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Newman – Testing SpeedwayMedia.com

Tag: Newman

  • Bristol Rewind: All the Action Plus Drama at Stewart-Haas

    Bristol Rewind: All the Action Plus Drama at Stewart-Haas

    The smoke cleared after the weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway, and there were surprises upon surprises. After an exciting NASCAR Camping World truck race in which Kyle Busch just edged out Timothy Peters on the last lap, it was followed up with Busch dominating the Nationwide Series race. What happened on Sunday was different, if not pleasing.

    It all started on Thursday for me. Arriving in Bristol on Thursday, the first order of business was setting up the camping trailer. Unfortunately, a freak accident happened and I somehow broke my ankle. I cannot tell you what happened. It happened too fast. My weekend was a long saga of pain. I made it to the track, but not without making things worse. I didn’t have credentials for this race, something I plan to have in the future, but I still could watch on television. I was within sight of the track even if I couldn’t get inside. It was a very frustrating weekend.

    Carl Edwards had the car to beat and he demonstrated it all night. A good crowd, not a sellout as in years past, but good, saw Edwards the class of the field until his engine failure. That left the race to Matt Kenseth and Kasey Kahne to decide. What resulted was a colossal battle. In former days, before the track was changed to progressive banking several years ago, it would have meant a tap to the rear of the car, in this case Kenseth’s, and a drive by. It didn’t happen on this night. Kenseth and Kahne battled side by side for much of the last 50 laps, but little touching took place. Kenseth prevailed and rolled to his fifth win of the year and a probable first seed in the final playoffs that we have come to call The Chase.

    It was a great show, but what was going behind the scene was the biggest story. Apparently Gene Haas, co-owner with Tony Stewart of Stewart-Haas Racing had made a decision. Earlier in July, SHR made a business decision to let Ryan Newman go because they couldn’t afford to run a four-car team because of sponsorship. Enter Haas. With Stewart on the shelf with the broken bones from a extra-curricular race, Haas made the decision to hire Kurt Busch for the fourth team that was impossible on a month before. One has to consider that either this didn’t set well with Stewart or that he was in on it from the beginning.

    Regardless of what happens next (Stewart didn’t attend the news conference today to announce Busch’s hiring due to a doctor appointment), it appears that someone has a lot of explaining to do, especially to Ryan Newman. Stay tuned.

    In the meantime, what will happen to Ryan Newman? The consensus is that he will end up at either Richard Childress Racing or Furniture Row, just vacated by Kevin Harvick who also left for SHR or Furniture Row to replace Busch. Furniture Row has a news conference on Friday to announce their driver, so that seems to be out. One also has to consider that Jack Roush has expressed interest in Newman. It’s all a little foggy now.

    Just like it has been for several years, all this overshadowed the racing at Bristol. It was a good weekend. The racing was good and the crowd came back somewhat. The bigger story might be what happens next.

  • The Beauty of Silly Season

    The Beauty of Silly Season

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”208″][/media-credit]It’s finally Silly Season time and moves are happening fast. The season started prematurely with A.J. Allmendinger’s failed drug test and Matt Kenseth’s shocking announcement that he was leaving Roush Fenway, but this is the time of year when Silly Season starts in earnest and started it has.

    Joe Gibbs Racing announced what we’ve known for ages, Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 20 Home Depot/Family Dollar Toyota next season. And Penske Racing announced that Joey Logano will drive Allmendinger’s former ride, the No.22 Shell Ford in 2013, but it doesn’t stop there.

    This weekend we learned that Tony Stewart has lost one of his primary sponsorships. Office Depot is leaving. This is problematic because Stewart-Haas racing lost the U.S. Army as a sponsor on its No. 39 car that Ryan Newman drives. That leaves only the Go Daddy car, the No. 10 Chevrolet that Danica Patrick will drive in 2013, as the only fully sponsored car in the SHR stable. Efforts have been made to obtain sponsorship for the No. 39 car apparently without success. That puts Ryan Newman on the market because he is a free agent next year. But there’s more.

    Elliott Sadler, the current points leader in the Nationwide Series, announced he was leaving Richard Childress Racing’s Nationwide team at the end of the season. The reasons are somewhat foggy and contradictory. Sadler says RCR offered him nothing. Richard Childress has expressed disbelief that Sadler was leaving after having his “best season.” We may have to wait awhile to get the full story on this one. Rumor has Sadler going to Joe Gibbs Racing and taking his sponsor, One Main, with him. Whether that means Gibbs has his sponsor for a fourth Sprint Cup team is not determined yet.

    That’s the beauty of the Silly Season. It’s drivers and teams looking for that extra edge. Kenseth looking for some new scenery (he’s been with Roush since day one), Logano looking for an organization that has the ability to win and one that will respect his talents, and Sadler, at age 37, looking for a chance to get to the big show again. It puts Ryan Newman, who strangely finds himself without sponsorship, possibly on the market. It leaves the very successful RCR Nationwide program without a lead driver. And it gives something for fans to debate.

  • Fans Have Spoken – Excitement is the Key

    Fans Have Spoken – Excitement is the Key

    It has been a solid year for discussion of NASCAR. The season started with the Daytona 500 being delayed by rain. Then, once the green flag fell, all the talk was about Juan Pablo Montoya having an equipment failure, turning right into a jet dryer and the resulting fireball. Of course Matt Kenseth won the race, but true to his personality, no one remembers it. Then after a couple of races, the two top series in NASCAR headed to Bristol Motor Speedway to what appeared to be an empty track (it’s amazing what a large venue looks like half full).

    After the rain-shortened race in California, the boys headed to Martinsville. After the first half (and most of the second half) of the race made sleeping medications unneeded, an interesting thing happened. Jeff Gordon dominated that race, but Jimmie Johnson ran him down and took the lead. Gordon wasn’t done, however. Working hard, Gordon and Johnson battled with Gordon taking the lead. Then it happened. David Reutimann, trying to stay in the coveted top 35 in points, which insures a start in the next race, had problems. Running around the track at what many called 20 mph, Reutimann had problems. He couldn’t turn left due to tie rod problems and then the engine gave up the ghost. He stalled on the front stretch. Caution came out, a green-white-checker was in the cards, and the field was bunched up. On the first attempt at the infamous two lap shootout, Clint Bowyer tried to pass both Gordon and Johnson in the first and second turns (the story is fuzzy, but Bowyer says he got pushed by Ryan Newman and had to make the make the attempt to pass while others say that Johnson and Gordon, who did not pit, had old tires and couldn’t get a fast start) and what Gaston Gazette sportswriter Monte Dutton called “synchronized spinning” resulted. Gordon and Johnson finished lower than they deserved and Newman won after a fierce battle with A.J. Allmendinger (where did he come from?).

    The verdict was in. I penned a commentary last year saying Martinsville was the new Bristol and that prediction came true. While Bristol had good racing and lots of two-groove passing, the excitement factor was missing. Even though the same factor was missing for 250 laps at Martinsville, the end made everyone leave talking about the race and how great it was. Unfortunately, Reutimann immediately became the villain—the guy who changed the face of the race—it was obvious that Gordon and Johnson had the best cars—and the phone lines lit up on the NASCAR programs on SiriusXM radio. Never has a nice guy been so criticized and discussed. No one wanted to discuss California or Phoenix.

    What has been missing the last few years is the excitement factor. When the Bristol track was reconfigured, and when the Chase made drivers so concerned about point totals in their quest for a place in the Chase, we lost that urgency to actually take chances to win a race. Add to that a driver who just wanted to keep his team in the position to make the next race, and the excitement factor raised by 1,000 per cent. People responded.

    Those of us that consider us purists and like watching racing are in the minority. Since football has become the sport of choice in these United States, it should be obvious that good old fashioned racing is what has been missing from today’s NASCAR. That’s why I applaud Bruton Smith. He is willing, apparently, even though promised announcements have not been made, to change his track to add that excitement to Bristol. Smith heard the fans and realized that without the fans, there would be no races or NASCAR. That was refreshing. And as many media types or drivers cry about the changes that may come to Bristol, we always have Martinsville. It has pretty much been like it is for over 60 years and it works. That is what racing was like for six decades and the attempt to sterilize the sport should by now be clear to the powers that be is futile. Folks want excitement. And that’s all that matters.