Most of all, Cautions should only be thrown when there’s an actual hazard on the track and not just to bunch up the field to jive up the race. This was my biggest grievance with the caution clock. It wasn’t designed to stop frequent hazards. It was meant to disrupt the flow of the race every 20 minutes, just for the sake of it, and have a restart, just for the sake of it. I won’t call it manipulation by NASCAR as others have because that implies the sanctioning body had nefarious purposes for implementing it. It was simply an element they implement with the intention of making the racing better, but it caused more backlash than it was worth.

    Taking factors such as these into consideration, it’s not hard to see why some people don’t care too much for the “enhancements” being made to the sport.

    But now let’s talk about why these changes had to happen.

    We can’t avoid the elephant in the room. NASCAR’s television ratings in 2016 were lousy.

    This past season alone, 21 of 36 races suffered a decline in ratings from the year before and 22 suffered a decline in viewership from the year before. Fifteen races suffered double-digit declines in one or both measures. Finally, 11 of the final 12 races (excluding rainouts) suffered an all-time or decade-plus low in ratings or viewership (all figures are courtesy of Sports Media Watch).

    This past season wasn’t an aberration either. It’s been the latest in a downhill slide from NASCAR’s peak ratings in the mid-2000’s, at a point when the sport was second to the National Football League in ratings.

    The sport suffered heavy as a result of the Great Recession of 2007-2008 and it took years to get back on solid footing.

    The impact is also being felt at the turnstiles.

    Not long ago, NASCAR races were packed to the brim with devoted fans who would happily sit for hours in the stands to watch an event.

    Now, only the Daytona 500 and the Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway sellout, and even that has come with people saying those weren’t really “sold out.”

    Most weeks, the stands are roughly 65-80 percent for a Cup Series race. But it’s when the series ventures to tracks such as Indianapolis Motor Speedway that the drop in attendance is more spotlighted. At a venue with a permanent seating capacity of 235,000, we’ve had numbers recently as low as 50,000 and 30,000 according to last year’s estimates.

    It also doesn’t help that stock car racing at The Brickyard is dull.

    Which brings me to my next point: The times when the racing just isn’t good….Yeah, that’s a major problem.

    Today’s NASCAR is slanted towards downforce-centric tracks, such as the mile and a half’s. Stock cars are best suited to run on short tracks and high-banked, high-speed ovals such as Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway.

    Because of this unbalanced favoring of downforce-centric tracks, the racing is hit or miss at some tracks, such as Atlanta, and is completely nonexistent at others, such as Texas Motor Speedway.

    With higher downforce, passing goes to a higher tier.

    It also doesn’t help that we’ve engineered the failures out of the cars to the point that they’re indestructible. Even back markers rarely retire from a race now with a mechanical failure.

    The two paragraphs above are how you get Martin Truex Jr. leading a whopping 392 of 400 laps on his way to winning last years Coca-Cola 600.

    Now whereas people such as myself must watch every lap of that woodshed whipping because I was in the media center covering the race, others have the option of DVR’ing the event and fast-forwarding through the beatdown and skipping to the finish.

    Scott Fowler of The Charlotte Observer said it best in his column on today’s announcement.

    “I know several people – and not all of them are young – who make a consistent habit of watching entire NASCAR races in 10 minutes.

    “They record the whole race, then watch the replay at 60 times the usual speed. They don’t stop the recording unless they see smoke, which means a crash, which means an interesting restart.

    “Then they stop the recording for one last time with 20 laps to go in the race. They watch those laps at normal speed, see who won and switch over to ‘The Walking Dead.’”

    In other words, people don’t feel as if they’re missing anything by simply DVR’ing the event and fast-forwarding through it to the end. Formula 1 has reached this point. There’s a saying that the race is to the first turn and that’s not entirely wrong. If you beat the field down into Turn 1, you’ve pretty much won the race nine times out of 10 in F1.

    Don’t get me wrong. I love F1, but I’m not going to act like it has the most compelling racing in the world.

    Now anecdotes doesn’t necessarily equate to proof, true. But Fowler has covered sports, especially in Charlotte, for longer than I’ve been alive. So I’ll take his word that he’s telling the truth. And I’ve heard these same complaints made by fans, young and old, on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio for a number of years now.

    Bottom line: The races are, or were, marathon events and with an upcoming generation that now has the attention span equivalent to a goldfish, the days of just sitting in the stands and watching those marathon events will be relics of the past. My generation isn’t content with just sitting in the stands at Bristol Motor Speedway and watching whatever happens like I was (before joining the media corp). My generation isn’t content with just watching a 24-hour endurance race like the Rolex 24 at Daytona. Most of all, my generation isn’t content with waiting for the climax of the race. They need some assurance that what’s being built up will lead to a great payoff.

    Whether or not these “enhancements” will work will be shown in a matter of time.

  • 2017 NASCAR Hall of Fame Class Takes Its Place in the Hall

    2017 NASCAR Hall of Fame Class Takes Its Place in the Hall

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Another class has been immortalized amongst the sport’s greatest and most important figures.

    Five new inductees, comprised of Richard Childress, Rick Hendrick, Raymond Parks, Benny Parsons and Mark Martin, were inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame, the eighth class inducted into the hall since its opening in 2010.

    The members of this class have, between all five individuals, 19 combined championships amongst the three owners and 61 wins amongst the two drivers.

    First to speak was 2014 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick to introduce Raymond Parks.

    He talked about Parks “[installing] professionalism” in the early days of NASCAR.

    “Like Bill France Sr., he, (Parks) foresaw that with the proper guidance, rough and tumble stock car racing could become a nationally recognized sport,” Harvick said. “He put his money where his mouth was, investing in our great pastime as an owner.”

    Parks’s granddaughter, Patricia DePottey, accepted his induction into the hall on his behalf.

    She was asked if it hit her just how important Parks was to the formation of the sport.

    “It does, and I will tell you knowing my grandfather, anybody who knew him, he could speak a whole book in two words,” she said. “And the first time, to let you know how he was, I asked him, ‘How did you get into racing?’ And in less than 10 minutes, he told me his whole life story. His story was, ‘Well, I got some cars, and I just started winning.’

    “And I went, ‘Okay.’

    “And you could go into his store, and he had that wooden table that you saw in the picture. He had his trophies. And I’m not kidding you, if you went over to look at one of the trophies, he would stand there and he’d say, well, oh, I got that when Red Byron won the championship.

    “That was the end of the story.

    “But what really hit me, I think, was the first time I went to the Daytona Speedway, I was sitting in the stands, and it hit me, because everything I had heard growing up, I could see all of them in the Streamline Motel. I could see the cars racing around in the sand. I could just envision everything that he accomplished, and it was like all of the stories became real.

    “And I think that was just a very momentous time for me.”

    The second induction was the late Benny Parsons.

    He was introduced by 2012 Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski, who compared Parsons’s rise from a Detroit taxi cab driver to a NASCAR champion as being something straight out of a Hollywood script.

    “The people of Michigan love their champions, and as I can attest and Benny can attest, he was a champion that made everyone in the state very proud,” Keselowski said. “And racers in Michigan were a tight-knit community, and the automotive hub of Detroit, starting with Benny and my grandfather, incredible relationship, and the Keselowskis and Parsons that developed a bond that still exists today. That’s why it’s such an honor for me to be here tonight. But beyond Benny’s work behind the wheel, it was his work in the broadcast booth that really stood out and brought his knowledge and love of the sport to the rest of America.”

    Parsons’s widow, Terri Parsons, accepted his induction on his behalf. She thanked people who were part of his racing career in ARCA and NASCAR. She said there were numerous “old crew members” who “worked on numerous cars” he drove.

    “Most of all, the most important thing about tonight for him would be the people and especially the fans, understand how much they meant to him and how much he loved each and every one of you,” she said. “You all have such great stories, and tonight is really a celebration of his life. This is not sad, this is happy.  I’m the only one that’s sad.”

    When asked what the family would do with the ring, she said it would be left on display in the hall.

    “We’re going to put it in the Hall of Fame, because we think about it, the people at home, the fans that are visiting the Hall of Fame, never get to see a ring because we all take them home with us, so we thought we’d like to share this with the people that come through the Hall of Fame so they can see what an actual Hall of Fame ring looks like,” she added.

    H. Clay Earles, the founder of Martinsville Speedway, was awarded the 2017 Landmark Award. Clay Campbell, grandson and current track president, accepted the award on his behalf.

    After being introduced by his grandsons Austin and Ty Dillon, Richard Childress was officially inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

    He started by saying that being surrounded by the greats of the sport he’d be joining in the hall, combined “with so many great inductees [in this class] is quite an honor.”

    “Raymond Parks, a pioneer car owner, who paved the way for owners like Rick Hendrick and myself; Benny Parsons, a great driver and a champion; Mark Martin, you deserve to be in the Hall of Fame, buddy,” Childress said. “You can win at anything. And Rick Hendrick, my friend, what an honor to go in this Hall of Fame with you. You’re a champion. You did so much for this sport. It’s an honor to go in with you. Thank you. Congratulations to all of the inductees tonight.”

    He then went into how only in the United States “could a kid selling peanuts and popcorn at Bowman Gray Stadium have a dream of becoming a race driver some day, and then he goes out and buys him an old ’47 Plymouth, pays $20 for it, that was the best investment I ever made, and have a dream of being a NASCAR driver some day, be standing up here tonight to be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame.”

    He went on to thank his family, sponsors and drivers who’ve made Richard Childress Racing the racing organization what it is today.

    But he thanked the late Dale Earnhardt in particular.

    “I wouldn’t be standing here tonight without him,” he said. “He was a great friend and a huge loss to all of us and to our sport. I knew Dale for over 25 years. We spent 18 seasons together racing. I have so many great memories. Winning our first championship, winning the Daytona 500, Indy, and many more.

    “He is a seven-time NASCAR champion.

    “But most of all, he’s a champion to all of his fans, his friends and his family. I’ve got so many Dale stories, I was asked to tell a Dale story.

    “The only one I can think of that really stands out, it’s the first time I met Dale and we were racing. We were racing down at Metrolina Speedway on the Grand National race that Ned Jarrett put together that day, and was coming into Turn 3, Cale Yarborough and myself was racing for the win, and we got together going into Turn 3. I made it back around and won the race.

    “After the race, we was standing there having us a few cool ones, Dale was there, and in his ol’ Dale Earnhardt style, he walked over, poked me in the chest, and he said ‘Next time I race with you, I will win.’  What history never knew from that day.

    “Great times.”

    He also spoke of the 1969 Talladega 500, which most of the regular drivers boycotted.

    “Bill Sr., 1969 when we had the boycott in Talladega, I’d ran the race on Saturday, and he gave us the deal money back then to come and race plus what you’d win in the purse,” he said. “When the boycott happened he stood on that bench down there, and he said, boys, if y’all race tomorrow, I’ll give you more deal money and you can take the purse. I left that day with probably more money than I’d ever seen at once in my life, probably 3 or 4 thousand dollars. I didn’t think I’d ever have to work again. Hell, I’m still working. That was the break that really helped RCR get going. I’ll never forget it.”

    He closed out his speech by thanking the fans of NASCAR, the U.S. armed forces and the staff at the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

    Hendrick was next to be inducted. He was introduced by seven-time and reigning Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson and four-time series champion Jeff Gordon.

    Hendrick started his speech by praising the other inductees into the hall. He said Martin “made a difference in every organization that you’ve ever been in,” including Hendrick Motorsports. He said BP “was one sweet man. He loved everybody. He lifted everybody. He was such an ambassador to our sport. He was a champion, but he was a champion in the booth. He was a champion person. And when you go through life and no one has anything to say ugly about you, can say anything negative, then you are a true champion,” and Parsons was that guy. He said he’s read and watched videos about Parks and stated he probably wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for owners like him paving the way.

    Hendrick also took time to thank his wife Linda.

    “I don’t know if you remember this, I’m sure you do, 44 years ago this month, we swapped rings,” he said. “So this ring is as much for you as it is for me because there’s nobody that’s sacrificed what you’ve sacrificed for me to do what I’ve done. She stood in the back of the grocery store with me, and we counted our money before we went to the checkout line. Our bed in our first house had three legs and Muncie four-speed gearbox for the fourth leg.

    “When we were boat racing, she was selling tee shirts out of the back of the trailer so we could raise enough money to go back and do it again. So she sits in church on Sunday, so many Sundays by herself when I’ve been gone for 44 years doing what I love.

    “Tonight, this is as much yours, probably more, than it is mine. I love you, and thank you for all you’ve done.”

    He told the story of starting Hendrick Motorsports.

    “I think back to Linda and I moving to Charlotte and I was selling parts to all the race teams that weren’t funded, and I got a call one day when Richard Broom and I were drag boat racing, and we were looking for a sponsor, and Max Muhleman called me, and he said ‘Would you like to own a race team with maybe C.K. Spurlock, the All-Star Race, and Richard Petty would be the driver?’ And I thought, ‘Is this a trick question? Am I really — are you serious?’

    “I met this guy, Harry Hyde, who was a better salesman than I am. Harry Hyde convinced me if he could build one car that he could go win a race, and I believed it. And when we formed All-Star Racing in that little tin building on the hill, we had five employees. I was renting the transmissions, renting the equipment, and Harry was making $500 a week.

    “And we raced for six races with Geoff Bodine, and I said, Harry, we wrecked Darlington, and I said, ‘I can’t go any further. If we don’t get a sponsor we’ve got to close the doors.’

    “Now, true story, Linda is here. I had promised her we’d go to a revival. So on the Martinsville race, the seventh race, I was in church, and I went to a pay phone after church, and I called my mother, and I said, ‘Mom, how did the race end up in Martinsville?’ She said, ‘You didn’t hear?’ And I said, ‘No.’ She said, ‘Geoff blew up,’ and I said, ‘Blew up, okay.’ She said, ‘No, he won.’ I said, ‘He won the race?’ So everybody was wrapping his yard in toilet paper.

    “But I think I had divine intervention that day because I was in church.

    “But we got a sponsor that year, and kind of the rest is history.”

    He concluded by saying he humbly accepts this honor.

    The final inductee of the night was Mark Martin.

    He was introduced by Matt Kenseth, who stated Martin was one of the earliest drivers to be dedicated “to precise nutrition and rigorous workouts” and build a career that ran four decades.

    “As his former teammate, I had the privilege of witnessing my mentor’s talent and fortitude first hand,” Kenseth said. “Now he gets to take his rightful place amongst NASCAR legends in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.”

    After being inducted by former car owner Jack Roush, Martin started his speech, being as modest as always, by thanking his wife Arlene Martin.

    “We met Christmas 1983, and Arlene, from that day, that day and every day since then, you have made me better,” he said. “It’s incredible what we’ve seen and what we’ve done to get here.”

    He was at a loss for words trying to state how it felt standing up on stage, saying his “words could never do justice.”

    “To me, it’s an honor — to say it’s an honor would be an understatement,” he said. “To say it’s a culmination is a fact. It’s an honor beyond the wildest imagination of a kid from Arkansas that just loved to drive fast cars and win races.

    “Most importantly, it’s the recognition of hard work, determination, drive and focus, not of myself, but of those that gave their blood, sweat and tears to put me up here tonight. I want to thank all the Hall members, all the ones that came before me. If not for the groundwork they laid with their relentless passion and effort and sacrifice to the sport, there might not be a NASCAR at all, and there certainly wouldn’t be no Hall of Fame.”

    Martin transitioned into thanking those who helped him achieve his goals, including his parents, Larry Shaw, Larry Phillips, Banjo Grimm, Rex Robbins, Ray Dillon, Bud Reeder and a host of others.

    With Reeder, he said he went from a ride in 1981 to leaving Daytona broke in 1982.

    “I was just a kid like Jeff Gordon was when he came along, 22 years old, I had never failed at anything, and it looked like it was going to be pretty easy,” he said. “I sat on two poles out of five races, worst I ever qualified was sixth, led two races decisively, and finished third, seventh and 11th in those two races. It looked like it was going to be pretty easy.

    “So I started off 1982 and left Daytona broke, a sponsor that never paid, and I proceeded to just struggle all year long. Pretty much lost everything.

    “But you know, you can never, ever give up.

    “So then in 1984, I’m standing outside the fence looking in the garage area at Daytona. I was watching the mechanics changing springs, the engine tuners working on the carburetors, crew chiefs going over their notes, and the drivers walking back and forth from the cars to the transporters, and I said, ‘I can beat those guys.’ Now, understanding I wasn’t waiting to go inside and get in my car. I wasn’t worried about sitting on a pole or winning a race. I didn’t even have a credential. I was on the outside looking in.

    “Sometimes you just need a second chance. And I needed that second chance.”

    He said that second chance came in the form of a man wearing a full-brimmed hat who “used more words than most of us know.”

    “Jack, we battled side by side for nearly 20 years, and I never once questioned your will to win or determination to succeed,” Martin said. “We not only won a lot of races, but you helped mold me into the man I am today. I can’t thank you enough for what you’ve done for me, for everything — for the opportunity to even stand up here tonight on this stage, or more importantly, the role you played in me becoming the person I am today.”

    He closed out his speech by thanking his sponsors he had over the years, NASCAR, the France family, the fans, his crew chiefs and pit crew members over the years and even took time to thank the media.

    “And to the media, I didn’t always agree with you, but I always admired your dedication to the sport I loved so much,” he said.

    The 2017 class and the living inductees of the hall took to the stage to take part in a group photo to close out the ceremony.

  • Tweaks to the rules for the 2017 season

    Tweaks to the rules for the 2017 season

    When teams roll into the garage at Daytona in a few weeks, they’ll be met with slight adjustments to the regulations.

    NASCAR sent out a memo over the weekend detailing changes for the 2017 season for all three national touring series. The changes include limits on tire allocation (for select races), allowance of use of a driver biometric device and reduction in restrictor plate and spoiler size.

    The tire allocation limit applies to all three series. The allocation in the Monster Energy Cup Series affects 13 of 36 events this season and each event will will have one less set of tires, sans the finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway which will have two fewer.

    The events affected are the Daytona 500, both Phoenix races, both Martinsville races, both Bristol races, both Kansas races, Kentucky and Chicagoland.

    Both Talladega races, Sonoma, Daytona in July, both New Hampshire races, Watkins Glen and the Bojangles’ Southern 500 will have an additional set of tires for teams, however.

    All Cup teams will be required to start every race on the tires they used in qualifying.

    Drivers in all three series will be permitted to wear a wrist-worn health tracking device. It must operate on an internal power source, such as a battery, may not transmit data or connect to the vehicle in any manner. Drivers may use certain models made by Garmin, Misfit, Polar, Samsung, Tom Tom and Jawbone.

    The size of the spoiler (minus the plate races) for the 2017 season in the Cup Series will be 2.35 inches, down from 3.5 inches used for all but three non-plate races (which used a 2.5 inch spoiler).

    For the plate races at Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway, the size of the restrictor plate openings will be reduced by 1/64th of an inch, trimmed from 57/64 to 7/8th of an inch. It applies only to the Cup and XFINITY Series.

    The previously optional roof hatch is now mandatory for the plate races in both Cup and XFINITY.

    All Cup cars must carry a roof-mounted camera assembly for every race, regardless if they’re being used by the broadcast partner.

  • Edwards Stepping Away from Racing

    Edwards Stepping Away from Racing

    One big name driver is leaving the sport less than 50 days prior to the start of the new season.

    Carl Edwards officially announced that he was stepping away from NASCAR competition before the start of the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, but wouldn’t say he was retiring.

    He came to the decision on walking away from racing for three personal reasons: his accomplishments in his career, desire to focus on outside interests and his health.

    “I’m personally satisfied with my career…you guys know I don’t race just for the trophies,” Edwards said. “This has always been a neat journey for me. I’ve been rewarded by the challenges.”

    He also spoke about the adrenaline rush of driving a race car for the first time.

    Edwards transitioned into talking about the season-long grind that is the 36-race NASCAR season. He talked about how he spends all day thinking about racing and how he’s done exactly that for 20 years.

    “I need to take that time right now and devote it to people and things that are important to me, things that I’m really passionate about,” he said.

    He then spoke of his health, saying he could stand there in good health and how it was “a testament” to NASCAR, the tracks, the car builders, his fellow competitors and the pioneer drivers who weren’t as lucky to stay as healthy.

    “Having said that though, it’s a risky sport. I’m aware of the risks. I don’t like how it feels to take the hits we take. I’m a sharp guy and I want to be a sharp guy in 30 years. Those risks are something I want to minimize.”

    He also added that when he said one of his reasons for leaving was health, that wasn’t implying he was in bad health.

    “I am healthy,” he said. “Everybody texted me yesterday — yeah, I’m great, and all the people close to me are healthy. I appreciate are those concerns, but that’s not an issue.”

    Edwards said the decision was entirely his.

    He was asked when he came to it.

    “So I had been thinking what I thought was a reasonable amount about how this would end,” Edwards said. “I always think about things going forward. And in my mind, I’d considered next year being my final year, but I hadn’t put really a lot of thought into it. And after Homestead, I had some time to sit, think and reflect about all of this, and for those three reasons that I gave you, I thought, man, it just — I can’t come up with a good reason why now isn’t a good time.

    “And so I presented that to Coach. I didn’t know what he would say, and like I said, he and the sponsors — I mean, everyone, accommodated me in a way I just didn’t expect, and that means a lot.”

    He spoke on the frustration of being so close to winning the championship last November at Homestead-Miami Speedway, only for a multi-car wreck with 10 laps to go taking him out stealing his shot at it. During banquet week, however, he said “I will appreciate the championship we win more because of it.” He was then asked what during that time caused him to change from wanting to fight for a title in 2017 to ready to walk away.

    “I don’t know who was interviewing me there, but I got to Champions Week and I had a lot on my mind, and I just kind of felt — it kind of took me off guard to start talking about it again,” he said. “I hadn’t talked about it with anyone. But yeah, I’m not going to say this whole thing was easy or clean or perfect. I mean, this isn’t the — there was no epiphany moment. That has been something I really thought a lot about, and it wasn’t easy. Pardon me if I went back and forth a little bit about it.”

    Edwards said earlier in the conference that if he wished to return to racing, Joe Gibbs would be the first person he would call. Later, he was asked what he would do “if there was no room at the inn.”

    “Well, if there’s one thing I’ve learned about Toyota, it’s that Toyota makes sure that what they go do, they do well,” he added. “We look at what Martin was able to do at Furniture Row, Barney Visser and those guys. I don’t want to start down this path. That is not my plan. But I’d be open to anything that involved Coach Gibbs, Toyota, and the people that make this thing work right now.  I mean, this is a cool deal.”

    The press conference at the Joe Gibbs Racing shop in Huntersville, North Carolina came roughly 24 hours after news of his departure from the sport was broken by Tom Jensen of FoxSports.com.

    After the conclusion of his conference, Coach Joe Gibbs announced that reigning XFINITY Series champion Daniel Suarez will move up to Cup in 2017 to drive the No. 19 JGR Toyota.

    Edwards ends his career having driven a combined 750 career races in NASCAR three national touring series. The majority of those starts came in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. In 445 Cup starts, 28 wins, 124 top-fives, 220 top-10’s, 22 poles, 6136 laps led, a career finishing average of 13.6, 352 lead lap finishes, running at the finish in 414 starts and a best points finish of second (twice).

  • Texas undergoing repave prior to next race

    Texas undergoing repave prior to next race

    Come this April, one track will have a completely new surface and slightly different profile.

    Texas Motor Speedway announced plans for a complete repave of the 1.5 mile quad-oval racing facility where completion is expected, barring any weather delays, before the start of the O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race weekend on April 9. The repave includes a new asphalt racing surface, “an expansive French drainage system on the frontstretch and backstretch,” according to the release by the speedway, and a four-degree reduction in banking in Turns 1 and 2. Turns 3 and 4 will remain unchanged.

    This is the track’s second repave in its 20-year history and first since 2001.

    The repave came as a result of races being delayed as a result of water seeping out of cracks in the track and improper drainage. Both Cup races were delayed by rain and track drying efforts. Weather delays and track drying halted last year’s Firestone 600 IndyCar Series race 71 laps in and the remainder of the event was pushed from June 12 to August 27.

    “The old pavement no longer dried as quickly because through the years of use and weather, the asphalt became porous, kind of like a sponge,” said Texas Motor Speedway President Eddie Gossage. “Even if we only had a brief shower it was taking us far too long to get the track dried in order to get on to the racing. We owe it to the fans to present the best possible race track so they will be assured of seeing NASCAR and INDYCAR races even if we face some brief inclement weather. This will accomplish that goal.”