Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • Richard Petty Driving Experience Returns to Daytona

    Marks the first time fans will be able to drive Daytona International Speedway since June 2010

     

    (Concord, NC) December 3, 2010 – The wait is finally over for those who want to be among the first to experience the newly repaved Daytona International Speedway.  Richard Petty Driving Experience (RPDE) will be on track at Daytona two days this month – Monday, December 27th and Tuesday, December 28th, 2010 – for the first time since a massive repaving project shut down the track for six months.

    “We’re very excited to get back on track at Daytona International Speedway.  Consistently ranked as a favorite by our customers, Daytona is the ultimate experience when it comes to our ride and drive programs,” said Brian Flynn, Chief Executive Officer.  “We look forward to getting back out and running on the new surface.”

    RPDE is now taking registrations for their 8, 16 and 24-lap driving programs at Daytona.  High speed Ride-Along’s will be available during operating hours both days on a first-come, first served basis.  If you want to be one of the first to experience the historic track since its reopening, visit www.drivepetty.com or call 800.237.3889.  Hurry, seats are going fast…very, very fast! 

    -end-

     

    About Richard Petty Driving Experience:

    Richard Petty Driving Experience, a motorsports entertainment and automotive services company headquartered in Concord, N.C., produces and facilitates NASCAR-style stock car drive and ride-along experiences, auto manufacturer ride and drive programs, safe driving programs, mobile marketing events and production services to the film industry. The company offers rides and drives at more than 20 major speedways around the country and has permanent facilities in Las Vegas, Orlando, and Concord, NC. For more information, call 1-800-237-3889 or visit www.drivepetty.com

  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. Wins Most Popular Driver Award & Talks about his Future

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. Wins Most Popular Driver Award & Talks about his Future

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the NMPA Hamburger Helper Most Popular Driver Award for the 8th consecutive year. He accepted the award on Thursday in Las Vegas at the NASCAR NMPA Myers Brothers 2010 Awards Luncheon.

    Earnhardt Jr. began by saying that receiving the award was “a great honor” but first he wanted to congratulate his teammate Jimmie Johnson. He joked about forgetting to congratulate him last year adding that Rick Hendrick had already sent him a text message to remind him to do so.

    [media-credit name=”Dale Earnhardt Jr. accepts his eighth consecutive Hamburger Helper Most Popular Driver Award during the NASCAR NMPA Myers Brothers Awards Ceremony on Thursday. Photo by CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]He went on to congratulate General Mills, NMPA, his sponsors and his team but his most heartfelt thanks went to his fans.

    “They really make everything about this sport, about this very moment here, possible for all of us,” said Earnhardt.

    After the luncheon, Earnhardt Jr. spoke with the media about the 2011 season with new crew chief Steve Letarte.

    He described learning about the crew chief change saying, “It’s like knowing what you’re getting for Christmas, but not being able to mess with it until that morning.”

    But he also acknowledged that the real change will begin with the driver himself.

    “The only person that can truly help me get where I need to go, obviously, starts with me, Earnhardt Jr. said. “Then it goes to Rick (Hendrick), Steve and those guys that are your inner circle every week and that are in your corner every week.

    “My biggest problem, I think, is my confidence. I know what I’ve done in the past. I know that I’ve out run and beat these guys that I compete with each week before and I just have to remember that the potential is there.”

    Earnhardt Jr. also believes “there’s a swagger that you have to have,” and the only way he will be able to get that back is to put together some tops five runs.

    “To convince myself to get back to where I need to be confidence wise, I need to see it happen on the track. I can’t just talk myself into going to the track thinking the way I need to think. I’m going to go there and mash the gas and it needs to happen. When it happens, then I’ll go, ‘Yeah, this is what it’s supposed to be like’ and then you kind of get the swagger back and the confidence comes back and everything is rock solid. You win battles, little battles throughout the day with that confidence that you normally don’t win whether it’s with yourself or your competition out on the race track. There are thousands of battles happen throughout the race.”

    Many believe Earnhardt Jr.’s problems on the racetrack began with the introduction of the COT and he admits that it “has been challenging.”

    “But I think the potential for the car to get the grip and get the feel of the race track that I need is there because I’ve had it before. We just missed it. The cars are just not into the track to get the speed and get the grip that I feel like I need to get. We haven’t been able to find what that combination is, whether it’s a package in the springs or the sway bars, which it probably isn’t. We’re missing something for the car and the feel that I need to feel. It could be anything related to the car even before it comes into the crew chief’s hands, we just have to see.”

    Although the last few years have been difficult for Dale Jr., he’s not looking for your pity. Instead, he is looking ahead to the future and the opportunity to prove himself.

    “I don’t think I should win any sympathy votes. We need to perform. We need to be hard on ourselves to how poorly we ran at times last year. We need to force ourselves and push ourselves to improve and that’s what we try to do every offseason. Physically and mentally it can be kind of tough on you but you just kind of rebound and renew yourself in the offseason and renew your faith in your abilities.”

  • Rick Hendrick: The Artwork of a NASCAR Champion and Someone To Always Respect

    Rick Hendrick: The Artwork of a NASCAR Champion and Someone To Always Respect

    When it was announced last year at the Sprint Cup Series banquet that Rick Hendrick would be receiving Bill France Award of Excellence, nobody was surprised.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Everybody understood why Hendrick was receiving the award, as his actions through his 26 years in the sport speak for themselves. Hendrick has proven himself on-track as he’s made Hendrick Motorsports the best team in NASCAR.

    Though beyond that, he’s been through a lot of personal battles and stayed strong as he fought a battle with leukemia in 1997, and fought through the death of 10 of his closest friends in 2009.

    The success for Hendrick through the 26 seasons has been great, considering where it started and how it could’ve not even taken place. Hendrick and driver Geoff Bodine went into the Martinsville race in 1984 with one thing on their mind—run well or else they’d be done soon.

    “It was a pivotal race for us,” Hendrick later told The Sporting News in a 2004 interview. “I know exactly what some of these guys feel like who have an unsponsored car—we did not have a sponsor. We had a small associate on the car, All-Star Racing and City Chevrolet, my store in Charlotte. We were running the deal out of our pocket and needed some success to sell a sponsor.”

    Bodine would do more then just run well and lock in some sponsorship—he’d win the whole show as he took the lead with 48 laps to go and never looked back.

    “The race just unfolded,” Bodine said. “We were running good. I knew you had to pace yourself at this track; brakes were really important. I was doing that throughout the race. At the end, it was just perfect. The neat thing about the race was it was Rick’s first win, my first win; but no one fell out of this race. None of the good cars were out.”

    Hendrick wasn’t there for the race as at the time, he was in church with his wife. After the race was over, he called his mother and asked him how they had done. His mother told him, “Bodine blew up…no seriously! Nobody has told you! He won!”

    That year, Hendrick and Bodine finished the year with a total of three wins, seven top-fives, 14 top-10s and three pole positions.

    Since then, the success has only grown for Hendrick as his drivers have won 194 Cup races and 10 Cup titles.

    In the process, he’s also set records. In 2010, driver Jimmie Johnson became the only driver ever in NASCAR history to win five championships in a row (2006-2010) and Hendrick now ranks at the top of the all-time winners list.

    Last year, Hendrick also became the only driver to have his cars finish one-two-three with Johnson first, Mark Martin second and Gordon third. The size of the organization has also grown along the way as he went from a small shop of approximately 20 people to now employing more than 500 people.

    Though when it came to Betty Jane France’s speech to announcing the award to Hendrick, it was not the stats she brought up; it was the other elements of Hendrick.

    “NASCAR has had many iconic figures throughout its rich history, and Rick Hendrick certainly falls into that category,” France said. “Through the years, he has not only won our respect but our hearts as well.” These words from France were preceded also by praise from two of his drivers during their speeches at the banquet.

    “You taught me to live big and small—live big in your passion for what you do, what you believe in and in your successes, but be humble and appreciative and give thanks for all those things,” Jeff Gordon said during his speech.

    Martin said in his speech he sees “a little bit of Rick Hendrick in each and every one of” the employees of the team and went on to add, “You just win everything there is in NASCAR. You made history, win all these championships. You’re a big winner. Congratulations and thanks for letting me be a part of it. But that’s not the most impressive part of it. To me, you’re a true champion as a person, such an incredible individual that affects so many people in a positive way. I’d like to be more like you.”

    These elements that both Gordon and Martin speak about go towards the way that he treats the people around him.

    During discussions about the sport, you hear people getting talked about in a negative way somehow. Though in the midst of those discussions, nobody has anything negative to say towards Hendrick, as most people respect him and always regard him as a positive person. This is because he always treats people—no matter who they are or what their background is—positively and with respect. Hendrick is a person that you never see talk bad about people, even when others may.

    One example would be Kyle Busch, 

     a driver whom Hendrick released in 2007. Everybody speaks of Busch in a negative light, due to how he’s reacted on track with his attitude. Everybody thought Hendrick let him go and did it due to that attitude and didn’t want to deal with him.

    Though according to Busch’s manager Jeff Dickerson, it was Hendrick who gave Busch and Dickerson the best advice in choosing a new team for Busch to go with. Dickerson recalled going to Hendrick numerous times to ask him questions and Hendrick would always be open to answering them. Dickerson credited Hendrick for being one of the main players in the changing of the teams. Busch also went on to add that nobody was to sit and blame Hendrick for letting Busch go, as that was partly the fault of Busch.

    The reason Hendrick had let him go and hired Earnhardt Jr. was because Busch was hinting that he was looking around, when actually he was liking the scenario at Hendrick Motorsports.

    So why does Hendrick have the theory to go out and be nice to everybody, even if they’re on an opposing team? Simple—it’s all about the people for him. When speaking of the success of his organization, he always feels the need to bring up the people first.

    “I think our people are the biggest asset,” he says. “If you can keep it together and tweak it, it’s much better off than tearing it down and rebuilding it every year. It slows you down.

    “I’ve seen this happen in my career here. You can have all stars together; there’s no guarantee they’ll work. I mean, you can guess the best so called crew chief and best driver in the garage area and put them together, and that’s not necessarily going to work. You know, what I’ve tried to do is promote tweaking it rather than rebuilding it. I’m a fix it kind of guy rather than a strip-it-and-rebuild-it kind of guy.”

    This attitude is what drives the employees to work so hard and why you’ll see Hendrick employees putting that extra effort in, according to Johnson, Alan Gustafson and General Manager Marshall Carlson.

    “It starts with Rick and his vision and what he has given us all to work with in his 25 years in the sport,” Johnson says. “He’s just done an amazing job. I’m happy to make him happy, I’m happy to make him smile.”

    “The way that he goes about keeping us going, he’s got one requisite, and that is that we race together, and that’s absolutely imperative,” Carlson adds. “Beyond that, he gives everyone a lot of flexibility and a lot of autonomy, a lot of—as far as the X’s and O’s, these guys figure that out, and these guys bring their game to the track.

    “And I think that competitive people who want to win are attracted to that. I think that’s why Jimmie was attracted to the organization and Chad and why they continue to want to be there. …There’s 500 teammates back at Hendrick Motorsports who have built that place, and every single one of us owes an incredible debt of gratitude to Rick for his leadership, for his commitment and dedication for giving us the resources to have these opportunities.”

    “I don’t think there’s any person that I’ve ever met who was more compassionate and who treats fellow human beings better than Rick Hendrick,” Gustafson says. “And I think that’s the key for me personally, and that’s all I can speak on.

    “…There’s not any magic. The fact is he’s willing to do more for people, for his people, than basically anybody else is. And he’s willing to put himself second time and time and time again for his company and for his people, and we all sincerely appreciate that, and we want to return the favor to him because he treats us so well.

    “I think he genuinely enjoys bringing good things and happiness to people’s lives, and he does a great job of it. So he’s just a super special person. The world would be a worse place without Rick Hendrick in it. He’s just a great guy and somebody you will do anything for because he will treat you the same way.”

    So when it came towards choosing someone whom to look up to, I did not have to look far past Rick Hendrick in including him on the list.

    Rick, you showed so many qualities that showcase a top quality of person. Your dedication and the success of your team have shown me that hard work pays off and even though it may get hard at times, I need to keep at it. The qualities you showcased well in getting through the hard times have showed you’re a fighter and that giving up is not an option. Though the heart you have is what brings you to the front of my mind. The friendship you have shown and how much you care about others is what makes you stand above others when looking for someone to look up to.

  • Shell and Pennzoil Unveil 2011 Paint Schemes, Announce Return to Indianapolis 500 with Penske Racing

    Shell and Pennzoil Announce Their Return to the Indianapolis 500® with Veteran Driver Helio Castroneves

    HOUSTON, Texas (Dec. 2, 2010) – Tonight Shell Oil Company (Shell) and Penske Corporation unveiled their 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and  IZOD IndyCar Series car line-up along with important driver details for the 2011 season.  Officials from both companies met with members of the media at the Penske-Wynn Ferrari dealership at the Wynn Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nev., to unveil both the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Dodge that Kurt Busch will pilot throughout the 2011 season and the No. 3 Shell V-Power®-Pennzoil Ultra™ Dallara/Honda that three-time Indianapolis 500® champion Helio Castroneves will pilot at the Indianapolis 500 in May 2011.

    “I am honored to represent the Shell and Pennzoil brands in the NASCAR Cup Series starting in 2011,” said Busch. “I look forward to building on the success of our storied past at Penske Racing with our new sponsors at Shell and Pennzoil.”

    Shell and Pennzoil also announced their return to the Indianapolis 500 this evening as they unveiled the No. 3 Shell V-Power®-Pennzoil Ultra™ Dallara/Honda that three-time Indy 500 champion Helio Castroneves will drive in the centennial celebration of the Memorial Day weekend classic.

    “I am very excited to be working with Shell and Pennzoil this season and I’m proud to have the opportunity to drive the beautiful Shell V-Power®-Pennzoil Ultra™ car in the 2011 Indianapolis 500 representing the No. 1 premium gasoline and Pennzoil’s most advanced motor oil in the U.S.,” said Helio Castroneves, driver of the No. 3 Team Penske IndyCar.  “Shell and Pennzoil have such a great history in IndyCar racing and they have certainly had some special moments with Penske Racing at the Indy 500.  I hope we can create a little bit more history together this May at Indianapolis!”

    “Shell has more than a half-century of motorsports expertise and alliances allowing our organization to bring quality fuels and lubricants technology from the track to the road,” said Lisa Davis, President, Shell Lubricants, Americas.  “Strategic alliances are very important to our organization and the new relationship with a winning team like Penske provides us with additional opportunities to continue furthering our technological leadership and product development through the invaluable knowledge gained both on and off the track.”

    Penske Corporation is one of the world’s most successful and recognized transportation-based business enterprises and provides unique activation opportunities.  While Shell and Pennzoil will be the “Official Fuel and Motor Oil Supplier” to the Penske organization in the U.S., the relationship goes far beyond a typical sponsorship.  Beginning in 2011, Penske will work with Shell and Pennzoil to embark on a technical alliance that will offer insights into motor oil and fuel technology.

    The renewed alliance will provide Penske’s IndyCar and NASCAR teams with cutting edge Pennzoil Ultra racing oil technology for all their racecars. Additionally, this alliance will enable further product development for Shell and Pennzoil through the invaluable knowledge gained surrounding fuels, lubricants and engine technologies.  Like Shell and Pennzoil, Penske Corporation has a close relationship with Chrysler and Ferrari, both part of the Fiat Group.

    “Shell and Pennzoil are two established and winning brands and they will be strategic business providers for our Penske Automotive Group and Penske Truck Leasing businesses,” said Roger Penske. “This is a very important global relationship for our organization and we look forward to producing many victories for Shell and Pennzoil in NASCAR, in the IZOD IndyCar Series and across our businesses.”

    Winning is a tradition for Penske Racing. Competing in a variety of disciplines, cars owned and prepared by Penske Racing have produced 332 major race wins, 396 pole positions and 23 National Championships. The team has also earned 15 Indianapolis 500 victories and won the 2008 Daytona 500. For more information about Penske Racing, please visit www.penskeracing.com.

    Pennzoil and Penske Racing already have a dynamic history at the Indianapolis 500 as two Penske Racing entries have raced to victory lane decorated with the traditional black and yellow colors.  The new alliance will try and add another trophy to their collection as Helio Castroneves races for his record-tying fourth Indianapolis 500 title in the No. 3 Shell V-Power®-Pennzoil Ultra™ Dallara/Honda in May 2011.

    Shell is the no. 1 lubricants supplier in the U.S. and the nation’s best-selling gasoline brand with more than 14,000 branded stations. Shell has a strong motorsports history aligning with race teams since the 1920’s. In addition to the alliance with Penske Racing, Shell affiliates currently have several motorsport technical co-operation programs in place, including Ferrari in Formula 1, Ducati in MotoGP, and with Hendrick Motorsports in NASCAR. Shell uses the knowledge gained from the extreme conditions on the track in the development of fuels and lubricants. These learnings transfer directly to the products available to customers, such as Shell V-Power® premium gasoline and the ultra-class synthetic motor oil, Pennzoil Ultra™. Shell V-Power® was developed to meet the needs of customers who want to help maintain optimum performance achieved through the benefits of a clean, gunk-free engine. Similarly, the advanced proprietary synthetic formula of Pennzoil Ultra™ far exceeds the most stringent car manufacturer’s engine cleanliness standards.

    For additional information, please visit www.shell.us/racing.

    Penske Corporation is a closely-held diversified transportation services company whose subsidiaries operate in a variety of segments, including retail automotive, truck leasing, transportation logistics, transportation component manufacturing and professional motorsports. Penske Corporation manages businesses with revenues in excess of $16 billion, operating in more than 1,800 locations and employing over 36,000 people worldwide.

    Shell Oil Company, including its consolidated companies and its share in equity companies, is one of America’s leading oil and natural gas producers, natural gas marketers, gasoline marketers and petrochemical manufacturers. Shell, a leading oil and gas producer in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, is a recognized pioneer in oil and gas exploration and production technology. Shell Oil Company is an affiliate of the Shell Group, which operates in over 100 countries and territories and employs more than 102,000 people.

    Shell Oil Products US, a subsidiary of Shell Oil Company, is a leader in the refining, transportation and marketing of fuels, and has a network of approximately 6,100 branded gasoline stations in the Western United States. Shell Oil Company is an affiliate of the Shell Group [(NYSE:RDS.A) and (NYSE:RDS.B)]. Shell Oil Company is a 50 percent owner of Motiva Enterprises LLC, along with Saudi Refining, Inc. Motiva Enterprises LLC refines and markets branded products through more than 8,300 Shell-branded stations in the Eastern and Southern United States.

    Pennzoil® is the no. 1 selling motor oil and one of the most trusted brands in America. The Pennzoil line of quality products meets or exceeds industry specifications to offer exceptional engine cleansing and protection, and includes Pennzoil Ultra™ motor oil with Hyper Cleansing Technology™, Pennzoil Platinum® Full Synthetic motor oil, Pennzoil Gold™ motor oil, Pennzoil® High Mileage Vehicle® motor oil, Pennzoil® Advanced Protection motor oil, and Pennzoil Marine® engine oil. For more information about Pennzoil products, please visit www.pennzoil.com 

    Pennzoil is produced and marketed by Shell Lubricants. The term ‘Shell Lubricants’ collectively refers to the companies of Royal Dutch Shell plc that are engaged in the lubricants business. Shell Lubricants companies lead the lubricants industry, supplying 13.4% of global lubricants volume. The companies manufacture and blend products for use in consumer, heavy industrial and commercial transport applications. The Shell Lubricants portfolio of top-quality brands includes Pennzoil®, Quaker State®, FormulaShell®, Shell TELLUS®,  Shell RIMULA®, Shell ROTELLA® T, Shell SPIRAX®, a portfolio of leading car care brands and Jiffy Lube® lubrication services.

    Royal Dutch Shell plc is incorporated in England and Wales, has its headquarters in The Hague and is listed on the London, Amsterdam, and New York stock exchanges. Shell companies have operations in more than 100 countries with businesses including oil and gas exploration and production; production and marketing of Liquefied Natural Gas and Gas to Liquids; manufacturing, marketing and shipping of oil products and chemicals and renewable energy projects including wind and solar power. For further information, visit www.shell.com.


    Based on GF-5, Ford, Chrysler, GM and Ferrari specifications

    Kline & Company, “Global Lubricants Industry 2009 – 2019.”

  • Denny Hamlin’s Pit Crew Wins the 2010 Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew Award

    LOS ANGELES (December 2, 2010) – Excellent pit stops can make or break a race and a season for a team. For Denny Hamlin and his No. 11 FexEx Toyota, his pit crew helped him gain a spot in the NASCAR Chase for the Sprint Cup, challenge the front of the field throughout the season and finish second in the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings.

    That’s why Mechanix Wear is proud to announce that the No. 11  FedEx pit cre w from Joe Gibbs Racing is the winner of the Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew Award for the 2010 season.

    This award is the only authentic competition voted on by crew chiefs. The No. 11 FedEx pit crew was selected for its fast pit stops, flawless performance and incredible effort over the 38-race season. The team also won the Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew Award for the second quarter.

    The No. 11 FedEx pit crew travelled to Las Vegas to be honored at the annual NASCAR Sprint Cup celebration, where they took home the Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew trophy and the $100,000 grand prize.

    Crew chief, Mike Ford of the No. 11 FedEx pit crew is proud of the impressive job his team did during the 2010 season.

    “I’m proud of all of our guys for earning the Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Crew Award,” said Mike Ford, crew chief of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 FedEx Toyota. “I had a great deal of confidence in our guys throughout the season and they certainly deserve a lot of credit for the success we experienced this year. NASCAR has a long season and everyone on our team puts in a tremendous amount of effort each week, so it’s great to have them recognized with this well deserved award.”

    Michael Lepp, Athletic Director and Paul Alepa, Pit Crew Coach for the No. 11 FedEx team, offered their five tips for success as listed below:

    1. Preparation/Planning
    2. Deliberate Practice
    3. Focus
    4. Fitness
    5. Mental Toughness

     

    The members of the No. 11 FedEx pit crew include:

    Gas Man:                      Scott Wood     

    Jack Man:                     Nate Bolling

    Catch Can:                    John Eicher

    Front Tire Changer:        Mike Hicks

    Front Tire Carrier:           Brandon Pegram

    Rear Tire Changer:         Jonathan Sherman

    Rear Tire Carrier:            Heath Cherry

    About Mechanix Wear

    Mechanix Wear, the #1 glove in racing, is the motorsports industry’s first and foremost company dedicated to providing gloves to help you work faster, safer and cleaner. From the introduction of the Original glove in 1991, Mechanix Wear has continually defined the state of high quality performance work gloves by adding products specifically designed to enhance comfort and resist extreme wear, temperatures and impact. Mechanix Wear gloves can be found in toolboxes in homes, garages and workshops and used by emergency, military and professional tradesman as well as do-it-yourselfers.

  • Petty Is Among The Greats That Can’t Manage

    Petty Is Among The Greats That Can’t Manage

    We have seen this problem throughout the world of sports. You have a fantastic athlete that makes a name for himself and then retires to become an owner. How many times in sports have we seen this happen and end in failure? Sadly, Richard Petty has fallen under the curse as well. The seven-time NASCAR champion is struggling to keep his Richard Petty Motorsports racing team afloat after going from a four car operation down to two and the stunning news of Petty putting together an investment team to take control. Petty will became the chairman of the new ownership group and will oversee RPM’s day to day operations.

    [media-credit id=26 align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Richard Petty won 200 races as a professional NASCAR driver, but after taking over as an owner he has only won four races and three if you count the days from Petty Enterprises. Bobby Hamilton won at Rockingham in 1996 and 1997, but waited another two years until John Andretti found victory lane at Martinsville in 1999. Also, remember that before Hamilton’s victory in 1996 that Petty Enterprises hadn’t won a race since 1983 at Phoenix. The team was bought out in 2008 and became Gillett-Evernham Motorsports before Evernham left the team and Richard Petty Motorsports came to be. They have won 1 race and it was in 2009 with Kasey Kahne at Sonoma and Petty’s first win as an owner in 10 years.

    What am I trying to get to here? Look at Wayne Gretzky. He scored 894 times in his NHL career and holds probably every single record in the NHL and tried being an owner/coach of the Phoenix Coyotes. Heck, he did so bad the team never made the playoffs and went bankrupt, which led to Gretzky resigning as Head Coach and now just a spectator. His wife Janet has been accused of betting on games and that has led many to believe that the money won could have been used to help the Coyotes, but that accusation never went to court.

    Also, a lot of the greatest owners of all time were actually playing in their sport at one time and weren’t that good. Joe Torre wasn’t the greatest player on the field, but he led the Yankees to 4 World Series rings in 5 years. Freddie Roach was a boxer in his time, never won a world title, and even lost 13 times. Look at what he has done with Manny Pacquiao. Pacquiao is an eight-division world champion. That is a true athlete. Now, I may be dead wrong on this whole thing with Richard Petty, but I just don’t see them having any success this year. The team is struggling in the money column and that is terrible for any team.

  • Is Mark Martin the Place Card For Kasey Kahne at Hendrick Motorsports?

    Is Mark Martin the Place Card For Kasey Kahne at Hendrick Motorsports?

    Okay, now that Dale Earnhardt Jr. has been awarded Jeff Gordon’s equipment, team and crew chief, just what does Mark Martin have to look forward to?

    Martin will now drive the equipment that Junior has struggled with especially the last two seasons at Hendrick Motorsports.  He will also have Lance McGrew as his new crew chief.

    McGrew is a technical guy who had a failure to communicate with Earnhardt Jr.  Martin is more of a technical driver who is able to give great feedback on how to set up a car.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]With that being said, it sounds like McGrew and Martin are quite the good pairing.

    Martin is in his final year at Hendrick Motorsports which makes him a lame duck driver, as the saying goes.  Typically a driver in the last year of their contract fails to perform optimally.

    McGrew Knows he will move on to other duties at HMS or elsewhere after the 2011 season when Kenny Francis comes on board as Kasey Kahne’s crew chief.

    Place cards are placed at the seat a guest is to occupy at the table.  You have to wonder if Kasey Kahne’s place card is on Mark Martin at the HMS table.

    It would be easy to surmise the new No. 5 car will just continue to make a mediocre showing if Martin and McGrew end up butting heads.  If it was a driver other than Mark Martin, it could be easy to assign low expectations to the team.

    Martin wants to go out as a winner at HMS.  He was second to Jimmie Johnson, the perennial NASCAR Sprint Cup Champion in 2009.

    For whatever reason he and his crew chief, Alan Gustafson, just failed to get up to speed this season and lost the momentum from the prior year.  Martin ended up just outside the Chase contenders, 13th in the point standings.

    Martin fought hard for months to dissuade the media and disbelievers that he would be the one leaving Hendrick Motorsports to make room for Kasey Kahne in 2011.  He said he would stay and drive the No. 5 GoDaddy.com car and that is what he is going to do.

    His intent was to finish the last year of his contract as planned, regroup with Gustafson and go for wins in the coming season.  The one thing he didn’t count on was the loss of Gustafson, a crew chief he worked so well with.

    Now as we wait for the kickoff of the new season at Daytona International Speedway in February, it will be like the toss of a coin before a football game.

    Will Mark Martin get the winning side of the coin or will he get the side that makes him the designated place card at Hendrick Motorsports?

  • Determined and Motivated: Five-Time Championship Crew Chief Chad Knaus

    Determined and Motivated: Five-Time Championship Crew Chief Chad Knaus

    Through the history of NASCAR, there are only few driver-crew chief relationships that are capable of creating dynasties. One of those would be the combination of Johnson and Knaus.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]The strength of their relationship, plus Knaus’ desire, are two of the keys to that make them as good as they are. Knaus’ desire was seen even before he became the crew chief was Johnson; it was shown to Phillippe Lopez when Knaus worked for Stanley Smith as a shop-foreman.

    “Chad wasn’t there for the check,” Lopez said. “He wasn’t there for the glory. He was a racer. He did everything the right way. Nothing was half-assed. But you knew right away he had big dreams. He told me he wanted my job. He wasn’t kidding.

    “But he would do whatever it took to make himself better. He was great with working on bodies and Bondo (putty used in fabrication), but he wanted to learn about shocks. He was consumed with learning about it, mastering it and then doing it better.

    “It wasn’t unusual for me to have to tell Chad at two or three in the morning that it was time to go home.”

    It was Knaus’ attitude, however, that almost broke them up.

    Johnson’s description of the breakdown at the end of the 2005 season was they both wanted it so bad that they were “butting heads in the process.” So Hendrick pulled them into his office, ready to discuss things between them and if needed, separate them.

    “It was getting to the point where Chad and Jimmie were having more bad days than good days,” Hendrick said. “I called them into my office … and said ‘If we’re going to act like kids, we’re going to have cookies and milk and we’ll have some down time where we can talk about what you don’t like about each.”

    With a play on what was seen as “childish behaviour”, he set the room up as if it was a kid’s room and served them Mickey Mouse cookies and milk. This meeting allowed both Knaus and Johnson to get all their feelings about each other.

    “The meeting was supposed to be how we split the guys up,” Hendrick said. “But in this meeting, these guys really put their heart on the table and they talked specifically about what they didn’t like. Instead of holding it in, they were able to become closer friends and still respect each other’s professional position in the team.

    “I’m real proud of them because I would have bet money that we couldn’t fix it. I think both of those guys would be successful in their own right, but I think they’re stronger together.”

    “It took a lot of effort on each other’s parts,” Knaus later on said in a different article. “At that point, we were both tired and very frustrated. We were on the cusp on winning a championship for the first three years and we weren’t able to pull it off. Expectations were high. We weren’t able to deliver. There’s a lot to wanting to deliver for Rick and Jimmie and I felt that I laid down a little. I didn’t make the right decisions.

    “It takes maturity, wisdom and you have to learn. We learned over a period of time. You have to go over life experiences and race car experiences to get what you really need. There was a point there that we had to make a decision whether we wanted to do this or not.

    “We just had to learn to rededicate ourselves to the cause—and that’s what we did.” This conversation with Rick helped their relationship a lot, allowing them to now be the driver-crew chief pair to beat.

    “Jimmie and Chad have something very, very special together,” Gordon said in the article “One More with Feeling.” “I know everything that goes into their cars and everything about their set-ups, and they’re still beating us. It’s frustrating but you’ve got to give them credit. They’re the best right now.”

    “My relationship with Chad has been unlike any relationship I’ve had before with a crew chief,” Johnson stated in November of 2008. “We’re close in age, which is a first for me, and we share a lot of things in common. We have two completely different personalities, and his strengths fit my weaknesses and my strengths fit his weaknesses. So I think the pairing of us both has been really good.”

    Knaus still has that desire, though now it is pointed in a direction that benefits them all and has equaled record material. Since that discussion, they have gone on a roll, winning the last five championships (2006-2010).

    His motivation and hard working style at times has got him in trouble in the process as he has been caught in a sense cheating and has been suspended.

    In 2006, Knaus was suspended for making an illegal adjustment to the rear window after Daytona 500 qualifying, which resulted in a four week suspension. Despite this, the No. 48 team still came out on top, winning the Daytona 500 with interim crew chief Darian Grubb.

    In 2007, Knaus was suspended for six races as a result of the shape of the fenders in between the template points being in question by officials.

    In 2009, Knaus was warned about getting close to breaking the rules of with regards to the height rule as he was only a 1/16 of an inch within the window allowed.

    A lot of people have labeled him with the label of a “cheater”, though he says that it’s him doing his job to push the limits and find an advantage for his team.

    “I don’t cheat,” Knaus told Jenna Fryer in 2009. “I think it’s easy for me to be labeled that way. We’ve done a lot of things to help the sport transition and develop new rules, but that doesn’t mean we are cheating. We are pushing the limits.

    “Look at Tiger Woods, because he trains more and practices more and pays more attention to club selection and studies the greens, is he cheating? That’s not true.

    “Look back at the things I’ve been in trouble for, and that was maybe two times that something was actually outside the rules. I think it’s a bad label, a bad label for the team. But it doesn’t bother me a lot because I know deep down it’s not the case.

    “The fenders on the cars on Sonoma? Those were not illegal. The casual fan doesn’t understand it. It’s easy for someone to label that a person is a cheater, when in reality it wasn’t cheating, it was just not done the way it should be.”

    Knaus is referring to the last piece of the art of “creative interpretation”, which is reading the rules and interpreting them in the way you feel, though also maybe a way that they were intended to be. It’s about finding that grey area.

    “I think that’s our job, to find those areas of interpretation, the gray areas, and do just that,” ex-crew chief Robbie Loomis said in an article. “Interpret. There is a lot less room in there to find an advantage than there used to be, but that’s part of the challenge.”

    Knaus is not the first of his type, too. There were others before him who pushed the rules and have been recognized as some of the best.

    Smokey Yunick was one of the most famous people for doing this as he always was looking to see what he could do within the rules. There’s a story where in tech inspection, NASCAR removed his fuel cell and Smokey turned around, asking, “Are you done yet?” and they told him. He then proceeded to drive away from the officials, but how’d he do that?

    He had a fuel line of 11 foot coils of two inch diameter (equaling five gallons) and had enough fuel still in the car. He did that to therefore gain more fuel millage but most importantly, because the officials forgot to write that rule. Now if you read the rulebook, you notice there’s a length specified.

    Then there was Ray Evernham, who came out with the car T-Rex at the 1997 Winston, dominating the show. After the show, Evernham was pulled aside and NASCAR specifically told him that he was not to bring that car back.

    “We went through the rule book and wherever there was a real gray area or no specifics regarding certain components, we worked hard in that area with new things,” Eddie Dickerson, manager of Chassis Engineering at Hendrick Motorsports, said in an article on NASCAR.com. “There are no major changes you can make to components on these cars. So we worked hard in different little areas. It was a combination of things. … [But] we did not do anything illegal with the car.”

    Richard Petty was quoted in a NASCAR.com article saying, “I always told my guys, ‘Cheat neat and you’ll get by with a bunch of stuff.’ I don’t particularly tell my guys to cheat. I just tell them not to get caught.”

    It’s all about the art of the teams trying to find that advantage.

    “Every team out there is trying to do something to be faster than the next,” Knaus told Ed Hinton in 2009. “If they’re not, they’re not running competitively. I can promise you that.

    “And if the crew chief is not trying to push something to make his car faster, then he’s not doing his job and he’s not living up to his responsibility.”

    Johnson feels that Knaus has this motivation due to his own fear of losing.

    “I think it’s a fear of losing that motivates him more than anything,” Johnson said. “He is more motivated by dominating, in a sense. We’ll have what we consider the best car in practice and look at lap tracker and we might have a tenth on the field and he’s like, ‘We need more.’ That’s just his mindset. It’s more, more, more. We’ve got to be better. We’ve got to be better.

    “I feel that he’s afraid of losing. When he loses, something goes on in his head and I don’t know if it comes from being a kid and racing and working his way up through the ranks or watching his dad race or whatever, but there’s something there that he is afraid of losing. And that’s why when he wins, he’s kind of chilled and relaxed because it satisfies what that fire is inside of him.”

    “I don’t want to lose,” Knaus said. “I don’t. There’s some validity to that. Everybody wants to be good at something and this is what I want to be good at. I don’t want to let anybody down. I’ve not had a lot of other stable things in my life and the race car has always been there.”

  • Toyota NASCAR Notes & Quotes Champion’s Week

    TOYOTA TIDBITS — November 29 – December 5, 2010 Here Are the Headlines:   Camry Drivers Compete in Chase   Toyota Takes Titles   Busch Breaks More Records   Tundras Tally Record Total Wins

    COUNTING CAMRY CUP NUMBERS:  Toyota drivers combined for 12 wins, 41 top-five results and 81 top-10 finishes in 36 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) races in 2010.  Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) teammates Denny Hamlin (eight wins) and Kyle Busch (three wins) each captured multiple checkered flags, and David Reutimann drove to victory lane once.  Busch and Hamlin qualified for the 2010 Chase for the Sprint Cup championship playoff — ending the year second (Hamlin) and eighth (Busch) in the final standings.  Joey Logano (16th) and Reutimann (18th) also finished the season in the top-20 in points.

    NATIONWIDE NUMBERS:  Camry drivers combined for 17 wins, 73 top-five finishes and 146 top-10 results in 35 NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) races in 2010.  Busch — the 2009 series champion — won a series-high 13 races, and finished third in the point standings despite running only 29 of the 35 races.  Busch also helped Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) earn a third straight NNS owner’s title.  Other Toyota racers to win NNS events in 2010 were Logano (three wins) and Marcos Ambrose (one win).  Camry drivers Logano (eighth), Jason Leffler (ninth) and Steve Wallace (10th) finished in the top-10 in points, and Toyota won its third consecutive Nationwide Series manufacturer’s championship.

    RECORD-BREAKING RESULTS:  Busch enjoyed a record-setting year in the Nationwide Series in 2010.  He set a record for the number of NNS race wins in a single season with 13 — breaking the old record of 10 race wins which Busch (2009) held with Sam Ard (1983).  Busch also became the first driver to win in all three of NASCAR’s premiere series at the same race track during the same weekend when he won NSCS, NNS and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) races at Bristol Motor Speedway in August.

    TUNDRA TRIUMPHS:  Tundra drivers combined for 15 wins, 59 top-five results and 123 top-10 finishes in 25 NCWTS races in 2010.  Busch won a series-high eight NCWTS races in just 16 starts with his first-year race team, Kyle Busch Motorsports  (KBM).   Tundra drivers Aric Almirola (two), Todd Bodine (four) and Timothy Peters (one) also won races in 2010.  The 15 victories by Tundra drivers were the most in a season for Toyota since joining NCWTS competition in 2004.  The previous mark for wins in a season by Tundra drivers was 14 in 2009.  Toyota drivers Almirola (second), Peters (sixth), Mike Skinner (eighth) and David Starr (ninth) also finished in the top-10 in points.

    TOYOTA TITLES:  Bodine earned his second NCWTS driver’s championship in 2010 — becoming Toyota’s first two-time driver’s champion.  In the team’s inaugural season of competition, KBM earned the 2010 NCWTS owner’s championship with four drivers piloting the No. 18 Tundra during the season.  Toyota won its fifth consecutive Camping World Truck Series manufacturer’s title in 2010.  Toyota has won the award every year since 2006, and this season clinched the championship at Texas in November with two races remaining.  

    TOYOTA TALLY:  Toyota drivers competed in a total of 96 NASCAR races across all three national touring series in 2010 and accumulated 44 total victories.  In 36 NSCS races, Camry drivers recorded 12 wins (33 percent) and seven poles (19 percent).  In 35 NNS races, Camry drivers accounted for 17 race wins (48 percent) and 18 poles (51 percent).  In 25 NCWTS races, Tundra drivers registered 15 victories (60 percent) and 10 poles (40 percent).

    REMARKABLE JGR RESULTS:  Since the team started using Toyotas in 2008, JGR drivers — Busch, Hamlin, Logano and Tony Stewart (2008) — have earned a total of 98 wins behind the wheel of Toyota Camrys and Tundras across all three NASCAR series.  JGR has earned 30 NSCS wins and 49 NNS wins.  In addition, Busch has picked up one NNS win driving for Braun Racing and registered a total of 18 NCWTS wins — eight with KBM and 10 with Billy Ballew Motorsports.

    KYLE COLLECTS CHECKERS:  This year, Busch had a season across all three of NASCAR’s national series that would be considered a good career for most drivers.  Making 81 total starts (36 NSCS, 29 NNS and 16 NCWTS), Busch won a remarkable 24 races — nearly 30 percent of the races he entered.  The Las Vegas-native recorded 45 top-five results and 57 top-10 finishes, and had 11 poles.  Busch has also earned the most victories in a Toyota with 65 total wins in a Camry or Tundra in 251 starts (15 NSCS wins, 32 NNS wins and 18 NCWTS wins).

    TRUEX TAKES SECOND TITLE:  Ryan Truex clinched his second consecutive NASCAR K&N Pro Series East (NKNPSE) driver’s championship when he took the green flag at Dover International Speedway in September.  In 2010, Truex had two wins and nine top-10 finishes in 10 races. The 18-year-old Mayetta, N.J.-native posted both of his victories at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and needed only to start at Dover in the No. 00 NAPA Camry to secure the title.  Michael Waltrip Racing (MWR) also won its second owner’s championship in the series.

    HOLMES NOTCHES WEST CHAMPIONSHIP:  Camry driver Eric Holmes won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West (NKNPSW) championship with a 16th-place finish in the season-finale at Phoenix International Raceway to help Toyota drivers sweep the NASCAR regional series titles in 2010.  Driving the Bill McAnally Racing No. 20 Camry, Holmes won five of 12 events in 2010 en route to his third series title.  The 36-year-old Escalon, Calif., native previously won the NKNPSW championship in 2006 and 2008.  

    BACK STORY:  Background information on the Toyota NASCAR program is available at www.toyotaracing.com and members of the media can access Toyota images at www.toyotamotorsportsmedia.com. TOYOTA 2009 NASCAR STATISTICS: Series Races Starts (Drivers) Wins Top-5s Top-10s Poles Times Led Laps Led NSCS 36 458 (33) 12 41 81 7 225 2,890 NNS 35 379 (37) 17 73 146 18 181 3,430 NCWTS 25 250 (32) 15 59 123 10 119 2,051

    LEE WHITE, president and general manager, TRD U.S.A. (Toyota Racing Development) What are your thoughts about the success of Toyota drivers and teams across NASCAR in 2010? “We are very proud of our Toyota Camry and Tundra teams and drivers this season.  We and our teams were able to earn two manufacturer’s championships, two owner’s championships and a driver’s title.  We all supported Denny Hamlin and Joe Gibbs Racing as they battled through the final race in the Chase for the Sprint Cup title at Homestead-Miami, and we could not be prouder of their efforts.  It was an honor to once again share in the success of Joe Gibbs Racing in its Nationwide Series owner’s championship, as well as the success of Kyle Busch Motorsports in its inaugural season in the Camping World Truck Series. Celebrating Toyota’s first repeat champion with Todd Bodine is the icing on the cake.  A lot of hard work and dedication by all the Toyota teams and drivers went into the 2010 season — from the Toyota drivers and teams to all the personnel at Toyota and TRD in California and North Carolina that contributed to the program.  We look forward to carrying the momentum from this season into 2011.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Will the outcome of this year’s Chase provide motivation for next year? “Obviously coming this close is tough, especially the small, little things that could have changed the outcome of this Chase in one lap.  But that part of it hurts, but — you’ve got to get better at all aspects and I feel like that’s where that teams been — the 48 (Jimmie Johnson) team has been strong over the last few years.  They really have no weak spots.  There are several parts of our car, there are several parts of our team that we can improve on, and that’s a good thing, because as competitive as what we are right now, I know I need to get better in qualifying.” What emotions will you take into the off-season? “It’s going to be fuel for me.  I’m just going to try to get better.  There’s things that I can improve on as a driver.  I’ve got to work on qualifying.  I’ll study that in the off-season.  I’ve got to work on my outright speed on the short go’s, on restarts.  Those are the things that I’ve got to get better at and as a team I’ll debrief with them and tell them the things that I feel like our cars need to be to be better in the future.  I can assure you we’re going to hang our heads high because we came close this year.  We had a great year.”

    JOE GIBBS, team owner, Joe Gibbs Racing What difference did you see in Denny Hamlin and the No. 11 team this year? “I just think that it’s a maturing process.  Denny (Hamlin) and Mike (Ford, crew chief) have an unusual feeling for each other.   Their team here is very solid and the pit crew.  In pro sports you can’t win if you’re missing something — a pit crew, a crew chief or whatever.  I feel like they’re a very solid team and I think they proved that this year.  And, of course, Denny is maturing.  He’s still young so hopefully we’ve got a lot of good years in front of us.”

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 Z-Line Designs Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing What does it mean to be part of another Joe Gibbs Racing NNS owner’s championship? “It’s a great testament to the people that I’m surrounded with, with Jason (Ratcliff, NNS crew chief) and the Gibbs family and everybody that’s helped me.  I feel like we’ve done a lot of things that we really didn’t expect to do on the Cup side this year.    We had a lot of good finishes.  I felt like that was something to build upon and go into next year with a stronger feeling and a better relationship with Dave (Rogers, NSCS crew chief), and a better relationship with Dave that he has with Mike (Ford, 11 NSCS crew chief) and Zippy (Greg Zipadelli, 20 NSCS crew chief), so we can all work together again to get all three Gibbs cars in the Chase, and hammer out another championship.”

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 TRAXXAS Toyota Tundra, Kyle Busch Motorsports What does it mean to win the NCWTS owner’s championship in the first season for Kyle Busch Motorsports? “It’s excellent — that’s what we set out in the beginning of the year to do was to come out here and work as hard as we could, to work with two different drivers at first, myself and Brian Ickler, but when Brian got the call to go drive some Roush Racing stuff, we brought in Johnny Benson for a race and we brought in Kasey Kahne for a race, and without all those guys being able to give us good, solid finishes we wouldn’t be in this position.  So it’s to them, it’s to Eric (Phillips, crew chief), it’s to Rick (Ren, general manager), all the guys.  For myself, it’s just the name on the door that said Kyle Busch Motorsports, and maybe that’s who the checks are signed by, but it takes a lot more than just that to go to the race track week in and week out.  Their families and their families’ support and my support from Samantha (Sarcinella, fiancé) and my mom and dad and my brother, too — I mean, being 25- years-old and being in this spot now, winning an owners championship, we never would have thought.”

    TODD BODINE, No. 30 Germain.com Toyota Tundra, Germain Racing How does it feel to be a two-time NCWTS champion? “I never thought that I’d be a one-time champion, let alone two-time champion.  It’s because of these guys up at the track and all the guys back at the shop that — I appreciate the hard work.  It’s hard in a career to be a part of a group that cares as much as this one, and is as good as this one.  I’m fortunate now, this is our fifth year together and we’re going strong and I count my blessings every day to be a part of a group like this — that care and want to win and want to run up front and can do it every week.”

    What did you do different this year compared to last year to win the title? “We didn’t really do anything different.  Last year, we just had bad luck — wrong place, wrong time.  A lot of times, we just weren’t handling well.  But, everybody stuck it out.  They dug deep, they dug within themselves to build trucks last winter.  That is one thing, last winter we went to work and re-did our trucks, re-engineered them.  We made them a lot better.”

  • NASCAR Champ Johnson Even More Dominating on Television than the Track

    Networks Centered Their Attention Around Series Superstar in 2010

    ANN ARBOR, MI, December 1, 2010 – While it should come as no surprise five-time NASCAR Champion Jimmie Johnson received the most attention during race telecasts this past season, the degree to which he dominated is staggering when considering Johnson was interviewed an entire half-hour longer, and mentioned 1,800 more times by the announcers than Series runner-up Denny Hamlin throughout the year.

           According to research conducted by Joyce Julius & Associates, Inc. — which has monitored every NASCAR race telecast over the last 25 years — Johnson’s name was mentioned 7,875 times during the 36 live event telecasts (and replays) of the 2010 season.  Johnson also appeared in a series-high 88 interview segments, which collectively added up to one hour, 31 minutes, 35 seconds (1:31:35) of television face time for the driver.

           Hamlin in comparison, who won the most races (eight) and was leading The Chase heading into the final race at Homestead-Miami Speedway, drew 6,072 announcer mentions and 56 interviews totaling 1:01:50.

           Kyle Busch also proved to be a popular interview subject, as the eighth-place driver finished tied for third among all racers with 47 interviews lasting a combined 1:07:13.

           In contrast, Matt Kenseth, a top-five points finisher, appeared in front of the cameras just 14 times in 2010 for a little more than 10 minutes.

           Of the three network combinations televising the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series this past season, TNT proved to be the most interview-friendly, as the six mid-summer races on the cable network averaged 15 driver interviews per telecast, with each lasting about 1:15.  Races on Fox saw 13 driver interviews clocking in at 1:08 apiece, while live broadcasts on ABC/ESPN generally saw 10 interviews conducted for an average of 1:03.

    Year-End Top-20 Interview Results:

    Rank Driver Points Interviews Interview Announcer
        Finish   Time Mentions
    1) Johnson, J. 1 88 1:31:35 7,875
    2) Hamlin, D. 2 56 1:01:50 6,072
    3) Busch, Ky. 8 47 1:07:13 5,500
    3) Harvick, K. 3 47 0:55:00 5,346
    5) Gordon, J. 9 46 0:59:03 5,039
    6) Stewart, T. 7 40 0:39:29 3,957
    7) Busch, Ku. 11 38 0:35:32 3,114
    8) Bowyer, C. 10 36 0:36:08 3,482
    8) Edwards, C. 4 36 0:51:20 3,133
    10) Burton, J. 12 33 0:32:51 3,483
    10) McMurray, J. 14 33 0:49:44 2,899
    12) Kahne, K. 20 31 0:28:37 2,269
    13) Biffle, G. 6 30 0:30:06 3,357
    14) Logano, J. 16 27 0:26:59 1,982
    15) Earnhardt, Jr., D. 21 21 0:18:45 2,155
    16) Ambrose, M. 26 16 0:15:22 1,641
    16) Montoya, J. 17 16 0:08:57 3,343
    18) Newman, R. 15 15 0:14:24 1,966
    19) Kenseth, M. 5 14 0:10:43 2,601
    19) Keselowski, B. 25 14 0:12:44 1,143

    About Joyce Julius & Associates, Inc.:

             Joyce Julius & Associates, Inc. is the sports and entertainment industry leader in accurate measurement and evaluation of sponsorships and promotional programs.  Joyce Julius’ fully customizable, third party research is highlighted by in-broadcast television exposure monitoring, full media impact measurements, and fan/consumer perception analyses.

             The Ann Arbor, Michigan-based firm has been measuring the impact of corporate sponsorships across all forms of media since 1985.  These forms of media include national and regional event television broadcasts, television highlight and news programming, event radio, print media, Internet articles, along with exposure stemming from promotions and advertising, as well as event on-site elements.