Monday, May 30, 2016
Truex Breaks Through With Dominant Coke 600 Victory
Martin Truex, Jr. and Furniture
Row Racing won the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway Sunday night,
leading 392 of 400 laps – a whopping 588 of 600 miles -- in NASCAR’s most
demanding event.
Truex didn’t just dominate
Sunday’s race, he administered an old-fashioned, woodshed whipping. On a
weekend punctuated by unpredictable weather and constantly changing track conditions,
Furniture Row was the weekend’s only constant. They were seventh in opening
practice, climbing to third-fast in Round Two before winning the pole with a
fast lap at 192.328 mph. They
also topped Happy Hour, before placing the field solidly in
their rear-view mirror at the drop of Sunday’s green flag, and keeping it there
all night long.
"It seemed
like he was just playing with the rest of us,” said four-time Coke 600 winner
Jimmie Johnson afterward. "I would flat-foot it around (Turns) One and Two
and have a nose on him, then he would drive right back by me into Three and Four.
It was very impressive.”
There have been other dominant
days in NASCAR’s history. The late Jim Paschal set the previous NASCAR record
for miles led in a single event; leading 502.5 miles in the Coke 600 nearly
half a century ago.Jeff Burton led green-to-checkers
– 300 consecutive laps -- at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in September of 2000,
but those performances paled in comparison to Truex’s Sunday dominance.
With apologies to Leonardo
DiCaprio, Truex was King of the World at Charlotte Motor Speedway Sunday,
ending his agonizing run of early season disappointment with one of the
greatest performances in the history of the sport.
In their inaugural season with
Toyota, Truex and crew chief Cole Pearn have had more than their share of “close,
but no cigar” moments. They led the season-opening Daytona 500 just 50 feet from
the checkered flag, before falling to Denny Hamlin by a mere .011 seconds. That
Daytona debut was precursor for the weeks to come, as Truex contended for victory
time after time, only to fall short of Victory Lane.
He led 141 laps at Texas Motor
Speedway last month, only to finish sixth when a late-race caution flag left
him alone on the race track while his closest pursuers pitted for fresh tires. He
led 172 laps at Kansas before a broken screw lodged behind his right-front
wheel on a decisive late pit stop, forcing an unscheduled return to pit road
that turned certain victory into a demoralizing, 14th-place result. He
contended again at Dover two weeks ago, leading 47 laps before being swept-up
into a late-race restart crash caused by Jimmie Johnson’s balky transmission.
"All
you can do is focus on what you're doing,” said Truex of his 2016 trials. “Focus
on how to get through those moments and figure out what it takes to win the
race.”
The
New Jersey native has experience in “getting through those moments.” His longtime
girlfriend,
Sherry Pollex, was declared cancer-free in January after waging a heroic battle
with ovarian cancer; a battle that gave the couple a renewed set of priorities
and a new appreciation for a team owner – Barney Visser -- who stresses the
value of family, above all.
"He really and truly
treats (everyone) like family," Truex said. "It's a big deal to all
these guys to get to share this with him tonight."
"It's been
frustrating," said Visser of the 2016 season. "But I've learned to
live with the frustration. Racing will do that to you."
Truex
admitted wondering what might go wrong in the final laps Sunday, imagining what
horrifying twist of fate might rob him and his team of their moment, yet again.
"There
was a few moments toward the end of the race where I was thinking, 'Please, I
don't want a caution,’ he said. “When you see the white flag, you have a finger
or two crossed on the steering wheel, trying to get to the end."
Sunday’s performance validated
Visser’s decision to align his team with Toyota in 2016. But it’s not like
major changes were needed.
Truex finished fourth in the 2016
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup; in title contention all the way to the final event
at Homestead Miami Speedway. But Visser -- a Vietnam paratrooper with the 173rd Airborne Brigade -- has always charted his own
course, both in business and in racing. Unhappy with his place in Chevrolet’s
Sprint Cup Series pecking order, the Colorado businessman announced plans to switch
manufacturers at season’s end, abandoning successful partnerships with Chevrolet
and Richard Childress Racing in favor of the uncharted waters of Toyota.
"He
took a chance,” admitted Toyota Racing Development president David Wilson
Sunday night. “Arguably, he was crazy to do that. He was running so well with
his other partnership.”
FRR set realistic goals for
the opening weeks of the campaign, with Visser cautioning it could be “late May
or early June” before his team made full use of its new affiliations. Sunday night,
he stood near the back of Charlotte’s raucous Victory Lane celebration, looking
a bit bewildered amid the confetti, booming pyrotechnics and spraying
champagne.
His team had won twice before –
a Southern 500 score with Regan Smith in 2001 and Truex’s win at Pocono Raceway
a year ago – but Visser had never been there to celebrate in person.
"It's finally time to be
here," he said. "I've experienced (winning) at home, but this is
great. I could do this every week."
"This is the most excited
I've ever seen him," laughed Truex. "I'm pretty sure he even hugged
me."
With a return to Pocono’s
Tricky Triangle just a week away, there could be more celebrations to come.
Monday, May 23, 2016
COMMENTARY: Work To Do Before 2017 All Star Race
NASCAR earned an “A” for
effort and a “D-minus” for implementation Saturday night, as the sanctioning
body’s new Sprint All Star Race format hurtled off the rails, plummeting the
event into an maelstrom of confusion and controversy that sadly overshadowed
the on-track product.
The new format – brainchild of former series champion Brad Keselowski – required drivers to make a green-flag pit stop in the opening, 50-lap segment. And by the midway point of the run, all but one competitor had done so. Joe Gibbs Racing driver Matt Kenseth remained on the track, however, trapping the balance of the field a lap down. Kenseth’s strategy unraveled when Jamie McMurray spun in Turn Two with less than four laps remaining, creating a caution period that prevented Kenseth from coming to pit road before the end of the segment. He was eventually penalized one lap by NASCAR, but race officials failed to allow the lap-down drivers to exercise the wave-around option to regain their lost lap.
Joey Logano claimed the 1ドル
million winner’s prize, outdueling sophomore phenom Kyle Larson in a late-race
battle that saw Larson carom off the Turn One wall with less than two laps
remaining. Unfortunately, the edge-of-your-seat finish did not make up for a
series of procedural foul-ups that watered-down a planned, 13-lap finale and left
drivers, teams, officials and fans alike confused over who led the race, who
trailed and even who was on the lead lap.
The new format – brainchild of former series champion Brad Keselowski – required drivers to make a green-flag pit stop in the opening, 50-lap segment. And by the midway point of the run, all but one competitor had done so. Joe Gibbs Racing driver Matt Kenseth remained on the track, however, trapping the balance of the field a lap down. Kenseth’s strategy unraveled when Jamie McMurray spun in Turn Two with less than four laps remaining, creating a caution period that prevented Kenseth from coming to pit road before the end of the segment. He was eventually penalized one lap by NASCAR, but race officials failed to allow the lap-down drivers to exercise the wave-around option to regain their lost lap.
"I didn't know what way was
up,” said Dale Earnhardt, Jr., speaking for virtually everyone. “Lap-down cars
were pitting with lead-lap cars. Wave-around cars were up front and in the
middle.”
“I don't know how in the hell
we were scored a lap down after they stopped the 20 car,” said Tony Stewart. “It's
the most screwed up All-Star Race I've ever been a part of. I'm glad it's my last
one. I'm madder than hell because I don't understand how the hell they've
officiated this, from start to finish."
NASCAR eventually got the
running order correct, and all the lapped drivers utilized subsequent wave-around
opportunities to regain their lead-lap status. But a planned, 13-lap final
segment – with the front half of the field on old tires and the back half on
new rubber – fizzled when a multi-car Segment Two crash eliminated a number of
potential contenders. In the end, only Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch began the
final segment on old rubber; far outnumbered and quickly gobbled-up by those allowed
to install four fresh Goodyear Eagles.
"Hindsight is really
easy,” said NASCAR senior vice president of competition Scott Miller afterward.
“We didn't really have a mechanism (to correct the problem) in our race
procedures.”
Unfortunately,
there were signs of trouble Saturday night, even before the green flag flew. Despite
two weeks of explanation, the vast majority of NASCAR fans remained thoroughly confused
by the new All Star format.
“Too
many rules,” they said. “Too many requirements, too many uses of the word `mandatory.’”
In
addition, the blind draw that preceded the final, 13-lap dash actually encouraged
teams to give less than their best effort. At least one Top-5 driver plummeted mysteriously
backward in the final few laps of Saturday’s second segment; clearly attempting
to fall out of the Top-11 and earn an up-front starting spot for the finale.
That’s
not what fans pay to see.
NASCAR’s Miller admitted that
the sanctioning body was unprepared for Kenseth’s strategic twist Saturday,
saying, “We ran into a situation where our race procedure didn't give us the
opportunity for a wave-around and it created a lot of confusion. It's very
unfortunate that this situation cropped up and a lot of people walked away from
here disappointed. We're disappointed, as well."
Speaking off the record, one
All Star competitor said he believes NASCAR settled on its 2016 All Star format
far too late to prepare for the event.
“They told us about it at
Talladega,” he said. “A lot of us had concerns, but the race was already two
weeks away. What were we supposed to do?”
Clearly, that late rollout left
insufficient time for NASCAR to troubleshoot the process and anticipate the myriad
ways that teams like Kenseth’s might attempt to manipulate the format to their
own benefit. There’s no fixing it now, but NASCAR has plenty of time – 51 weeks
– to get it right for next season, simplifying the process to emphasize racing,
rather than rules.
Eliminating
the word “mandatory” from the All-Star format should be Step One. Mandating pit
stops reduces the number of available options and locks teams into a single strategic
scenario. Remove the competitive handcuffs and let teams get creative again.
Step
Two is to eliminate any rule, regulation or procedure that rewards going slowly.
No more inverts, no more incentives for finishing in the back of the pack.
“Hammer
down” should be the only phrase that pays.
There
was plenty to like about Saturday night’s All Star Race. It – and the Sprint
Showdown that preceded it – featured multiple passes for the lead and more
side-by-side racing than we’ve seen in the last five All Star Races, combined.
“I don't know how you can get
much more compelling racing than what we saw today,” said Keselowski afterward.
“The intent was really
positive,” agreed Earnhardt. “The ideas were great. But the simpler we make it,
the easier it is to follow. You just have to worry about rooting for your guy”
Junior
had it right Saturday night, and NASCAR will do well to listen. When all else fails;
simplify, simplify, simplify.
Any
All Star format that cannot be explained to the masses in 20 seconds or less is
a lousy format.
Sprint
All Star Race 2017 needs to be more about racing and less about rules.
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Silas' BK Rock Holdings Assumes Ownership Of Rockingham Speedway
Rockingham
Speedway has a new owner today, but he is not exactly a stranger to the
property.
Ownership
of the historic North Carolina speed plant was assumed today by a Florida-based
holding company owned by Bill Silas, who was a former stakeholder in the track
along with partner Andy Hillenburg. Silas’ BK Rock Holdings entered a 3ドル
million bid for the property at a public auction on May 5, and that bid was
accepted this week when an additional period for “upset bids” passed with no
further interest.Journal.
North
Carolina’s Farmers and Merchants Bank initiated foreclosure proceedings on the
track in late 2014, with a judge eventually placing the property into
receivership. Silas’ 3ドル million bid will be used to pay remaining creditors,
leaving the track to move forward debt-free.
Silas
has not spoken directly of his plans for the facility, but told GodfatherMotorsports.com in mid-April that
he does not believe the track can ever again succeed as a racing-only venue.
“It can’t be just racing,” he said. “Two or three races a
year will not begin to pay the bills. The track needs other (non-racing) events
to draw people in. The place is totally underutilized.
“Rockingham will never be just a race track, ever again,” he said. “Look at
Charlotte Motor Speedway. There is something going on there just about every
day. They have 2-3 major racing events each year, but they’re putting something
in the bank just about every day.”
Silas also said he did not anticipate running the speedway himself.
Rockingham
hosted races on what is now the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series from 1965 to 2004. It
has laid silent since a Camping World Truck Series event in 2013.
Speculation Over: Harvick Signs Multi-Year Deal To Remain With Stewart Haas Racing
Photo: Sarah Stierch
Stewart-Haas
Racing put NASCAR’s latest “rumor that will not die” to bed today, announcing
that former Sprint Cup champion Kevin Harvick has signed a long-term contract
extension to remain with the organization.
Harvick’s
status has been the subject of widespread speculation since SHR announced earlier
this year that they will join the Ford camp in 2017, ending a longstanding
technological partnership with Chevrolet and Hendrick Motorsports.
Despite
repeated denials, various media outlets have continued to report – as recently
as yesterday – that Harvick would leave the team at season’s end to remain in
the Chevrolet camp. The 2014 Sprint Cup Series champion reacted angrily to
those reports, Tweeting yesterday that they originated from a “bunch of people
who make $%& up.
“Let's
play a game,” he tweeted. “What has better information about things I do? Media
sources (or) my direct social account.”
Today,
Harvick said he is “very happy to have my future secure with a team so
dedicated to winning. It was a big decision to join Stewart-Haas Racing and it
has turned out to be my best decision. I came to Stewart-Haas Racing to win
championships. We have one, but that only made us hungry for more.”
“Kevin’s
results speak for themselves,” said SHR co-owner Tony Stewart. “He brings a
presence to our team that makes everyone want to work harder. Kevin Harvick has
made Stewart-Haas Racing a better team and he will continue to be an integral
part of our future.”
Harvick
has 32 career Sprint Cup victories, nine of them in his 83-race tenure with
SHR.
Crew
chief Rodney Childers signed a multi-year contract extension last June.
Thursday, May 12, 2016
Trademark Office Ruled Earnhardt Is Not Famous Enough To Warrant Broad Protection
Dale Earnhardt, Sr.
The
widow of the late NASCAR champion Dale Earnhardt, Sr. suffered a setback
recently in her bid to prevent her stepson from using the family name in his
business.
Teresa
Earnhardt went before the United States Patent and Trademark Office to request
that Kerry Earnhardt – eldest son of her late husband and his first wife – be barred
from using the term “Earnhardt Collection” to market his line of homes and home
furnishings
The USPTO ruled
in favor of Kerry Earnhardt, saying that his use of the term “Earnhardt Collection”
did not create undue confusion or imply any association with his late father.
Teresa Earnhardt has appealed that decision, arguing that Kerry Earnhardt’s use
of the “Earnhardt Collection” name caused confusion in the marketplace and
damaged her late husband’s brand.
Teresa Earnhardt
Interestingly,
one of the key factors in the USPTO’s initial ruling was Teresa Earnhardt’s
failure to produce evidence that Dale Earnhardt was sufficiently famous to
require broad trademark protection. Especially damaging was her admission that
Earnhardt-branded merchandise sales have decreased since the seven-time Cup
Series champion’s death on the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. Teresa
Earnhardt testified that she believes her late husband deserves to be granted “famous”
status, but the USPTO disagreed, saying her claims that "DALE EARNHARDT
brand licensed merchandise totaled 50ドル million annually and reached 60ドル million
after his death” were little more
than “hearsay,” with their veracity “not corroborated or otherwise
verified by (her) with additional evidence.”
In fact, the panel cited Teresa Earnhardt’s own testimony that “since
2001 (the year of Dale Earnhardt’s death), sales of Dale Earnhardt- licensed
merchandise have declined” as evidence that the man known as The
Intimidator is not, in fact, famous enough to be granted the type of wide-ranging protection enjoyed by the estates of Elvis Presley or Marilyn Monroe.
“Because of
the extreme deference that we accord a famous mark in terms of the wide
latitude of legal protection it receives, and the dominant role fame plays in
the likelihood of confusion analysis, it is the duty of the party asserting
that its mark is famous to clearly prove it,” wrote the panel in its decision. “In this case, while (Teresa
Earnhardt) has established the renown of Dale Earnhardt, the former race car
driver, there is no evidence that (she) has established the fame of the mark
DALE EARNHARDT with respect to any goods. Moreover, even if we were to find
that the mark DALE EARNHARDT is famous, such finding does not extend to (her)
rights in the name EARNHARDT, by itself.
“Simply put,” wrote the panel, “Teresa Earnhardt) has not demonstrated fame, for
purposes of likelihood of confusion, for either of its DALE EARNHARDT and
EARNHARDT marks.”
Teresa
Earnhardt’s appeal is scheduled to be heard by a three-member board. Experts in
copyright and trademark law say that such boards rarely overturn the original
decision of the UPSTO.
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
Stevens Suspended, Fined For Missing Lug Nuts
It was only a matter of time.
Just a few days after NASCAR re-implemented rules requiring teams to install all five lug nuts on each wheel, the sanctioning body handed down a P3 penalty to crew chief Adam Stevens, after discovering missing lug nuts on the winning No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driven by Kyle Busch following last Saturday night’s GoBowling 400 at Kansas Speedway.
Stevens was fined 20,000,ドル suspended from all NASCAR Series Championship point-counting events through May 18 and put on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31 for violating sections 12:1 (actions detrimental to stock car racing), 10.11.3 (pit road equipment) and 12.5.3.4.1 (which outlines the P3-level penalty) of the NASCAR Rule Book. In addition to Stevens, front tire changer Josh Leslie was suspended through May 18 and put on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31.
Joe Gibbs Racing has confirmed that it will not appeal the penalty. In a written statement, the team said it utilized “unaltered, stock lug nuts during Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway and each wheel had all five lug nuts attached to the wheel at the conclusion of the race. The team does acknowledge that not all lug nuts were tightened to the wheel.”
NASCAR also issued written warnings to the No. 43 and No. 78 teams Sprint Cup Series teams for failing pre-qualifying laser inspection twice, and the No. 7, 43, 47 and 48 teams for failing pre-qualifying template inspection twice.
Just a few days after NASCAR re-implemented rules requiring teams to install all five lug nuts on each wheel, the sanctioning body handed down a P3 penalty to crew chief Adam Stevens, after discovering missing lug nuts on the winning No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driven by Kyle Busch following last Saturday night’s GoBowling 400 at Kansas Speedway.
Stevens was fined 20,000,ドル suspended from all NASCAR Series Championship point-counting events through May 18 and put on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31 for violating sections 12:1 (actions detrimental to stock car racing), 10.11.3 (pit road equipment) and 12.5.3.4.1 (which outlines the P3-level penalty) of the NASCAR Rule Book. In addition to Stevens, front tire changer Josh Leslie was suspended through May 18 and put on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31.
Joe Gibbs Racing has confirmed that it will not appeal the penalty. In a written statement, the team said it utilized “unaltered, stock lug nuts during Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway and each wheel had all five lug nuts attached to the wheel at the conclusion of the race. The team does acknowledge that not all lug nuts were tightened to the wheel.”
NASCAR also issued written warnings to the No. 43 and No. 78 teams Sprint Cup Series teams for failing pre-qualifying laser inspection twice, and the No. 7, 43, 47 and 48 teams for failing pre-qualifying template inspection twice.
RCR Unveils Rudd-Themed Darlington Throwback Paint Schemes
In celebration of Darlington Raceway's throwback race weekend,
Richard Childress Racing unveiled paint schemes today for its No. 3 and 31
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams, to be raced in the Bojangles' Southern 500 on
Sunday, September 4.
Both paint schemes will pay tribute to RCR's first win as an
organization, which came on June 5, 1983 at Riverside International Raceway.
The cars will feature designs and stylized numbers resembling the No. 3
Piedmont Airlines Chevrolet that Ricky Rudd drove to Victory Lane at the
now-defunct race track.
The No. 3 Chevrolet SS, driven by Austin Dillon, will feature the
same red, white and blue color scheme of Rudd's historic race car. American
Ethanol will serve as primary sponsor.
The No. 31 Chevrolet SS, driven by Ryan Newman, will feature
throwback logos from primary sponsor Caterpillar and a similar stylized number
to Rudd's victorious race car.
Other RCR special paint schemes for the Darlington Raceway
throwback weekend including the No. 27 Menards Chevrolet SS, will be unveiled
at a later date.
"RCR appreciates the support from our loyal partners,
American Ethanol and Caterpillar, to celebrate this throwback race weekend and
our first win as an organization," RCR President Torrey Galida said.
"Our partners have been the lifeblood of RCR and the key to success over
the past 47 years. This should be another fun race weekend with a mix of old
school and new school."
Rudd, who retired from racing in 2007, not only scored RCR's first
victory that afternoon at the 2.62-mile road course, but also his first-career
win. He held off the likes of Bill Elliott, Harry Gant, Kyle Petty, Darrell
Waltrip and future RCR driver Dale Earnhardt.
"Ricky's win in 1983 was a special one because it catapulted
RCR into one of the elite performance organizations in NASCAR," RCR
Chairman & CEO Richard Childress said. "Every time I think back to
that afternoon in California, I think about how far we've come as a company.
This will be a great opportunity to pay tribute to our past."
Darlington Raceway's award-winning throwback race weekend
celebrates the history and heritage at one of NASCAR's most historic race
tracks. The campaign focuses on a specific era, with this year's event being
the 1980s, historic moments and drivers that made The Lady in Black one of
NASCAR's crowned jewels. The Bojangles' Southern 500 will take place Labor Day
weekend, Sunday, Sept. 4, 2016 in Darlington, South Carolina.
"We appreciate Richard Childress Racing's support of our throwback
weekend at Darlington Raceway," Darlington Raceway President Chip Wile
said. "It's exciting to see how teams such as RCR are honoring their
storied history with special paint schemes for our Labor Day weekend event. We
can't thank them enough for their participation in our historic celebration of
the sport."
Almirola To Run Waffle House Colors At Bristol
Smithfield and Waffle House will team up with Richard Petty
Motorsports for the Bristol Night Race on August 20, when Aric Almirola drives
the No. 43 Smithfield/Waffle House Ford in one of the most popular races in the
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season.
The race will mark the third time that Smithfield, Waffle House
and RPM have teamed up on the race track. During that three-year partnership,
the companies created Waffle House Race for Rewards, an app that allows patrons
to earn points by eating at Waffle House and redeem those points for Waffle
House merchandise and Smithfield racing gear.
"Smithfield is a valued partner of Waffle House, and we're
thrilled to share in their racing program with Richard Petty Motorsports and Aric
Almirola," said Walt Ehmer, CEO, Waffle House. "This program allows
us to reward our customers with unique products and opportunities. Racing,
especially in the Bristol Night Race, brings a great platform to give back to
our customers and earn some new ones too."
RPM is in its fifth year of partnership with Smithfield Foods and
the third with Waffle House. Last season, Almirola scored a fourth-place finish
at Richmond International Raceway in the No. 43 Smithfield/Waffle House Ford.
"We're thrilled to have Waffle House joining Smithfield on
our No. 43 Ford," said "The King" Richard Petty. "The
patrons at Waffle House are overwhelmingly NASCAR fans. It's exciting to pair
three popular brands together to give back to race fans and Waffle House
patrons."
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
Sauter Apologizes For Post-Race Comments
Johnny Sauter
Ben Rhodes
is off the Bozo List.
After
crashing with Rhodes on the final lap of Friday night’s Camping World Truck
Series race at Kansas Speedway, leader Johnny Sauter minced no words in
expressing his unhappiness. He accused the 18-year old of being “brain dead or
can’t see,” after the pair spun in the final turn, handing the race to rookie
William Byron.
Speaking
on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio today, Sauter apologized for his remarks, saying
Rhodes’ actions were not as underhanded as he had first believed.
“Up
until I had done that interview, I hadn’t seen any replays,’’ said Sauter, who
limped his battered machine beneath the checkered flag to claim a 16th-place
finish. “I was under the assumption that he just drove straight into the back
of me, and that wasn’t necessarily the case. I called Ben and told him that all
the things that I said, I take back.
“I
hate that I said that.’’
Ben Rhodes
The
Wisconsin native said that after viewing videotape of the final lap, his
opinion of what happened has changed.
“I
came off Turn 2 and I had a pretty good lead,” he said. “I went down the
backstretch and I swerved… to try to break the draft as much as you possibly
can. When I did that, the floats in the carburetor (stuck) or something
happened. Actually, the motor started missing a little bit -- a couple of times
-- going down the backstretch. That’s ultimately what enabled him to get close
to me.
“I
put us both in precarious positions,” he admitted. “My motor was missing. I
must have starved it for fuel and it enabled him to close on me. I saw the
position it put him in. I saw how fast he had closed on me. He probably didn’t
expect it, nor did I. It was just a racing incident. It’s unfortunate.”
Rhodes
initially accepted blame for accident post-race, calling his contact with Sauter, "a rookie mistake.”
Monday, May 09, 2016
Drew Herring To Drive For JGL Racing At Dover
JGL Racing has added Drew
Herring to the organizations "Young Guns" program. The Benson,
North Carolina native will drive the team’s No. 24 Toyota at the upcoming Ollie's
Bargain Outlet 200 NASCAR XFINITY Series event at Dover International Speedway on
Saturday, May 14.
The race will be Herring's
16th career start in the XFINITY Series.
"I am really thankful for
the opportunity to get behind the wheel of the No. 24 Toyota for JGL
Racing," said Herring. "I look forward to working with everyone
in Dover for the first time. Dover is a tough track and things happen
fast there. It will be important for us to work well together from the
very first lap so we get to know each other well and build a strong
relationship. I have had the pleasure of being around the team in the
shop and I know they are a hard working group of guys. I am confident we
will all work together well and get better with every lap we make in practice,
qualifying and the race."
In his previous 15 NASCAR
XFINITY Series starts, Herring has earned two Pole Awards, five Top-10 and one
Top-5 finish. He also has one career start in the NASCAR Camping World
Truck Series to his credit, which netted him another Top 10 finish.
"We are excited to add
Drew to the JGL Racing organization and The Young Guns program," added
James Whitener, owner of JGL Racing. "While he has limited starts in
the Series, he has countless hours of seat time as a test driver. We feel
that he is a perfect fit for the Young Guns program and we look forward to
having him behind the wheel of our No. 24 Toyota in Dover."
Herring joins Matt Tifft,
Corey Lajoie and Brandon McReynolds as participants in the JGL Racing Young
Guns program.
Saturday, May 07, 2016
Former Truck Series Owner Steve Turner Dies
Former NASCAR Camping World
Truck Series championship team owner Steve Turner passed away
Thursday evening in his native Texas, following a brief illness.
A successful owner on both
dirt and asphalt, Turner parlayed a highly successful Texas oil business into a winning NASCAR career.
He purchased the former Braun Racing NASCAR Xfinity Series operation in 2009, renaming it Turner Motorsports. He captured the Truck Series title in 2012 with son-in-law James Buescher at the controls, before joining forces with Harry Scott, Jr. and renaming the team Turner-Scott Motorsports the following season.
He purchased the former Braun Racing NASCAR Xfinity Series operation in 2009, renaming it Turner Motorsports. He captured the Truck Series title in 2012 with son-in-law James Buescher at the controls, before joining forces with Harry Scott, Jr. and renaming the team Turner-Scott Motorsports the following season.
Turner left the sport in 2014,
and had most recently resided in Houston.
Friday, May 06, 2016
An Open Letter To Teresa Earnhardt
Dear
Mrs. Earnhardt,
Many of us
were disappointed to read today that you have elected to appeal a
recent U.S. Patent and Trademark Office decision upholding the right of Kerry
Earnhardt – eldest son of your late husband, Dale Earnhardt, Sr. – to market
homes and home furnishings under the name "The Earnhardt Collection.”
We
haven’t heard much from you since the days immediately following the tragic loss
of your husband on the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500; days where you
repeatedly stated how important the support and well-wishes of Dale’s fans had
been in helping you and your family cope with your grief.
We
grieved along with you in those dark days, mourning the loss of someone we
idolized and worshipped, both for his talent behind the wheel and for his ability
to remain “one of us.” We still grieve his loss, but we understand that your
loss far surpassed ours. We lost our hero that day, you lost your husband.
None
of us would presume to compare the two.
We
understand your decision to withdraw from the NASCAR community. We understand
the conflicting emotions you must certainly feel for a sport that made
your husband wealthy and world famous, only to take his life. We understand
your reticence to return to the site of Dale’s death, and we understand your inability
to maintain a daily presence in sport that took him from you. Racing is clearly
no longer part of your life, and we get that.
More
difficult to understand, however, is your decision to deny the public -- Dale’s
fans – virtually every opportunity to relive and rekindle the memory of his illustrious
career. We’ve heard stories of you declining to loan race cars and memorabilia to
organizations like the NASCAR Hall Of Fame, who desire only to preserve his
memory and introduce the man called “The Intimidator” to new generations of
race fans.
Even
worse, we hear of the distance – both physical and emotional – that exists
between you and Dale’s three eldest children; Kerry, Kelley and Dale, Jr.;
as well as the continuing battles over his
legacy, his estate and the race team that once bore his name.
It’s
as if you believe that locking Dale’s memory behind closed doors – keeping it
exclusively to yourself at the exclusion of all others – somehow endears him to us, even more.
Nothing
could be further than the truth.
“Cornering
the market” by micromanaging his memory and challenging his children’s right to their own last name may keep the cash rolling in, but it diminishes our memory of your husband.
It also casts you – his widow and legal representative – in a very poor light.
The bitterness you continue to display toward Dale’s children is impossible to
defend. More important, it is not what he would have wanted.
If
you truly loved Dale – and we know you did – you should also respect
his children. Short of that, the least you can do is avoid being a negative influence
in their lives. Kerry, Kelley and Dale, Jr. don’t need your help. They're all doing
quite nicely on their own, with no apparent assistance from you.
Just
don’t spin them out. Let them run their race, while you run yours.
Live
and let live.
We
assure you, Mrs. Earnhardt, that we are not stupid. We know the difference
between the great Dale Earnhardt and others with the same last name. We are
capable of differentiating between your late husband and his surviving children,
all of whom have made successful names for themselves, both in and out of
racing. And no matter what your high-priced attorneys may claim, we understand
that Kerry and Rene Earnhardt’s latest business venture has nothing to do with a
man who passed away 15 years ago.
We
do not see today’s headlines as an attempt on your part to protect The Intimidator’s
legacy. We see them as a mean-spirited effort to prevent Dale’s children
from using their own name; a name they were born with, and which you merely inherited
by marriage. It is their birthright, and you are wrong to deny them
that right, based on nothing more than capitalistic greed.
You
are an Earnhardt, and always will be. But you are not the only Earnhardt. It is irresponsible and self-serving to insert
Dale’s name into a senseless dispute where there are no winners, only losers.
You
didn’t ask for our advice, but we will offer it, nonetheless. Perhaps it’s time
for you to invest as much time and energy to supporting your late husband’s
children – all of them – as you do to
safeguarding his money. Perhaps then, we will once again be free to remember him (and
you) as fondly as you both deserve.
Rest
assured that we will never forget Dale, no matter how closely you guard every
trophy and trinket.
Thursday, May 05, 2016
Bowyer To Drive For JR Motorsports At Chicagoland
Clint Bowyer will return to
NASCAR Xfinity Series competition with JR Motorsports at Chicagoland Speedway
on Sept. 17, driving JRM’s No. 88 Chevrolet with sponsorship from Morton
Buildings.
Based in nearby Morton,
Ill., Morton Buildings specializes in constructing farm shops, equestrian
facilities, hobby buildings, garages, churches, municipal buildings, airplane
hangars, custom homes, commercial structures and general storage buildings. The
company is now in its third year of partnership with JRM.
“When Dale Jr. offers to
let you drive his car, there’s only one answer and that’s ‘yes’,” said Bowyer.
“JR Motorsports is certainly on a roll right now and I know those guys are
working hard to make the boss happy by building fast cars. It’s going to
be a blast wheeling that No. 88 Morton Buildings Chevrolet around Chicagoland
in the Xfinity race. It’s going to be even better when we can celebrate with
the boss in Victory Lane.”
A native of Emporia, Kan.,
Bowyer earned a NXS championship in 2008 and tallied a total of eight career
victories in the series. His most recent NXS start came in 2012 at Daytona
International Speedway.
“We’re excited to be
partnering with JR Motorsports and Clint Bowyer for the upcoming Xfinity Series
race at Chicagoland Speedway,” said Morton Buildings Marketing Manager Brian
Haraf. “We’re thrilled to be a part of the team and support a member of
our extensive family of building owners.”
Bowyer,
who currently races full-time for HScott Motorsports in the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series, is named as the ninth driver to pilot JRM’s No. 88 “All-Star” Chevrolet
in 2016. He joins Josh Berry, Alex Bowman, Cole Custer, Dale Earnhardt
Jr., Chase Elliott, Kenny Habul, Kevin Harvick and Regan Smith. In nine
starts this season, the team holds two wins (Daytona and Richmond), five
top-five and eight top-10 finishes.
NASCAR Rolls Out 2017 National Series Schedules
NASCAR
announced the 2017 schedules for its three national series today, giving fans
and stakeholders a significant head start in planning for next season.
The
sanctioning body finalized the 2017 schedules months ahead of previous years,
thanks to a new, five-year sanctioning agreement between NASCAR and its tracks.
One notable change to the 2017 NASCAR Cup Series schedule is a date swap
between Talladega Superspeedway and Kansas Speedway; with Talladega becoming the
second race in the Round of 12 (Oct. 15) and Kansas inheriting third and final
race in that round on Oct. 22.
“Announcing
the 2017 national series schedules this early in the season is another example
of the collaborative spirit across the NASCAR industry,” said Steve O’Donnell,
NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer. “It is an
exciting time in NASCAR, with some of the most intriguing racing we’ve seen in
years. With the 2017 schedule solidified, the industry can now concentrate on
the remainder of this season, while planning for the future much earlier than
in previous years.”
Texas
Motor Speedway’s spring Cup race shifts to Sunday, April 9, while Dover
International Speedway’s spring date moves to June 4; onea week after the
Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Michigan International Speedway’s
second race will return to its traditional early August slot, on Aug. 13.
The
NASCAR Cup Series 2017 schedule opens with the Daytona 500 at Daytona
International Speedway on Sunday, Feb. 26 and culminates with the Championship
Race at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 19.
The
NASCAR XFINITY Series will kick off at Daytona on Feb. 25, and crown its
champion at Homestead on Saturday, Nov. 18. Its schedule features four
standalone events – Iowa Speedway (July 29), Mid-Ohio (Aug. 12), Road America
(Aug. 26) and Kentucky Speedway, the first event in the NASCAR XFINITY Series
Chase (Sept. 23). For the second consecutive season, Iowa will host a NASCAR
XFINITY Series-NASCAR Camping World Truck Series companion weekend on June
23-24.
The
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series opens its season at Daytona on Feb. 24, and
culminates at Homestead on Nov. 17. Five standalone races are included among
the 2017 lineup: Texas Motor Speedway (June 9), Gateway Motorsports Park (June
17), Eldora Speedway (July 19), Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (Aug. 27) and Las
Vegas Motor Speedway (Sept. 30). The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Chase
once again begins at New Hampshire Motor Speedway (Sept. 23).
2017
NASCAR CUP SERIES SCHEDULE
Date
Site
2/18
Daytona
International Speedway (Unlimited)
2/19
Daytona
International Speedway (Daytona 500 Qualifying)
2/23
Daytona
International Speedway (Duel)
2/26
Daytona
500
3/5
Atlanta
Motor Speedway
3/12
Las
Vegas Motor Speedway
3/19
Phoenix
International Raceway
3/26
Auto
Club Speedway
4/2
Martinsville
Speedway
4/9
Texas
Motor Speedway
4/23
Bristol
Motor Speedway
4/30
Richmond
International Raceway
5/7
Talladega
Superspeedway
5/13
Kansas
Speedway
5/20
Charlotte
Motor Speedway (NASCAR All-Star Race)
5/28
Charlotte
Motor Speedway
6/4
Dover
International Speedway
6/11
Pocono
Raceway
6/18
Michigan
International Speedway
6/25
Sonoma
Raceway
7/1
Daytona
International Speedway
7/8
Kentucky
Speedway
7/16
New
Hampshire Motor Speedway
7/23
Indianapolis
Motor Speedway
7/30
Pocono
Raceway
8/6
Watkins
Glen International
8/13
Michigan
International Speedway
8/19
Bristol
Motor Speedway
9/3
Darlington
Raceway
9/9
Richmond
International Raceway
9/17
Chicagoland
Speedway
9/24
New
Hampshire Motor Speedway
10/1
Dover
International Speedway
10/7
Charlotte
Motor Speedway
10/15
Talladega
Superspeedway
10/22
Kansas
Speedway
10/29
Martinsville
Speedway
11/5
Texas
Motor Speedway
11/12
Phoenix
International Raceway
11/19
Homestead-Miami
Speedway
2017 NASCAR
XFINITY SERIES SCHEDULE
Date
Site
2/25
Daytona
International Speedway
3/4
Atlanta
Motor Speedway
3/11
Las
Vegas Motor Speedway
3/18
Phoenix
International Raceway
3/25
Auto
Club Speedway
4/8
Texas
Motor Speedway
4/22
Bristol
Motor Speedway
4/29
Richmond
International Raceway
5/6
Talladega
Superspeedway
5/27
Charlotte
Motor Speedway
6/3
Dover
International Speedway
6/10
Pocono
Raceway
6/17
Michigan
International Speedway
6/24
Iowa
Speedway
6/30
Daytona
International Speedway
7/7
Kentucky
Speedway
7/15
New
Hampshire Motor Speedway
7/22
Indianapolis
Motor Speedway
7/29
Iowa
Speedway
8/5
Watkins
Glen International
8/12
Mid-Ohio
Sports Car Course
8/18
Bristol
Motor Speedway
8/26
Road
America
9/2
Darlington
Raceway
9/8
Richmond
International Raceway
9/16
Chicagoland
Speedway
9/23
Kentucky
Speedway
9/30
Dover
International Speedway
10/6
Charlotte
Motor Speedway
10/21
Kansas
Speedway
11/4
Texas
Motor Speedway
11/11
Phoenix
International Raceway
11/18
Homestead-Miami
Speedway
2017
NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES SCHEDULE
Date
Site
2/24
Daytona
International Speedway
3/4
Atlanta
Motor Speedway
4/1
Martinsville
Speedway
5/12
Kansas
Speedway
5/19
Charlotte
Motor Speedway
6/2
Dover
International Speedway
6/9
Texas
Motor Speedway
6/17
Gateway
Motorsports Park
6/23
Iowa
Speedway
7/6
Kentucky
Speedway
7/19
Eldora
Speedway
7/29
Pocono
Raceway
8/12
Michigan
International Speedway
8/16
Bristol
Motor Speedway
8/27
Canadian
Tire Motorsport Park
9/15
Chicagoland
Speedway
9/23
New
Hampshire Motor Speedway
9/30
Las
Vegas Motor Speedway
10/14
Talladega
Superspeedway
10/28
Martinsville
Speedway
11/3
Texas
Motor Speedway
11/10
Phoenix
International Raceway
11/17
Homestead-Miami
Speedway
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