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AT&T sues NASCAR over paintjob

via Engadget

Even diehard fans of gas guzzling motorcars making entirely too many left turns in succession know that its about more than just the racing, and AT&T is apparently fairly hot and bothered that its mega marketing bucks aren’t resulting in a new paint job. The #31 car, which owned by Richard Childress Racing and driven by Jeff Burton, has been sponsored by Cingular for about six years, but as we all know, AT&T (and its blue sphere) are calling the shots now. Unfortunately, Nextel (you know, the folks who sponsor NASCAR) has been less than snappy in addressing the change in logos, and now AT&T is dropping a lawsuit on NASCAR in an attempt to hasten the change. Typically, we would seriously question the sanity of a driver refusing to abide by the wishes of its primary source of funding, but when you’re cruising in second place (and a good bit of winnings), you roll however you please.

Here’s the release announcing the lawsuit

Busch wins first COT race at Bristol

As Jeff Burton considered how to beat Kyle Busch in the closing laps at Bristol Motor Speedway, he couldn’t shake the lessons his mother taught him as a child.

“My mother always told me to do onto other people the way you want them to do you,” Burton remembered. “That’s the only thing I know to do. I’ve always tried to let the guy I am racing with set the rules. … Kyle drives hard. He drives really hard. But he’s always raced me with respect.”

And with that, Burton refused to bump Busch out of the way Sunday, instead pulling alongside of him before Busch beat him in a drag race to the finish line to win the first Car of Tomorrow race.

The two have battled in the Busch Series this season, and had a stirring door-to-door duel in Las Vegas two weeks ago that Burton won as Busch spun backward across the finish line.

Burton credited Busch with racing clean that day, and both drivers had it fresh in their memories on the final three laps Sunday.

“Jeff Burton easily could have dumped me there in [Turns] 3 and 4, but I think our Vegas finish helped me out a little bit with that,” Busch said. “I think I had some brownie points to use up.”

Busch took the lead with 16 laps to go on a smooth pass around Denny Hamlin in thick traffic and stayed there through a pair of cautions. He had driven away from the competition when the 15th and final caution set up a three-lap shootout.

With Busch and teammate Jeff Gordon running 1-2 at the restart, the two plotted their own strategy with their respective crew chiefs.

“Well, good job guys,” Busch sighed at the final caution. “We’ll do what we can. I can’t promise you anything.”

“He’ll be nice,” crew chief Alan Gustafson said. “He’ll play nice.”

It didn’t sound that way on Gordon’s channel.

“Tell that 5, if I get a fender underneath him, he better think about the fact that we’re teammates,” Gordon said. “If I don’t get a fender underneath him, I won’t move him out of the way.”

It never mattered, though, as Burton jumped past Gordon on the restart and quickly pulled onto Busch’s rear bumper. Burton looked low and Busch threw a block, then he went high and Busch blocked that, too.

Burton finally pulled alongside Busch as they closed in on the finish line, but Busch nipped him at the flag for his first Nextel Cup victory on a short track.

Both drivers could have spun Busch to get past him, and the 21-year-old appreciated the veterans for racing him clean.

“Without Jeff Gordon and Jeff Burton behind me, I never would have won this race,” Busch said.

Burton didn’t regret it.

Autostock

Lap-by-Lap

Kyle Busch moved past Denny Hamlin on Lap 485 and held his position through two restarts for fourth career victory.

“I could have used the bumper to move him out of the way and win the race, but I didn’t want to,” Burton said. “I can lay in bed [Sunday night] and wonder, ‘What if?’ But that’s what I chose to do. If you can’t pass him without knocking him out of the way, do the best you can. He’s driven me clean, and that’s what I did with him.”

Gordon, the pole-sitter, wound up third and was thrilled with the effort after struggling for most of the race.

“That’s an awesome win for him,” Gordon said. “I wanted to race with him. I got a run on the inside and I knew Burton was going to get a run on the outside and I knew I was in trouble, so I just tried to hold onto third.”

Busch’s win was the third in a row for Hendrick Motorsports — Jimmie Johnson won the past two Cup events — and was the 200th overall win for car owner Rick Hendrick. It also was the 600th for manufacturer Chevrolet, which introduced the Impala SS this weekend to coincide with NASCAR’s debut of the Car of Tomorrow.

The COT spent seven years in development as NASCAR tried to build a uniform car that would cut costs, improve safety and even the competition. It will be used in 16 races this season as NASCAR phases it in through the 2009 season.

It’s introduction had teams fretting for months over performance and the many unknowns the COT created.

But when the race finally began, everything seemed pretty normal. Except for the design of the cars, which have a front splitter and a detachable rear wing, nothing was out of the ordinary.

And the worst fears — that the track would be littered with parts and pieces every time one of them wrecked — never developed. But the drivers said its too early to pass judgment. The car races again next week at Martinsville Speedway, another short track, before getting its first true test next month in Phoenix.

“If the car is safer and races better, then I am all for it,” Gordon said. “But we can’t answer that question this weekend.”

Kevin Harvick was fourth, followed by Greg Biffle, Jeff Green and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Clint Bowyer finished eighth and Jamie McMurray and Casey Mears rounded out the top 10.

Gordon took the points lead as Mark Martin, who came into the race on top, skipped the event and turned his keys over to rookie Regan Smith.

Smith finished 25th and Martin dropped to eighth in the standings - 162 back. Gordon leads Burton by three points.

As expected, Juan Montoya struggled at his first short track, finishing 32nd after an early spin dropped him several laps down. But he still considered the day a success.

“We got the car home and scored some more points and just go on to the next one,” he said. “It was pretty easy, to be honest.”

A.J. Allmendinger, the former Champ Car star, also struggled. He was 40th in his Nextel Cup debut.

“You know, I used to think Champ Car was tough to drive,” Allmendinger said. “But do 500 laps around this place. That’s a lot of work.”

The race initially belonged to Tony Stewart, who pulled away to a huge lead during the 257 laps he was out front. But his Chevrolet lost power during a caution with 211 laps to go, and he was livid as he pulled into the pits.

He bemoaned his bad luck in an expletive-laden rant as his Joe Gibbs Racing team worked under the hood of his car. He returned to the track 23 laps down.

Kasey Kahne, who ran in the top five for the first half of the race, spun out moments before Stewart went out to take himself out of the competition.

With the two best cars out of the running, the race opened up for everyone else. Busch and Hamlin traded the lead several times until traffic allowed Busch to get by him for good.

Edwards wins Busch race at Bristol

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Carl Edwards held off hard-charging teammate Matt Kenseth over the final dozen laps to win the Busch Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway on Saturday.

It was a typical crash-filled Bristol race, with 12 cautions for 103 laps and one red-flag stoppage. NASCAR also confused things with a miscue on pit road that confused most of the field and gave Edwards, Kyle Busch and Ryan Newman a second chance.

Edwards used that free pit stop to get fresh tires and drive away to his first win of the season. Kenseth never got close enough to move him, and Edwards beat him to the line by 0.260 seconds.

“I just can’t thank Matt Kenseth enough for racing me that clean,” Edwards said. “He’s so great here and it meant the world to beat him.”

Kenseth said he tried to get past Edwards earlier, but couldn’t, and wouldn’t force the issue.

“This place is tough. It’s kind of a give-and-take racetrack and sometimes I struggle when to give and when to take,” he said. “I got under Carl two or three times and lifted his left-rear tire, he chopped me pretty good, so I had to get it out of the gas. I could have stayed in and got him turned around, but I got out of it.”

A caution came out with 117 laps to go and NASCAR told its officials to open pit road. But pit road was closed when Busch and Edwards — the leaders — passed the entrance. They didn’t stop.

But pit road opened seconds later, and the rest of the field did stop.

NASCAR blamed that on a delay in changing the lights on pit road and quickly reviewed it. Officials then allowed Busch, Edwards and Newman to pit and line up where they were originally running when the caution came out.

“It was a mistake that NASCAR made in this case,” president Mike Helton said. “And there’s no absolute fix for that. So we felt like the most fair thing to do was to simply say, ‘Pit road is open. You can pit if you want to. You don’t have to.’

“There’s no absolute clean fix, but we felt like that was the most fair fix.”

Not everyone agreed.

“I don’t have any idea what happened,” Kenseth said. “The first time by it was closed. NASCAR said to open it over the scanner, but we’re still supposed to pay attention to the light. The light was clearly, clearly red. No arguing that. It was closed. It was red.

“I don’t understand why they got their spots back.”

Had NASCAR not allowed the cars to pit without repercussions, everyone who did pit likely would have passed them soon after the restart. And had the three drivers pitted without NASCAR’s blessing, all would have been shuffled to the tail end of the lead lap.

“They could have just as easily told us we’re just going to have to deal with it,” Edwards said. “I appreciate NASCAR helping us out there.”

“I’m not upset at Carl one bit. Lapped cars don’t give way to the leaders when they’re already a lap down and going their second lap down and [Wallace] was pathetic [Saturday].”

Kyle Busch, on Mike Wallace

Edwards, the Busch Series points leader, led 147 laps en route to the win.

Busch led 89 and seemed to have the best car, but was spun out twice — once while leading. The second spin came with 77 laps to go in the race when he was running second and Edwards was third.

As the leaders closed in on the lapped traffic, they had little room to race and Edwards ran into the back of Busch. It dropped Busch back to 12th and he had to fight his way back to third.

He was livid after, with most of his rage directed at Mike Wallace.

“I’m not upset at Carl one bit. Lapped cars don’t give way to the leaders when they’re already a lap down and going their second lap down and [Wallace] was pathetic [Saturday],” Busch fumed. “Absolutely, outrageously stupid. He was mad at us because NASCAR gave us a break because they didn’t open up pit road right and when I got up to the front there he was trying to knock in my fender and ride along side me.

“When I tried letting him go, he wouldn’t go. He was just being a complete moron.”

Newman was fourth, followed by Clint Bowyer, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Greg Biffle and Kevin Harvick as Nextel Cup drivers took the top eight spots.

Nascar should return to its roots…

Bruce Rivera writes this excellent piece at http://insiderracingnews.com/BR/030807.html

NASCAR Should Return To It’s Roots
An Opinion

The Nextel Cup Series was on break this week, and the Busch Series was in Mexico, and what a finish they had!

Juan Pablo Montoya’s drive from back in the pack to first place was a legend-maker, but for that little skirmish with a yellow car along the way. All we heard on the coverage was wall-to-wall Montoya, and he lived up to the hype.

Lost in the controversy of him spinning his teammate is the fact that Scott Pruett made a tremendous charge, adrenaline-driven no doubt, from 19th to finish 5th, in just eight laps, and some of those were cautions!

Good driving gentlemen! How was that “team meeting” this week with Mr. Ganassi?

Read the rest of this great piece HERE

Las Vegas…..

The week’s By the Numbers focuses on the favorite NASCAR sons of Las Vegas — Kurt and Kyle Busch. The brothers have combined to make nine starts at their hometown track, which also happens to be the number of Cup races held there since Las Vegas Motor Speedway opened in 1998.

Younger brother Kyle has had more success there, albeit in half the starts. He has two top-fives in three starts, finishing second and third, respectively, the past two years in the No. 5 Chevy.

Kurt Busch finished 16th last year, his first in the No. 2 Dodge. He garnered his only top-10s the previous two years driving the No. 97 Ford. In 2005 he finished third, right behind brother Kyle.

The 2005 event marked Kyle’s ninth Cup Series start, while Kurt was the third race into a new season as the reigning Nextel Cup champion. The elder Busch led 40 laps that day, the most he has ever led in six LVMS starts.

Kurt has 15 career wins, but Vegas is among the unlucky 13 tracks where Victory Lane remains elusive.

“I want to win at all the tracks and hopefully I’ll be around long enough to win at most of them. But Vegas is No. 1 on my hit list right now,” Kurt said. “It’s my hometown. I used to haul [rear] through that desert parking lot before the big track even existed. You know … I saw it built from the ground up. With the track being completely redesigned now, it’d be extra special to win this weekend.”

Interesting Fact

26.8Ken Schrader is one of 10 drivers to start all nine races at Las Vegas. During that time he has the same average starting and finishing positions.

Fun Fact

100:1Odds given for Robby Gordon, J.J. Yeley, Dave Blaney, Bobby Labonte, Brian Vickers, Reed Sorenson, Juan Montoya, Paul Menard, Michael Waltrip and Dale Jarrett to win the UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, the longest in the field.

All the Facts

0.045 Margin of victory in seconds Jimmie Johnson beat Matt Kenseth to the finish line in 2006, the closest in track history that didn’t end under caution.

1 Number of laps led by 2006 winner Jimmie Johnson.

2 Drivers entered in their first Nextel Cup race: Aric Amilora (No. 80 Chevy) and Jon Wood (No. 21 Ford).

2 Number of drivers to win at Las Vegas in the past four years: Matt Kenseth (2003-4); Jimmie Johnson (2005-06).

3 Races won from a top-10 starting position: Mark Martin, 7 (1998); Jimmie Johnson, 9 (2005) and 3 (2006).

4 Consecutive top-10 finishes at LVMS by Matt Kenseth, the longest current streak.

4.3 Average starting position for Greg Biffle and Kasey Kahne, best among all drivers with more than one start. Both have three starts at Vegas.

5 Wins for team owner Jack Roush in nine Vegas starts: Mark Martin, 1 (1998); Jeff Burton, 2 (1999-2000); Matt Kenseth, 2 (2003-04).

7.0 Jimmie Johnson’s average finish in five LVMS starts, best of all time.

7 Top-10s by Mark Martin at LVMS, more than any other driver.

7 Most lead-lap finishes at Las Vegas: Mark Martin, Tony Stewart.

13 Gallon-sized fuel cells to be used this year to combat possible tire problems a newly paved surface can have.

15 Worst finish for Casey Mears in four LVMS starts, his first in 2003. He has three consecutive top-10s.

20 Degrees in banking at the reconfigured LVMS, up from 12 degrees previously.

147 Official car number for Ken Schrader per the entry list. Schrader’s Ford will have the 47 on the side rather than the 21 he has driven the past 38 races. Jon Wood will race the 21.

174.904 Qualifying speed for Kasey Kahne in 2004, a track record. Only three speeds came in under that mark during the two-day Preseason Thunder test.

179 Laps led by Tony Stewart, the most of any driver without a Vegas win.

367 Laps led by Matt Kenseth, most of any driver at Las Vegas

via Nascar.com

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COMING SOON

baseballblogger.net

We just bought the domain name baseballblogger.net

Would have loved to have had a .com but we tried about 150 different variations on baseball and they were all taken. Even if most of them are vacant at the actual URL.

Ours won’t be however. Look for content on baseballblogger.net quickly.

Look for subdomains for our favorite teams to come quickly as well, like

whitesox.baseballblogger.net

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etc.

SuperBowl XLI DVD now available

A new DVD celebrating the Indianapolis Colts is much more than the usual game-by-game season recap. It’s about the entire process of how the Colts overcame previous playoff disappointments to become a champion.

Titled “2006 Indianapolis Colts Super Bowl XLI Champions” and released this week by NFL Films, the 73-minute DVD focuses on insights, the sideline and on-field banter, and key plays from the season.

Though the reactions, including from play-by-play radio voice Bob Lamey, come during good times and bad, Colts fans will find the memories are mostly fond ones (just fast-forward if you don’t want to see those late-season losses).

Camera angles are from field level, and for effect, some big plays are shown at game speed and then in classic slow motion. Harry Kalas narrates the game clips with his distinctive bass-heavy voice.

Included with the credits after the game-by-game segment are clips of Colts comments at the Super Bowl homecoming celebration at the RCA Dome. They culminate with owner Jim Irsay saying, “I couldn’t be more excited and the thing about it now, starting on Feb. 5, is when you refer to Indianapolis, Indiana, you refer to ‘em as world champions!”

Irsay shouts those last two words, then hoists the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

Extra features include the NFL Network’s postgame coverage, highlights from Super Bowl XLI media day starting with quarterback Peyton Manning, and miked segments from NFL Films.

The DVD has been priced between $19.99 and $25.99 and is available at many area stores.