Category: Featured Other Series

Featured Other Series

  • Simon Pagenaud would like another opportunity at Le Mans

    Simon Pagenaud would like another opportunity at Le Mans

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Winning a title in IndyCar hasn’t stopped Simon Pagenaud from wanting to return to Circuit de la Sarthe to finally get his first win in the worlds greatest endurance race.

    Speaking to the media yesterday at Martinsville Speedway, the driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Chevrolet in the Verizon IndyCar Series and 2016 IndyCar champion was asked if he had any desire to return to and compete in the 24 Hours of Le Mans again one day.

    “Yes, definitely,” Pagenaud said. “It definitely haunts me every morning when I wake up. I finished second. Evidently, it was the closest margin in history. So I got unfinished business there for sure.”

    The French native was driving the No. 9 Team Peugeot Total 908 on the final stint when it finished second overall to the No. 2 Audi Sport R18 (driven by Andre Lotterer) in the 2011 24 Hours of Le Mans. He finished a mere 14 seconds, 13.854 to be exact, behind Lotterer in what was the fourth closest finish in the history of Le Mans.

    It was Audi’s eighth win in 12 years in the twice around the clock race through the French countryside. They would go on to win the next three years in their reign of dominance of the event. This was a point that Pagenaud brought up in his availability.

    “The difficulty is you’ve got to be in a proper factory program like I was with Peugeot or Audi, for example, or Porsche to have a chance to win,” he said. “It’s such a difficult race with so many different factors in play. You need to be really well prepared and to do that, you need to be in a factory team.”

    He also added that his attention at this time is on IndyCar and Team Penske.

    “So right now with my priority being on IndyCar with Team Penske, it’s out of the question for now,” he added. “But hopefully someday, there will be an opportunity and I’ll definitely come back.”

  • Allegations Fly Between Bobby Hamilton Jr., Jack Hughes

    Allegations Fly Between Bobby Hamilton Jr., Jack Hughes

    Allegations continue to be made against former NASCAR driver Bobby Hamilton Jr. following the claims made by ARCA drivers Kevin Hinckle and Cassie Gannis in August. Both drivers are pursuing legal action against Hamilton, with Hinckle and Gannis both filing breach of contract lawsuits.

    Hamilton’s former partner at Hamilton-Hughes Racing, Jack Hughes, also came forward with allegations leveled towards the 38-year-old driver.

    Beginning in 2015, Hughes said he had agreed to rent Roger Carter his equipment for his Carter 2 Motorsports organization, the team that Hamilton ran 10 events for in 2015. After Carter’s checks to Hughes for his equipment kept bouncing, Hughes took a trip to the ARCA event at Chicagoland to collect the money from Carter and to see what was going on. Hughes stated that it was at this meeting to receive money that Carter owed Hughes, that he first came in contact with Hamilton.

    Shortly afterward when Carter was arrested in August of 2015 for identity theft, forgery of instrument, and misdemeanor larceny, Hughes was notified by Carter’s landlord in North Carolina that Carter was being evicted. Hughes traveled to Carter’s shop to pick up his equipment, including cars, hauler, semi, etc. Around this time Hughes stated that he was contacted by a former employee of Carter’s named Craig Gottfried, who said that he and Hamilton were forming a new team, before asking Hughes if they could use his equipment. According to Hughes, they offered to let him store his equipment in Hamilton’s Springfield, Tennessee race shop until things were better sorted out.

    In all, Hughes took four cars and a late model, a semi, a hauler, and some spare parts to Hamilton’s shop. Afterward, Hamilton asked Hughes about possibly partnering up to form a new team, whereas Hughes said he would think about it.

    Soon after, Hamilton signed a lease on another building in Russellville, Kentucky, and proceeded to move the team to that shop. Hamilton asked Hughes if he could use his speedway chassis to test at Daytona in January. According to Hughes, he agreed, telling Hamilton that if the car was wrecked that he (Hamilton) was responsible for repairs. After the test, Hughes was asked by Hamilton to assess a value of his equipment to show a dollar amount to what he was bringing to the table. Hamilton was asked the same in return, but according to Hughes he never received anything in return from him.

    Hughes further stated that not long afterward he received phone calls from drivers Kevin Hinckle and Kevin Rutherford, both stating their contracts were canceled for various reasons. At this time Hughes became suspicious, following a phone call from Hinckle shortly before Daytona. Hughes was shown that on the entry list, the No. 64 car (owned by Hughes) had Chuck Adcock (Hamilton’s brother-in-law) listed as the owner instead of Hughes, even though Hughes owned the points to the No. 64 and two chassis that he owned were being used in the race.

    After hearing from other drivers regarding their agreements being canceled for various reasons as well as seeing how none of the HHR entries made the race at Daytona, Hughes decided to meet with Hamilton in his race shop, face-to-face. According to Hughes, following the meeting, where the two went over the contracts that Hamilton signed with the drivers, he decided to part ways with Hamilton and take his equipment back.

    On March 30 Hughes sent a formal letter to Hamilton announcing he was ending his partnership. The letter detailed why with reasons including:

    • Retaining employees against Hughes’s wishes, including one individual who had “jumped his parole requirements and shouldn’t have been working for the team.”
    • Zero access to the financial figures including monies from sponsor Makeover Mortgage despite asking for access to the information.
    • No way of breaking even or even making money for the team after reviewing the then-current driver contracts.

    Hamilton allegedly asked Hughes if he could keep the equipment until after the Talladega event at the end of April. During that time, according to Hughes, Hamilton took Hughes’s equipment to Nashville with driver Eric Caudell, where the car received extensive damage to the rear end.

    Instead of bringing back the equipment after Talladega like he was asked, Hughes said that Hamilton didn’t even contact him until the middle of May when he texted Hughes saying that a man named “Tom,” was bringing his equipment back in his semi and hauler. According to Hughes, Hamilton would never call, just kept texting him instead with reasons for not coming ranging from a flat tire to being pulled over by the police. After hearing this last reasoning, Hughes allegedly contacted the Illinois State Police only to find out his semi was never pulled over.

    When Hughes went down to his shop to pick up his equipment himself, he found it had been sabotaged. His rig had a flat tire, the battery box was riveted shut, the batteries were dead, his generator was missing, and two of his cars were stripped clean, far from the condition they were in when he first let Bobby use them.

    On July 21 Hughes received a text from Hamilton to go pick up his stuff because he (Hamilton) was being evicted from the Russellville shop and everything needed to be removed from the property. According to Hughes, upon arriving he found his rig with three of his cars in varying forms of condition. One car was stripped entirely of its body, another was heavily damaged, and one was a speedway car. While the hauler was left unlocked the semi was locked, with the keys being nowhere in sight with Hamilton apparently away on a float trip.

    Hughes contacted the sheriff and the landlord, both of whom were able to work things out with him so he would have time to get his equipment moved. After several calls and texts, the keys reappeared in the semi, according to Hughes, and he was able to take it back. Despite getting his semi and hauler back with three of the cars as well, Hughes alleges he didn’t get everything back, as Hamilton traded in the late model for a welder, without permission from Hughes.

    However, Hamilton is adamant that there is more to the story, saying that Hughes wasn’t as involved as he claimed. SpeedwayMedia.com spoke with Hamilton on September 25 via telephone.

    Following the incident with Carter 2 Motorsports Hamilton stated that Hughes contacted him and said that he wanted to be a part of Hamilton’s race team, offering him usage of three race cars and a transporter as well. Hamilton stated that Hughes then contacted him and wanted to redo the team name to Hamilton-Hughes Racing, saying that he wanted to go “50/50” with the team.

    “When it came down to it, it was something we should have left quiet,” said Hamilton. “Just kinda bought the stuff from him or whatever, because we never got anything from him. He never contributed. All he wanted to do was come to the shop, hire or fire people, or tell us what we needed to do. He had a couple of people who he wanted to fire right off and I told him, I said ‘Hey, while you’re in Chicago, we’re here. You can’t just roll up and tell them to get the hell out of the building because you don’t like them.’”

    Hamilton stated that he had a conversation with Hughes at one point after Hughes claimed to see something on one of the employee’s Facebook profiles, where afterward Hughes wanted to remove the employee.

    “I told him, ‘Look, their Facebook is their own stuff. Unless they’re saying something that’s damaging to the team.’ He said, ‘Well, what they’re doing, what if somebody gets hurt or whatever?’ I said, ‘What do you think that all the insurance is for? These guys are having fun, they’re getting stuff done. Leave it alone.’”

    Hamilton stated that it got to a point where Hughes came down wanting to remove another employee and Hamilton allegedly told him that when he started paying his half then they would start worrying about what to do with people. Hamilton claims that at that point Hughes had yet to pay anything. They had gone to buy a motor together at one point and Hughes had split the cost for the engine with Hamilton and that was it, according to Hamilton. Hamilton claims that Hughes had only put in a total of $4,000 into the place.

    Hamilton also alleged that every time Hughes would come down to go do something, such as whenever Hamilton needed something picked up in North Carolina, Hughes would offer to do it for him. However, Hamilton stated that he would have to pay for gas, lodging, and food during Hughes’s trip.

    Hamilton further alleged that Hughes would voice concern over matters such as team staff and the shop’s electric bill despite both matters being covered, and Hamilton says that he finally told Hughes that until he did his part for the team, he should stay out of the shop. Hamilton said he told Hughes this because when Hughes arrived at the shop, people were wanting to go home, people weren’t wanting to be a part of the team, and that Hughes wasn’t liked at the shop.

    Hamilton also said that following their split, when Hughes began stating that Hamilton was keeping his equipment, Hamilton told Hughes to send receipts of everything that he owned or bought for the team so they could settle any claims disputes.

    “If Jack had all this stuff, why didn’t he do his own thing?” asked Hamilton. “He could do it. But bottom line is he didn’t have anything because he wanted to get with someone no different from Roger Carter. Carter had all this stuff. Only difference was Roger was a smart enough guy he’d let him come in and say he was part owner and this and that and try to run his shop. Prior to us, prior to Roger, he did it himself. He had a driver development program. So why did he need us? Because he didn’t have anything. He had junk that we fixed up. Ask anybody in the ARCA Series, everything was used and old so we had to fix it up.”

    “It’s simple. You want a question about Jack Hughes, I can tell you one question to ask him that will put him in the dark and you won’t hear nothing else from him. Ask him to show you documents that show how much money he spent with the race team being 50/50 and he was part owner. And that would be the end of Jack Hughes.”

    Hamilton also alleged that despite Hughes claiming that Hamilton was using the equipment beyond what was agreed, Hughes, in fact, didn’t have anything to take from the shop. Once the cars were loaded up, there was nothing else for Hughes to take besides the cars and transporter. According to Hamilton, once the cars were locked in the shop, he called Hughes and told him to come and get his stuff. However, Hamilton stated that Hughes took a while to get his stuff because he said that he needed someone to come with him and assist in picking up his property because he was driving his car.

    “It’s all one big circus, dealing with him,” said Hamilton. “It was unpredictable, just someone just wanting to get their name out there, because if he had all this stuff that we supposedly took, why did he need us?”

  • Late race chaos allows Ricciardo to win in Malaysia

    Late race chaos allows Ricciardo to win in Malaysia

    Daniel Ricciardo was content to settle for second or third, but a late race reliability issue for one of the Mercedes drivers allowed him to take the lead and score the victory.

    Sebastian Vettel suffered race-ending damage after contact with Nico Rosberg in turn 1 on the first lap of the Malaysian Grand Prix. Photo: Clive Rose/Getty Images
    Sebastian Vettel suffered race-ending damage after contact with Nico Rosberg in turn 1 on the first lap of the Malaysian Grand Prix. Photo: Clive Rose/Getty Images

    Typically, most Formula 1 races see the game-changing moments in the dash towards turn 1 on the first lap, and there was also that in this race.

    Going into turn 1, Sebastian Vettel got in too hot and made contact with Nico Rosberg. He sent Rosberg spinning while he bent the left-front wheel of his car and retired from the race. This required a virtual safety car period.

    After the race went back to green, it settled into the typical follow the leader routine, only interrupted by Romain Grosjean locking up the brakes, going off track at the final turn, retiring from the race and prompting another virtual safety car period.

    Rosberg spent the whole race working his way from the rear of the field back up to the front. During his run to a third place finish, he was handed a 10-second time penalty by the stewards for contact with Kimi Raikkonen just past halfway.

    Lewis Hamilton's championship hopes took a hit when he retired with a blown engine with just over 20 laps to go in the Malaysian Grand Prix. Photo: Charles Coates/Getty Images
    Lewis Hamilton’s championship hopes took a hit when he retired with a blown engine with just over 20 laps to go in the Malaysian Grand Prix. Photo: Charles Coates/Getty Images

    It was on lap 40, however, when it became anyone’s race because pole sitter Lewis Hamilton, who had the field in check from the start, suffered an engine failure on the pit straight and retired from the race.

    This prompted another virtual safety car period. Red Bull Racing brought both cars onto pit road to change onto soft tires. Ricciardo, who overtook his teammate for second on lap 39, assumed the lead and got first dibs on tire service.

    The race went back to green a few laps later and Ricciardo drove on to win the Malaysian Grand Prix.

    As has become his custom of late, Ricciardo celebrated with a “shoey” (chugging champagne from his shoe). Teammate Verstappen, team principle Christian Horner and even Rosberg also took a shot of champagne from Ricciardo’s shoe.

    Verstappen took the second step on the podium and Rosberg, who had a 10-second penalty, finished 13 seconds ahead of Raikkonen and retained his podium finish.

    Valtteri Bottas rounded out the top-five.

    Sergio Perez finished sixth, Fernando Alonso finished seventh, Nico Hulkenburg finished eighth, Jenson Button finished ninth and Jolyon Palmer finished in the points for the first time in his career with a 10th place finish.

    Rosberg leaves with a 23-point lead over Hamilton with five races remaining in the 2016 season.

  • Rosberg holds off hard charging Ricciardo to win in Singapore

    Rosberg holds off hard charging Ricciardo to win in Singapore

    While the stat books will show it was a clinic by Nico Rosberg, it was anything but in the closing laps of Formula 1’s night race.

    The race started just shortly after 8:00 p.m. local time (8:00 a.m. Eastern time) and the Mariana Bay Street Circuit’s record of always seeing a safety car continued with a wreck by Nico Hulkenburg right off the line. Max Verstappen spun the tires getting off the line, which caused a log jam behind. Hulkenburg made contact with Carlos Sainz, spun down the track and slammed the inside wall.

    Valtteri Bottas and Jenson Button also sustained contact during the first lap melee and both retired from the race.

    There was also a scary incident on the restart when a track marshal was still on the racing surface when the race went green. Thankfully, the marshal made it to his post unharmed.

    After that, the race settled into the typical follow the leader routine. Although there were a few interesting battles during, especially with Kimi Raikkonen and Lewis Hamilton making slight contact racing for second just past halfway.

    Beginning under 20 laps to go,  the cars pitted for the final time except for one, the race leader Rosberg. The Mercedes team opted to not pit Rosberg onto fresher tires and have him run to the finish on his current set of soft tires.

    “We couldn’t come in because I had traffic. I was very slow on that lap and he would’ve beaten me,” Rosberg said of the decision to not pit.

    What started as a gap of over 30 seconds from second-place Daniel Ricciardo to race leader Rosberg shrank as the laps winded down. With five laps to go, the gap was 5.2 seconds and Ricciardo was on pace to possibly be within DRS range on the final lap, but lapped traffic stalled him for a lap and made all the difference.

    “It was close,” Ricciardo said. “As soon as we did a pit stop, we though Nico would come in. I pushed really hard on those tires. By the end, we were a little bit dead. But at least we got close and made it exciting.”

    He got within a second of Rosberg on the final lap, but ran out of time to make a move for the win as Rosberg scored the victory in the Singapore Grand Prix.

    “It’s been an awesome weekend here in Singapore for me,” Rosberg said on the podium. “Already yesterday with the pole lap and then today [with the] great start. Had a good car in the race. Of course, Daniel tried to pull one up on me with the pit stop at the end there. We knew it was going to be tight in the end, but it worked out. So [I’m] really, really happy.”

    He also addressed being told to manage his brakes the whole race.

    “The whole car was on the edge,” he added. “It always is here at Singapore. So it’s all the more satisfying with a race like that.”

    Ricciardo settled for the second step on the podium.

    “We’ve come very close this year on numerous occasions, but I’m not gonna stand up here and be disappointed,” Ricciardo said. “I think we gave it a good shot. We tried something at the end with the strategy and we got within half a second. It was close, but we’re up here (podium) again. It feels great.”

    Hamilton rounded out the podium for the 99th time in his career. But as podium interviewer Martin Brundle put it, “It’s not the sweetest one I suspect.”

    “No, definitely not,” Hamilton said. “First of all, big congratulations to Nico. He drove fantastic all weekend and fully deserved the win. Very tough day today, but it always is in Singapore. This weekend has just been a bit of a tricky one for me, but I’m so glad I can get back on the podium and get some points for the team.”

    He also addressed his struggles early in the race.

    “It’s my brakes,” he added. “I was struggling with the brakes way overheating. So I just had to slow down and watch the other guys pull away. I was just looking at different ways to try and get them back under control. Eventually, once I did on, I think my second stop or third stop, the brakes were under control. But of course, towards the end, I still got a bit of heat in them.”

    He was also asked if he’s concerned about being eight points behind Rosberg with six races remaining.

    “Well it’s a lot different than when I was here last year, but with everything that’s gone on this year, I’m still in the fight. It’s still a long way to go and I’m gonna give it everything I’ve got,” he added.

    Raikkonen came home fourth and Sebastian Vettel, who started dead last, rounded out the top-five.

    Max Verstappen finished sixth, Fernando Alonso finished seventh, Segio Perez finished eighth, Daniil Kyat finished ninth and Kevin Magnussen rounded out the top-10.

    As for the Haas F1 Team, Esteban Gutierrez finished 11th and Romain Grosjean retired from the race before it started with brake wire issues.

    Rosberg leaves Singapore with an eight-point lead over teammate Hamilton in the drivers championship.

    Next up for Formula 1 is a trip to the capital of Malaysia for the Malaysian Grand Prix at the Sepang International Circuit.

  • Rosberg wins eventful race in Belgium

    Rosberg wins eventful race in Belgium

    Nico Rosberg out-lasted the chaos of the first 10 laps to put on a clinic and score the victory at Spa-Francorchamps.

    Going into turn 1 off the start, Kimi Raikkonen got into teammate Sebastian Vettel and sent him spinning. Raikkonen suffered damage to his front wing and was forced to pit for repairs.

    One lap later, Carlos Sainz suffered a right-rear tire blowout that destroyed the rear-end of his car and sent him spinning in the chicane. This necessitated a virtual safety car period.

    The race went back to green and was put under safety car conditions on lap 6 after Kevin Magnussen got loose cresting the top of Radillion, overcorrected, veered to the right, spun 180 degrees, hit one barrier rear-end first and then slammed into another head-on. Per Will Buxton of NBC Sports, Magnussen suffered only a cut to his left ankle.

    After three laps of riding around behind the safety car, the race was red-flagged to repair the barrier.

    The cars rolled back onto the track at 8:41 a.m. Eastern time for a lap around the track before going back to green on lap 11. At that point, the race proceeded more orderly.

    There were some run ins between Max Verstappen and the two Ferrari drivers at various points with the young Dutch driver being aggressive on the defensive.

    Aside from the first 10 laps, it was the standard Mercedes clinic performance for Rosberg who drove on to score the victory in the Belgian Grand Prix.

    “It’s been a great weekend,” Rosberg said to a chorus of boos from the fans trackside. “Very, very happy with that result, of course. I understand that some of you are very disappointed. I understand you wanted Verstappen to be up here…You’ve been amazing to see so many of you come. It’s been very impressive to see a great atmosphere.

    “Thank you to my team of course. Great car they’ve given me. Very special day.

    “Oh, and congrats to Lewis (Hamilton). From last place to third must’ve been pretty impressive.”

    It’s his 20th career win and 49th podium finish in 198 Formula 1 starts.

    Daniel Ricciardo came home second in his No. 3 Red Bull Racing car.

    Mark Webber chugs champagne from Daniel Ricciardo's shoe following Ricciardo's podium finish in the Belgian Grand Prix. Photo: Dan Istitene/Getty Images
    Mark Webber chugs champagne from Daniel Ricciardo’s shoe following Ricciardo’s podium finish in the Belgian Grand Prix. Photo: Dan Istitene/Getty Images

    As Mark Webber, who was conducting the podium interviews, proceeded to interview him, was about to repeat his actions from Germany and guzzle champagne out of his shoe again. Instead, he asked Webber to do the honors. To which he did.

    “Thanks for doing that,” Ricciardo said. “I think we just made our country even more proud.

    “It was pretty messed up at the start. There was a lot of safety car’s and then the red flag. We knew we had a bit of damage actually from the first corner, but we fixed the front wing and then got back out. I mean it was a race by myself, but obviously I enjoyed it the pace and to keep Lewis behind was a good achievement today.”

    It’s his 14th podium finish in 101 starts.

    Lewis Hamilton, who started the race from pit lane, rounded out the podium in the other Mercedes.

    “Firstly, I got to say a big thank you to this crowd. It was incredible today,” Hamilton said. “I know a lot of these people came out for Max, which is amazing and is great for the sport, but I just want to say a big thank you to everyone for supporting me today. The team did an amazing job this weekend. I changed three engines. I’m actually ahead of these guys now on engines, which is a good thing. Thanks to the team. Just a remarkable day, what beautiful weather, great crowd and a great race.”

    It’s his 97th podium finish in 180 starts.

    Nico Hulkenburg finished fourth and teammate Sergio Perez rounded out the top-five.

    Vettel recovered from his lap 1 spin to finish sixth. Fernando Alonso brought his McLaren Honda home to a seventh-place finish. Valtteri Bottas finished eighth. Kimi Raikkonen finished ninth and Felipe Massa rounded out the top-10.

    Magnussen, Marcus Ericsson, Sainz, Jenson Button and Pascal Wehrlein failed to finish the race.

    Hamilton leaves Belgium with only a nine-point lead over Rosberg in the drivers championship.

    Next up on the Formula 1 calendar is the Italian Grand Prix at Monza next Sunday.

  • Hamilton puts on clinic at the Hockenheimring

    Hamilton puts on clinic at the Hockenheimring

    While pole sitter Nico Rosberg got a horrible start, teammate Lewis Hamilton got an excellent start and put on a dominating performance as he scored the victory at the Hockenheimring.

    “Well first, let me start with a big thank you to all the fans that have come out today in Germany,” Hamilton said on the podium. “To see so many people here is very sportsman from the people here. I got a lot of flags out here. I just appreciate you all coming here.

    “What a race. What a great start. My engineers did a fantastic job. The balance was amazing and it was just about keeping it cool and looking after the engine. I’m just so happy I could up here for Mercedes-Benz, who I’ve been with since I was 13. So this is a very proud position for me to be in.”

    It’s his 49th career win in Formula 1, sixth of the season, third in the German Grand Prix, second at the Hockenheimring and 96th career podium finish.

    Daniel Ricciardo came home second in his No. 3 Red Bull Racing car.

    “It was a race of strategy at first,” Ricciardo said on the podium. “It was really close on the first corner with myself and Max (Verstappen). He had a good run on the outside. On the super soft’s (tires), I was much more comfortable and we had good pace for the last half of the race. We really capitalized on a good day. We had a good day. Obviously, we couldn’t win, but second and third isn’t too bad.”

    Daniel Ricciardo celebrates his podium finish by chugging champagne from his shoe. Photo: Mark Thompson/Getty Images
    Daniel Ricciardo celebrates his podium finish by chugging champagne from his shoe. Photo: Mark Thompson/Getty Images

    He decided to celebrate his runner-up finish by chugging champagne from his shoe during the podium celebration.

    Max Verstappen rounded out the podium in his No. 33 Red Bull.

    “We had a good start. From there on, I think the pace was pretty good. I was enjoying it. We chose to do two different strategies on the car, so I let Daniel by. From there on, we played really well as a team. To get a double-podium out of it was the main target and to score more points than Ferrari. That’s what we definitely did today.”

    It’s his fourth of the season and third in the last four races. This completed the first double-podium finish for Red Bull since the 2015 Hungarian Grand Prix.

    Rosberg brought his No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas car home to a fourth-place finish.

    “The start, yeah, we lost the race at the start definitely,” Rosberg said of his start following the race. “Just massive wheel-spin. I don’t understand it. It’s not something I foresaw.”

    Compounding his lousy start was a five-second time penalty he was handed halfway through the race after running Verstappen off the track limits at the hairpin.

    “Just a great battle and a great move I thought,” Rosberg said of the incident with Verstappen. “I was really happy about it and I didn’t expect a penalty at all. The penalty came through and that was very surprising.”

    He was asked if his move on Verstappen was “too much on the edge” like his run-in with teammate Hamilton in Austria.

    “Well, according to them (race stewards), yes. It was too much on the edge, but I don’t think so.”

    Sebastian Vettel rounded out the top-five in his No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari.

    Kimi Räikkönen finished sixth in his No. 7 Ferrari. Nico Hülkenberg’s No. 27 Sahara Force India Mercedes was the last car to finish on the lead lap in seventh. Jenson Button finished eighth in his No. 22 McLaren Honda. Valtteri Bottas finished ninth in his No. 77 Williams Martini Racing Mercedes. Sergio Pérez rounded out the top-10 in his No. 11 Force India Mercedes.

    The two Haas F1 drivers finished 11th (Esteban Gutiérrez) and 13th (Romain Grosjean).

    Felipe Massa and Felipe Nasr were the only retirements from the race.

    Hamilton leaves Germany with a 19-point lead over Rosberg in the drivers’ championship standings.

    Mercedes leaves with a 159-point lead over Red Bull in the constructors’ championship standings.

    Formula 1 goes on its annual summer holiday during the month of August. For the next two weeks, teams are forbidden from being in the shops and doing any work on the cars.

    “I won’t be going skydiving, but definitely relaxing,” Hamilton said of his plans for the summer holiday. “I’ll have my dogs with me and with family and friends. I think the whole team, everyone back at the factory and everyone here that works so hard this season, they all need a break. We all need a break. So I think I think it’s really well earned.”

    F1 returns to action on August 28th for the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps.

  • Hamilton takes points lead with win in Hungary

    Hamilton takes points lead with win in Hungary

    Lewis Hamilton is the points leader for the first time this season after a dominating victory in Hungary.

    He got the jump on pole sitter Nico Rosberg on the initial start and never looked back as the driver of the No. 44 Mercedes AMG Petronas car scored the victory in the Hungarian Grand Prix. It’s his 48th win in Formula 1 and fifth at the Hungaroring. It’s the first win for Mercedes at the track in the turbo-hybrid era (2014-present).

    Rosberg came home second in his No. 6 Mercedes. Daniel Ricciardo rounded out the podium in his No. 3 Red Bull Racing car. Sebastian Vettel came home fourth in his No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari. Max Verstappen rounded out the top-five in his No. 33 Red Bull.

    Kimi Räikkönen, after making contact with Verstappen late in the race, finished sixth in his No. 7 Ferrari. Fernando Alonso finished seventh in his No. 14 McLaren Honda. Carlos Sainz Jr. finished eighth in his No. 55 Toro-Rosso Ferrari. Valtteri Bottas finished ninth in his No. 77 William Martini Racing Mercedes. Nico Hülkenberg rounded out the top-10 in his No. 27 Sahara Force India Mercedes.

    Jenson Button was the only retirement from the race.

    Hamilton leaves Hungary with a six-point lead over Rosberg in the drivers’ standings. Mercedes leaves leading the constructors’ championship.

  • LaJoie Returns To Victory Lane

    LaJoie Returns To Victory Lane

    Picks Up First K&N Pro East Win Since 2012 At New Hampshire
    By Jason Christley, NASCAR

    LOUDON, N.H. (July 16, 2016) – Corey LaJoie returned to Victory Lane in dominating style Saturday night.

    LaJoie led the final 34 laps and drove away from the field on a green-white-checkered finish to win the United Site Services 70 at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway. It was LaJoie’s first win since 2012 when he had five victories en route to a runner-up finish in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East.

    The victory came twenty years to the week that his father, two-time NASCAR XFINITY Series champion Randy LaJoie, won at New Hampshire. A then four-year-old Corey was in Victory Lane with his dad that day.

    This time, Corey LaJoie was the elder statesman, as the 24-year-old NASCAR Next alum held off runner-up Todd Gilliland, 16, and 17-year-old third-place finisher Justin Haley.

    Kyle Benjamin and Austin Theriault finished fourth and fifth, respectively.

    LaJoie was making his first NASCAR K&N Pro Series East start of the season, driving the No. 41 CarQuest Auto Part Chevrolet for Ranier Racing with MDM. He started second alongside teammate Benjamin and took the lead from him on Lap 39.

    It was sweep redemption for LaJoie, who suffered a mechanical failure while running in the top 10 earlier in the day in the NASCAR XFINITY Series race. LaJoie also twice came close to winning the NASCAR K&N Pro Series race at New Hampshire. He was was runner-up to Kyle Larson in 2012, and wrecked late in the running of the 2010 race while battling for the lead.

    Hunter Baize was sixth Saturday night, followed by Harrison Burton, Trey Hutchens, Ryan Preece and Tyler Dippel.

    With his finish, Haley was able to keep his lead to 40 points over Benjamin with five races remaining.

    The United Site Services 70 will air on NBCSN on Thursday, July 21 at 11 p.m.

    The NASCAR K&N Pro Series will next run at Iowa Speedway in the annual combination showdown with the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West in the Casey’s General Store 150 presented by Vatterott College on Friday, July 28.

    Complete Results:

    [pdf-embedder url=”http://www.speedwaymedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/race_results_-_nhms-KN.pdf”]

  • Hamilton Out-Duels Rosberg in Austria

    Hamilton Out-Duels Rosberg in Austria

    Nico Rosberg attempted to stop Lewis Hamilton’s pass on him going into Turn 2, but the block backfired, he lost his front wing and his teammate and main rival for the championship drove on to score the victory in the Austrian Grand Prix.

    It’s the 47th win in Formula 1 for the driver of the No. 44 Mercedes AMG Petronas car, first at the Red Bull Ring, 250th by a British driver, fifth by a British driver at the circuit and 94th career podium.

    Max Verstappen, who had been leading the race near the end, earned his third career podium finish and first for Red Bull Racing at their home circuit with a runner-up finish in his No. 33 RBR car. Kimi Räikkönen rounded out the podium in his No. 7 Scuderia Ferrari. It’s his 84th career podium finish.

    Rosberg brought his wounded No. 6 Mercedes car home to a fourth-place finish. Daniel Ricciardo rounded out the top-five in his No. 3 RBR car.

    Jenson Button brought his No. 22 McLaren-Honda home to a sixth-place finish. Romain Grosjean finished seventh in his No. 8 Haas F1 Team Ferrari. Carlos Sainz Jr. finished eighth in his No. 55 Toro Rosso Ferrari. Valtteri Bottas finished ninth in his No. 77 Williams Martini-Mercedes. Pascal Wehrlein rounded out the top-10 in his No. 94 Manor Racing Mercedes.

    Esteban Gutiérrez brought the other Haas car home 11th.

    Sebastian Vettel was leading the race when he suffered a right-rear tire blowout and hit the wall on the pit straight. He finished the race unclassified.

    Rosberg leaves Austria with an 11-point lead over Hamilton in the drivers’ championship. Mercedes leaves still leading the constructors’ championship.

  • Opinion: Bowman Gray Stadium Needs To Crack Down On Out of Control Drivers

    Opinion: Bowman Gray Stadium Needs To Crack Down On Out of Control Drivers

    A couple of years ago I wrote a piece for another publication condemning Bowman Gray Stadium’s evolution from great racing venue to the world’s largest cheap-o wrestling arena. I received a lot of hateful comments and tweets for my words and although it was fun, it was ultimately disheartening to see that people defended that sort of behavior. It definitely put things in perspective regarding what “fans” considered to be “exciting” in the racing world, and it didn’t look good.

    Remarkably, after the initial buzz died down things at Bowman Gray seemed to go silent, with ridiculous on-track disputes going back to the usual “I’m-angry-so-let’s-play-bumper-tag-in-the-infield” temperament. That is until Saturday when Joe Ryan Osborne of Kannapolis was taken into custody by the Winston-Salem police after hitting another crew member with his car after doing a donut in the middle of a group of spectators and crew members.

    According to the Winston-Salem Journal, Sgt. Allison Marion of the Winston-Salem Police Department said on Sunday that Osborne was charged with two counts of assault with a deadly weapon and that he would be scheduled to appear in court next month.

    Marion, who was one of the arresting officers on the scene Saturday night also added that “He was released with a written promise to appear in court.”

    Let that sink in a bit.

    There’s a guy, in a race car which (very obviously) weighs more than a normal human being, spinning his car around while in the middle of a group of people. Think about that. Think about the absurdity in that. Think about the absolute, unabashed stupidity in that action.

    Is it because there was actually some good, drama-free racing going on earlier in the evening? Spectators who were there on Saturday were quick to point out that it was a tame evening at the track (which may or may not be saying something).

    If this was one isolated incident, then it would be easier to be angry at Osborne. But the truth is simple: Why am I not surprised, given the location of this incident? Should we even care, given that Bowman Gray has become the least dignified track in the country right now?

    I use those words deliberately. This is a racetrack that has the moniker of “Madhouse,” due to the craziness that occurs there. Let’s not forget that Madhouse was the name of the A&E program that has actually been off the air for a while now (I get the idea someone forgot to tell that to the guys at Bowman Gray) and has seemingly ruined the track and crowd there.

    To elaborate, the track now thrives not on good hard racing, but on fighting, car chases, crashes, and blood lusting fans screaming down epithets and curses giving their least-favorite driver the double bird every time they drive by. Of course, I know that’s not every fan in attendance, just the majority. But it irks me, irks the living daylights out of me, for that majority of fans to scream (well, tweet) to me that that’s the sort of thing this racing was built on. That this sort of nonsense was “old school cool” and how drivers supposedly handled their business with each other.

    Now don’t get me wrong. I love watching drivers and crews fight. I pointed that out in that piece for the other publication, but I still ended up with insults being lobbed my way calling into question my sexual preference, political leanings, country of origin, so on and so forth. So let me be clearer this time: I love watching the fights. Pause. I love it when scores aren’t settled on track or by drivers ramming each other on pit road. Pause. I love it when the two combatants exit their cars and approach each other man to (wo)man. Pause. I love when the combatants exchange fists and/or insults. Pause.

    Jeff Gordon did it right at Texas Motor Speedway in November 2014. He pulled up to Brad Keselowski’s Ford, got out, and approached him. He tried talking to him, then proceeded to stomp him a new mudhole. No risky behavior, no trashing perfectly good race cars. He got out like a man, approached his foe like a man, and handled his business like a man.

    So all this talk about drivers holding up races while chasing other drivers through the pits or drivers cutting donuts in the middle of a large group of people being “manly” and “old school cool” is a joke, a fool’s argument that should be dropped. Good hard racing isn’t cars getting destroyed by angry drivers and if a supposed race fan only goes to see these fights then they need to re-evaluate their love of the sport.

    More so, racing became great because of great racing. So damn this talk of “it gets in touch with our sport’s roots” or “our racing forefathers did the same thing.” Our racing forefathers became great because of what they did behind the wheel to win races. Bowman Gray Stadium is a short track that I would love to visit some day. It seems like it has it’s fair share of good racing every so often. But it always gets overshadowed by something such as a winner getting popped in the face in Victory Lane by a fellow competitor’s wife or an angry driver getting drug alongside another racer’s hot rod.

    The track promoters need to crack down on this. Either that or turn it into a mud bullring and host weekly demo derbies. On-track drama should be like the Sprint Cup finish at Phoenix early this year, or the last lap at Richmond in May. It shouldn’t be a high-octane episode of Jerry Springer.

    In a way, Bowman Gray had a hand in this incident by thriving on this sort thing. They have no issue stopping races just so a couple of angry drivers can goof off and ram each other under caution, and they don’t have an issue with drivers acting up and running out of control. They’re not stiff or consistent in their punishments. That should change; they should start banning drivers for life. Let the offending drivers take their no-handling attitudes elsewhere.