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Edwards goes back to back – wins at Vegas

March 3rd, 2008

LAS VEGAS — During the Sprint Cup Series’ brief sojourn in Las Vegas, it wasn’t a roll of the dice that propelled Carl Edwards to his second consecutive victory and the ninth of his career.

It was the roll of a tire — and what didn’t happen afterward.

With the help of a judgment call from NASCAR, which opted not to penalize Edwards after a tire rolled away on pit road, Edwards streaked to victory in the UAW-Dodge 400 Sprint Cup race Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

In a two-lap dash after NASCAR stopped the race for nearly 18 minutes to clean the track in the wake of a wreck that wiped out contenders Matt Kenseth and Jeff Gordon, Edwards pulled away from Dale Earnhardt Jr. to win by .504 seconds.

The victory gave Edwards the series points lead for the first time in his career, by 21 points over Las Vegas pole-sitter Kyle Busch (11th Sunday) and by 41 over Daytona 500 winner Ryan Newman (14th). If Edwards remains atop the standings before the next race remains to be seen after NASCAR found an “issue” with the 99 car in post-race inspection.

Greg Biffle finished third, followed by Kevin Harvick and Jeff Burton. Kasey Kahne, David Ragan, Travis Kvapil, Denny Hamlin and Mark Martin completed the top 10 in a race punctuated by a record 11 caution periods.

As strong as his car was, Edwards’ closest call came during the tire incident on pit road. During a pit stop on Lap 215 of the 267-lap race, the crew of the No. 99 Ford failed to secure a tire removed from the car. Though the tire bounced off the pit wall and across pit road, TV coverage showed a non-network cameraman inadvertently interfering with the crew’s attempts to secure the tire, and NASCAR did not assess a penalty.

That enabled Edwards to restart third on Lap 220, instead of at the tail end of the longest line. He eventually took the lead for good on Lap 238.

“That’s nice of them,” Edwards said on his radio after learning he had escaped a penalty.

“We’ll get [Sprint Cup Series director John] Darby a nice Christmas gift. He’s a reasonable man,” replied crew chief Bob Osborne.

The NASCAR rule book states: “During a pit stop, if a tire is not controlled and/or travels more than halfway across the pit road, a lap or time penalty may be assessed. If in the judgment of NASCAR officials, a team made every effort to control a tire and circumstances beyond their control cause the tire to travel across pit road, a lap or time penalty may not be assessed.”

Edwards had rallied from a pit road speeding penalty early in the race, but a penalty late in the race would have doomed his chances.

“At the end, I was very nervous that we were going to get a penalty after the tire got away,” Edwards said later. “But NASCAR made a call in our favor after reviewing the tape, and I’m grateful for that.”

So was Osborne. “It was stressful, but results are what we’re looking for, and I’m glad to be here,” he said.

Three cautions after that nerve-wracking pit stop, on a restart with five laps remaining, Earnhardt Jr (second at the time) spun his tires, Gordon dropped low and Kenseth went high to pass the No. 88 Chevrolet. As the cars exited Turn 2, with Edwards in the lead and Kenseth and Gordon in his wake, the No. 24 Chevrolet of Gordon washed up to the outside, clipped Kenseth’s No. 17 Ford and started a wreck that crippled both cars.

Gordon’s Chevy slid back across the track and ploughed into the inside retaining wall at an entrance to the infield, ripping the radiator out of the chassis. NASCAR stopped the race to clean the track for a restart with two laps to go.

“That red flag just really killed us,” Earnhardt said. “We were terrible on cold tires. I had a good car, and I’m really proud of my team, but I would have liked to have had a shot at Carl on hot tires there.”

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Edwards wins "Rain Delayed" Auto Club 500

February 25th, 2008

FONTANA, Calif. — Carl Edwards won the rain-delayed Auto Club 500 on Monday, charging past defending Cup champion Jimmie Johnson with 13 laps remaining.

Johnson, winner of the past two Cup titles, came out of the final pit stop in the lead with 26 laps left. But Edwards came from third to capture the eighth victory of his career.

Edwards showed good form on his traditional victory backflip in front of the main grandstand after taking the checkered flag in a race that ended under caution when Dale Jarrett spun on the final lap.

Edwards had it all but wrapped up at that point, driving his Roush Fenway Racing No. 99 Ford to a lead of more than four seconds over Johnson.

Jeff Gordon, who dominated Sunday’s racing, was third. He was followed by Kyle Busch and Roush’s Matt Kenseth, who had won the two previous February races at this track.

About 25,000 fans, far short of the approximate 120,000 capacity, showed up on Monday, with the sun peeking out from high clouds and temperatures moving into the high 60s.

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UNOFFICIAL NASCAR POINTS STANDINGS AS OF 02/22/08

February 23rd, 2008

NASCAR Points Standings

# Driver                    Points         Behind
1 Jimmie Johnson    6723             Leader
2 Jeff Gordon          6646              -77
3 Clint Bowyer        6377             -346
4 Matt Kenseth       6298             -425
5 Kyle Busch           6293             -430
6 Tony Stewart       6242             -481     
7 Kurt Busch           6231             -492
8 Jeff Burton           6231             -492
9 Carl Edwards       6222             -501

13 Ryan Newman    4046             -2677

16 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 3929          -2794

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NASCAR Allstate 400 at The Brickyard – July 29, 2007

July 13th, 2007

Indianapolis Motor Speedwayallstate400

4790 W 16th St
Indianapolis, IN 46222
(317) 492-6784
(317) 492-6737
Get Directions: To hereFrom here

Directions To IMS
Parking & Camping
Spectator Regulations
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Track Map
Allstate 400 at The Brickyard Tour Information
Wikipedia Entry on The Allstate 400 at the Brickyard

GET TICKETS TO THE ALLSTATE 400 – CLICK HERE

NASCAR is coming to The Indianapolis Motor Speedway and you don’t want to miss it.

NASCAR NEXTEL CUP SERIES SCHEDULE (all times local – EST):

Friday, Aug. 5: 1:30-2:30 p.m., NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series practice

3:30-4:30 p.m., NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series practice

Saturday, Aug. 6: 8-9 a.m.: NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series practice

9:30-10:30 a.m.: NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series practice

3:10 p.m.: NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series qualifying (two laps)

Sunday, Aug. 7: 1:10 p.m.: Driver introductions

1:30 p.m.: 12th Allstate 400 at the Brickyard (160 laps/400 miles)

ON THE AIR (all times Eastern Daylight):

The 12th Allstate 400 at the Brickyard will be televised live on NBC at 2:30 p.m. (EDT) Aug. 7. A half-hour pre-race show will start at 2 p.m. on NBC.

Coverage of NASCAR NEXTEL Cup qualifying takes place from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. (EDT) Aug. 6 on the TNT cable network.

The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network will broadcast a one-hour Allstate 400 at the Brickyard pre-race show at 1:30 p.m. (EDT) Aug. 7, followed by the live race broadcast at 2:30 p.m.

A qualifications show will air live from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. on Aug. 6 with a wrap-up of qualifying scheduled for 6-7 p.m.

The IMS Radio Network also will broadcast an Allstate 400 at the Brickyard preview show from 6-7 p.m. Aug. 5.

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NASCAR Allstate 400 at The Brickyard

July 9th, 2007

A great place to get all of information you need on the Nascar Allstate 400 at The Brickyard is indpls.com. Look at this piece to get details on the event.

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The United States Grand Prix is Sunday, June 17, 2007 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

June 3rd, 2007

Indianapolis Motor Speedway
4790 W 16th St (16th and Georgetown Roads)
Indianapolis, IN 46222
Tickets at 800-822-4639 or 317-492-6700

Next up at The Indianapolis Motor Speedway – The USGP – The United States Grand Prix. Get ready for the thrills and excitement of Grand Prix racing in Indianapolis.

New 2007 F1 rules will create more action and strategy. Get complete details on the changes at the Official USGP website.

Get your tickets from StubHub.com

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Coca-Cola 600 Race Results

May 28th, 2007

Casey Mears gambled on his gasoline, and it paid off. He makes his first Nextel Cup Series Win.

Complete Race Results are available HERE

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Dario Franchitti Wins the 91st Indianapolis 500

May 28th, 2007

In 2002, Dario Franchitti contended the Indianapolis 500 was an interruption of his CART schedule. It was the Scotsman’s first foray to the historic 2.5-mile ribbon of asphalt with then-Team Green, and “I just didn’t get it.”

Five years removed, Franchitti is the Indianapolis 500 champion.

“Who would have thought it?” said Franchitti, whose rain-soaked firesuit didn’t dampen his enthusiasm as he chugged the traditional winner’s bottle of milk in Victory Circle. “I can’t believe it. It’s the Indianapolis 500.”

The Andretti Green Racing driver inherited the lead on Lap 155 when teammate Tony Kanaan pitted, and the No. 27 Canadian Club Dallara/Honda/Firestone splashed across the finish line under the yellow/checkered flag combination on Lap 166 as rain doused the cavernous facility.

Target Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon was runner-up, while pole sitter and two-time 500-Mile Race winner Helio Castroneves of Team Penske finished third. Sam Hornish Jr., who last year gave team owner Roger Penske his 14th Indy 500 title, finished fourth and Ryan Briscoe in the No. 12 Luczo Dragon Racing car (a Team Penske satellite program) rounded out the top five.

Franchitti’s sentiments about the “500″ began to turn in 2003, when he competed full time in the IndyCar Series with Andretti Green Racing. He finished where he started (sixth) in 2005 and last year advanced 10 positions to finish seventh.

“When we came here in ‘02 we were in the middle of a very busy time with the Champ Car schedule,” Franchitti said. “We had just swapped from Reynards to Lolas (chassis) and we decided we were going to do the Indy 500 in a car we had no knowledge of. It was a heck of a month. Days I wasn’t on track here I was testing a Lola at Mid-Ohio (Sports Car Course), so I literally had no day off all month.

read the rest at indycar.com

Complete Race Results here

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XM Radio – a fan’s perspective

May 25th, 2007

XM Radio has had a bad week, maybe even two weeks.

First, the deal with Opie and Anthony, which many people blew out of proportion. I believe that XM has the right to do with it’s MULTI-MILLION dollar talent whatever it wants to do. I also believe that those people who cancelled because of O&A will be back, at a higher monthly fee more than likely. It was, of course, their right to cancel.

How sad if O&A where the only thing on XM that they listened to. XM has the live broadcast of EVERY MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL game, LIVE. It has play by play of ALL NHL games through the Stanley Cup. It has Indy Car, ESPN Radio and Dale Jr LIVE. Cal Ripken has a show. XM Public Radio.  60 Commercial Free Music stations (if you can’t find music you like here, it does not exist).

For people who like O&A uncensored comedy, they have XM Comedy 150, a completely uncensored comedy channel.

XM has Oprah & Friends, Air America, Fox News Talk, Traffic and Weather for 21 Major Metropolitan Areas, Fox News, CNN, CNBC, Bloomberg, ABC, BBC, The Weather Channel, CNN Headline News, CNN en Espanol and CSPAN.

XM has original shows that bring the biggest names in music, comedy and sports into their studios.

I have had an XM Radio for 3 yrs and cannot live without it. Remind again, what does a commercial sound like? Whatever your politics are , you can find them talking your way on an XM Channel. Need news – got you covered 24/7 on 6 or more different channels.

So go and get an XM Radio now and show them some love.

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Record Gas Prices – Are you feeling gouged?

May 23rd, 2007

As of yesterday, gas prices are the highest in U.S. history—we just passed the 1981 record, even adjusted for inflation.1 Prices could reach $4.00 per gallon in parts of the country, just in time to crimp summer vacation plans. As consumers suffer, the oil industry continues to reap the windfall—breaking profit records on an almost quarterly basis. It’s outrageous!

Enough is enough. Hearings start today on H.R. 1252, a House bill that would make gas price gouging a federal crime, punishable by 10 years in prison. Speaker Pelosi has said she’ll move the bill to a vote this week—if there’s the two-thirds majority required to fast track the bill through the process.2

Oil company lobbyists are frantically trying to stop the bill. Your representative needs to hear from you today. Will you sign our petition asking Congress to pass the price-gouging bill—and then send it to your friends?

“Gasoline price gouging should be made a federal crime before the summer price increases hurt more American families.”

Sign the petition:
http://pol.moveon.org/stoppricegouging/?rc=oil_petition&id=10387-6330836-PS4iKQ&t=4

Rep Bart Stupak (D-MI), sponsor of the House bill said this of his motivation to introduce the legislation:

“In April … crude oil was $7 a barrel cheaper than last year (but) gas prices were almost 50 cents a gallon higher. Clearly there’s more at play than simply the world crude oil market.” 3

In April, more than two-thirds of Americans reported that their gas bills were causing financial crunches, with a full third saying it was having a “serious” impact on their families.4

That same month, the top two US companies, Exxon-Mobil and Chevron-Texaco, announced a combined $14 billion in first quarter profits.5

It seems like even the oil industry has gone too far this time, and it’s time to balance the scales. The Senate passed a price-gouging measure out of committee last week, and the House bill now has over 100 co-sponsors from both sides of the aisle.

The oil industry is nervous. They’ve sent their lobbyists to the Hill in full force to stop—or at least weaken—these bills, and they’re pulling out all the stops. The American Petroleum Institute, an industry front group of more than 400 oil and gas companies, even threatened that new laws could increase gas prices more.6

Enough is enough. This summer, we can stop Big Oil from profiting at the expense of American families. Can you sign the petition to ask your representative to make gasoline a price gouging a federal crime now?

Sign the petition:
http://pol.moveon.org/stoppricegouging/?rc=oil_petition&id=10387-6330836-PS4iKQ&t=5

Don’t forget to pass it on to your friends—this week is an historic opportunity to send Big Oil a message that we’ve had enough.

Thanks for all you do.

–Ilyse, Natalie, Eli, Tom, and the MoveOn.org Political Action Team
  Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

Sources:

1. “U.S. gas prices jump more than 11 cents,” Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 21, 2007
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=2595&id=10387-6330836-PS4iKQ&t=6

2. “Debate on [H.R. 1252], offered by Energy and Commerce Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee Chairman Bart Stupak, D-Mich., will kick off Tuesday with a hearing in Stupak’s subcommittee. It is possible that an Energy and Commerce markup will follow. But Democratic leaders might opt to bring the bill up to the floor under suspension of House rules by Wednesday.”
Excerpted from National Journal’s Congress Daily, Monday, May 21, 2007

3. “Lawmaker Links Gas Prices to Investments,” Houston Chronicle, May 16, 2007 http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/4810598.html

4. “As Gas Prices Rise Again, Democrats Blame Big Oil,” Washington Post, May 11, 2007 http://www.moveon.org/r?r=2591&id=10387-6330836-PS4iKQ&t=7

5. “Lawmaker Links Gas Prices to Investments,” Houston Chronicle, May 16, 2007 http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/4810598.html

6. “Lawmakers’ blood pressure rises with prices at the pump,” TheHill.com, May 17, 2007 http://www.moveon.org/r?r=2586&id=10387-6330836-PS4iKQ&t=8

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Harvick holds out for $1 Million Bounty

May 21st, 2007

Kevin Harvick earned another $1 million payday Saturday night, winning the Nextel All-Star Challenge after Matt Kenseth got caught speeding and brothers Kurt and Kyle Busch took each other out of contention.

That made Jimmie Johnson, a two-time All-Star race winner, the last driver for Harvick to contend with.

But Johnson barely mounted a challenge, staying in line behind Harvick until the final lap at Lowe’s Motor Speedway. Johnson made one attempt at a pass, Harvick blocked it, then drove off to his second win of the season.

Harvick’s other victory also was a jackpot — he earned $1.5 million for winning the season-opening Daytona 500.

“To win a Daytona 500 and the All-Star race, that’s pretty cool,” Harvick said in Victory Lane.

Harvick, who was second to Johnson last season, scored his first All-Star victory in seven tries and gave car owner Richard Childress his first win in the non-points event since Dale Earnhardt in 1993.

“You are the man,” Childress radioed Harvick.

It capped a hugely successful weekend for Childress, who said Friday he had formed an engine alliance with Dale Earnhardt Inc. Then AT&T won an injunction to get its logos placed on RCR driver Jeff Burton’s car.

The car has been sponsored by Cingular, but AT&T has been fighting to get on the hood since the two companies merged. NASCAR denied the request, citing its exclusivity agreement with series sponsor Nextel, but a U.S. district judge allowed RCR to put the AT&T logo on the car Saturday morning.

Mark Martin finished third and was followed by Burton, Tony Stewart, Johnny Sauter and Kenseth. Ryan Newman, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Martin Truex Jr., who got into the race by winning the Nextel Open, rounded out the top 10.

Kenseth had the field covered, leading 37 laps and winning the first and third segments. But he was flagged for speeding off pit road as he tried to beat Jeff Gordon out after the last stop.

“I got so busy with those other cars, I looked down and I was 200 [RPM] over,” Kenseth said.

The All-Star race is usually good for some drama, and it came 18 laps from the finish when brothers Kurt and Kyle Busch wrecked each other.

Kyle Busch, who led 23 laps over the first three segments, was trying to pass his older brother on the inside when Kurt Busch drifted down and the two made contact. Kurt Busch surged ahead, Kyle Busch spun, tapped his brother, and both cars bounced off the wall

“I was waiting for the day when we got together, and we did, and we were racing for a million bucks,” Kurt Busch said. “That was a bummer, to have my little brother pull that move on me. Maybe I should have given an inch instead of taking an inch from him, but hey, that’s what the All-Star race is all about.

“We’ll see what we can do to discuss it, but right now I’m not eating any Kellogg’s anytime soon.”

While Kyle Busch was back in the garage, things fell apart for mighty Hendrick Motorsports.

Winners of eight of the last nine points races, Hendrick saw three of its four cars fall out of contention in a matter of minutes. Gordon got a flat tire to fall off the pace, then Casey Mears and Denny Hamlin made contact to bring out the third caution of the race.

It left Johnson, the defending race winner, as Hendrick’s only hope. And after three mediocre segments, it didn’t appear he would challenge for the win.

But he was in third after the Busch brothers wrecked and wasted little time working into second while Martin settled into third.

It stayed that way for several laps, as neither Johnson nor Harvick stepped out of line. Only when Harvick appeared to have it in the bag did Johnson make his move.

“I kept chasing him on the bottom, trying to force him to make a mistake, but he drove a solid race,” Johnson said. “On the last lap I thought, ‘I’ve got a cushion behind me, let me just try it.’ After 1 and 2, I got right to the 29’s bumper and I was like, ‘Why didn’t I try that a lot sooner?’ But that’s racing.”

 

Hotwire

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Gordon is HOT – wins at Darlington

May 14th, 2007

As steam poured from his engine, Jeff Gordon figured his chance at victory had gone up in smoke.

Any other season, it would have. But in this year of near-perfection for Hendrick Motorsports, nothing ever goes wrong.

And Denny Hamlin is pretty sick of it.

Gordon overcame an overheating engine — he said with five laps to go there was no way he’d make it to the finish — to race to his third victory of the season Sunday at Darlington Raceway. Hendrick has won four consecutive races, eight of nine overall, and remained perfect in the five Car of Tomorrow events.

“I can’t believe that thing lasted,” Gordon said of his motor, which had thick steam streaming out of it for the last hour of the race. “There’s no way that thing should have ever made it.”

When it did — even though Gordon gambled and didn’t make a final pit stop when most of the field did with 23 laps to go — Gordon won for the third time in four races and maintained a 231-point lead on Jimmie Johnson in the Nextel Cup standings.

“That’s the way you win races right there,” said Gordon, a seven-time Darlington winner. “What an amazing year we’re having.”

One that Hamlin was a little bitter about after his second-place finish.

Hamlin, who led a race-high 179 laps, suffered when his crew dropped a pair of lug nuts on a late pit stop. It cost him a shot at running for the win, and he has finished second or third in four COT races.

It was extremely frustrating for Hamlin, who has led a series-high 563 laps in the five races the car has been used.

“We gave away another one to Hendrick Motorsports,” Hamlin said. “It’s a shame. This has got to end. We have to win a race sooner or later. Everybody will talk about how Hendrick won another race, but this was our race.”

Hamlin was also critical of NASCAR for not calling a caution for obvious debris in the closing laps. Had the yellow flag waved, Hamlin was confident he would have beaten Gordon.

“Somebody’s entire fender and underbody was on the racetrack,” Hamlin said. “I literally pumped my fist in the car ’cause I knew a caution was going to come out. And of course, if caution comes out, it’s game over. Instead, Hendrick gets another break.”

Even Gordon admitted that NASCAR should have thrown a yellow. But he didn’t complain because he believed a debris caution with 17 to go — when Gordon had a huge lead — was bogus.

“There absolutely should have been a caution there at the end — but there shouldn’t have been one before it,” Gordon said. “There at the end — debris, oil, everything you can imagine — was on that racetrack and that comes back to the inconsistency. I am glad they didn’t throw it at the end, but I didn’t understand why they threw it earlier.

“It can work with you or against you. [Sunday] it worked for us.”

Rain washed out the race Saturday night and it was rescheduled for Sunday, making it the first NASCAR race run on Mother’s Day since 1986. Although Gordon’s mother left the track when it appeared his motor wouldn’t last, he was still able to celebrate the win with his pregnant bride.

Gordon and wife Ingrid Vandebosch are expecting their first child — a daughter — at the end of June and this was her last race before the birth.

“It was fantastic to just think that here in about six or seven weeks, she is going to be a mother,” Gordon said. “She had a little tear in her eye, definitely her emotions and the hormones are flowing right now.

“She knew, too, that this was her last weekend to travel before she has the baby, so I think that meant a lot to her to be able to pull that off before she’s stuck at home for a little while.”

Johnson, last week’s winner, finished third for Hendrick. Ryan Newman was fourth, followed by Carl Edwards and Matt Kenseth.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. capped a frenzied week that began when he said he’s leaving DEI at the end of the season by finishing eighth.

But Earnhardt said strong support from his crew kept everyone focused.

“My guys said, ‘We’re behind you,’ and that took it all away,” he said. “We focused on the car, we drove the car and we had a good time this weekend. I had no pressure, nothing really on my mind other than what we were supposed to be doing.

“I was surprised. I thought it would be a little more of a distraction.”

Clint Bowyer and Jeff Burton, teammates at Richard Childress Racing, rounded out the top 10.

Gordon’s radiator was on the verge of busting for the latter part of the race, with thick steam blowing from under the hood as he ran second to Johnson.

But a caution with 23 laps to go changed the race, with Johnson ducking onto pit road while Gordon gambled to stay out. Gordon took over the lead, Johnson restarted in seventh, and no one came close to challenging Gordon again.

Johnson thought he would quickly work his way back to the front on new tires, but had no regrets after traffic prevented the defending champion from scoring his fifth win of the season.

“New tires always pay off here,” Johnson said. “If I was back in that position, I think I would go for tires again.”

Gordon never felt confident that his engine would go the distance. He got terrific jumps on every restart, needing the air to cool down his motor, and said he didn’t pit with his teammate because he worried the engine would overheat during the stop.

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Unser gets "BUMPED" from Indy 500

May 14th, 2007

Al Unser Jr. was once the guy to beat at Indy. Now, he’s just one of the drivers trying to get in the show. The two-time Indianapolis 500 winner was bumped from the field on Sunday, the second of four days of qualifications for the May 27 race.
Unser qualified early on the 2.5-mile oval, posting four-lap average of 220.963 mph that left him vulnerable to being bumped out under the new procedure that limits the number of qualifiers during each of the first three days of time trials to 11.
He spent a nervous couple of hours before John Herb (who finished 27th in 2001 in his only Indy start)  knocked Unser out of the field with a  221.070 run, just 30 minutes from the end of the session.
Herb was then bounced out of the field for the second time Sunday by 1996 Indy winner Buddy Lazier, who bumped his way back into the lineup by improving his speed from 220.452 to 221.380.
That left Lazier “on the bubble” as the 22nd and slowest driver in the partial lineup. Jaques Lazier, got out just before the final gun in an effort to bump his older brother, but pulled back onto pit road after one lap at just over 220.

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Indianapolis 500 to be telecast in HD

May 12th, 2007

via EngadgetHD.com

Indy 500In yet another installment of “it’s about time that went HD”, we are kinda excited to announce that for the first time ever, the Indianapolis 500 will be presented in HD this Memorial day. While NASCAR enjoys so much success, — and HD coverage for almost four years — the so called greatest spectacle in racing finally gets the HD treatment. The main race as well as shows on qualifing days will use 53 cameras, — hopefully all HD — and required a significant financial investment to make it happen.

 

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Car of Tomorrow back on track this weekend

April 21st, 2007

via Motor Sports News.Net(work)

We get to see how NASCAR’s new racecar handles flat-track racing this weekend at Phoenix International Raceway. The Car of Tomorrow (COT) will be used again this weekend after having a weekend at Texas in the old-style racing machine.

There still hasn’t been a great outpouring of affection for the COT and I don’t expect the reaction to change much this week. Phoenix might just be the first track where the new NASCAR racing machine has a chance to dodge some of the harsh words from drivers.

The one-mile speedway has only nine to 11-degree banking in the turns and only three-degree banking on the frontstraight. That kind of racing surface could be the middle ground crew chiefs and drivers have been looking for to help them figure out how to work the setup of the new cars.

The original Arizona speedway was opened in 1964, but NASCAR’s top series did not begin racing at the facility until 1988. NASCAR’s parent company, International Speedway Corp. (Or is it the other way around?), purchased the track in 1997. There was only one trip each year to Phoenix then, but in 2005 NASCAR awarded a second yearly race date to their track.

Kevin Harvick, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Burton are the only active drivers with more than a single win at Phoenix. Harvick won both races at PIR last year. Dale Jr. won his events in 2004 and 2003. Jeff Burton’s wins were while he was driving for Jack Roush in 2001 and 2000.

The one-time winners list at Phoenix includes Kyle Busch (2005), Kurt Busch (2005), Matt Kenseth (2002), Tony Stewart (1999), Dale Jarrett (1997) and Mark Martin (1993).

Phoenix is one of three speedways left on the NASCAR schedule where Jeff Gordon has not won. Gordon has run 16 races at Phoenix scoring seven top-five and 13 top-ten finishes.

This will be Mark Martin’s first experience in race conditions with the Car of Tomorrow. Mark has the most top-five (8) and top-ten (14) finishes at Phoenix International Raceway. Martin is only racing in selected events this year.

The top-five finishers of the April 2006 race at Phoenix were Kevin Harvick, Tony Stewart, Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards and Clint Bowyer. Eleven drivers traded the lead 20 times.

Greg Biffle, who finished 15th, collected the bonus points for leading the most laps. His No. 16 was scored first for 151 of the 312 laps. Race winner Kevin Harvick led only the last ten laps of the event.

The other drivers leading more than one lap in the race were Mark Martin (111), Clint Bowyer (21), Kyle Busch (7), Tony Stewart (6) and Dave Blaney (2).

There were seven caution flags and the race took just under two hours and 55 minutes to complete.

Kyle Busch was the Bud Pole Award winner with a qualifying speed of 133.744 miles-an-hour. Busch crashed before the middle of the event and finished 36th.

Be on alert that pre-race proceedings begin early this weekend. Times trials for the Saturday night race are scheduled Thursday night at 8:00 p.m. Speed Channel will broadcast the qualifying session. ESPN2 handles the Phoenix Busch Series race Friday night at 9:30 p.m.

The Nextel Cup green flag at Phoenix is scheduled to drop shortly after 8:30 p.m. Saturday night. The Nextel Cup drivers run next Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway and then it will be three Saturday Nextel Cup races in a row.

The top NASCAR division goes to Richmond, Darlington and then Charlotte for Saturday events for the first three weekends in May.

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