Category: Featured Stories

Featured stories from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • Tire Testing Set to Begin in Daytona; NASCAR’s Perseverance from Daytona 500 Remembered

    Tire Testing Set to Begin in Daytona; NASCAR’s Perseverance from Daytona 500 Remembered

    As drivers make the journey to Daytona Beach on Wednesday and Thursday for a Goodyear tire test on the newly repaved Daytona International Speedway, it brings back memories of how the NSCS got to this point.

    The biggest race of the NASCAR season is supposed to be remembered as the greatest day in a driver’s life. The 2010 Daytona 500 however, was remembered for one of the worst days in NASCAR’s.

    Thanks to something that some thought they would never see in a middle of a race: a pothole.

    Just past halfway of the February 14, 2010 running of the Great American Race, things started to get a little bumpy in turns one and two. The race was red flagged for an hour and half as NASCAR officials went to work to repair the four-inch, two-foot deep hole.

    The race was restarted only to be red flagged for another hour when the hole opened again. When the race restarted for the final time it would go past its scheduled distance thanks in part to NASCAR’s new green-white-checkered rule before Jamie McMurray and Dale Earnhardt Jr. raced to the finish line.

    Many were understandably upset with the day and that a race which started shortly after 1:00 p.m. ET didn’t end until nearly seven hours later. Some fans left during the red flags, be it from frustration, travel plans or the weather cooling down, the stands did empty.

    Others sat and watched McMurray capture his first Daytona 500 as Earnhardt Jr. went from 22nd to second in two laps. It certainly wasn’t a day that anyone was expecting but it could have been much worse and for that NASCAR should be applauded.

    Said former Daytona International Speedway president Robin Braig back in February, “We’re the World Center of Racing. This is the Daytona 500. This is not supposed to happen and I take full responsibility … I apologize for it. This is hallowed ground. We understand that. We accept the responsibility.”

    Braig may have sounded hard on himself but it’s not a lie in saying he did everything he could. The decision was made to red flag the race to fix the pothole, not once but twice.

    No one, fans or drivers, wanted to sit around and wait but it was better than calling the race early and robbing everyone of the biggest race of the season. It also wouldn’t have been the best way to kick of the season with a bad tone in the first race.

    Kevin Harvick, who was leading during the second red flag, told TV viewers he hoped NASCAR would restart the race instead of declaring it official. If they had he would have been called the winner but the racecar driver in him wanted to go out and beat the 42 other competitors.

    It’s been said time and time again that NASCAR may never win with the fans, there’s just too much to complain about. Back in February, NASCAR worked and worked to ensure the fans could not complain.

    They worked and worked to give them what they wanted: not only a complete race, but a complete Daytona 500.

    It won’t go down as NASCAR’s most defining moment, but it should go down as one worth noting. NASCAR officials were bound and determined to do right by those in the sport and for the sport.

    Looking back, 2010 was all about the fans as many changes NASCAR made ones they were kicking and screaming for. Heading into the season it was announced a new green-white-checkered rule, three attempts, would be put into effect to help ensure fans would see the race end with a run to the finish and not under caution.

    Boys, have at it. ‘Nuff said.

    The wing became history after Bristol in March, nearly three years to the day after it made its debut at the same track. Double-file restarts helped create the great racing that seen every week as it made its season-long debut.

    Positive, they’re out there if you look.

    Ramsey Poston, NASCAR’s director of corporate communications wanted the positives of the Daytona 500 to overshadow the pothole debacle.

    “Obviously the red flags are unfortunate, no one wants to see that,” he said that day.

    “But hopefully what fans will really remember about this race tomorrow and years to come is that dramatic finish, the 88 [Earnhardt Jr.] cutting through the entire field, really having a great finish for the win, and a great win for Earnhardt-Ganassi with Jamie McMurray.”

    Here the sport is, in December of the same year when all of this took place, with the new pavement at Daytona finished. The day was coming when it would have had to be done, it was marked for possibly 2012, but it’s here and now.

    Drivers such as McMurray and Earnhardt Jr. will be among the likes of Kurt Busch, Mark Martin, Jeff Gordon, Jeff Burton and about 12 others as tentative participates in the test. New pavement brings new excitement as an opportunity to see the new surface before Speedweeks has drivers anxious to get there.

    “Everybody used to dread Daytona testing,” said 2009 Daytona 500 winner Matt Kenseth.

    “I’m really looking forward to getting on the track and seeing how they did on the paving job and how smooth it is. I bet it will really change the track. I bet you it will feel like you are on a different track. That surface was so incredibly worn out before, and now it’s going to be more like a Talladega race. It’s going to be wide open. Handling is going to matter more than [at] Talladega but probably not very much. Everybody is going to be wide open. It is going to be a big draft the whole time.”

    Talladega Super Speedway, who was paved following the 2005 season, has the expectations for the 2011 Daytona 500 through the roof. Talladega is coming off a historic season where they set the record for the most lead changes, 88, in a NSCS race. The fall race fell short by of tying or passing that record with 87 lead changes.

    What can Daytona do with a new surface? History might be in the making and it starts with Wednesday and Thursday’s tire test.

    With the holidays around the corner, it’s a time to celebrate and be thankful. Some fans, believe it or not, are thankful for NASCAR. They’re also thankful for the pothole.

    Thankful because even though it may not seem like they’re listening, NASCAR has the fans in mind. They certainly did back in February with the decisions made in the Daytona 500.

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: Scott Speed grabs the Red Bull by the horns

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: Scott Speed grabs the Red Bull by the horns

    The fact that NASCAR Sprint Cup driver Scott Speed will not be returning to the Red Bull Racing, (RBR), #82 Toyota next year is no real surprise. Frankly, we’ve been expecting that announcement since last summer. But the driver’s Wednesday morning announcement that said he was suing RBR did come as a surprise. What’s even more surprising is the fact that the announcement of the potential suit came via “Twitter” so the driver could keep his followers up to speed.

    [media-credit name=”Simon Scoggins” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]In a “Tweet” sent on Wednesday, Speed wrote: “today should be the day my lawyer files this lawsuit against Red Bull. Had to tell my loyal “Twitter” followers before they saw it online.” In a second “Tweet” from the same day he wrote: “sure not easy to find something, (a ride for next year), when u start looking in December, but we workin’ on it. I’ll keep ya posted, sure we will find something.” He also indicated that he would entertain a serious offer from a NASCAR Nationwide or Camping World Truck Series team.

    Also on the same day Speed made plenty of comments to the racing media and claimed that he was notified, via a November 24th fax that he would not be in the Red Bull Racing ride in 2011. This was despite the fact that he has a contract with RBR that runs through the end of the 2011 season along with company options for the 2012 and 2013 seasons.

    During the course of interview comments, Speed expressed disappointment over the fact his official dismissal was handled via a fax machine without so much as one telephone call from Austria, the official home of Red Bull Energy Drink. He also noted that Red Bull officials were on hand for the November 22nd NASCAR season finale at the Homestead-Miami Speedway but no one actually spoke to him.

    He was later quoted as saying “I can’t describe how upset I am just by the morality of it. I don’t understand how you can treat people like this.” Speed went on to say that he felt like he had been kicked to the curb without an offer to pay him anything at all adding “they were, okay, we’re done with you. Thank you for seven and one half years.”

    Speed declined to elaborate on the terms of his contract with RBR or the details of the pending litigation. However, last Friday, the details did go public on the Internet via public records from the North Carolina Superior Court, located in Statesville, where the suit was filed on Speed’s behalf. According to those records the driver is seeking $6.5 million in damages. The suit listed the following grievances:

    RBR failed to provide his #82 Toyota team with the proper funding needed to compete at the NASCAR Sprint Cup level.

    Speed’s original agreement with RBR was for three years and was signed in September of 2007. His salary tier levels were set at $300,000 for the 2008 season, $500,000 for 2009 and $1 million during the 2010 season. Speed’s contract also had a clause that guaranteed him bonus payments from the team that included 50% of the prize money from a race for every top ten finish, 45% for finishes between positions 11 through 20 and 40% for any finish 21st or worse.

    The lawsuit also states that, in June of 2008, Speed’s contract was amended to include the 2011 season at a seasonal salary of $1.5 million. That same amendment also granted RBR the right to pick up contract options on the driver for the 2012 and 2013 seasons with salary raises of $500,000 per year.

    The lawsuit also states that in January of this year RBR revised Speed’s contract cutting his 2010 salary from $1 million to $500,000

    Despite that cost cutting move, RBR picked up the driver options through the 2013 season, in May of this year, only to officially release him last November 23d.

    The lawsuit further stipulates that the $6.5 million represents money Speed would have earned from the 2011 through the 2013 plus the $500,000 in salary lost form this year.

    Speed also said that the potential award from the lawsuit was also compensation for the likelihood that he will be idle during the upcoming 2011 season also noting that the possibility of signing with another NASCAR team this late in the year is unlikely.

    Understandably, RBR has issued no formal comment on the pending lawsuit.

    But the timeline associated with this driver’s dismissal, based on previously published reports and statements from RBR officials, clearly indicates that Speed must have had some idea that his tenure with the team was going to end.

    In July of this year RBR General Manager Jay Frye said that Speed’s future with the organization would be decided within the next month adding “we need to perform, we need to be better.”

    That naturally raises the question: why did RBR wait so long to officially let the driver know he would not be returning to the team next season?

    The answer to that question involves two other Sprint Cup drivers, Brian Vickers and Kasey Kahne, along with the unusual circumstances that were associated with them.

    In early spring Brian Vickers left the RBR #83 Toyota team due to a reported serious illness. The medical malady was later reported to be blood clots which eventually led to open heart surgery this past August. Thankfully Vicker’s medical condition, during the second half of this year, showed a marked improvement to the point where he no longer was required to take blood thinners. He’s not primed and ready to resume racing next year for RBR

    Meanwhile Kasey Kahne announced his plans to leave Richard Petty Motorsports to sign with Hendrick Motorsports to drive their #5 Chevrolet. But that ride, contractually occupied by Mark Martin, wasn’t going to be available until the start of the 2012 season. Team owner Rick Hendrick eventually made a deal with RBR to place Kahne in one of their cars next year.

    In late October, General Manager Jay Frye said that RBR’s 2011 plans included fielding two cars for Vickers and Kahne. With Vickers returning to good health, RBR announced that Scott Speed would not be returning and was free to negotiate with other teams.

    When asked about the fact that Speed had a contract through the 2011 season, plus options, Frye pointed out that his contract also had a performance clause that relieved RBR from financial responsibility past the 2010 season if he doesn’t finish in the top 16 of the Sprint Cup driver’s standings. He in fact, finished 30th this year.

    Scott Speed’s numbers, as a RBR development driver, started strong in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series in 2008. He made 16 starts in the series while compiling one win, four top five finishes, nine top tens along with an average finish ratio of 13. During the 2009 season he moonlighted in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, in addition to his Sprint Cup schedule, where he scored eight top ten finishes with an average finish of 14.3.

    But somehow his Sprint Cup numbers never materialized to the level RBR was hoping for. Many observers felt Speed should have spent an additional year in NASCAR’s truck and Nationwide series before moving to the top level. From 2008 to 2010 Speed had 76 official Sprint Cup starts. He only netted one top five finish, three top tens and had an average finish ratio of 27.2. In these modern times those type of numbers often forces team management to consider making a change.

    Following the progress of this lawsuit is going to be rather interesting. It’s certainly true that the timing of his dismissal has made it virtually impossible for Speed to find a quality ride in any one of NASCAR’s series for next year. His belief that RBR did not properly provide the funding for his team to be competitive is also rather eye opening. But the real point of contention here could turn out to be his contract for 2011, plus the subsequent two year option, versus RBR’s claim that the contract has a performance clause.

  • Questions, Answers and Conundrums from the SpeedwayMedia Mailbag

    Questions, Answers and Conundrums from the SpeedwayMedia Mailbag

    The 2010 NASCAR season is officially over, well, except for some suspensions and probations issued over the past year. Those are not officially over until December 31st. That’s a whole different article.

    Wire services, official press releases and even news around the sport has slowed to a trickle. It is officially the off season in NASCAR.

    Sitting at my desk admiring the most recent construction of another cobweb, I decided it was time to do some digging through the Speedway Media mailbag.

    The mailbag at Speedway Media isn’t exactly like traditional mailbags, actually, it’s more like a large round Tupperware bowl that’s so worn out it stopped burping years ago.

    Once in a while the staff writers take turns reading and responding to the miniscule amount of fan letters, questions and even occasional suggestions that almost never pour in.

    After spending a few hours of reading and a little consternation, I came across four letters I thought were relevant, topical, well thought out, and begged to be answered.

    Honestly, there were only four letters in the bowl and I needed at least 500 words for this article, so I thought I would just answer them all.

    Mary Anne from Mobile writes:
    Dear Speedway Media: Do you think Jimmie Johnson will win his fifth championship in a row this year?
    Well Mary Anne as you can see it’s been a while since we checked the mail bag. Jimmie Johnson did in fact win his fifth championship in a row this year. Since there is not much change scheduled for next year in the Chase system or in NASCAR, Johnson is certainly the favorite to occupy the podium again.

    Karl from Kalamazoo writes:
    Dear Speedway Media: Has Hendrick Motorsports found a sponsor for Kasey Kahne in 2012 yet?
    Karl, that’s a very good question. As of right now there have been no announcements of any sponsorship deals for Kahne beyond 2011. Given the most recent turn of events at HMS; swapping crews in the middle of a race and a multitude of personnel changes after the final race, except for JJ and Knaus, it’s quite possible a sponsor like Manpower Temporary Services would be best suited for Kahne in 2012.

    Louise from Lubbock writes:
    Dear Speedway Media: Why is Dale Earnhardt Jr. once again NASCAR’s most popular driver? Shouldn’t Jimmie Johnson’s five championships in a row make him the most popular driver?
    Louise I am surprised you are the only one who has asked this question. Johnson has won quite a few awards over the past couple of years, including Athlete of the Year.

    Even though he has won five championships in a row, the answer to your question has two parts and is quite simple.
    First: Dale Earnhardt Jr. gets more attention for not winning than Johnson does for winning.

    Second: Everyone likes Jr.

    Speaking of Jr. and not winning, Robert from Richmond writes:
    Dear Speedway Media: Do you think Dale Earnhardt Jr. will extend his contract with Hendrick Motor Sports?
    Thanks for the question Robert. I doubt it will happen by the end of this year, but who knows, this year has had its share of strange events.

    Macy’s fired Santa Claus, Urban Meyer abruptly resigned, Auburn went undefeated, and Joe Nemechek actually ran a full race.

    The marriage between Rick Hendrick and Dale Earnhardt Jr. started off as traditional as unions go. Hendrick brought money, Earnhardt brought his name along with some extra baggage of a cousin. It was consummated quickly with a Duel win at Daytona.

    Since then there hasn’t been much bliss. Hendrick has tried to keep the romance going by supplying Jr. with new equipment and even a new crew chief. It still didn’t seem to be enough. So once again Jr. is getting another new crew chief and also moving in with Jimmie Johnson.

    The move with Johnson could be strategic, or a veiled attempt at marriage counseling.

    I doubt that Hendrick and Earnhardt Jr. will get a divorce at the end of 2012, but it’s possible a trial separation is in their future. This would give both of parties a chance at finding what they did or didn’t have during their union.

    That’s all for this edition of Speedway Mailbag.

    Feel free to send your questions, comments and suggestions to mailbag@speedwaymedia.com.

    Opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect opinions of the management.

  • Meet Jimmie Johnson’s Chase Kryptonite: Texas Motor Speedway

    Meet Jimmie Johnson’s Chase Kryptonite: Texas Motor Speedway

    After winning his fifth straight Sprint Cup Series championship or even back to when he won his fourth, Jimmie Johnson likes to make it known that each championship season is different.

    “It is a different year, a different Chase,” said Johnson during the contender’s press conference before Homestead. “I kind of think every year is different for that matter. I know the last four years we’ve had the same result. But every year, every championship battle has had its own little quirks to it.”

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]While the road to the title may go through the same 10 tracks in the Chase and the same 36 tracks that circle the country, how the championship is won is different. Johnson has come from behind and he’s dominated to win it.

    Whether it was battling Carl Edwards, Mark Martin or Denny Hamlin or even the style of racecars – from twisted sister to half a season with the COT, to a full season of the COT then changes from the wing to the spoiler – nothing stays the same.

    The last three seasons however, Johnson has seen one constant which threw an obstacle in his way: Texas Motor Speedway.

    Like most tracks the Sprint Cup Series visits, his statistics at the 1.5-mile track in Forth Worth, TX are worth noting. He’s led laps, finished well and has even won before.

    Since the win, which came in November of 2007, Johnson hasn’t performed to standard at Texas. That’s in the Chase events, the spring races have been nothing short of Johnson perfection. In nine spring races, Johnson’s results: sixth, eighth, ninth, third, 11th, 38th, second, second, and second.

    But, back to the Chase, a time when the 48 is at their best, Texas has been their Achilles heel. A year after their win, Johnson went to Texas and ran embarrassingly. Carl Edwards, whom he was battling for the championship with, and, who won the race, lapped him early.

    Johnson and team struggled from the beginning with the handling of the car and never got their lap back. In a rare occurrence, Johnson didn’t even lead a lap in the race and wound up finishing 15th.

    “It’s like getting kicked in the balls over and over. That sucked,” Johnson said afterwards. In the end it wasn’t enough to keep Johnson from winning his third straight championship.

    November of 2009, what many thought was unimaginable, happened: Johnson wrecked. Not only did he wreck, he wrecked in a Chase race.

    On lap three Johnson jumped to the outside of Sam Hornish Jr., who was hit by David Reutimann. Hornish was sent sideways into Johnson, causing the 48 to start spinning and come back down the track where hit Hornish and then the inside wall.

    To the garage Johnson went where crew members from every Hendrick Motorsports team came to the aid to repair his mangled Chevrolet. The work was enough to send Johnson back to the track where he was able to finish (38th) but with valuable points. Again though, he didn’t lead a lap.

    Afterwards Johnson said, “I don’t think I could have done anything different. 77 lost it. I wish he could have waited a few more laps before he lost control of his car.”

    Three months after the incident, when the NSCS hit media day in Daytona, the now four-time champion still wasn’t happy. Johnson ripped into Hornish saying, “The guy I wouldn’t want to learn from would be Sam Hornish. He hits way to much stuff, including me.”

    Johnson was also miffed that Hornish hadn’t called to apologize or say anything about the wreck. When asked, Hornish said Reutimann had called him to take the blame but Hornish wasn’t going to reach out to someone that was mad at him.

    When Johnson continued his assault, Hornish said it surprised him and that, “Jimmie’s had ample opportunity to look at the tape.”

    For the second year in a row, Texas had shaken up the Chase. Should the speedway need a new slogan, they should jump on the fact that they know how to produce championship drama and have made it three years in a row where the championship was almost lost there.

    The 2010 AAA 500 was more than Denny Hamlin winning and Johnson having to swap pit crews. The 48 team again showed up to the Lone Star state off of their game, betraying Johnson’s confidence heading into the weekend.

    “Texas and Phoenix have been really good tracks and we’ve always raced well at those racetracks,” he said.

    In the first three practice sessions Johnson never ended a session higher than ninth and he qualified 17th. On Sunday evening of raceday he ran between eighth and 15th, again fighting the handling of the car and fighting pit road.

    Pit road selections saw Hamlin’s team, winners of the pit crew challenge, pitting the 11 car in front of the 48. Stop after stop Johnson was beaten off pit road and suffered slow stops by his team.

    His finish wasn’t as bad at 2008 and 2009, he finished ninth and led one lap on a green flag pit stop, but it was enough to lose the point lead. Leaving Texas with two races to go, Johnson sat 33 markers behind Hamlin.

    Oh the Chase drama at night is big and bright, deep in the heart of Texas!

    The latest drama has been thought to be the biggest. Championship was over, Hamlin had Johnson down and almost out. It was an unfamiliar and unwanted territory for Johnson.

    “It sucks,” he said. “I don’t want to be there. Every year feels different being here this late in the game. We all know how special a run we’ve been on and how rare it is in sports period … I know I’m down and I need to get back on top.”

    Back on top he was two weeks later for a fifth title.

    For three years Texas came close to crowning a new champion and while it didn’t, Texas did set up dramatic Chase conclusions. Texas has also shown that Johnson and company are human even if the past five years have had many watching them do inhuman things.

    With three straight second place finishes in the spring Texas race, what has made the Chase race slow him down? As Johnson has faltered at Texas, drivers he was battling for in the Chase won two of those three races.

    The best news for the competition is that Texas will again be in the Chase in 2011 as 42 drivers again try to dethrone Johnson. All of which is helping  Texas quickly become the Chase race you don’t want to miss.

  • Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Reality Is, Races Are Run on the Track, Not at the Shop

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Reality Is, Races Are Run on the Track, Not at the Shop

    For the second straight season, Hendrick Motorsports team owner Rick Hendrick, was able to keep the fans as well as the media right where he likes them, poking around his organizations race shops looking for the hottest story to finish off the year.

    We already know one the hottest stories to come out from behind the doors of one of NASCAR’s most decorated organizations is Jimmie Johnson’s record setting fifth straight championship in-a-row.

    It’s not hard to see that most of the fans are still trying to convince themselves that somehow NASCAR got it all wrong by allowing such a travesty to enter the sport by way of a fiasco called the Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]Even though Johnson walked away the big winner for the fifth straight year, the biggest question to come out of the HMS camp during the season was the poor showing by NASCAR’s most popular driver again.

    No other driver received the amount of publicity for such a poor season then the son of one of the true legends of the sport, Dale Earnhardt Jr.

    Question after question was posted, along with many fictional answers as to why this 36 year-old driver from Kannapolis, North Carolina has not been able to perform according to their standards.

    These standards are what every NASCAR fan hopes their favorite driver can achieve, but unfortunately, not all drivers are capable of reaching them, whether it be because of talent, skill, heart, desire, equipment or whatever excuse will be placed upon them.

    Excuses have become second nature whenever Earnhardt’s fans have tried to justify or explain why he is having trouble with an organization that is said to have the best equipment in the sport.

    How many organizations can boast of having a four-time, along with a five-time champion, on the same team?

    Wasn’t it just last season when a 50 year-old driver by the name of Mark Martin, who was driving in his first season with the organization won five races, along with finishing second in the points behind cup champion Jimmie Johnson?

    Martin just about stole the headlines away from Johnson towards the end of the season, but the big story was the signing of IZOD IndyCar Series star Danica Patrick, only a few days after NASCAR’s season ending awards banquet.

    The signing of Patrick took the focus off of Johnson’s fourth championship, when a legion of doubters began flooding the NASCAR social sites explaining why the GoDaddy.com poster girl should not be allowed to race in NASCAR’s second tier series.

    Marketing has always been the cornerstone of this great sport of ours, and it’s no wonder that Mr. Hendrick has made it one of his key ingredients when it comes to building a successful organization.

    After all, when you look back to Earnhardt’s last three seasons with the organization, the majority of the fans began putting him into the same category as Patrick with the moniker that Hendrick only hired him because of his popularity.

    Now, whether it is true or not has yet to be proven, especially after Hendrick heard the cry from the fans and replaced Earnhardt’s long time crew chief Tony Eury Jr. with Lance McGrew.

    It wouldn’t take long before Earnhardt’s fans would begin questioning whether McGrew was the right man for the job, and once again, the focus of Earnhardt’s poor results would be back in the hands of his crew chief.

    So when Hendrick made the announcement at the end of the season that Earnhardt would be getting Gordon’s crew chief Steve Letarte to start the 2011 campaign, along switching the shops of the 24 and 88 teams, almost immediately Earnhardt’s legion of fans went into a frenzy saying this should be the move that puts their driver back in victory lane.

    Now from a marketing standpoint, it made all the sense in the world, especially when you are dealing with the sport’s most popular driver and part of the focus being on keeping his fans happy.

    Changing shops is not the answer to the problems which Earnhardt has faced since coming on board with HMS in 2008, and when you think about it the only difference is the car number sitting next to his.

    Earnhardt will be working with a new group of team members, which will be led by his new crew chief Steve Letarte.

    Sharing a race shop with five-time champion Jimmie Johnson will not make him a better driver, nor will it help the team since each driver has their own driving style and set-ups which they prefer.

    When looking back to 2002, when Johnson first came into the series, Gordon’s best season was in 2007 when he finished second in the point standings, with six wins while sharing the same shop with Johnson.

    Gordon, who has proven to be a more experienced driver than Earnhardt, missed only one chase appearance in 2005, which happened to be the same year Steve Letarte took over for Robbie Loomis with 10 races left in the season.

    Gordon would add an additional 10 wins, 78 top-five and 114 top-10 finishes in 190 starts with LeTarte as his crew chief, but in the end would only pick-up one win in the last three seasons which is way below Gordon’s standards.

    “Five years is a long opportunity, and I had an opportunity to get him there, and we came close a few years but we never got there completely,” said Letarte who will not be back with Gordon next season.

    Letarte also added that, “I’m definitely disappointed in that. … I’m a crew chief in this sport because of Jeff Gordon, and Rick Hendrick.”

    Letarte knows he will have his hands full next season and the task at hand will not be an easy one, especially when you’re talking about a driver who means so much to the sport.

    “I was excited for the opportunity. I was humbled. It’s a very important task for this company, for Dale Jr., for the sport, and I take it as that. I was very proud that I was the guy tagged for that. I’m excited, and I’m ready to go,” said Letarte when talking about the move to the No. 88 team.

    Whether or not the changes will be beneficial to Earnhardt is a question mark that will be answered once the 2011 season begins, even though in the minds of the purist races are run on the track and not in the shop.

    As far as Earnhardt’s fans are concerned, they need to realize a four-time champion encountered his own problems while sharing a shop with Johnson, and it’s not the shop that makes the driver, even though Earnhardt feels otherwise:

    “I needed this to happen. Hopefully, this will get me back to winning races, running in the top five and running in the top 10.” said Earnhardt of the change.

    Earnhardt also added, “The only person that can truly help me get where I need to go starts with me, then it goes to Rick, Steve [Letarte] and those guys in your inner circle every week and in your corner every week.”

    How many crew chiefs will it take to get Earnhardt back into victory lane is anyone’s guess, but the answer may be plain and simple in the eyes of NASCAR’s most popular driver:

    “My biggest problem, I think, is my confidence,”

  • Robert Yates Racing Back in Motorsports Headlines as NASCAR SPEC Engine Supplier

    Robert Yates Racing Back in Motorsports Headlines as NASCAR SPEC Engine Supplier

    After being eatten up through a merger with Richard Petty Motorsports and not even spoken about, Robert Yates Racing is back in the motorsports headlines.

    NASCAR announced today that Robert Yates Racing Engines will be the exclusive supplier of the NASCAR SPEC engines in the SPEC engine program.

    [media-credit name=”Getty Images” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]The program provides teams with the opportunity to buy the NASCAR-Approved SPEC engine from Robert Yates Racing Engines, a racing engine and parts company owned by Robert Yates and Chris Davy, pre-assembled or as a kit and have their own designated engine builder perform the assembly.

    “The SPEC engine program has clearly established itself as a competitive, economical alternative for many of our teams,” said Richard Buck, NASCAR director of touring series, in a press release. “As the sport works to establish ways to better manage costs, the option to be able to run the SPEC engine has provided additional teams the opportunity to run in more races and be competitive.”

    The engine, which was introduced in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series in 2006 as an optional means for managing costs and providing teams with additional opportunities to compete, is also available for use in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tours, and the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series. It is also an option for NASCAR Camping World Truck Series teams at select tracks.

    “We’re excited to be part of NASCAR’s on-going efforts to provide affordable alternatives for racers throughout this sport,” said Robert Yates, the former NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion car owner and engine builder. “Since its debut, the SPEC engine has clearly proven its worth under the rigor of competition. We look forward continuing with the same high-level of service, engine power and quality.”

    The SPEC engine achieved tremendous success with Wegner Motorsports, which served as exclusive supplier from 2007-2009. Wegner is diversifying its business and will continue to produce engines for various forms of motorsports and support RYRE through the transition period.

    “I am happy to have been involved with the NASCAR SPEC engine from its inception,” said Carl Wegner. “I will still be available to Robert Yates Racing Engines to help in the transition of this great program. I wish nothing but continued success to NASCAR and the SPEC engine program.”

    Robert Yates Racing was formed in 1988 after Yates purchased the assets of Ranier-Lundy and started the team with Davey Allison, who had been with Ranier-Lundy at the time.

    Through the years, Yates had drivers like Allison, Ernie Irvan, Kenny Wallace, Dale Jarrett, Ricky Rudd and Elliott Sadler behind the wheel

    Robert Yates Racing Engines are best known for the years where they dominated Daytona International Speedway with Dale Jarrett behind the wheel.

    A losing battle to find sponsorship, find the right combination and lack of funds forced them to merge with RPM in 2009.

  • Rick Hendrick’s Journey to a NASCAR Dynasty

    Rick Hendrick’s Journey to a NASCAR Dynasty

    Rick Hendrick started out with the simple life working on the family farm in Virginia, but he was always interested in cars and speed.  He worked with his father building cars and went drag racing in an old Chevy.

    [media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]While still in high school he won a contest for building engines.  His thoughts of becoming a baseball player faded and he attended North Carolina University in a program that had him also working at Westinghouse Electric Company in Raleigh, N.C.

    He then decided to purchase a used car lot with the help of an established new car dealer and it was named Hendrick Automotive Group.  In 1976 he sold his assets to buy a franchise in South Carolina and became the youngest Chevrolet dealer in the country.

    Hendrick was able to turn the troubled dealership into one of the most profitable in the region.  From there he bought a dealership in Charlotte N.C. and the rest is history with his success in automotive dealerships now exceeding some 80 franchises employing in excess of 5,000 employees.

    Drag boat racing fascinated him in the late 70’s and he had a team that won three championships and set a world record of 222.2 with Nitro Fever.

    With his automotive business home base being located in Charlotte, it was a natural that he became involved in the NASCAR Sportsman (Nationwide) series.  By 1984 he formed All-Star Racing which is now Hendrick Motorsports.  He cobbled together a small race shop with five employees and attempted to pull off a deal to have Richard Petty race the Daytona 500 for him, but the deal fell apart.

    Not to be discouraged by the fact he no sponsor or driver, Hendrick hired Geoff Bodine who finished eighth in the Daytona 500.  Money was tight and Hendrick didn’t think he could race more than five races, but Bodine won at Martinsville and Northwestern Security Life came on board with sponsorship funds and at that point saved the day for the team.

    Hendrick credit’s the loyalty of his group of employees for the success he has had.  He said, “I want to be competitive and I want to win races and championships, but you know what means more to me?  Guys who say our place is special and appreciate their jobs and feel like it’s a family.”

    Hendrick added, “You’ve got to win, you’ve got to perform and you’ve got to take care of each other.”

    The ability to lead, make good decisions and inspire loyalty has started at the top with Hendrick and led to stability throughout his organization

    His recent tough decision to swap the teams around within his organization is just one example of his leadership.  Though the shakeup was announced two days after Jimmie Johnson clinched his fifth consecutive NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship, the decision was made two weeks before in a lengthy meeting with all the involved parties.

    It was Hendrick that calmed the waters after the news making  mid- race team swap of the Lowe’s 48 over-the-wall crew with Jeff Gordon’s crew.  He  motivated everyone not to rest, not to back down and to continue to overcome Denny Hamlin’s chance to win his first NASCAR title in the Cup series.

    Hendrick watched the Petty Championships and the titles won by Richard Childress Racing and wondered how he could beat them.  Well it is obvious he put all the pieces in place to win 10 Championships in NASCAR top-tier series.

    Jimmie Johnson’s fifth consecutive championship put the dynasty built by Rick Hendrick in the record books as one of the top organizations in sports history alongside teams like the Boston Celtics and New York Yankees.  In the NHRA John Force who has 15 Top Fuel Funny Car titles, won 10 in a row from 1993 to 2002.

    Hendrick plans to win more championships with his roster of drivers, Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin who will hopefully yield winning results with the realignment of all the teams except for the five-time champ and his crew chief, Chad Knaus.  In 2012 Kasey Kahne will move in to the slot occupied by Mark Martin along with his crew chief, Kenny Francis.

    It has been a long road for Hendrick and not always an easy one with legal problems, illness and the tragic airplane crash that killed his son, brother and two nieces along with others from the organization.

    For now though, Hendrick Motorsports has set the bar very high for all the other NASCAR teams.  Watching how the Hendrick drivers fare in 2011 will be very interesting and we just may see some surprise turnarounds.

  • Johanna Long Declares Family Victory at Snowball Derby

    Johanna Long Declares Family Victory at Snowball Derby

    At her home track, surrounded by her family and over one hundred of her closest friends, Johanna Long laid claim to the coveted Snowball Derby trophy. Long, just 18 years old, became the youngest winner of the infamous race at Five Flags Speedway and just the second female ever to hoist the Tom Dawson trophy.

    “It means a lot to me,” Long said. “It’s my backyard and to have all my family and all my friends come, it was awesome to share it with them.”

    [media-credit name=”One Source Track Photography” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]For Long, being surrounded by family and friends made the win not only special, but also very emotional.

    “Everyone was crying,” Long said. “My dad’s been running this race for ten years and we finally did it. We won the race. So, it was just very emotional.”

    Long, behind the wheel of her No. 10 Panhandle Paving & Grading, qualified well for the 43rd running of the Snowball Derby, the race deemed the unofficial Super Bowl of Short Track Racing for Super Late Models. Long started the race in fourth and worked her way quickly to the front of the field.

    “We started the race and we led a few laps,” Long said. “But then we fell back because we wore our tires out.”
    After getting stuck in the pits, Long quickly got back up to the front of the field. But her tires yet again betrayed her, leaving her and her crew in hope of the next caution.

    “We were waiting for the last pit stop with about ten laps to go and we finally got to pit,” Long said. “We were all on different strategies for pitting so we were scattered all over the place.”

    Long started seventh after pitting for tires and she worked her way to the front of the field, picking spots off one at a time and avoiding the wrecks which had broken out all over the field. She then had to battle one more driver, another up and comer Landon Cassill, for the race lead.

    “Me and Landon Cassill were racing pretty hard and I got into him a little bit,” Long said. “But I came out and he didn’t. Me and Landon go way back and it was after all the last lap of the Snowball Derby. So you’ve got to give it your all.”

    “There were guys out there that are the best of the best,” Long said. “People come from all over to race this race and to beat all of them was pretty awesome.”

    Although this was the only win of the year for Long, she has also valued the seat time she has gotten this season, particularly in the Truck Series. She is also looking to capitalize on her Snowball Derby momentum to carry her and her team into the next year.

    “I know we’re going to run Truck races for sure,” Long said. “Hopefully we will get a whole full season and we’re working really hard for that.”

    Long plans to run the entire 2011 season in her family-owned Truck team, just as she did in the latter part of the 2010 season. She, like so many of her peers, is also in search of sponsorship to support her seat time and her dream.

    “We have great people backing me and a great crew chief,” Long said. “Everyone is giving me a great truck every time I go out there. We just need a little bit of sponsorship so hopefully we can make it.”

    Long hopes that her Snowball Derby win will indeed turn heads her way and perhaps garner her opportunities that she would not have had prior to her victory.

    “Hopefully I did open some eyes and they see that I can do it,” Long said. “I’ve learned a lot and I know that I will be just as good if I can do the same in the truck.”

    Long is also looking forward to the holidays where she will spend some much-needed time off with her family before preparing to take to the track at Daytona for the start of the 2011 season. She is also looking forward to spending time with her sister and new nephew Gage, who was born shortly after her Snowball Derby win.

    “He was born the day after the Derby so we went straight to the hospital,” Long said. “It was a very emotional week.”

    “What a night, what a weekend, what a year,” Long said. “This is what I’ve dreamed of ever since I became a racer. It is my family’s dream and I couldn’t have done it with my dad, my mom and sisters, my aunts and uncles and grandparents.”

    “After a long learning year in the Truck Series, it was awesome to come back to my home track and get this done,” Long said. “I can’t wait to see what’s next.”

  • David Stremme to Form Nationwide Series Team

    David Stremme to Form Nationwide Series Team

     David Stremme told Sirius NASCAR Radio’s Sirius Speedway with Dave Moody that he is working hard to assemble a NASCAR Nationwide Series team for 2011.

    “I’ve got my own shop — right next door to Rusty Wallace Racing — and we’ve got enough room to run a good Nationwide team there,” Stremme said. “I purchased some Nationwide cars and have all the equipment I need to run them, but it’s all about the funding. I might own some of the operation, or maybe someone else will own part of it.”

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Stremme said he has already made a substantial investment in the operation, purchasing cars from “a very good Sprint Cup team. We’re changing them all over to Nationwide specs, and we’re working hard to make sure we do everything right. I don’t want to just be out there, I want to be competitive. And to do that, we need a sponsor. I’m working hard on it, and we’ve got lots of things working, but nothing’s done yet.”

    In six years of Sprint Cup Series competition with 119 starts, he has only three top 10s. Hense why for Stremme, despite his Cup experience, it would make sense to step down to the lower tier series.

    In six years in Nationwide Series competition with 133 starts, he has 20 top fives and 49 top 10s, yet no wins. The last time he ran in the series was in 2008 where he ran 32 of the 35 races on his way to finishing 11th in the points.

    Stremme has no experience with the new style car so that will present a possible problem with adjusting himself to the series. Though with many crew members who have experience being laid off, Stremme may be able to pick them up and use them to his advantage in the creation of this team.

  • Just What Happened To Kurt Busch?

    Just What Happened To Kurt Busch?

    Kurt Busch may have finished 11th in the Chase for the Championship, but at one point Kurt Busch was the hottest driver in NASCAR. He started off the 2010 year with 5 Top 5 finishes before winning the All-Star Race followed by the Coca Cola 600 and became the first man since Kasey Kahne back in 2008 to pull the feat off, but the question is what happened?

    [media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Busch actually had some more success. He finished 6th and 3rd respectively in his next two races, but somewhere along the line the lucky charm must have fallen out the window. He still managed to gather up the 10th most amount of points out of the 36 races run, but that is not much of a difference. Over the next 21 races he finished outside of the Top 10 in 13 of those. He finished outside of the Top 10 62% of the time in those final 21 races. If Busch wants to contend again he must improve his numbers.

    Is there a problem with Kurt Busch? That is a possibility. Both of the Busch brothers can be hard to work with at one time or another and his tendency to let his emotions get the best of him certainly doesn’t make the body shop any happier, but crew chief Steve Addington won 8 races with his younger brother in 2008! In my opinion, it could be a problem with Busch’s attitude. If you ever listen to Busch’s in-car audio if something is going wrong, he is almost always negative and putting down his crew! This is a problem as well for Dale Earnhardt Jr. The crew wants to know ways to fix the problem, not how much they suck and how mad Busch is at them. Morale is an issue and Busch needs to be more courteous.

    Both Kurt and Kyle are very much alike. Kurt tries to do the mature act, but when he is under pressure it doesn’t always pan out. If any of you want any evidence of my claims, you can watch this video,

    This kind of attitude will absolutely NOT win you a championship. Period. No matter how good you are. You need your pit crew to win a championship. Like a good NFL team, defense wins championships.