Category: Featured Stories

Featured stories from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: Some outstanding Nationwide Series business

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: Some outstanding Nationwide Series business

    [media-credit name=”Joe Dunn” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]NASCAR’s Nationwide Series will be playing a major role in the champion’s weekend at the Homestead-Miami Speedway in Florida with Saturday’s running of the Ford 300. The 2010 series championship is of course already wrapped up. Brad Keselowski took care of that piece of business last Saturday in Phoenix. However, the series’ owner’s championship and rookie title are still up for grabs and that resolution could get quite interesting before the race is over.

    THE RACE BREAKDOWN

    The big contest in the Ford 300 is going to be centered around the series’ owner’s points championship. Joe Gibbs, owner of Kyle Busch’s #18 Toyota, currently leads those standings by a margin of 41 points over Jodi Geschickter, the owner of record of Brad Keselowski’s #22 Penske Racing Dodge.

    This points battle became tighter following last Saturday’s Phoenix event. Going into that race Joe Gibbs held an 81 point advantage over their season rival. But a cut tire hampered Kyle Busch’s race effort and the team had to settle for a 16th place finish. Meanwhile Keselowski had another strong race and brought his car home with a third place finish that cut the Gibbs’ lead in half.

    In recent years the owner’s title has increased in importance to the Nationwide Series teams. Joe Gibbs Racing could be in line to tie a series records by winning three consecutive owner’s titles. The last time this feat was accomplished was by former series owner Bill Baumgardner who won consecutive titles from 1995 to 1997. Traditionally, the championship driver usually delivers the owner’s title as well. If Kyle Busch can deliver Gibbs another title this Saturday, it will mark the fourth time in series history that the two titles were split among two different teams.

    Kyle Busch is the defending race winner from last year and has a very healthy average finish ratio of 11.8 at the Homestead-Miami Speedway. However, there’s a streak that he will want to bring to a complete halt this Saturday. The last time the 12 race winner visited a Nationwide Series victory lane was back on October 9th at the Auto Club Speedway in California. Since that time Keselowski has won two consecutive races followed by two consecutive wins from the red hot Carl Edwards.

    Meanwhile Brad Keselowski has his own agenda for Saturday’s Ford 300 that goes well beyond just winning the race. He of course wants to give team captain Roger Penske a second championship within a period of seven days by winning the owner’s title. Also, he plans on setting a new series record for the most top five finishes in a single season. The present record, 25, is currently shared by Kyle Busch and 2000 series champion Jeff Green. Keselowski also plans on extending his streak of running at the finish which is currently 101 races.

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

    Going into the Ford 300 there’s only eight points separating the contenders for the Nationwide Series’ 2010 Raybestos Rookie of the Year title. The combatants are Ricky Stenhouse Jr, driver of the #6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford and Brian Scott, driver of the #09 RAB Racing Toyota.

    Each of these young drivers has endured unexpected distractions during the course of their 2010 racing season. Stenhouse, who is hoping to become the fifth Roush Fenway Racing driver to win the rookie title, is well aware that he’s lucky to have this ride. Stenhouse began the season by becoming a model of inconsistency. There were poor finishes and crashes that even began to tax the patience of Jack Roush. When Stenhouse failed to qualify for last summer’s Nashville race, Roush benched him for a short while. That was a major wake up call for the young driver. Since that time he’s collected two top five finishes, seven top tens and has improved his average finish ratio to 19.9.

    Brian Scott also endured his own distractions. He began the season with Braun Racing and was showing a great deal of promise. But late in the year Braun sold his entire Nationwide Series operation to Turner Motorsports and Scott suddenly found himself becoming a free agent without a ride. He made quick work of joining RAB Racing to finish out the season. But there’s no need to worry about this talented young driver. He will be joining Joe Gibbs Racing, as a full time Nationwide Series driver, next year. He’s going to be just fine.

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

    THE RACE BREAKDOWN

    The Ford 300 is 200 laps/300 miles around the Homestead-Miami Speedway’s 1.5 mile oval.

    The race has 46 entries vying for the 43 starting positions.

    16 of those entries are on the go or go home list. These teams are not guaranteed a start in the race because they are currently outside of the top 30 in owner’s points. These teams will have to rely on their qualifying speed to earn a starting berth.

    14 of the entries are double duty drivers meaning they are entered in both the Nationwide and Sprint Cup series events.

    The Ford 300 is the last ever race for the current Nationwide Series car. The series version of the car of tomorrow will be implemented full time in 2011.

    The Ford 300 will be broadcast live by the ESPN2 Network beginning with the pre race show at 4 pm eastern time.

  • NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Phoenix

    NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Phoenix

    Note these are all fictional
    1. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin lead 190 of 312 laps at Phoenix, but a late stop for fuel cost him a chance at the win and nearly cost him the points lead. He entered the race with a 33-point lead, and after finishing 12th, left with a 15-point edge over Jimmie Johnson.
    “Points can evaporate as quickly as gas,” Hamlin said. “But you can tell Jimmie Johnson that Denny Hamlin isn’t ‘going away.’ He can say that the magnitude of the situation got to me, but the truth is, the only pressure I was feeling was fuel pressure.”
    2. Jimmie Johnson: Johnson finished fifth in the Kobalt Tools 500, conserving fuel over the final laps, and cut deeply into the points lead of Denny Hamlin, who had to pit for fuel with 14 laps remaining. With one race remaining, Johnson trails Hamlin by 15 points.
    “Hamlin’s 33-point lead is now 15 points,” Johnson said. “And speaking of things that were ‘cut in half,’ the ‘48’ pit crew became the ‘24’ pit crew in Phoenix.
    This is the closest Chase For The Cup in history with one race to go. There are three drivers with a shot at the Cup, which is three times what I’m used to. This Chase may be different from all the others, in that someone may actually get ‘caught.’”
    3. Kevin Harvick: Harvick bounced back from a pit mishap to score a sixth at Phoenix, and positioned himself for a decent shot for the Sprint Cup championship. Harvick is 46 points behind Denny Hamlin, and will need a solid finish at Homestead, along with trouble for Hamlin and Jimmie Johnson, for an unlikely championship.
    “I have no problem wishing ill will on others,” Harvick said. “But, as Hamlin can attest, I’ve even better at directing ill will toward others.
    Hamlin and Johnson have proven to have the most formidable cars this season, race in and race out. But there’s something that travels even faster than they do, and that’s bad news.”
    4. Carl Edwards: Edwards ended a 70-race winless streak, taking the Kobalt Tools 500 for his first Sprint Cup win since Homestead in 2008. Edwards also won Saturday’s Nationwide Wypall 200 to complete the weekend sweep. He is now fourth in the Sprint Cup standings, 264 out of first.
    “Kyle Busch may have done it first with his double-barreled middle finger display last week in Texas,” Edwards said. “But I’m proud to say I’m the latest to pull off the ‘flippin’ double.’”
    5. Jeff Gordon: Gordon finished 11th at Phoenix, as handling issues handicapped his efforts and placed him on the verge of his second winless season. He is sixth in the point standings, 338 out of first.
    “I’m not sure what I’ve lost more of this year,” Gordon said. “Races, or respect for Jeff Burton.
    Once again, Chad Knaus has proven that he’s the most astute crew chief in the business. On Johnson’s final pit stop, Knaus immediately called for Johnson to conserve fuel, while the tactic didn’t even cross Mike Ford’s mind until much later. So, it seems I’m not the only Hendrick driver who’s capable of beating someone else to the punch.”
    6. Matt Kenseth: Kenseth finished seventh in the Kobalt Tools 500, his second straight top-10 finish and 13th of the year. He is now fifth in the point standings, 311 out of first.
    “Carl Edwards had a great week in Phoenix,” Kenseth said. “He’s got plenty to build on for next year. Greg Biffle’s got two wins this year, but I believe he’s ready for this year to be done. I am as well, but to a greater extent. Collectively, you can call us ‘Done And Doner.’”
    7. Kyle Busch: Busch finished an uneventful 13th at Phoenix, one week after being fined $25,000 for an obscene gesture directed at a NASCAR official at Texas. Busch now sits seventh in the points, 347 out of first.
    “I guess paying $25,000 for a middle finger,” Busch said, “is what’s known as having your ‘emotions in check.’”
    8. Greg Biffle: Biffle benefitted from several frontrunners falling short on fuel to pull out a fourth-place finish at Phoenix, his ninth top 5 of the year. He improved one spot in the Sprint Cup point standings to eighth, 349 out of first.
    “This Chase For The Cup has had everything,” Biffle said. “Trash talk, physical confrontations, flying car parts, and failed inspections. Or, as I like to say, ‘a Carl Edwards career retrospective.’”
    9. Joey Logano: Logano finished third at Phoenix, his 16th top-10 result and fifth consecutive finish of seventh or better.
    “I’ve served notice that I’ll be a force to contend with next year,” Logano said. “Hopefully, I’ll be a force to contend with in the Chase, and not out. My recent finishes make one thing crystal clear, though. And that’s that I’ll have a good view for the finish of this year’s Chase.”
    10. Kurt Busch: Busch started third and finished ninth at Phoenix, posting his 17th top-10 finish of the year. He moved up one spot to tenth in the point standings, and trails Denny Hamlin by 429.
    “This is shaping up to be the most exciting Chase finish in history,” Busch said. “The anticipation is overwhelming. Everyone, and not just racing fans, is talking about Hamlin, Johnson, and Harvick. So much that even my ears are burning. And I lost all feeling in those years ago.”
  • Seeking: Single or married men, 18-35, must enjoy fast cars and having a good time

    Seeking: Single or married men, 18-35, must enjoy fast cars and having a good time

    Seeking:  Single or married men, 18-35, must enjoy fast cars and having a good time….and like being harassed at airports.

    Shame on you.

    You probably clicked on this link, thinking that I was looking for a hot date.

    Well, I’m not.

    Actually, believe it or not, NASCAR is looking for a guy, any guy (preferably in groups of hundreds or thousands), between the ages of 18-35. Oh, and before I forget, I really don’t think they care what age you are, ‘8 to 80’ (following one ‘dirty old man’ joke) even works, but right now, the 18-35 demographic is disappearing at an alarming rate, so I don’t think the France Cartel is too picky as to who shows up for a good time.

    The good part?

    On this particular date, you don’t have to buy dinner, open a door, or even be considerate of their feelings. You don’t even have to leave the house.

    The bad part?

    To get the full effect, instead of just watching a race on TV, you’ll need to see a race in person, which means you will have to spend some money. A lot of money.  Oh, and unless you’re driving to a NASCAR race, you’ll probably be flying, which means, that with the new TSA (Transparent Security Administration, because it’s not designed to actually work) ‘enhanced’ security guidelines, you’ll get to be a lot more friendly with the security goons at your local airport….oh yeah, and at the airport closest to the event in question….a truly-wonderful ‘two-fer’.

    And on a side note….has anyone stopped to consider what these new ‘enhanced security guidelines’ enacted by the Oba-mao administration are going to do to race attendance?

    Just in case you’ve been really spending too much time focusing on NASCAR, and not taking a moment to see what’s going on in the world around you, these new ‘security guidelines’ involve a new type of body scanner that gives a frightening clear view of your family jewels….and other body parts, if you’re not a guy….and there is some indication that the images taken from these scanners are somehow now popping up on the internet….oh, and if you’re not up for other people taking a gander at whether or not you made a good grade on the evolutionary scale (concerning the family jewels department), men and women with surgical gloves on await you in a side room to give you a full pat-down, lifting up various bodily components (both men and women have them, I’ll leave it to your imagination as to what I’m talking about) to verify you aren’t packing a 10-megaton nuclear warhead in either your Victoria’s Secret undergarments (both the upper and lower), or your Hanes tighty-whities.

    Oh, and by the way? There is no other option. Once you’re in the airport….you’re screwed. One man who attempted to defy both searches, and was kicked off of his flight….he’s facing a world of hurt right now. Do some searching, and you’ll find out what I’m talking about. For all intents and purposes, that man has become a hero, and is now facing the mother of all legal battles.

    I’m really not trying to scare you right now….I don’t have to. NASCAR, and other racing series (oh yeah, what about the ‘other’ guys?) are already facing a kick in the shins from this disastrous economy, and depending on who you talk to, this is only the beginning….and now, those who actually attend the races are going to be harassed further, viewed unclothed via’ electronic means or groped (if they fly), and this is supposed to be good for the sport (or any sport, for that matter)?

    There’s a two-fold issue here:

    First, once people realize what’s going on in the airports (I don’t have enough time to type out the horror stories already coming out), and how this administration is now attempting to destroy the airline industry….they’re not going to want to fly….anywhere. I don’t want to fly anywhere. And I haven’t even been on a plane in at least a decade. I haven’t been in an airport but once those same ten years (August of this year, fetching my sister from a flight, you just gotta love the hour-and-a-half wait in line to get on a plane).

    I’m not scared of flying….I love planes (I’m a WWII Aviation nut). These new guidelines haven’t deterred me from wanting to fly, and I’m somewhat-comfortable enough with what I was equipped with from God that I’m not worried about people seeing me digitally-unclothed in a TSA scanner.

    However, I’m not going to play the game. And that’s really what this is. A game. A game played by people who weren’t elected into office by the voting public, and since they aren’t answerable to that same voting public…there aren’t really any consequences to their actions, are there?

    And we’re the ones who suffer. And those who are suffering? We did some housecleaning a couple of weeks ago at the polls. We’ve got another round in 2012, provided we last that long. There are some seriously-scary problems headed our way, and I don’t know how it’s going to turn out.

    Getting back to the airport thingie, the aeronautical (which sort of means ‘flying’ for those of you who vote Democrat) public, whether they are folks who enjoy going to NASCAR races, or fly to see relatives they really had no business moving ten states away from, they’re seriously going to re-think their travel plans once they realize what’s going on. This is bad for auto racing in general, not just for the France Cartel.

    I talk to dozens of people a day. It is part of my day job. Nobody wants to fly now. And nobody I know really wants to be stuck in a seat on a plane, sitting next to a Democrat (there is some discussion as to which is worse; the security gate, or being stuck in a seat next to someone who votes ‘D’).

    Wait a minute….I was supposed to be writing a ‘humorous’ editorial here, wasn’t I?

    Meanwhile, back at the ranch….

    Part two of the ‘two-fold’ issue: NASCAR is really going to have to make some changes to the cars, the tracks, and the type of racing they’re doing, something so spectacular (as opposed to craptacular) as to make people want to forget about the horrors at the airport.

    This will be addressed in another editorial….but for now, in spite of all of the terrors that the outside world is trying to foist upon you, NASCAR would still like to take you out on a date….remember, at the very least, you don’t have to leave the comfort of your own chair/couch/loveseat/anti-gravity field/iron maiden to enjoy the outing.

    If at first you don’t succeed, call it ‘the Car of Tomorrow’.

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: The financial saga of Richard Petty Motorsports

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: The financial saga of Richard Petty Motorsports

    One of the biggest questions in NASCAR racing these days is the financial solvency and outright future of Richard Petty Motorsports, (RPM). At this juncture it’s actually not certain if the team will see the green flag at Daytona when the 2011 season gets underway next February.

    The strange saga of RPM majority team owner George Gillett’s finances has encompassed three years of twists and turns that has involved a National Hockey League team, a British football team, a company that managed ski resorts and even business dealings with a Saudi Arabian prince. To fully understand the journey that may lead to RPM’s complete extinction one has to look at the time line issues that created the problems to begin with.

    MARCH 2007. Sports mogul George Gillett Jr, owner of the National Hockey League team the Montreal Canadiens as well as a professional soccer team in Liverpool-England, is reported to be looking at investing in a NASCAR Sprint Cup team. The reports state that he’s was holding conversations with a variety of team owners including Evernham Motorsports. Two weeks later team owner Ray Evernham confirms that he has been talking with Gillett.

    AUGUST 2007. Following several months of negotiations Gillett purchases a reported eighty percent of the team. The sale was handled by the Booth Creek Management Corporation based on a bank loan supplied by Wachovia Securities. The new team name is now Gillett Evernham Motorsports, (GEM). Ray Evernham remains as CEO and substantial partner.

    SEPTEMBER 2007. Rumors are rampant that GEM and Petty Enterprises have been holding meeting regarding a possible merger that would create a four car Dodge team. However, those talks eventually stall and are completely discontinued by the following November.

    SEPTEMBER 2008. GEM enters into negotiations for a purchase/merger with Robby Gordon Motorsports, (RGM). Surprisingly the effort stalls when GEM announces that it has filed a lawsuit against Gordon citing an alleged breach of the tentative agreement that would have sold RGM to Gillett for a reported $23.5 million. Two weeks later the two organizations announce they have resolved their issues and Gillett drops the lawsuit as well as any merger plans.

    This action is followed by rumors that claim Gillett is also seeking an asset purchase and merger with both Bill Davis Racing and Chip Ganassi Racing, presented by Felix Sabates. These reports are flatly denied by both Davis and Ganassi.

    OCTOBER 2008. Ray Evernham announces plans to sell the major portion of his twenty percent ownership of GEM to Gillett but does remain tied to the team as a small minority owner.

    DECEMBER 2008. Reports surface that proposed merger talks between Gillett and Petty Enterprises are now back on.

    GEM lays off 65 employees from their NASCAR Nationwide Series teams. This is followed by an announcement that says the company will be shutting down their Nationwide operations.

    JANUARY 2009. The merger between GEM and Petty Enterprises becomes official. The new collaborations fields four Dodge teams under the new name of Richard Petty Motorsports, (RPM). This name change is reported to be a deal breaker from King Richard Petty.

    MARCH 2009. Rampant rumors regarding George Gillett Jr’s financial status becomes prevalent. Those rumors state that the problem is associated with cash flow relative to business problems with his professional soccer team in Liverpool-England. An angry Gillett vehemently denies that the situation may force him to sell his National Hockey League team: the Montreal Canadiens.

    JUNE 2009. The state of the national economy, and its huge impact on American automakers, takes its toll on Chrysler who is forced to officially file bankruptcy. That action, in turn, impacts the cash flow of RPM because Chrysler cannot meet financial obligations to the race team. RPM lays off nine employees from its Sprint Cup operation and reduces the salary of many others.

    Despite strong denials from earlier in the year, Gillett does indeed sell the Montreal Canadiens considered to be one of the major cornerstones of his business empire.

    Rumors surface saying RPM is talking to Toyota about a manufacturer change for their race teams.

    JULY 2009. RPM officials issues a denial regarding rumors of downsizing their Sprint Cup operation to three teams. However, they do inform driver Reed Sorenson that he is now free to talk to other team owners.

    AUGUST 2009. Lee White, Director of Toyota Racing Development, confirms that he’s been negotiating with RPM regarding a manufacturer change for the team but says he doesn’t expect it’s going to happen.

    SEPTEMBER 2009. A letter of intent is announced regarding the proposed merger between RPM and Robert Yates Racing. The structure of deal calls for RPM to switch to Fords with drivers Kasey Kahne, Elliot Sadler, A J Allmendinger and Paul Menard in the seats. Reed Sorenson is officially informed that he will not be returning to the #43 ride. RPM relocates their operation to the Yates facility in Concord-North Carolina and signs on with previous Yates vendors. Roush Fenway Racing will provide the Ford Fusion race cars while Roush Yates Engines will provide the power plants and gear assemblies. That move prompts RPM to lay off 40 employees from their engine department which is officially shut down.

    During this same time a report surfaces stating that drivers Reed Sorenson and A J Allmendinger waived their RPM paychecks for a period of time in order to keep their teams on the race tracks.

    In one of his most interesting business moves to date, George Gillett Jr announces an exclusive collaboration with Prince Faisal bin Abdullah al-Saud, a member of the Saudi Royal Family. The deal calls for the creation of a NASCAR style racing circuit along with Richard Petty Racing Schools in the Saudi Kingdom as well as other possible locations in the middle east. The Liverpool soccer club is reported to also be involved with the establishment of Liverpool branded football academies in the middle east. This deal is reported to be worth approximately $560 million. This business arrangement actually had nothing to do with RPM despite the volume of rumors that said the Prince would become the new team owner. Rumors that said RPM had been sold were quickly denied by Foster Gillett, the son of the team’s majority owner.

    NOVEMBER 2009. Heading into the final season of his RPM contract, Kasey Kahne announces that he’s now a free agent and will be looking at other race teams for the 2011 season.

    JANUARY 2010. Following months of intense negotiations, the merger between RPM and Yates Racing is now complete and officially announced.

    APRIL 2010. The state of Gillett’s financial status hits a high public profile with the revelation that the loan from the Wachovia Bank, reported to be between $70 to $90 million used to purchase the race team to begin with has been in a state of default since February. The financial damage is reported to be caused by the country’s economic collapse and in particular its impact on the nation’s automakers and their inability to maintain financial obligations to race teams. In a rare public comment on his personal financial matters, Gillett explains that the default is technical in nature and should not be misconstrued to mean that he missed any payments. He goes on to say that he failed to meet one of the covenants attached to the loan further stating that sometimes these covenants require a money borrower to maintain a certain level of cash flow. However, an anonymous source, reported to be close to the deal, states that the problem was indeed related to a lack of payment. In all fairness, it needs to be pointed out that this anonymous source was never revealed and this information was never confirmed by any executive from a financial institution. However, in the days that followed this revelation there was an announcement saying a deal was put in motion to restructure the company debt.

    In the middle of these financial rumors comes a confirmed report from driver Kasey Kahne who says he will be leaving RPM at the end of the 2010 season and has signed a multi year contract with Hendrick Motorsports. This is followed by vast confusion because Kahne’s new ride with Hendrick will not be available until the start of the 2012 season. Following months of speculation the matter gets resolved by Hendrick sending Kahne to Red Bull Motorsports for 2011.

    AUGUST 2010. RPM suffers another financial setback when primary sponsor Budweiser announces they will not be renewing their contract when it expires at the end of the 2010 season. The beer company later announces plans to sign with driver Kevin Harvick and Richard Childress Racing.

    RPM announces its plans for the 2011 season and says they will trim their operation down to a pair of Ford Fusions. Marcus Ambrose will replace Kahne in the #9 Ford with sponsorship from Stanley Tools. A J Allmendinger will remain in the #43 Ford. RPM announces that they are very close to signing a deal with Best Buy Stores, and their Insignia Electronics brand, to sponsor the Allmendinger ride. Driver Paul Menard announces that he’ll be leaving RPM to join Richard Childress Racing. After saying earlier that he doesn’t expect to return to RPM next year, driver Elliot Sadler signs a deal to drive a Nationwide Series car for Kevin Harvick Inc.

    OCTOBER 2010. In another round of financial maneuvers, Gillett fires the Board Of Directors of his British soccer team. The move is an effort to stop a corporate take over of the soccer team by New England Sports Ventures, (NESV). an organization owned by John Henry. This is the same John Henry who owns Major League Baseball’s Boston Red Sox franchise as well as fifty percent of the Roush Fenway Racing NASCAR teams.

    During the Charlotte race, Kasey Kahne crashes due to a reported brake failure. It’s the third such brake failure within a short amount of time and a furious Kahne says he can’t wait to get away from RPM. In the aftermath RPM announces the early release of Kahne and places driver Aric Almirola in the seat to finish out the season. This move allows Kahne to get a head start on plans to join Red Bull Racing next year.

    The early release of Kahne sparks rumors that states RPM owes him a substantial amount of back salary reported to be somewhere in the area of $1.25 million. Kahne later confirms that he’s been paid in full and says the earlier than expected parting of the ways made sense for both sides. Later RPM informs employees, who were planning to join Kahne next year at Red Bull Racing, that their services are no longer needed and they are let go immediately.

    RPM’s next financial headache arrives when Roush Fenway Racing repossesses the cars that were scheduled to race at Talladega alleging non payment of an outstanding bill. An anonymous source claims that the outstanding bill, owed to Roush Fenway and Roush Yates Engines, is somewhere between $9 and $12 million. However RPM arranges a partial payment, to the vendor’s satisfaction, and the race cars are returned to the shop the following day.

    Richard Petty declines to comment on rumors that states he’s attempting to put together an investment team in order to buy majority interest of RPM from Gillett. This is followed by a report that states the Wachovia Bank, holder of Gillett’s defaulted loan note, is alleged to be in favor of a Petty takeover and is willing to give him some extra time to see if he can find investors. This is despite another rumor that states a second, unidentified, party is reported to be interested in purchasing the RPM assets.

    Much to his dismay, Gillett learns that his Liverpool soccer team has been sold for $475 million a figure reported to be far less than expected and no where near the actual value of the team. This action was reported to be launched by a bank in Scotland who held the defaulted note originally initiated by Gillett and his partner. The devalued soccer team reportedly places a huge strain on Gillett’s liquid assets and creates more doubt regarding the solvency and future of RPM. There are also reports that says both Gillett and Petty have aggressively stepped up efforts to find investors for the beleaguered team.

    Gillett, through his company Booth Creek Resort Properties LLC, sells stock in companies that operates the Northstar At Tahoe Ski Resort in an effort to raise additional capital. The sale of this stock is reported to be $63 million. But one day later radio talk show host Dave Moody, from Sirius Radio’s NASCAR Channel, releases a story that says public records indicates that Gillett’s Booth Creek company only managed the ski resort. The records also indicated that Gillett, along with his wife, only owns four percent of Booth Creek. The report also said that the net proceeds from the sale of these stocks were no where near the figure originally reported.

    NOVEMBER 2010. Despite initial reports to the contrary, Budweiser agrees to stay with RPM, and honor their contract, until the end of the current racing season. Following Kasey Kahne’s early release from the team, Budweiser alleged breach of contract saying they signed on with Kahne and not a substitute driver. At first it was believed that Budweiser was not going to honor the contract, and the funding that came with it, for the final five weeks of the season which was the last thing RPM needed at this point in time. However, secure in the knowledge that Kahne was more than willing to honor his remaining sponsor commitments, Budweiser relented and announced they would honor their contract to its fullest.

    Once again RPM endures another embarrassing episode regarding money owed to Roush Fenway Racing and Roush Yates Engines. This latest episode occurred after the November 8th Sprint Cup race at the Texas Motor Speedway. The plan was to have the haulers from the four RPM teams to meet a Roush Fenway hauler in the speedway parking lot to accept delivery of the cars needed for the Phoenix race the following Sunday. However Roush Fenway instructed their driver not unload the race cars until he received  telephone instructions. The problem was once again overdue invoices. The funding for the Phoenix cars was supposed to be delivered on the Monday morning following the Texas race so the new cars could be loaded into the RPM haulers and sent on their way to Arizona. The five haulers sat in the Texas Motor Speedway parking lot until the following Wednesday afternoon before the transaction was completed. The result was a mad dash to complete the 18 hour drive to the Phoenix International Raceway where the cars had to be unloaded in the garage area by early Friday morning.

    It appears that RPM will be ready for next Sunday’s season ending race at the Homestead Miami Speedway in Florida. During the Phoenix race last weekend Mike Shiplett, crew chief for RPM’s #43 Ford, told Fox Sports that the Homestead Cars are ready and the engines were scheduled to be delivered to the RPM shop last Saturday. It was anticipated that the final prep work would be completed by Tuesday with a Wednesday departure of the team trucks to Florida.

    The large and looming questions that remains are: will RPM be present at Daytona next February when the green flag falls on the 2011 season? Can Richard Petty line up the investors needed to buy out team majority owner George Gillett Jr? Can Gillette acquire enough funding, and financial solvency to save the race team he purchased back in 2007?

    Last October Richard Petty said “I’ve been here, (NASCAR), since 1949 and I’m going to be here ’till they run me off.” There is a large contingent of people who hope that’s true. The world of NASCAR without the name Petty, and the #43, attached to it simply would not seem right.

  • The Final Word – With one to go, our three contenders look to lay claim to Homestead

    The Final Word – With one to go, our three contenders look to lay claim to Homestead

    So, what did we learn in Phoenix?

    Well, we learned that we got ourselves a real Chase for the 2010 Sprint Cup championship that should last until the final lap of next Sunday’s finale in Florida. Instead of calling the engraver to start putting Denny Hamlin’s name on the trophy, he heads back east with a slim 15 point margin over Jimmie Johnson, with Kevin Harvick just 46 away. That fat lady who does all the singing when it is time to turn out the lights at the end of the party has to wait just a bit longer before she can begin to warble.

    We learned again that sometimes you can be the star of the show but it means squat if you have to surrender the lead you had held most of the day in order to take on fuel when others do not. Hamlin went with a gas and go with 14 to go that allowed his competitors to dodge a bullet, unlike one of Dick Cheney’s buddies, and stay in the hunt. Instead, the lead (rhymes with led) went directly into Hamlin’s foot, and he wasn’t happy about it.

    We learned that Harvick would finish sixth, but he had to dig like hell to do that. We hear he won’t be stealing the pit crew from team mates Clint Bowyer or Jeff Burton even though a hung lug nut dropped him from sixth to 19th with 81 laps to go. Happy probably wasn’t as he had to make up a lot of ground just to get back to where he had started from. If nothing else, it should serve notice as to what Hamlin and Johnson can expect if they should stumble at Homestead.

    We learned that putting Jeff Gordon’s over the wall guys with Johnson was good for the defending champ, and not so good for the other four time king. Jimmie gained spots in the pits and finished fifth, Gordon lost a few and wound up 11th. That is the difference between being in the Chase, and being in the running for the title.

    We learned that Carl Edwards still knows how to do his flip as he won for the first time since they raced at Homestead in 2008. Not only that, but he rushed through the gate into the stands to find himself in the middle of the most traffic he has seen since Talladega. He might have got mobbed by the fans, but it sure looked easier to do than trying to climb the fence, ala Tony Stewart. I wonder why Smoke never thought of going through, instead of up?

    We learned that when you add a gas can to the 18.7 gallons already in the tank, a car might get really good fuel milage. However, the tank left hanging on Kasey Kahne’s spoiler was empty and apparently violated the rule about leaving the pits with equipment. I am happy to report that when he came back in to have it removed, he didn’t flip off anyone and was allowed to leave.

    We learned that Krissie Newman did not give birth during the race, that Ron Hornaday did not have to replace Ryan behind the wheel, allowing the Rocketman to finish second. NASCAR’s own baby boy, the 20-year old Joey Logano, was third.

    We learned that some of the boys thought the track was wider than it was. Jamie McMurray’s spoiler was left hanging after he bounced off the fence, but he still managed a top ten. You begin to wonder if the templates only slow down a car, while beating the crap out of it on the track makes improvements Smoky Yunick could have only dreamed about.

    We learned that if you wait long enough, good things can happen. You might have read my thoughts as to just how awful the team of Rusty, Brad, and Ray have been on the ESPN broadcasts. Well, last Sunday was their finest hour as they provided commentary that was both informative and entertaining. Yes, I was shocked, too. While none of them are in the same league as Kyle Petty, the trio actually gave me info on Sunday that my mother-in-law (who thinks an Allmendinger is what you use to get the nut out of the shell) could not.

    We learned that while Chad Knaus exiled his #48 boys to Team Gordon, he once found himself on the bench on the big day. Jeff Gordon won the Daytona 500 in the late 1990’s, but tire changer Knaus had been replaced before the race and wasn’t even at the track. Better things lay ahead, as this will mark the ninth straight year his driver will have finished in the top five in the season standings. That is almost as impressive as four straight titles. Almost.

    Of course, five straight championships has even a better ring to it. Will it happen, as Johnson heads to a track he has never won at, where fifth in 2009 was his best finish there in five years? Hamlin won that race last year, has three top threes in the last four held there, and looks like the smart choice to dethrone the king. Then again, a problem in the pits, with a tire, with an engine, or with someone around you, and history won’t mean a thing except for the 2010 champion.

  • Fourth Turn A Fan’s Perspective Winner takes all but who should win?

    Fourth Turn A Fan’s Perspective Winner takes all but who should win?

    [media-credit name=”Simon Scoggins” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]“A champion is as a champion does in all things. The way he walks. The way he talks. The way he presents himself. The way he treats those that can not advance his cause. Every champion knows that the only true defeat is a victory without honor.” – R.C. Liggett

    Today we saw a very distinct and defining view of the three championship contenders. They are three very different competitors and very different personalities. But which one will truly represent our sport with the class and dignity of a true champion?

    Until the race concludes in Homestead next week, Jimmie Johnson is the series champion. He is a four time series champion. He has represented our sport with class and graciousness for four years. There are many who say his time is up. Let someone else win. However, Jimmie Johnson is not willing to just step aside.

    Jimmie has handled the pressure with the same grace that he has handled wearing super man’s cape. He has gone out and raced his way back into contention. Granted his crew has faded late in the year and has seemed to struggle throughout the year.

    Through the challenges of mind games from Mike Ford and Denny Hamlin, challenges on the track, and struggles in the pits, Johnson has kept his cool. Today was no different. He managed his fuel mileage with coaching from Chad Knaus and made it work. His composure kept him in the championship run. Had he panicked or refused to listen to Chad, he would have been out of the running. The true display of trust and confidence came when on the next to the last lap, Chad said, “Let the 29 go if you have to but stay smooth.” With the 29 closing fast in his mirror, Jimmie Johnson did just that. It was that consistent smooth rhythm that kept him ahead of the 29 and within striking distance of the 11 come Miami.

    The points leader is Denny Hamlin. He leads both Johnson and Harvick by a total of 46 points. In 1991, Rusty Wallace was quoted as saying there is a difference between cocky and confident. Anyone can talk the talk but the man that gets the job done, well that is confidence.”

    Denny Hamlin has backed up all of his predictions as though he were reading from a script. He and crew chief have played head games with the best. Everything from choosing the pit stall in front of the champions, to talking trash in the media. Up until today, it appeared that maybe it was working.

    But fuel mileage threw a monkey wrench into Hamlin’s cake walk. Hamlin stated that his fuel mileage had been excellent all year and he didn’t understand why it was so bad today. He didn’t know whether his crew chief was being conservative or whether he really couldn’t make it. This translates to It wasn’t my fault it was the crews fault that we didn’t have enough to make it.

    Hamlin’s frustration was illustrated by his in car camera when he threw his gloves. Hit the instrument panel, slammed the steering wheel and threw a bottle of water at a crew member who had handed him the bottle of cold water when he got out of the car. When he did his post race TV interview with Dr. Jerry Punch he didn’t even look at him. He didn’t look at the camera. And basically he pouted through the interview.

    His behavior, based on our definition that we started with, would say that Denny is not quite ready to be a champion of our sport. “A true champion knows that the only true defeat is a victory without honor.” Denny didn’t win. He had the strongest and best car. But circumstances did not play out in his favor. But he lost with honor. He did not lose with dignity.

    Kevin Harvick and his Gil Martin lead Shell Chevrolet over came a huge obstacle. A pit road mistake found Harvick returning to pit road to place a missing lug nut. Harvick, who is famous for his temper and berating his crew over mistakes, kept silent. He would state later that he said nothing because his crew had been so good the last few races and things happen.

    It was that missing lug nut that kept Harvick in the running. By returning to pit road and then stopping for 2 tires Harvick had 10 laps more fuel than his competitors. He came up through the field methodically. He kept the fenders on the car. He kept the car pointed towards the start finish line and he kept his foot on the floor. Again, as with Johnson smooth and steady wins the war. Although he didn’t catch and pass the 48, he did cement himself into the final race for the championship next week.

    Harvick’s temper is legendary. His aggressiveness is well documented on and off the track. As is his sense of humor and his relationship with the fans. Harvick is quick study. He is a great driver and he has a great sense of what it means to lead the sport and he has an experienced car owner to help him climb those ropes and learn the road of a champion.

    Jimmie Johnson summed up the race in Miami best when he called it a “one race winner takes all shootout.” But this is no ordinary winner takes all race. This is the Sprint Cup Championship. This is a half a million bucks to win the race and then somewhere in the neighborhood of 6 million dollars to win the championship plus the champion’s purse share next year. This winner takes all defines the term. And if history holds true and the personalities we have seen to date from the three contenders stay true to form, it fits Harvick’s style the best.

    Aggressive, hard charging, not afraid to bend the sheet metal, and gutsy enough to keep charging with a less than perfect car describe Kevin Harvick’s driving style and season to a T. But will he win?

    Jimmie Johnson has not won 4 championships being a quitter. He knows the odds. He has faced them in the past though not recently. And he has one of the very best in the business sitting on that pit box every week. They say it’s easier to find a job when you have a job and Jimmie Johnson has a job. He is the Sprint Cup Champion taking it away from him may not be nearly as easy as the points might make it look.

    Winning this championship will take not only bravado. It will take skill. It will take patience. It will take calculation. And most of all it will take a cool head. Those are all traits that we have not seen as of yet from Denny Hamlin. Although he has a 3 point lead going into Miami that is like having a stop stick to stop a train. That train I believe is Jimmie Johnson.

    Next week is not here yet and while it may be anyone’s game, experience and grace under pressure will most likely ultimately prevail. The head games have started, Denny Hamlin and Mike Ford started them, but I believe that Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus will finish them at the head table in Vegas.

    ~~~~****~~~~~

    Congratulations to Carl Edwards on his sweep of the weekend at Phoenix in the Nationwide Series and the Cup series. Hard fought and well deserved wins. Welcome back to Victory Lane Carl. You were missed. It was a very very thing classy to share your victory celebration with the fans. Congratulations to Todd Bodine on clinching the Camping World Truck Series Championship. Congratulations to Clint Bowyer on his Camping World Truck Series win.

    That said, to all the competitors in all the series thanks for giving us everything you have to give, you are our heroes. Most importantly, thanks to all the families who shared their loved ones with us so we could cheer our favorite driver and favorite teams. You are the true heroes of the sport and we are forever in your debt.

  • Kyle Busch May Have Lost His Cool in Texas But His Fans Found a Renewed Vigor

    Kyle Busch May Have Lost His Cool in Texas But His Fans Found a Renewed Vigor

    He’s the antithesis of Dale Earnhardt Jr. in every way and his fans are well aware and don’t care. Because that’s what they like about him and when the time comes they can be just as large in numbers and can get their point across.

    Kyle Busch and his fans have perfected the art of being outspoken. Last weekend in Texas it was hard to tell which of the two were tossing out more harsh words.

    It all started on Saturday when Carl Edwards beat Busch in the Nationwide Series race on a late restart that appeared to have jumped the restart. In a post race interview Busch started blasted Edwards and NASCAR and threw out a few words that started with the letter ‘F.’

    The following day it became much, much worse.

    His No.18 M&M’s Toyota could have been a contender for the race win, even after spinning on lap 159 since he had kept it off the wall and didn’t have any damage. But NASCAR deemed Busch to be speeding on pit road to avoid going a lap down. He was called back to pit road to serve a one lap penalty.

    That didn’t sit well with the driver and he began to let NASCAR know exactly how he felt about them. That included more four letter words, plenty of ‘F’ bombs and even a one fingered salute. In response, NASCAR called Busch back down pit road to this time serve a two lap penalty for what they deemed ‘unsportsmanlike behavior’ a term commonly used in football.

    Upon hearing that their driver might be facing further penalties their frustration surfaced. To them Busch was just showing his emotion, something that he’s very good at and NASCAR can’t fine a driver for being emotional.

    Others didn’t agree that he should have been penalized in the race and since he was, there was no need to further penalize him. The most common defense for Busch was that NASCAR had opened the door when they initiated the ‘Boys have at it’ policy before the year began.

    The policy doesn’t cover NASCAR officials and Busch stepped over the line.

    On the Tuesday following the race, penalty day, Busch was handed a fine from NASCAR for his behavior. He paid the $25,000 and apologized and acknowledged his probation until the end of December.

    Busch may have moved on but his fans certainly haven’t.

    Following the penalty they took to the social networking site Twitter to send NASCAR their thoughts. Most of them, as you can imagine weren’t pretty. Then there were others who decided to take a different route.

    Black sheep.

    That’s what his fans were feeling like and how they interpreted the situation and as such they have changed their Twitter aviator to a black sheep. A black sheep is someone that’s regarded as a disgrace to a certain group and to his fans NASCAR put Busch in that position.

    One such fan, Hank Kershell, who goes by @HankKershell on Twitter, from Arlington, TX, nearly exploded as much as Busch did. Kershell is now boycotting the last two races of the Sprint Cup Series season but will continue to support the driver that he’s been a fan of since 2004.

    “Back when it was just me, his mom and dad and Grandma,” he said with a laugh. “Well, just about.”

    For Kershell he doesn’t like when Busch tries to reign in his emotion, even though it can land him in trouble like it did at Texas. When that emotion is reigned in, he says, it’ll start to diminish how much Busch wins. As long as Busch gives it 100% every time, no matter where he ends up, it’ll still be exciting to watch.

    Texas though, “Kyle had an emotional meltdown during the race and I was OK with the fine,” he said. “I would have had a problem with further points penalties.”

    The black sheep comes from what Kershell says is penalizing a driver that does a lot for the sport and gets little in return.

    “I finally got tired of everyone always trying to treat Kyle like a little child when no one is bring in more new fans to the sport,” he said. “Although I agree with the penalty, their [NASCAR] statement afterwards was pretty condescending as well. No one watching really cares if some official gets flipped off – especially since the official never saw it. Kyle gets flipped off more than anyone in America; many fans are far more childish with less class than Kyle. And there are little kids around them when they do it.”

    Many other NASCAR fans around the globe may not meet his passion or conviction by traveling this past, but the sport does have some of the best fans in the world. For now though, Kershell isn’t alone in his black sheep support.

    Brandie Merrill, @Kbm18 on Twitter, from Logantown, Pa has been a Busch fan since his rookie season, and she too has changed her aviator to a black sheep. What drew her to Busch was the fact that all he wants to do is win races but also acknowledges that sometimes his actions aren’t appropriate.

    “We are all human and we all make mistakes,” said Merrill. “And we all get through them and go on and that’s what I love about Kyle – he’s human and he doesn’t try to be someone that’s he’s not.

    “He was already hot under the collar from the last restart on Saturday in the Nationwide Series race when Carl Edwards jumped the restart and NASCAR didn’t do anything about it … I wouldn’t blame him one bit, I say he had all the right to be mad like he was.”

    The official being flipped off came from the fact that he was an easy target, says Merrill, since he had to stand in front of the car. That didn’t put Busch in the right though, she said. The additional fine was a different story.

    “Maybe NASCAR shouldn’t have made it that high but they did,” said Merrill.

    The reason for Merrill’s black sheep was a little different than Kershell’s.

    “I changed my aviator to the black sheep in support of Kyle because of the weekend that NASCAR hanged him. I had always thought of Kyle, not only by all the haters, but NASCAR at times as the black sheep,” she said.

    NASCAR doesn’t want Busch to keep winning and breaking the records that he is her theory.

    “I have a couple of followers that are on the same mission as I am by displaying the black sheep,” said Merrill. “They said that they will change it when Kyle wins his next Cup race. As for me, I haven’t decided yet, I’ll support it as long as I think I should.”

    The frustration is still evident in Busch fans even a week after the incident. Their Twitter pages continue to light up and the army of black sheep continues to grow. Appears that sometimes it takes more than a bag of M&M’s to deal with the aftermath of a bad day at the races.

  • My Money’s on Johnson

    My Money’s on Johnson

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]Before today’s Kobalt Tools 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup race, I had just about made up my mind that Denny Hamlin was going to win the Sprint Cup championship. They had momentum and the psychological edge. About Lap 250, I still believed that. Hamlin was leading, as he had all day, and only Carl Edwards seemed to have anything for him. When Edwards passed Hamlin at Lap 266, I thought Hamlin was going to finish first or second and gain lots of points and then came that dreaded problem at flat tracks—gas mileage.

    We all struggle with gas mileage whatever we drive. Some of us live with SUV’s and pickup trucks that get minimal mileage. Some of us drive hybrids or small cars that get better, but you can bet we all watch it. And it’s only a few tracks where it’s a problem. Phoenix was one of those tracks today. Usually you can bet on a late caution so the drivers and crews can get fuel and tires for a final run, but not today. With only five cautions in the whole race, that wasn’t going to happen, so people gambled. Among the drivers who gambled were winner Carl Edwards, Jimmie Johnson, and others. Johnson, who was second in the championship struggle, was short on gas, but Harvick, the guy in third place, had the good fortune of having a lug nut missing on his car. The pit stop to correct that allowed him to get enough fuel to comfortably finish the race. Not so for a dominant Denny Hamlin.

    Just when it looked like Hamlin was going to gain needed points on both Johnson and Hamlin, no caution flag was in sight. Though Hamlin led 190 of the 312 laps, he finished 12th and lost 18 valuable points to Johnson. Johnson took a tremendous gamble, but credit crew chief Chad Knaus for rolling the dice. What could have been a disaster turned into a win in the points battle. I do not expect anything less next week at Homestead. I guess when you’ve won that many in a row, you can gamble. And when you know that you are that good, why not take the chance.

    This is why I believe that Johnson will win his fifth championship at Ford Championship weekend in Homestead. When you have four trophies, why not gamble for five? You’ve been there so you don’t sweat the small stuff. Hamlin’s crew will sulk on what happened this week and make mistakes just like they did today. What would have happened if Hamlin, with a very fast car, had pitted at Lap 235? We’ll never know, but you can bet it’s eating at Hamlin, the Gibbs racing team, and crew chief Mike Ford right now. How much of hangover on this lost opportunity will carry over into next week? I’ll bet it will be on their minds for a long time. Strange things happen in this sport, but my money’s on the No. 48, and that’s a shame. It doesn’t do NASCAR any good to have the same song every year. It should be an exciting weekend.

    Of course you have to admire what Carl Edwards did this weekend. He won the pole for the Sprint Cup race, qualified second for the Nationwide race, race circles around everyone in Sprint Cup practice, and won the Sprint Cup race. If there ever was a sign that the boys at Roush-Fenway had finally figured things out, this weekend was it. Whatever the problem was is probably solved. And next week they head for Homestead where the Roush Fords have dominated for years. Seeing Jack Roush, who cheated death twice in the last few years, celebrating, was a wonderful sight, but that doesn’t help Denny, Jimmie and Kevin. They are in a fight for a championship while the Fords are only looking for a win. And that’s a large part of the problem with today’s format.

    I’m not saying that Hamlin, Harvick, and Johnson were trying to win on Sunday. They were, but so much emphasis is placed on the championship that it was hardly mentioned throughout the race broadcast that there was a race outside of the championship struggle. The whole emphasis was on the three drivers who had a chance to win a championship that who would have thought that Greg Biffle pulled off another top five finish or that Ryan Newman, who had won at Phoenix earlier in the year, was second. In fact, we didn’t get that information until Jimmie and Chad were interviewed. As I’ve said many times, in my youth, it was more about who won on Sunday than who won the championship. I guess it’s the lust of the ownership of the series to make NASCAR more like the stick and ball sports where the championship (they think) is all that matters. With this “closest Chase in history” propaganda we’re going to hear all week, we’ll get the same kind of broadcast next week where guys like Biffle and Newman will do great things, but only be afterthoughts. David Pearson won his last championship in 1969 and no one remembers that, but can remember his magic in the No. 21 for a lot of years. Now, so much emphasis is placed on the championship that no one will remember that Carl Edwards broke a 70-race losing streak Sunday. It doesn’t matter. All that matters is who is the champion, something that has been artificially created to compete with sports that cannot be competed with. It boggles my mind.

    So, my money’s on Johnson. Hamlin’s team will make mistakes and Harvick will be his steady self. Knaus will pull a rabbit out of his hat and win the almighty championship by a point. When 2011 comes around, many will try to dethrone the magical No. 48 team, but will fail as usual, but until folks realize that it’s the winner who should get the spoils, it won’t make any difference. I’m glad great drivers like Biffle, Bowyer, Stewart, McMurray, and Edwards won races during these last ten events. It’s as if they didn’t even show up in the media’s eyes. I guess there’s always next year. Where we will repeat the same mistake again as ratings fall and attendance goes in the dumpster. And we will wonder why.

  • HOORAHS AND WAZZUPS: Phoenix Edition

    HOORAHS AND WAZZUPS: Phoenix Edition

    During the previous NASCAR weekend at the Phoenix International Raceway we watched Sunoco Race Fuels create a new level of drama in the Chase standings. We watched a driver redeem himself by sweeping the Phoenix victory lane and then swinging a very large hammer. We also shared a very emotional moment with “The Onion.” With those thoughts in mind let’s begin with:

    HOORAH for the state of the Chase. The Sprint Cup Series left Phoenix with the closest championship numbers in the Chase history heading into the final race of the year. Denny Hamlin’s points lead was shortened to 15 points over Jimmie Johnson while Kevin Harvick also picked up points on Hamlin and is 46 points from the top.

    WAZZUP with Hamlin’s fuel mileage issues? Saying that he wasn’t told he needed to conserve fuel, Hamlin had to come down pit road, with 14 laps remaining, for fuel and two tires. He exited pit road in 19th one lap down. It could have been much worse. Race leader, and eventual winner, Carl Edwards was in fuel mileage status and that allowed Hamlin to make quick work of passing him to get his lap back. He also managed to pick up an additional seven positions to minimize the points damage.

    WAZZUP with the in car camera shots of Hamlin punching his steering wheel and dash board after the race. He had every reason to be disappointed, and even angry, with a 12th place finish. He was a dominant factor all during the race and his 190 laps led allowed him to pick an extra ten bonus points. But the last thing he needed was a right hand injury when he’s so close to winning his first NASCAR championship.

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

    HOORAH to crew chief Chad Knaus for calmly guiding his driver through the process of saving fuel. It led to a fifth place finish and the points gain on Hamlin’s lead. Knaus told Jimmie Johnson to turn off his in car fans, stay off the brake pedal and run the lap times that he told him to. The pay off turned out to be huge in light of Hamlin’s fuel issues.

    This week’s HOORAH for making chicken salad out of chicken do do belongs to Chase contender Kevin Harvick. Harvick pitted on lap 224 only to return to pit road a lap later for a penalty because a lug nut on the left rear tire was missing. He fell from fifth to 18th on the leader board. A caution flag came out on lap 235 and, with virtually nothing to lose, crew chief Gil Martin called Harvick in for gas and tires. It loomed large at the end of the race where Harvick’s sixth place finish also allowed him to gain points on Hamlin’s lead.

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

    HOORAH to Carl Edwards for a Phoenix weekend that was simply astounding. The Roush Fenway Racing Ford driver did a double back flip after winning both the NASCAR Nationwide and Sprint Cup events. He also became only the third driver, in the history of NASCAR at the PIR, to sweep the weekend.

    Saturday’s win in the Wypall 200 was a dominant performance by Edwards. He led 153 of the 200 laps for his second, consecutive, series win and his fourth win of the season. His margin of victory, over runner up Kevin Harvick, was a whopping 5.2 seconds.

    Edwards led 93 laps of Sunday’s Sprint Cup race and won the Kobalt Tools 500 to complete the Phoenix sweep. After his second traditional back flip of the weekend, Edwards ran up into the grandstands much to the surprise and delight of the fans. He had every reason in the world to be happy. Edwards’ win snapped a 70 race win less streak that stretched back to nearly two years. Swinging that giant Kobalt Tools hammer in victory lane had to feel like sweet redemption for Edwards.

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

    WAZZUP with the fuel mileage issues with Juan Pablo Montoya’s Chevrolet? In the waning laps of the Sprint Cup race Montoya was riding second poised for a possible win if race leader Carl Edwards had to pit for a splash of fuel. He was told over the radio that he was good on gas and even had enough for at least an additional lap past the scheduled distance. Imagine every one’s surprise when the car ran out of fuel on the white flag lap. A sure fire second place finished spiraled downward to a disappointing 16th place finish.

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

    WAZZUP with the pit road troubles with driver Kasey Kahne and his Red Bull Racing Toyota team? On the first round of pit stops Kahne missed his pit stall and had to take an extra lap around the track in order to return to pit road.

    That was nothing compared to what happened during the next pit stop. With pit road service complete the car came off of the jack, Kahne sped out of his pit stall only to discover that the handle of the gas can was stuck on the car’s spoiler. That leads to a HOORAH to Sunoco Race Fuels whose company logo got a lot of television during that slow lap around the track so Kahne could come back to pit road to have the gas can removed.

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

    HOORAH to Todd “The Onion” Bodine for wrapping up his second NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship last Friday night in Phoenix. Bodine and company won the title a week before the season officially ends. Another HOORAH goes out to team owners the Germain Brothers who funded this Toyota operation out of their pockets when a race sponsor was always available.

    HOORAH to Sprint Cup driver Clint Bowyer who, driving the #2 truck for Kevin Harvick Inc, made his first series start since 2007 and won Friday night’s Lucas Oil 150.

    WAZZUP with more harsh racing luck for Ron Hornaday Jr. His Kevin Harvick Inc Chevrolet Truck was collected by Austin Dillon and the four time series champion was sent crashing into the wall. This incident marked Hornaday’s sixth crash related DNF this year. You can bet he can’t wait until this season ends next week.

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

    The final WAZZUP of the week goes to Jamie McMurray and that accidental car wash he tried to do on Jimmie Johnson’s Chevrolet during Sunday’s Cup race. The two cars were racing together when all of a sudden an errant water bottle came flying out of McMurray’s driver’s window. The bottle landed of top of the Johnson car and sprayed water all over his windshield. It turned out to be a case of no harm no foul but it’s the last thing a driver, in the midst of trying to win five consecutive championships, wants to see in the middle of a race.

    The final HOORAH of the week goes to Stewart Haas Racing for the special paint job on Ryan Newman’s #39 Chevrolet. In honor of the recently observed Veterans Day, Newman’s U.S. Army sponsored car was decorated with the pictures of over 500 veterans. The total affect was stunning and it was a highly unique way of thanking the men and women of our Armed Forces for their service.

  • Chase winding down in the desert as Hamlin leads going to Homestead

    Chase winding down in the desert as Hamlin leads going to Homestead

    As the NASCAR Sprint Cup teams arrived for work Sunday morning at Phoenix International Raceway, for the Kobalt Tools 500, they were greeted by something familiar from home on the east coast.  The garage opened this morning at 7AM local time as the sun was barely visible and the thermometer was hovering at the 40 degree mark.  But by the time the green flag dropped at 2:18 PM we were all reminded that we are here in the desert with a bright sun and 70 degrees.  This was ideal weather for the fans and the teams alike, except of course for the #71 team and driver Brendan Gaughan.  On the second lap, Gaughan had a right front tire go down sending him into the outside wall with heavy damage.  The TRG crew worked on the #71 car, but the front end damage was too severe for them to fix. The car was loaded up and readied to limp back home.

    The angels were not looking over Brad Keselowski either as he cut down a right front tire on lap 58 sending the #12 Dodge into the outside wall resulting in heavy damage.  After being treated and released from the infield care center, Brad headed to the garage to watch his crew working feverishly to rebuild the right front of his car.

    On lap 101 with Denny Hamlin leading the race, the third caution of the day came out for debris.  Seems that an errant water bottle splashed all over Jimmie Johnson’s windshield.  As the field pitted  the top 5 were Edwards, Hamlin, Kurt Busch, and Tony Stewart.  It was speculated that Jamie McMurray was the guilty water bottle thrower, but he did get that needed lucky dog to put him back on the lead lap. Hamlin wasted no time retaking the lead from Edwards after the restart.

    By lap 200 the #12 team had given up the battle and loaded up the car for the long ride home.  The result for Brad Keselowski will be a 42nd place finish, heading into the final race. On the track, Denny Hamlin continued to pace the field under green until the caution flew one more time on lap 222 as Robby Gordon spun in turn three.  In the ensuing pit stops, Kyle Busch and his crew outperformed the 11 crew and took over the lead. Harvick was forced to return to pit road for a missing lug nut which resulted in restarting 18th.

    On the restart, Hamlin rocketed past Kyle to retake the lead.  On lap 223 it was Hamlin, Edwards, Busch, Johnson and Newman rounding out the top five.  The green flag run was short lived as Travis Kvapil spun out on the front stretch on lap 235.  On lap 266 Carl Edwards squeezes past Hamlin to retake the lead, and two laps later Edwards has an 8/10th second lead over Hamlin. Montoya passes Jimmie Johnson for fourth and Ryan Newman joins in passing JJ for 5th place.   By lap 278 Harvick had worked his way up to 12th and was threatening.

    With 22 laps to go, Hamlin was looking for a caution, constantly telling his spotter there was debris.  Obviously NASCAR and many of the other teams saw no debris, in addition Johnson was too short of fuel to make it.  Meanwhile Gil Martin had told was  Harvick he had just enough gas to finish the 312 laps.  On lap 296 Chad Knaus was telling JJ to start conserving fuel.  Jimmie asked how much and Chad told him that he would tell him how fast to drive.

    On lap 300 Hamlin could wait no more and was forced to pit, barely able to return to the lead lap.  Meanwhile Edwards continued his charge up front while Johnson was slowing and holding onto 5th place.  Harvick moved up to 7th and Chad ordered JJ to cut all the fans and not use the brakes at all.  With 5 laps to go Johnson was told to do whatever to keep Harvick behind him, as Johnson slipped to 6th with Harvick right behind him.

    On the final lap, Montoya runs out of gas as Edwards wins the Kobalt Tools 500, with Ryan Newman 2nd , Logano 3rd with Johnson and Harvick finishing top 5.  Denny Hamlin finished 12th while Montoya managed to finish on the lead lap in 16th place.

    As the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series heads to their final race at Homestead, Denny Hamlin leads the Championship points 15 points ahead of Johnson, with Harvick 3rd, 46 points behind Johnson.

    Unofficial Race Results : Kobalt Tools 500

    Kobalt Tools 500

    November 14, 2010 – Race 35 of 36

    Pos. St. No. Driver Make Pts. Bon. Laps Status
    1 1 99 Carl Edwards Ford 190 5 312 Running
    2 19 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 170 0 312 Running
    3 10 20 Joey Logano Toyota 165 0 312 Running
    4 4 16 Greg Biffle Ford 160 0 312 Running
    5 21 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 155 0 312 Running
    6 29 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 150 0 312 Running
    7 15 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 151 5 312 Running
    8 28 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 142 0 312 Running
    9 3 2 Kurt Busch Dodge 143 5 312 Running
    10 5 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 134 0 312 Running
    11 22 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 130 0 312 Running
    12 17 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 137 10 312 Running
    13 7 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 129 5 312 Running
    14 31 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 121 0 312 Running
    15 11 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 118 0 312 Running
    16 35 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 115 0 312 Running
    17 20 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 112 0 312 Running
    18 2 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 109 0 312 Running
    19 40 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 106 0 312 Running
    20 26 9 Bobby Labonte Chevrolet 108 5 312 Running
    21 14 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 100 0 312 Running
    22 13 47 Marcos Ambrose Toyota 97 0 312 Running
    23 8 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 94 0 312 Running
    24 24 13 Casey Mears Toyota 91 0 312 Running
    25 12 6 David Ragan Ford 88 0 310 Running
    26 6 0 David Reutimann Toyota 85 0 310 Running
    27 9 9 Aric Almirola Ford 82 0 310 Running
    28 23 19 Elliott Sadler Ford 79 0 310 Running
    29 18 98 Paul Menard Ford 76 0 310 Running
    30 25 83 Kasey Kahne Toyota 73 0 310 Running
    31 33 26 J.J. Yeley Ford 70 0 309 Running
    32 16 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 67 0 309 Running
    33 34 7 Robby Gordon Toyota 64 0 308 Running
    34 38 38 Travis Kvapil Ford 61 0 308 Running
    35 27 82 Scott Speed Toyota 58 0 307 Running
    36 42 34 Tony Raines Ford 55 0 306 Running
    37 32 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 52 0 306 Running
    38 37 37 David Gilliland Ford 49 0 274 In Pit
    39 36 55 Mike Bliss Toyota 46 0 193 In Pit
    40 39 164 Landon Cassill Toyota 43 0 191 In Pit
    41 43 81 Terry Labonte Dodge 40 0 190 Out
    42 30 12 Brad Keselowski Dodge 37 0 58 In Pit
    43 41 71 Brendan Gaughan Chevrolet 34 0 1 In Pit