Wednesday, April 27, 2011

The 25 nominees for the 2012 NASCAR Hall of Fame class

The nominations for the 2012 class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame were unveiled Tuesday night and here they are in alphabetical order:

Buck Baker: First driver to win consecutive NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series championships (1956-57)

Red Byron: First NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion, in 1949

Richard Childress: 11-time car owner champion in NASCAR's three national series

Jerry Cook: Six-time NASCAR Modified champion

H. Clay Earles: Founder of Martinsville Speedway

Richie Evans: Nine-time NASCAR Modified champion

Tim Flock: Two-time NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion

Rick Hendrick: 13-time car owner champion in NASCAR's three national series

Jack Ingram: Two-time NASCAR Busch (now Nationwide) Series champion

Dale Inman: Eight-time NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series championship crew chief

Bobby Isaac: 1970 NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion

Fred Lorenzen: 26 wins and winner of the Daytona 500 and World 600

Cotton Owens: Driver-owner, won 1966 owner championship with David Pearson

Raymond Parks: NASCAR's first champion car owner

Benny Parsons: 1973 NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series� champion

Les Richter: Former NASCAR executive; former president of Riverside International Raceway

Fireball Roberts: Won 33 NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series races, including the 1962 Daytona 500

T. Wayne Robertson: Helped raise NASCAR popularity as R.J. Reynolds Senior VP

Herb Thomas: First two-time NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion, 1951, '53

Curtis Turner: Early personality, called the "Babe Ruth of stock car racing"

Darrell Waltrip: 84 wins and three NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series� championships

Joe Weatherly: Two-time NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series champion

Glen Wood: As driver, laid foundation for Wood Brothers' future team success

Leonard Wood: Part-owner and former crew chief for Wood Brothers, revolutionized pit stops

Cale Yarborough: Three consecutive NASCAR premier (now Sprint Cup) series titles, 1976-78

At this point, it seems that Darrell Waltrip and Cale Yarborough are locks, right? But their chances seemed pretty good last year and they were left out while Bobby Allison, a driver with a very similar resumé, was inducted. And with Childress, Hendrick and Leonard Wood on the list, that's three current Sprint Cup car owners. Which one of them gets in first?

If you're wondering about the 2011 class – Alison, Ned Jarrett, Bud Moore, David Pearson, Lee Petty – it hasn't been inducted yet. The 2011 class will be inducted on May 23, while the 2012 induction ceremony has been moved to January.

Who do you think should be part of the next class of NASCAR's Hall of Fame? My instant reaction prediction is Baker, Inman, Roberts, Waltrip and Yarborough. But I was one of the ones that thought DW would be going in this year. Drop us a line in the comments with your picks.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/blog/from_the_marbles/post/The-25-nominees-for-the-2012-NASCAR-Hall-of-Fame?urn=nascar-wp739

Phoenix Construction Chevrolet Jeremy Clements Boudreaux s Butt Paste Chevrolet Justin Allgaier

Back before things got rotten


 

photo: Jim Hunter, NASCAR communications exec who died last Friday of cancer at age 71.

 

TALLADEGA, Ala. – It’s Halloween at Talladega, and neither Jim Hunter nor Ed Shull is here.

Where are the grown-ups going to get their tricks and treats? Beats me.

Kids live in a Halloween world in which one night of the year, they get apples and candied corn and Zagnuts and all kinds of stuff that cost a penny when I was a kid and now runs at least a quarter.

Grown-ups live in a Halloween world all the time, and guys like Hunter and Shull made it bearable, doling out jokes and smart-alecky remarks, all of which, on balance, were enjoyable. Both could, when necessary, spew what seemed like acid from their tongues, sort of like unto a velociraptor, but the taste left in your mouth was never worse than dark, semi-sweet chocolate. Both could also charm a cobra without need of a flute.

Hunter, who died Friday night, was titular. He always held positions of influence: vice president of this or that, president of Darlington Raceway. Hunter never got sent out to a pasture that would hold him long. He could wield power and influence whether occupying the crown or just telling the despot in training what to do in order to keep the rabble in check. In terms of public relations, Hunter was the equivalent of what Jake Gaither said about Bear Bryant: He could take his’uns and beat y’ourn or take y’ourn and beat his’uns. I’d have liked a “flack-off” between Hunter and Humpy Wheeler. There’s no way the National Stock Car Racing Commission could have judged the outcome. The Supreme Court would have had to flip a coin.

The two men, Hunter and Wheeler, once played football, at the same time, at the University of South Carolina, on teams that weren’t notably successful. That’s almost certainly coincidental, but one can’t help but wonder what the Gamecocks had in the water coolers on the sidelines back in the late 1950s.

Wheeler said, via one of dozens of statements circulated on Saturday and one of the few that meant anything other than to meet perceived obligations, “Jim Hunter will be sorely missed because he knew more about pure media relations, and particularly how it relates to the fan, than anyone in motor racing. He was best in crisis, always giving sage advice behind the scenes. He also knew when to interject humor when everyone was ready to crack.”

That’s a fact. Several times he talked to me when I was ready to crack.

Not as many knew Shull, who passed away earlier in the week. A pity. I only had lunch with Hunter once, back in those confused days before NASCAR wrote guys like me off. Hunter and I didn’t dine more often because he probably had a purpose in mind any time he dined. It was in Michigan, back in the 1990s, and Hunter got me together with Jim France, probably because he suspected I had an aversion to anyone with that last name, and he wanted to preserve the reputation of at least one member of the ruling family in my jaded mind.

In one way, it worked. I enjoyed it. In another way, it didn’t. I don’t think Jim France and I have exchanged a word since. I’d be shocked if he has any idea who I am. I do think the quiet member of the family has a lot of sense, which may have something to do with why he doesn’t often traffic in sportswriters.

Shull and I had dinner many times, not because there was any notable reason but more because we enjoyed each other’s company. A typical Shull confab might include yours truly, David Poole, Ray Cooper, Dan Zacharias and a few others, and it might take the form of meeting at (a.) a restaurant that hardly anyone other than us knew about, or (b.) a ballgame, usually involving a pass to one of the luxury suites Gatorade used to have in most of the country’s venues. Shull once invited me to the World Series, which I turned down because I thought my presence alone would contribute to the likelihood of a victory by the New York Yankees. I didn’t go and the Yankees didn’t win, so I’ve no regrets even though it’s probably the only chance I’m ever going to have at seeing the World Series, given this infernal world I’m in.

That was a different century, and in terms of what I do for a living and what Shull did, a different world.

A man in my shoes can’t afford to compromise himself, and that was never an issue with either Hunter or Shull. I hardly ever go to dinner or ballgames or concerts anymore with any “official” who invites me. Then again, hardly anyone ever invites me.

Everything nowadays has to be for a purpose. Influence the media. Affect the outcome. Target the market. Grease the skids. Stuff the ballots.

Most of my dealings with Hunter and Shull were because I liked them, and they liked me. They knew I was too stubborn to be influenced, and I’m pretty sure I told both of them, “Now, you realize, just to make sure there isn’t an issue, I’m going to have to rip you.”

It was a point I didn’t need to get across. I was mainly kidding. They both laughed. Now they’re gone. So are Poole and Cooper. And I don’t laugh quite as often.

Source: http://nascar.rbma.com/on-track/general-motorsports/32742-back-before-things-got-rotten

Johnny Herbert Al Herman Hans Herrmann François Hesnault

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Classic F1 2011 - Michael Schumacher

Michael Schumacher has chosen his five greatest all-time grands prix for the second edition of this year's new-look classic Formula 1 feature.

To those unfamiliar with the concept, BBC Sport has asked all the F1 drivers to name their five favourite races, and we will select one of them ahead of each grand prix this season to whet your appetites for the action to come.

World champion Sebastian Vettel started the ball rolling with his selection prior to the Australian Grand Prix, and now it is his friend and countryman's turn.

The drivers are free to choose whether they pick races from their own career, or those from the wider history of F1 that have resonated with them. And like Vettel, Schumacher has selected only races from his time in the sport.

Whereas the Red Bull driver made his F1 debut only in 2007, Schumacher's career dates back to 1991 and the 42-year-old has raided the memory banks to come up with what he considers, for different reasons, key highlights of that time.

Not all of them are races in which he starred. Some of them are intended to highlight his admiration for rivals. Some fulfil both aims.

In chronological order, and in his own words, this is Schumacher's list:

"The 1991 Spanish Grand Prix.

"This was one of the first few races of my career, but that's not why I remember it. It's for the wheel-to-wheel battle down the pit straight between Ayrton Senna and Nigel Mansell, when they came within inches of touching. It was two great drivers pushing each other to the edge, but with the respect to leave each other just enough room. It's one of the coolest moments I've seen in F1."

"The 1993 European Grand Prix.

"Not one of my greatest races - I spun out in the pouring rain. I've picked this because of Ayrton. My time racing against him was too short. He was a great talent, and I always have been impressed by his driving, and this race showed exactly why."

"The 1998 Hungarian Grand Prix.

"This race sums up the great relationship I had - and still have - with Ross Brawn. We were behind the McLarens of Mika Hakkinen and David Coulthard for the first part of the race and Ross decided that the only chance of beating them was to switch to a three-stop strategy - one stop more than them. It was a brilliant plan but it wasn't easy. I still remember the radio message from Ross that I had to make up something like 25 seconds in 19 laps."

"The 2000 Belgian Grand Prix.

"I enjoyed many great battles with Mika Hakkinen, who was very fast and a very tough competitor, and this was one of the best. I got into the lead when it was wet early on, but as it dried up Mika had a big pace advantage and he caught up easily. I managed to fend him off for one lap, but on the next he pulled off a great move to pass me as we went either side of Ricardo Zonta's BAR."

"The 2000 Japanese Grand Prix.

"This is probably both the toughest and most beautiful race of my career. Mika and I were flat out all the way, really on the edge every lap on a great drivers' circuit with the world championship at stake. And the race was really tricky because of changing conditions in the drizzle. I managed to get out ahead after my final pit stop and won. What makes it all the more special was that it was my first world title for Ferrari - this race certainly is my personal number one."

As with Vettel, we have chosen one race to highlight in this blog - and how we could choose any other than Schumacher's number one?

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In addition, we have decided to make available the full BBC 'Grand Prix' highlights programme of the time from one of his other choices - the 1991 Spanish Grand Prix. You can watch it here.

You can also enjoy highlights of last year's Malaysian Grand Prix in both short and extended form.

The classic races will also be available on the red button on digital television in the UK. On satellite and cable they will be broadcast from 1900 BST on Tuesday 5 April until 0845 on Friday 8 April. On Freeview, they will be shown from 2215 on Tuesday until 0645 on Wednesday, on Thursday from 0415-0645 and again from 1915-2045.

A final word. In my last blog, I said that we would feature Schumacher's team-mate Nico Rosberg this time around. We were not able to do so because of unforeseen problems. His choices will appear later in the season.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/04/michael_schumachers_classic_f1.html

Z Line Toyota Kyle Busch Toyota Kimmy Z Line Designs Toyota Parker Kligerman

Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 4.26.11

Quick Spin: 2012 Infiniti M35h

Sporty hybrids are quickly becoming a dime-a-dozen, but the Infiniti M35h has the potential to rewrite the book.

Autoblog Podcast #227: with Brock Yates, Jr. of One Lap of America, New York recap and more!

Brock Yates, Jr. joins Chris Shunk, Dan Roth and Chris Paukert for the 277th installment of the Autoblog Podcast to talk about the 2011 Tire Rack One Lap of America and recap the New York International Auto Show.

Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 4.26.11 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 26 Apr 2011 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.autoblog.com/2011/04/26/daily-u-turn-what-you-missed-on-4-26-11/

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IndyCar Series announces format for doubleheader at Texas

The starting order for the second race in the Izod IndyCar Series' doubleheader on June 11 at Texas Motor Speedway will be decided by a blind draw.

Ho-hum, NASCAR does that for the Budweiser Shootout, right? Well, the Shootout doesn't pay points. The races at Texas will.

IndyCar announced that qualifying for the Saturday night twin bill will only apply to the first race. A blind draw will be conducted after the conclusion of the first race for the order of the second race and after an hour of prep, the second race will start.

Each race will pay half points, as the races will be half the distance of the full races that have been run at Texas (275K each versus 550K)

Additionally, entrants shall utilize the same pit locations, based upon qualifications results for the Indianapolis 500, for both races. Because of the brief amount of time between races, each team (distinguished from entry and entrant) will receive one additional engine for use as needed with its entries in Race 2.

"We want to keep the format of this event as exciting as possible for our fans as we revive this open-wheel tradition," said Brian Barnhart, president of competition and operations for INDYCAR, the sanctioning body of the IZOD IndyCar Series. "With the starting field for the second race set by random draw, you could see the winner from the first race starting from the back of the field, creating quite a bit of drama.

"Also, if a car suffers damage and fails to finish the first race, there will be an opportunity for the driver to rejoin in the second race as we will have extra engines available for use in their back-up chassis. We want to make sure we're ensuring a strong field for Race 2 to keep the excitement and momentum going throughout the entire event."

Personally, I can't wait for the races, simply because this hasn't happened in my lifetime. And add in the fact that it's at Eddie Gossage's house and there's no telling what will happen on June 11. Will this make you tune into the IndyCar Series, or is it a publicity stunt that you'll ignore?

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/blog/from_the_marbles/post/IndyCar-Series-announces-format-for-doubleheader?urn=nascar-wp542

Jean Pierre Jabouille Jimmy Jackson Joe James John James

Monday, April 25, 2011

2010 Autumn/Fall Ebisu Drift Matsuri Pics And Videos

In the afterglow of the last drift matsuri, a LOT of videos and pics sprung up! Here are some of the best ones I found...

Remi's Matsuri Highlight Video

.
Remi runs the website over at www.okidokyo.com where he has a handful of videos about drifting and Japan in general.

Matsuri Mechanics Video



This footage was filmed by the talented Brie Lawrie from the JPP team.

Also from Brie is her Autumn matsuri wrap-up video below..



And here are a few of my favourite Matsuri pics from around the web...

Chris Dejager was showing everyone why he got his D1GP licence. His signature backwards entries up on North course were definitely crowd pleasers. This shot was taken before the car was in an unfortunate accident. Let's just say Chris' S14 will have a different face next year!


As matsuri can sometimes resemble a demolition derby, this car came prepared for the worst. The spotlights are well positioned too so he can navigate around the courses better at night. You can tell he's a matsuri veteran.


And finally, what would a matsuri be without some rusted out corollas? People say he paid only 500 yen for it... or maybe the previous owner paid the guy 500 yen to take it away.

Disco Stu
www.DriftInJapan.com

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/driftinjapan/~3/W1igMhfu25k/2010-autumnfall-ebisu-drift-matsuri.html

Kasey Kahne Budweiser Ford Jimmie Johnson

CCS Late Models at Little Rock

Series joins Legends and Bandoleros for
this week?s round of the Spring Fling

Rockingham, N.C. (April 13, 2010) ? Since opening, Little Rock Speedway has seen a lot of action ? Legends, Bandoleros and testing by some of NASCAR?s biggest names.
But this Sunday, April 17, marks a first for the track as the Carolina Competition Sports Late Model Sportsman (CCS LMS) Series take to the quarter-mile configuration. Never before have full-size stock cars raced on the track.
Little Rock is the third stop on the CCS LMS schedule in its inaugural season.
?The Late Model Sportsman Series is a great addition to our Spring Fling schedule,? said Rockingham Speedway president Andy Hillenburg. ?These cars should put on one heck of a show on the quarter-mile.?
The Late Model Sportsmans will be joined by the Legends and Bandoleros as they make their penultimate stop at Little Rock in the Spring Fling Series. After taking a week of for Easter, the Legends and Bandoleros return with the Allison Legacy Series to wrap up the seven-race series on May 1.
Gates open at 8 a.m. each Sunday of the Spring Fling. Practice begins at 10 a.m. with heat races at 12:30 p.m. and main events to follow. Admission for spectators is $5 with $20 pit passes.
Racing returns to the one-mile Rockingham Speedway on May 13-14 with the UARA Late Models and the USAR Pro Cup Series Carolina 200. Advance tickets for the doubleheader are $20 in advance and $30 at the gate. Suite packages are also available.
For information on any upcoming events, contact Rockingham Speedway at 910-205-8800 or online at www.rockinghamspeedway.com.

Source: http://the-auto-racing-journal.blogspot.com/2011/04/ccs-late-models-at-little-rock.html

Hernandez Yeley David Carl Allison Gregory Jack Biffle David Lee Blaney

If this NASCAR thing doesn’t work out, Harvick’s got a new job


Since Kevin Harvick signed with Budweiser, he's been the perfect pitchman, crowing in public and on Twitter the virtues of the King of Beers. On Wednesday, he took it a step farther by actually hauling some of his product into a South Carolina Wal-Mart.

Obviously, this was a totally orchestrated deal; Harvick met with both fans and company officials. But he had fun with the whole deal, at one point motioning toward nearby Coors Light and Miller beer stacks and saying "Remember, everything on this side is contaminated."

Harvick kept hauling beer until the shelves were filled. So, yeah, if this NASCAR thing falls through, he's got a second life available as a rack jobber.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/blog/from_the_marbles/post/If-this-NASCAR-thing-doesn-t-work-out-Harvick-s?urn=nascar-wp583

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Long Beach finish boosts for Briscoe, his No. 6 Penske team

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/04/14/1145518/long-beach-result-provides-boost.html

Masahiro Hasemi Naoki Hattori Paul Hawkins Mike Hawthorn

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Kyle Busch dominates Nashville truck race

Source: http://www.skirtsandscuffs.com/2011/04/kyle-busch-dominates-nashville-truck.html

Chris Irwin Jean Pierre Jabouille Jimmy Jackson Joe James

Senna immortalised in new movie

The hotly anticipated new film 'Senna', about the life and career of the Brazilian Formula 1 legend, has finally been given a UK release date - 3 June.

The movie, which I was lucky enough to see last summer, has caused quite a stir both within Formula 1 and the film world and with good reason - it's fantastic. It has already won one significant award from the jury at Robert Redford's Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, who gave it the World Cinema Audience award for best documentary.

It's a marvellous movie and, coming as it does from Working Title, the company behind Four Weddings and a Funeral and the brilliant mountaineering film Touching The Void, that's no surprise.

Senna's story is a compelling one anyway, but what makes this film are the unearthed treasures of previously unseen footage - including revealing snapshots of his life in Brazil and behind the closed doors of the driver briefings at grands prix.

These are weaved together with more familiar images of the great Brazilian's career to create a fascinating story that grips the audience from early on and never lets go. You can get a sense of it from the trailer we have embedded in this blog.

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The fundamental story will be familiar to many - Senna's arrival in F1 with high expectations; his unnerving of the established stars with his breathtaking pace; his battle with arch-rival Alain Prost; his emergence as the dominant force within the sport through his talent and magnetic personality and charisma; his death and the shock felt around the world, not just in the sport that he had come to transcend.

But to make it work as a film, the producers had to make a decision about the narrative arc - what was their story line?

They chose the classic theme of the little guy battling against the establishment and, while it works well as a story and is true up to a certain point in Senna's career, it is also where those more familiar with Senna's story may occasionally find themselves questioning it.

Carried along as you are by the power of the film itself and of Senna's presence, you're aware that the events of his life don't fit the theme as comfortably as you might like - not from an objective point of view, anyway.

An example comes in a sequence that is one of the movie's greatest strengths - the way it deals with events surrounding the 1989 Japanese Grand Prix.

This was the first of two infamous collisions between Senna and Prost at Suzuka in consecutive years. The Frenchman turned in on Senna when the Brazilian tried to pass him at the chicane, they collided, Prost climbed out of his car, but Senna went on to win the race, only to be disqualified on dubious grounds for cutting the chicane, a decision that handed the title to Prost.


The poster for the new movie 'Senna'

Using previously unseen footage, the film shows Prost making his way to the stewards' room after the race and talking to Jean-Marie Balestre, the president of the sport's governing body, then called Fisa.

It creates a powerful reminder of how badly treated Senna was that weekend by the powers that be, so it fits nicely with the story of the film. Prost is painted as the villain, manipulating his powerful contacts to the detriment of the wronged, na�ve, brilliant upstart.

But of course the reality was much more complex than that. This sequence is not preceded by any sense of how things had got to that point between Senna and Prost, no relating of Senna's aggressive driving tactics towards his rival, or his breaking of an agreement the two had made before the San Marino Grand Prix earlier that year.

It is only later in the film - by which time Senna himself has effectively become the establishment - that this darker side to his sporting personality, the slightly unhinged aspect to his character, is touched upon.

On an objective level, this undermines the film a little. But from a cinematic point of view it undoubtedly makes for a more powerful story.

This film is telling Senna's story, from Senna's point view. He is used as a narrator in death, through archive interviews, in much the same way as the hero of Touching The Void, Joe Simpson, is used in life in that film, and the end product is similarly superb.

'Senna', then, is not an unbiased movie; it's not trying to be. But it is a brilliant and beautiful one.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2011/04/senna_immortalised_in_new_movi.html

Key Motorsports Chevrolet Shelby Howard InternationalTrucks com Chevrolet Kelly Bires

New season providing memories to savour

I'm sitting on the plane that is bringing me home from the opening trio of races, and I'm reminiscing.

I'm not daydreaming about the first time we heard the engines roar for 2011 in Albert Park, Sebastian Vettel's dominant start to the season, Vitaly Petrov flying or Lewis Hamilton's slow, steady reeling-in of Vettel this weekend.

Nope, I've gone a little further back: I'm re-living 1995. Trawling through the plane's CD library I've stumbled upon the breakthrough album Different Class by Pulp. It reminds me of my mum's pistachio green VW Polo, studying for my A-levels, David Coulthard's first Formula 1 win and me, at 17, thinking the world started and stopped at the Norfolk county border!

However, one thing slightly tainting the fun of air-drumming to Common People is that I've just realised Vettel would have been seven years old at that time. Ouch!

OK, I'm going to park memories of my oversized The Sweater Shop jumper - which was a must-have item for a lanky lad in Norwich in the mid-90s - and cast my mind back to the more recent memory of two races that have set the benchmark for the 2011 season.

Lewis Hamilton celebrates victory at the Chinese Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton celebrates victory at the Chinese Grand Prix. Photo: Getty Images

To be totally honest, I think that, while we all enjoyed the opening round in Australia, it disguised just how frenetic this year is likely to be. I was chatting to some guys in the paddock on Sunday who were speculating that if that race was run again tomorrow, Pirelli would bring the even more marginal Supersoft tyre to Australia.

I think that is an indication of the success of having these new tyres. As DC said at the end of the commentary on Sunday: "Thank you Pirelli".

While I agree with that sentiment, I think we should be thanking F1. I've been sharing this flight with the likes of Ross Brawn of Mercedes, Williams designer Sam Michael and Paul Di Resta, who has been mightily impressive for Force India. Those three guys, and the rest of the designers, technicians, drivers and team principles up and down the pit lane, want cars that are fast in every circumstance.

The drivers ask for consistency and reliability, while the manufacturers want something that is so quick it helps shift their road cars. However, they have agreed to totally compromise their work for the sake of you guys sitting at home.

To improve the show. Vettel didn't want a car that simply "dropped off a cliff" as its tyres were worn at the end of Sunday's race. The strategists aren't keen on the pit wall resembling Air Traffic Control as they desperately try to outwit their opponents and make themselves look clever, and team bosses don't want to have to defend strategic mistakes after every race.

Look back to 12 months ago in Bahrain. Hardly an overtake, and most cars stopping once. This year the sport is totally unrecognisable, and it makes for compelling TV.

I don't envy the boys having to call such frenetic racing in the commentary box but I think they're doing well. Particularly DC, whose experience, knowledge, eagle-eyes and quick wit have surprised even me.

As for Martin Brundle, he's welcome to have his grid walk back! Logistically, it was impossible for him to do it in China so I bravely took on the challenge. But I have enough to think about doing 60 minutes of live TV pre-race, with stories developing around me, and I really didn't like having to doorstep the drivers. It felt a bit like walking into your office and shoving a microphone under your nose as you sit at your desk.

Martin has done more than 200 of them whereas Sunday was, believe it or not, the first time I've been on the grid pre-race. I'm just happy to have survived interviewing a seven-time world champion despite DC totally abandoning me!

After I'd finished that, it was time for the racing. Almost 60 stops in Malaysia, a further 55 in China. And amongst it all a chance to look like a real hero. McLaren boss Martin Whitmarsh told me on the pit wall after the race that his team had actually got their strategy wrong and wanted to do only two stops.

Yet, while Vettel demonstrated that, even with his skills it was impossible to make such a tactic work, Hamilton and Mark Webber made a stop more and it paid dividends. In fact, the success of the tyres has totally overshadowed the introduction of DRS (Drag Reduction System) and re-introduction of KERS (Kinetic Energy Recovery System).

It is clear the FIA is still fiddling with the DRS rear wing to encourage overtaking. I don't find it artificial as it still takes skill to make a move stick. What I think we need to avoid is drivers overtaking in only one place, following their rival and not making a move until they can use their DRS advantage. We may also see two zones in Turkey.

You couldn't accuse Lewis of lacking ambition when overtaking though, could you? I was watching the race unfold in the McLaren hospitality area and while everyone was leaping around, hands on heads, almost unable to believe what was happening, the messages coming in thick and fast on Twitter were almost identical.

A good example of the power of Twitter was someone tweeting me a photo of Fernando Alonso's DRS operating outside the prescribed zone. I told the producer what I'd seen and the guys in VT called up the same clip and played it to the nation while Martin and David commented on it.

Anyway, the Pulp album has now rolled around to Monday Morning so I'm going to return to the 90s and leave you guys to a lovely shortened working week. We've stacks of stuff planned for a few weeks' time when we get to Turkey.

Thanks for setting your alarms in your droves the past month - it's good to know that plenty of you were watching as we marched around the pit lane and paddock. Below are my five favourite moments of the season so far - here's hoping for plenty more until 27 November!

1. Lewis's interview in the garage after his first win of the season. He was as open, honest and relaxed as I've ever seen him. I was blown away by the clarity of thought that he described as he closed in on Sebastian.

2. Petrov''s podium. What a car Renault have produced this year, and how cool was Vitaly in Australia? The first ever Russian podium in F1 and a great reward for the team's faith in him.

3. Eddie Jordan totally forgetting his question to Jenson Button on the F1 Forum in Malaysia. Thankfully DC stepped in as JB and I were both corpsing at that moment. Classic EJ and I missed him in China.

4. The RB7. Adrian Newey is an enigmatic individual who seems to have a God-given ability to design the most incredible racing cars - Williams, McLaren, Red Bull. They must all be so grateful they could afford him.

5. The racing. Paul Di Resta beating his classy team-mate Adrian Sutil, Felipe Massa beating Fernando Alonso, Vettel's dominance, Webber's doggedness, Team Lotus mixing it with the midfield and Kamui Kobayashi's racing instinct. Bodes well for the next seven months, eh?

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/jakehumphrey/2011/04/new_season_providing_memories.html

Sam Hanks Walt Hansgen Mike Harris Cuth Harrison

What if they tried stability?

Jimmie Johnson – Underdog? What might that do for the popularity of NASCAR?

 

AVONDALE, Ariz. – Just what does Brian France want to change?

The NASCAR monarch – after all, stock car racing has a clearly defined royal family and order of succession: Bill I, Bill II, Brian I – thinks if times are bad, the only possible solution is change.

The Internet hasn’t changed as much in the last decade as NASCAR.

Why not wait on the fans for once, instead of asking them to adapt?

The Chase, which made finishing 12th as important as first (for 26 races), is in its best shape since 2004, when it debuted. Somehow, by the strangest quirk of fate, one race remains and Jimmie Johnson actually doesn’t have it sewn up.

Johnson, unbeatable and unloved, thinks winning it this year might actually decrease the number of fans who dislike him. He’s going into the final race without the lead. Could the specter of Johnson the … underdog … be raised?

“It would probably be received better than the ones in the past, with the runaway show we’ve had in a couple of them,” he said.

It’s worth a shot, yes?

Lead changes and exciting finishes are up. The flip side, of course, is that Dale Earnhardt Jr. is down.

NASCAR changed its grading system and put everyone on a curve – or maybe all the courses are strictly pass-or-fail – for 26 races. It made all the cars so close to identical that Johnson himself might not be able to tell a Ford from a Chevy without those handy headlight decals. It revved up the action with rules that make the old “racing back to the caution flag” seem safe. The number of laps aren’t even reliable anymore.

Some fans are ticked off. Some are just tired.

Maybe change has been transacted at so dizzying a pace that people just can’t keep up. And contradictions flourish.

With cars that look just alike, inexplicably, one manufacturer, Chevy, dominates as never before.

Exciting races are perceived widely as just the opposite. “Boring” is just a strange word to be used in relation to what has taken place on the tracks this year, but fans say it every day.

Every change is sold as cost-cutting, but none of the teams ever actually save any money because, before they get a chance to do so, more changes emerge from that godforsaken Research and Development Center.

Even change gets old when it never stops.

Source: http://nascar.rbma.com/on-track/general-motorsports/33202-what-if-they-tried-stability

Gerino Gerini Peter Gethin Piercarlo Ghinzani Bruno Giacomelli

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Group seeks NASCAR Sprint Cup race in Iowa

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2011/04/22/1148301/group-seeks-nascar-sprint-cup.html

Ryan Truex NAPA Toyota Joe Nemechek Gator com Chevrolet

Engine Builder Says Christopher And Bonsignore Whelen Modified Tour Teams Weren't Aware Of Punishable Issue

On Wednesday, Whelen Modified Tour driver Ted Christopher insisted his team wasn't aware of the motor issues that led to NASCAR penalizing his team following his victory in Sunday's season opening Icebreaker 150 at Thompson International Speedway.

Whelen Modified Tour.jpgOn Thursday, the man that built the motor in Christopher's car insisted that neither Christopher or his team had any idea there were punishable issues with their engine.

NASCAR announced Wednesday that Christopher and his team, along with driver Justin Bonsignore and his team, were being penalized for using illegally altered carburetor boosters on their motors during Sunday's Icebreaker 150 at Thompson.

Source: http://blogs.courant.com/autoracing/2011/04/engine-builder-apologizes-says.html

Nicolas Kiesa Leo Kinnunen Danny Kladis Hans Klenk

Hands Down: Ted Christopher Rallies To Win Whelen Modified Tour Icebreaker 150 At Thompson Speedway

THOMPSON - Ted Christopher often jokes about how he continues to get better with age behind the wheel of a racecar.

Ted Christopher Thompson WMT Win 4-10-11.jpgIt's really no joke.

On Sunday, the 52-year old Christopher added one more dramatic performance to an already overflowing list of spectacular career accomplishments behind the wheel of a Modified.

Christopher, of Plainville, rallied from two laps down after an early wreck to win the Whelen Modified Tour season opening Icebreaker 150 at Thompson International Speedway.

Rowan Pennink of Huntingdon Valley, Pa. was second and Mike Stefanik of Coventry, R.I. third.

It was Christopher's 39th career Whelen Modified Tour victory, his sixth in the last eight events at Thompson and 12th overall at the track.

Source: http://blogs.courant.com/autoracing/2011/04/hands-down-ted-christopher-ral.html

Dale Earnhardt Jr AMP Energy National Guard Chevrolet Kasey Kahne Budweiser Ford

Hispania continues F111 improvements

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/xhmhix0KG5U/hispania-continues-f111-improvements.html

Bob Gerard Gerino Gerini Peter Gethin Piercarlo Ghinzani

Friday, April 22, 2011

INDYCAR: Another MUNDANE ABC Telecast...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/fg4GcOcPX5E/indycar-another-mundane-abc-telecast.html

Michael Annett Germain com Toyota Ryan Newman Phoenix Construction Chevrolet

Cartoon: Carl Edwards And The Magnificant Marketing Machine

Source: http://www.4ever3blog.com/2011/4/10/2101967/cartoon-carl-edwards-and-the-magnificant-marketing-machine

Greg Biffle 3M Ford Jeff Burton Caterpillar Chevrolet

Japan's 9.0 Earthquake and Ebisu Circuit Damage

On March 11 2011, Japan experienced one of the worst earthquakes in history (a 9.0  on the Richter scale) which set of a sequence of devastating events.

You would have seen the news of the Tsunami which flattened the north-east coastline of Japan in Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures.

Soon after the tsunami hit, the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant started overheating which fueled fears of a meltdown, and at this time, is still in critical condition.

So how did this all affect Ebisu circuit?

Thanks to Kuma and his blog, we're able to see some of the damage done to the tracks at Ebisu from the EARTHQUAKE!!

Driftland.. just a few more cracks.. probably won't even notice!
School course pits!! wow!
The cliff perched garages.. ouch! That's Kuma's first WRX that he sold to the italian drifter Federico Sceriffo.
Andy from PowerVehicles.com also mentioned their garages where they work from and store their $$$ cars was badly damaged too, but luckily his D1SL spec JZX100 only got minor damage.

It's a big shock to see the beloved Ebisu circuit receive so much damage, but the crew there have been hard at work and re-opened today after a 2-week closure.

Kumakubo really has a heart like a lion though. According to his blog, he has been providing shelter, food and water to those who lost their homes or had to evacuate due to the disasters.

Also, some folks have been wondering if drift matsuri will still be on at the end of April.

At this time, it is still going ahead. No news of cancellation. The only concern is the gasoline shortage that the whole of east Japan is suffering from.

If gasoline tankers can't start moving soon, there won't be enough hi-oku for the 200+ cars that attend matsuri - the next one coming on April 29th.

But, my inside source says that gas delivery should be back on track by the end of this month, so it seems there will be gasoline, but will there be enough for the gas guzzling drift machines! Let's hope so.

Disco Stu
www.DriftInJapan.com

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/driftinjapan/~3/qGa0K4C6AmM/japans-90-earthquake-and-ebisu-circuit.html

Terry Labonte Kevin Conway Joe Nemechek Jason Leffler

Edox X-Treme Pilot III is specially designed for WRC drivers

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Edox X-Treme Pilot III
Edox X-Treme Pilot III - Click above for high-res image

Whereas in circuit racing, drivers are competing against each other wheel-to-wheel, in rallying it's all a race against the clock, and the driver with the fastest time wins. So it follows naturally that rally drivers need the right tool for the job, and this is it: the Edox X-Treme Pilot III.

Crafted by the official timekeeper of the World Rally Championship specifically for WRC drivers, the X-Treme Pilot III features such unique touches as oversize push-buttons that are easy to actuate even with gloves on and a tachometer scale around the dial. It's housed in a lightweight titanium case with a wheel motif embossed on the case-back, and affixed to the paddock's most talented wrists by a rubber strap with rally-spec tire tread pattern.

The Edox X-Treme Pilot III will go on sale in June with an €1,890 (~$2,750) MSRP in a limited edition of 1000 examples.

[Source: Watch Happening]

Edox X-Treme Pilot III is specially designed for WRC drivers originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 22 Apr 2011 07:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.autoblog.com/2011/04/22/edox-x-treme-pilot-iii-is-specially-designed-for-wrc-drivers/

Theo Helfrich Mack Hellings Brian Henton Johnny Herbert

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Legendary Modified Driver Bob Potter To Serve As Grand Marshall For Tech-Net Spring Sizzler At Stafford Speedway

On June 28th, Bob Potter will get back on the track competitively at Stafford Motor Speedway when he participates in the first CarQuest Champions for Charity event.

Bob Potter At Thompson.jpgBut before getting back behind the wheel, Potter will first fill the role of honored one at the track. 

Potter, a 5-time SK Modified division champion at Stafford, will serve as Grand Marshall of the 40th Tech-Net Spring Sizzler at Stafford Motor Speedway, April 30-May 1.

Potter is one 14 drivers who will participate in the Champions for Charity event.

The 69-year old won five SK Modified championships at Stafford in 1988, '91, '92, '94 and '95.

Source: http://blogs.courant.com/autoracing/2011/04/legendary-modified-driver-bob-1.html

Jeffrey Michael Gordon Charles Robert Hamilton IV Charles Robert Hamilton V Kevin Michael Harvick

New season providing memories to savour

I'm sitting on the plane that is bringing me home from the opening trio of races, and I'm reminiscing.

I'm not daydreaming about the first time we heard the engines roar for 2011 in Albert Park, Sebastian Vettel's dominant start to the season, Vitaly Petrov flying or Lewis Hamilton's slow, steady reeling-in of Vettel this weekend.

Nope, I've gone a little further back: I'm re-living 1995. Trawling through the plane's CD library I've stumbled upon the breakthrough album Different Class by Pulp. It reminds me of my mum's pistachio green VW Polo, studying for my A-levels, David Coulthard's first Formula 1 win and me, at 17, thinking the world started and stopped at the Norfolk county border!

However, one thing slightly tainting the fun of air-drumming to Common People is that I've just realised Vettel would have been seven years old at that time. Ouch!

OK, I'm going to park memories of my oversized The Sweater Shop jumper - which was a must-have item for a lanky lad in Norwich in the mid-90s - and cast my mind back to the more recent memory of two races that have set the benchmark for the 2011 season.

Lewis Hamilton celebrates victory at the Chinese Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton celebrates victory at the Chinese Grand Prix. Photo: Getty Images

To be totally honest, I think that, while we all enjoyed the opening round in Australia, it disguised just how frenetic this year is likely to be. I was chatting to some guys in the paddock on Sunday who were speculating that if that race was run again tomorrow, Pirelli would bring the even more marginal Supersoft tyre to Australia.

I think that is an indication of the success of having these new tyres. As DC said at the end of the commentary on Sunday: "Thank you Pirelli".

While I agree with that sentiment, I think we should be thanking F1. I've been sharing this flight with the likes of Ross Brawn of Mercedes, Williams designer Sam Michael and Paul Di Resta, who has been mightily impressive for Force India. Those three guys, and the rest of the designers, technicians, drivers and team principles up and down the pit lane, want cars that are fast in every circumstance.

The drivers ask for consistency and reliability, while the manufacturers want something that is so quick it helps shift their road cars. However, they have agreed to totally compromise their work for the sake of you guys sitting at home.

To improve the show. Vettel didn't want a car that simply "dropped off a cliff" as its tyres were worn at the end of Sunday's race. The strategists aren't keen on the pit wall resembling Air Traffic Control as they desperately try to outwit their opponents and make themselves look clever, and team bosses don't want to have to defend strategic mistakes after every race.

Look back to 12 months ago in Bahrain. Hardly an overtake, and most cars stopping once. This year the sport is totally unrecognisable, and it makes for compelling TV.

I don't envy the boys having to call such frenetic racing in the commentary box but I think they're doing well. Particularly DC, whose experience, knowledge, eagle-eyes and quick wit have surprised even me.

As for Martin Brundle, he's welcome to have his grid walk back! Logistically, it was impossible for him to do it in China so I bravely took on the challenge. But I have enough to think about doing 60 minutes of live TV pre-race, with stories developing around me, and I really didn't like having to doorstep the drivers. It felt a bit like walking into your office and shoving a microphone under your nose as you sit at your desk.

Martin has done more than 200 of them whereas Sunday was, believe it or not, the first time I've been on the grid pre-race. I'm just happy to have survived interviewing a seven-time world champion despite DC totally abandoning me!

After I'd finished that, it was time for the racing. Almost 60 stops in Malaysia, a further 55 in China. And amongst it all a chance to look like a real hero. McLaren boss Martin Whitmarsh told me on the pit wall after the race that his team had actually got their strategy wrong and wanted to do only two stops.

Yet, while Vettel demonstrated that, even with his skills it was impossible to make such a tactic work, Hamilton and Mark Webber made a stop more and it paid dividends. In fact, the success of the tyres has totally overshadowed the introduction of DRS (Drag Reduction System) and re-introduction of KERS (Kinetic Energy Recovery System).

It is clear the FIA is still fiddling with the DRS rear wing to encourage overtaking. I don't find it artificial as it still takes skill to make a move stick. What I think we need to avoid is drivers overtaking in only one place, following their rival and not making a move until they can use their DRS advantage. We may also see two zones in Turkey.

You couldn't accuse Lewis of lacking ambition when overtaking though, could you? I was watching the race unfold in the McLaren hospitality area and while everyone was leaping around, hands on heads, almost unable to believe what was happening, the messages coming in thick and fast on Twitter were almost identical.

A good example of the power of Twitter was someone tweeting me a photo of Fernando Alonso's DRS operating outside the prescribed zone. I told the producer what I'd seen and the guys in VT called up the same clip and played it to the nation while Martin and David commented on it.

Anyway, the Pulp album has now rolled around to Monday Morning so I'm going to return to the 90s and leave you guys to a lovely shortened working week. We've stacks of stuff planned for a few weeks' time when we get to Turkey.

Thanks for setting your alarms in your droves the past month - it's good to know that plenty of you were watching as we marched around the pit lane and paddock. Below are my five favourite moments of the season so far - here's hoping for plenty more until 27 November!

1. Lewis's interview in the garage after his first win of the season. He was as open, honest and relaxed as I've ever seen him. I was blown away by the clarity of thought that he described as he closed in on Sebastian.

2. Petrov''s podium. What a car Renault have produced this year, and how cool was Vitaly in Australia? The first ever Russian podium in F1 and a great reward for the team's faith in him.

3. Eddie Jordan totally forgetting his question to Jenson Button on the F1 Forum in Malaysia. Thankfully DC stepped in as JB and I were both corpsing at that moment. Classic EJ and I missed him in China.

4. The RB7. Adrian Newey is an enigmatic individual who seems to have a God-given ability to design the most incredible racing cars - Williams, McLaren, Red Bull. They must all be so grateful they could afford him.

5. The racing. Paul Di Resta beating his classy team-mate Adrian Sutil, Felipe Massa beating Fernando Alonso, Vettel's dominance, Webber's doggedness, Team Lotus mixing it with the midfield and Kamui Kobayashi's racing instinct. Bodes well for the next seven months, eh?

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/jakehumphrey/2011/04/new_season_providing_memories.html

Erik Darnell 3M Ford Reed Sorenson Dollar General Toyota

Cyclist’s ride across America ends with Daytona victory lap

This is a cool Daytona story, and not just because it involves racers who aren't hooked up two-by-two.

Jimmy Button is a former motocross rider who was briefly paralyzed following an accident in Supercross practice 11 years ago. But intense physical therapy and training helped him beat the paralysis, so much so that he just finished a ride across the freaking country with a victory lap at Daytona International Speedway.

Button rode 2,428 miles, from Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego to Daytona, with the goal of seeking to raise money for research into spinal cord injuries.

Both sites have significance. Button was injured at Qualcomm in 2000, and won at Daytona in 1994 in the Lites division of the Daytona Supercross by Honda. You can find out more about his work at www.milesformiraclestoday.com. Congrats to Button on an exceptional achievement.

Photo via Daytona International Speedway.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/blog/from_the_marbles/post/Cyclist-s-ride-across-America-ends-with-Daytona-?urn=nascar-wp723

Dick Gibson Gimax Richie Ginther Yves Giraud Cabantous

2012 Fiat 500c drops its top in New York

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2012 Fiat 500c
2012 Fiat 500c - Click above for high-res image gallery

Fiat will unveil the brand's newest take on the tiny 500 at the 2011 New York Auto Show later today. The 2012 500c delivers a unique power-operated dual-layer panoramic folding top that leaves the vehicle's roof arches in place, and Fiat says that the design protects vehicle occupants from wind noise and buffeting unlike any other convertible on the market. The design also keeps the roof from impeding on rear passenger and cargo room, which is a nice touch on vehicle about the size of a ballet slipper.

The drophead can lose its canvas cover at speeds up to 60 miles perh our, and the roof can be partially closed to serve as a large sunroof should the driver so desire. The 500c also makes use of a slightly taller windshield compared to its hatchback brethren - a trait designed to give occupants a little more outward visibility.

Inside, the back seats can still be folded down to offer up to 23.4 cubic feet of cargo area. With the rear thrones in place, that number drops to a scant 5.4 cubes.

The 2012 500c will get its pep from a Multiair 1.4-liter four-cylinder engine when it goes on sale later this spring. Buyers can expect to play with 101 horsepower and 98 pound-feet of torque. When coupled to a five-speed manual transmission, the engine is also good for up to 38 miles per gallon, and a six-speed automatic is also available. Follow the jump for Fiat's full press release.



[Source: Chrysler]

Continue reading 2012 Fiat 500c drops its top in New York

2012 Fiat 500c drops its top in New York originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 21 Apr 2011 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.autoblog.com/2011/04/21/officially-official-fiat-500c-drops-its-top-for-new-york/

Gus Hutchison Jacky Ickx Yuji Ide Jesús Iglesias

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Leader?s Schmeder?s or Leaderhosen?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/RI35X7LO-Lg/leaders-schmeders-or-leaderhosen.html

Bobby Grim Romain Grosjean Olivier Grouillard Brian Gubby

From the snail-mail bag, five great suggestions for getting fans interested again in NASCAR

 

Great idea #4: Sprint Cup racin' on dirt tracks.

 

Dear NASCAR This Week,

I read your newspaper offerings weekly, and enjoy them, especially the comments from NASCAR fans. I've been a race fan for 65-plus years and enjoy sprints on dirt and NASCAR. Was talking to some buddies recently about what NASCAR could do to get fans “returning to the track,” and we came up with some suggestions:

  • Eliminate qualifying in its present format. At each event, have two qualifying races, starting half of the entries in each qualifier. The qualifier starting positions could be set by pulling numbers out of a hat, or something similar. The qualifier races should be short, maybe 50 miles at the max. Then take the top 20 finishers from each qualifier for the feature event. The features should be no more than 300 miles in length (with special exceptions). The races, as they are today, are too long, and real racing is usually put off until the last few laps. Shorter-distance races would encourage more intense competition throughout the event.
  • Eliminate this top-35 thing entirely. All that does is prevent potential new teams from being able to compete.
  • The points battle needs to return to the old format. Too much hype on the top 12 thing.
  • Maybe a couple of Sprint Cup races on dirt? There are some great mile and 1/2 mile tracks out there.
  • Lower the ticket prices for these events. An empty bleacher seat is a terrible thing to waste.

 

Thanks. -- Gary H., Newburgh, Ind.

 

Monte replies: Thanks to you and your friends for putting so much thought into this. We’d love to see Cup races on dirt, too, but there aren’t any dirt tracks capable of accommodating 50,000 or more fans.

Source: http://nascar.rbma.com/on-track/general-motorsports/33272-from-the-snail-mail-bag-five-great-suggestions-for-getting-fans-interested-again-in-nascar

Derrike Cope Charter Communications Dodg Carl Edwards Kellogg s Cheez It Ford

Ty Dillon stuns Frank Kimmel to win Talladega ARCA race

Ty Dillon made it look easy Thursday when he grabbed the pole for this weekend's ARCA race at Talladega ? his third pole in five career ARCA starts.

Saturday morning, in the rain-postponed version of the 80-lap companion event to Sunday's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race, he made winning look even easier by taking a pair of ARCA veterans to school when the checkered flag was waving.

Dillon, the 18-year-old grandson of NASCAR team owner Richard Childress, pushed 8-time ARCA champion Frank Kimmel to the front and then pulled in front of ARCA superspeedway ace Bobby Gerheart exiting turn four on the final lap. Kimmel swung high to block at first but then opted to protect the inside. Dillon used the open lane to slingshot past Kimmel and win by a nose.

The finish left the elder Childress ? who watched the race from Dillon's pit box ? comparing the move to one Dale Earnhardt would make to win at Talladega. Potentially overreaching statements aside, it was a great move and win for a kid who will graduate from high school this spring.

The race was initially scheduled for Friday afternoon at Talladega, but deadly severe storms in the Southeast didn't leave Talladega dry and rolled through prior to the scheduled start, canceling the day's remaining track activities.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/blog/from_the_marbles/post/Ty-Dillon-stuns-Frank-Kimmel-to-win-Talladega-AR?urn=nascar-wp613

Gene Hartley Masahiro Hasemi Naoki Hattori Paul Hawkins

Reigning Whelen Modified Tour Champion Bobby Santos III Fast Out Of The Gate At Thompson Speedway

THOMPSON - The last time Bobby Santos III was at Thompson International Speedway, he walked away with the hardware all drivers in the division are looking for.

Bobby Santos III Sizzler Practice.jpgSantos closed out the 2010 Whelen Modified Tour season at Thompson last October by capturing his first series title. Saturday he returned to Thompson looking prepared immediately to defend that title.

Santos, of Franklin, Mass., topped the speed charts in practice Saturday for the Whelen Modified Tour season opening Icebreaker 150 at Thompson with a fast lap of 18.407 seconds (122.236 mph). The speed proved faster than Santos' track record qualifying effort of 18.418 seconds in the Icebreaker last year.

Source: http://blogs.courant.com/autoracing/2011/04/reigning-whelen-modified-tour-1.html

Derrike Cope Charter Communications Dodg Carl Edwards Kellogg s Cheez It Ford

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Who else? Kyle Busch wins at Talladega in beat-up car

Kyle Busch figured that his chances for a win were decimated when he was involved in a 21-car pileup during Saturday's Nationwide race at Talladega.

Heck, he even went so far as to say that the car was "killed." After the car was patched up, there was still a gap between the left rear tire and the quarterpanel and tape all across the left side and front bumper.

It didn't matter. Busch made a daring three-wide move in Turns 1 and 2 on the final lap thanks to a push from teammate Joey Logano that put him in the lead as the caution flag flew for Mike Wallace's flip on the backstretch.

Believe it or not, Wallace, driving for Nationwide Series stalwart Johnny Davis, and Joe Nemechek were a force together in the last 25 laps, running with the leaders and surging to the lead on multiple occasions. The Wallace/Nemechek tandem was in the lead when the final two cautions came out — setting up two attempts at a green-white-checker finish — but that meant they were separated on the final restart as they started alongside each other on the front row.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/nascar/blog/from_the_marbles/post/Who-else-Kyle-Busch-wins-at-Talladega-in-beat-u?urn=nascar-wp626

Sons of Anarchy FX Network Chevrolet Ryan Newman Phoenix Construction Chevrolet Jeremy Clements

Di Resta takes praise in his stride

In Shanghai

Rookie Paul di Resta has been the subject of high praise in the Formula 1 paddock in Shanghai after scoring a point in each of his first two races.

The Scottish Force India driver was even likened by one journalist to French legend Alain Prost, another rookie who collected points on his debut.

Praise does not come much higher than that - Prost, who first burst on to the F1 scene with McLaren in 1980, went on to win four world championships and 51 grands prix.

But Di Resta is refusing to get caught up in the hype bubbling around him because he views his performances in Australia and Malaysia somewhat differently.

"All I can say is that we expected a bit more but for whatever reason it didn't quite come," Di Resta told BBC Sport.

"It's nice to get [my first points] out the way at the first and second grands prix.

"But that is the job we're out there to do and it has been a realistic target on both occasions."

Talking to Di Resta in Shanghai, I was impressed by his aura of almost palpable steeliness mixed with calm. Here is a man with a definite plan.

If the main priority on his F1 tick-list was collecting his first F1 points, then the second is beating the man in the same machinery.

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Di Resta, who was signed by Force India in January after learning the ropes last season as the team reserve, has already out-qualified team-mate Adrian Sutil twice and finished one place ahead of the German in Malaysia.

He had also been ahead of Sutil in Melbourne but the pair swapped places in the pits because they were running on different strategies and Di Resta crossed the line just behind Sutil in 10th.

"You can gauge yourself against your team-mate," added Di Resta. "And I've got a lot of respect for Adrian.

"I'd like to keep it where it's been and through the races I'm gaining more confidence. I did get the better of him in Malaysia but it's not always going to be like that.

"I wouldn't say he has to be afraid. Adrian is very quick and he's established, all I can say is that our performance has been comparable."

Winning a place in F1 has also given Di Resta, who is the cousin of the three-time IndyCar champion Dario Franchitti, a second chance to test his mettle against his former rivals Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton.

In his junior career, Di Resta raced against the future F1 world champions, notably beating his then team-mate Vettel to the Formula Three Euroseries crown in 2006 when the German was already dipping his toe into F1 as a tester for BMW Sauber.

Now he has returned to competition with his teenage rivals, does Di Resta think they have grown beyond him in terms of talents?

"They've got good equipment and they're good drivers but at the same time I don't think that anybody's special," he added.

"It's been good [to be competing against them] but at the same time they are a little bit up the end of the grid.

"I'd like to be racing against them. One day I'm sure we will be but I'm not going to compare myself against Sebastian when I'm not in the same car."

Paul di Resta

Di Resta has out-qualified his experienced team-mate in both races so far. Photo: Getty

And what if Di Resta was alongside Vettel in the second Red Bull?

"I'd be hopeful I'd be as competitive as Sebastian," he added.

"How much he has developed and how much I've developed from 2006 no-one will ever now until we are in the same position again."

Di Resta is refreshingly clear and open about where he finds himself in his fledging F1 career and where he wants to go.

But there are two points on which the Scot would not be drawn; what his ultimate aim is for 2011 and what difficulties he is contending with.

"I've tried not to think about personal targets at the moment," added Di Resta, whose preparations for the Chinese Grand Prix were hampered by a fuel-pressure problem that kept him consigned to the pits for second practice on Friday. "It's too early to do that.

"I'll take it week by week but what I've achieve I want more now of - and you keep wanting more until you've got it.

"I'm not going to speculate on what [I find difficult] as there are people who will pick up on it and I believe that on the outside you need to show you're strong.

"That is the whole idea of competitive nature, you pick someone's weak bits and you bounce on top of it."

There is one wish, however, that Di Resta is happy to talk about and that is the treat he would like for his 25th birthday, which he celebrates this weekend.

"I'd like some more points," he says instinctively. "I'd like some nice cars but there is plenty of time later in life for that, so I'll take some more points."

POST-QUALIFYING UPDATE, 1100 BST, SATURDAY 16 APRIL:

Di Resta's quest to end his birthday weekend on a high with more points to add to his tally was given a nice boost by a career-best qualifying performance in Shanghai.

The 25-year-old had not done any qualifying simulations during his limited running on Friday but he battled his way into the top-10 shoot-out for the first time and claimed eighth on the grid.

Di Resta, who passed Nico Rosberg of Mercedes in Malaysia and almost got the better of Michael Schumacher's Silver Arrow in a battle for ninth place, is now feeling confident he can move forwards during the race.

"Our race pace doesn't seem to be too bad," said Di Resta. "So fingers crossed we can pick up some points again."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/sarahholt/2011/04/di_resta_takes_praise_in_his_s.html

Masami Kuwashima Robert La Caze Jacques Laffite Franck Lagorce