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    Poking more holes in the top-35 rule

    Friday, June 6, 2008, 06:03 PM EST [General]

    Earlier this week, it was announced that the Haas-CNC Sprint Cup teams were going to appeal the 150-point penalties NASCAR levied for their alleged illegal wing brackets.  The catch is that until the appeal is heard, the teams will be listed in the owners standings with point totals reflecting the penalty.  Now, leaving aside this SPECIFIC question of guilt or innocence at Haas-CNC, is there anyone here who REALLY would like to ever see THIS scenario?

    1.  Team inside top-35 gets penalized, moving the team outside the top-35.


    This essentially happened to the #66 team, although they were in last week at Dover, their finish (39th) was poor enough to move them down to 36th.  They were 25th without the penalty headed to Dover, and they would have been 28th headed to Pocono.

    2.  Team, now outside the top-35, misses a race or two.

    Could happen, right?  The 70 team has missed races.  So has the 96.  And the 10.  And more.

    3.  Due largely to missing races, team falls well below top-35 cutline.

    This happens SO MUCH faster than you would think.  Right now, there is one team - the #66 - that is within 100 points of 35th.  For J.J. Yeley to put his #96 back into the top-35, he would nearly have to win a race, or string together top-ten finishes - which, by the way, ISN'T nearly required to be barely in the top-35 (see Waltrip, Michael.)  Every other team besides the #66 is at least 142 points behind 35th.

    4.  NASCAR accepts appeal and restores points that were penalized.

    Again - not specific to the Haas-CNC case, but it could happen.  Robby Gordon was docked 100 points this season that were returned.  This is not an entirely implausible scenario.


    Now, WHAT IF the rescinded penalty, applied for a few races then withdrawn, knocked a team out of the top-35 and forced them to miss races which they would have OTHERWISE qualified?  WHAT IF NASCAR restored the points, yet those races that were missed left that team STILL outside the top-35?  You know what that team would be?

    Screwed.

    Now, if you are reading this blog, you probably already don't like the top-35 rule - hardly anyone who really likes NASCAR does, right?  But seriously, how can NASCAR not see that they made a rule that could potentially have GRAVE unintended consequences?

    In this case, all the affected team could get is a "sorry, OUR bad" from NASCAR.
    0 (0 Ratings)

    JJD's updated points standings after Dover

    Monday, June 2, 2008, 07:31 PM EST [General]

    Despite a weekend of dreadfully boring racing this weekend at the Monster Mile, NASCAR has continued to reward us with the winning exploits of Kyle Busch.  Busch dominated the last half of the Best Buy 400, and a quick pit-stop by the #18 crew sent Kyle on his way to a four second-win, and truthfully, it wasn't THAT close.  Kudos to NASCAR for NOT throwing a debris caution, which would have been expected by many savvy NASCAR viewers.

    Kyle's win is his fourth of the season in Sprint Cup, leading the series, but what I find immensely more fascinating is that it was his TENTH win of the season.  Perspective?  How's this list of the top winning seasons (on all levels of NASCAR) since 1982, the first year of the Busch Series.

                           YEAR   CUP  NWS  CTS TOTAL
    Kevin Harvick          2006     5    9    0    14
    Jeff Gordon            1998    13    0    0    13
    Darrell Waltrip        1982    12    1    0    13
    Dale Earnhardt         1987    11    1    0    12
    Mark Martin            1993     5    7    0    12
    Bill Elliott           1985    11    0    0    11
    Dale Earnhardt         1990     9    2    0    11
    Jimmie Johnson         2007    10    0    0    10
    Jeff Gordon            1997    10    0    0    10
    Jeff Gordon            1996    10    0    0    10
    Rusty Wallace          1993    10    0    0    10
    Harry Gant             1991     5    5    0    10
    Dale Earnhardt         1986     5    5    0    10
    Mark Martin            1997     4    6    0    10
    Sam Ard                1983     0   10    0    10
    Kyle Busch             2008     4    4    2    10

    That's where Kyle sits on JUNE 2ND!  Props to FOX for bringing up during their broadcast:  this is one of THE most dominating streaks in NASCAR, ever.  And the best thing?  Kyle's running Texas, Nashville, AND Pocono next week.

    Kyle's win extends his JJD points-lead over race runner-up Edwards.  Dale Earnhardt Jr. holds third despite being collected in Elliott Sadler's lap 19 crash.  (Is it me, or does Sadler seem to get into a lot of rookie-ish incidents for a veteran?  And nice call my FOX blowing by Jeremy Mayfield's presence in the #40, racing Sadler hard on the outside 20 laps into a 400-lap race.  Gee, why would Mayfield do THAT?  And I suppose you could toss the fact that Gilliland was on the bottom and make a big soap opera out of it, too.)  Jeff Gordon and Greg Biffle gained spots with top-five finishes after Sadler's crash crippled many top-ten cars.

    SPRINT CUP (DRIVERS)
    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Kyle Busch                   171    1
     2 Carl Edwards                 127    2
     3 Dale Earnhardt Jr.            99    3
     4 Jeff Gordon                   92    6
     5 Jeff Burton                   90    5
     6 Denny Hamlin                  86    4
     7 Greg Biffle                   85   10
     8 Jimmie Johnson                84    7
     9 Tony Stewart                  73    8
    10 Clint Bowyer                  72    9
    11 Ryan Newman                   55   11
       Matt Kenseth                  55   14
    13 Kasey Kahne                   53   12
    14 Kevin Harvick                 50   13
    15 Mark Martin                   34   15
    16 David Ragan                   33   16
       Martin Truex Jr.              33   17
    18 Kurt Busch                    23   18
    19 Travis Kvapil                 21   20
    20 Brian Vickers                 20   19

    Joe Gibbs Racing strengthened its hold on the top-spot in the team standings with Kyle's win, but Roush Fenway Racing finished 2-3-4, with Greg Biffle winning the pole and leading the most laps, and they bumped Hendrick Motorsports from second-place, a big change from how things were a year ago.  Some lower-ranked teams had good days at Dover as well, with Dave Blaney equalling his best finish of the year for Bill Davis racing in ninth, Travis Kvapil with yet another solid run finishing 11th, and Juam Pablo Montoya, he of the revolving door of crew chiefs, finishing 12th after starting 35th.

    SPRINT CUP (TEAMS)
    Rank                           Points
     1 Joe Gibbs Racing               223
     2 Roush Fenway Racing            186
     3 Hendrick Motorsports           183
     4 Richard Childress Racing       132
     5 Penske Racing                   60
     6 Dale Earnhardt Inc.             58
     7 Gillett Evernham Motorsports    55
     8 Chip Ganassi Racing             31
     9 Yates Racing                    26
    10 Red Bull Racing Team            21
    11 Bill Davis Racing               11
    12 Michael Waltrip Racing           9
    13 Robby Gordon Motorsports         8
       Petty Enterprises                8
    15 Haas CNC Racing                  2
    16 Front Row Motorsports            1
       Furniture Row Racing             1
       Hall of Fame Racing              1

    Surprisingly, NO teams would have been knocked out of the top-35 this week.  However, a couple of big-time teams need a good week at Pocono after getting caught up in the early melee at Dover, as Tony Stewart is 24th and Kevin Harvick is 25th in owners points over the last five races.  Paul Menard would need a good run at Pocono as well, as he loses a 14th-place result from Talladega next week.

    JJD's IMPROVED TOP-35 RULE (including Haas CNC penalties)
    31 Reed Sorenson                  410 - 43rd*
    32 Elliott Sadler                 415 - 29th
    33 Michael Waltrip                391 - 27th
    34 Paul Menard                    388 - 14th
    35 A.J. Allmendinger              366 - 30th
    36 Michael McDowell               352 - 26th
    37 Dario Franchitti               334 - 28th
    38 J.J. Yeley                     319 - 45th
    39 Joe Nemechek                   317 - 25th
    40 Scott Riggs                    308 - 16th
    *Result at Talladega, which is dropped after the race at Pocono.  A higher finish = more points to replace to stay in top-35.

    Denny Hamlin won the Heluva Good! 200, and I'd like to be all fired up because yet another Joe Gibbs Racing Cup-driver won a Nationwide Series race, making it ten Nationwide wins for the trio (which, while patently ridiculous, is just a replay of Hendrick Motorsports' dominance in Cup last year), but look at some of the names that are consistently in the top-ten in this series.  David Stremme and Brad Keselowski are non-Cup drivers on non-Cup teams (officially, anyway), yet they scored top-tens AGAIN this week, with Stremme third and BK seventh.  Add to the mixed "Sliced Bread" Joey Logano's debut NWS start, resulting in a sixth-place finish, and I'd say Nashville is looking pretty interesting next week.

    NATIONWIDE SERIES

    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Kyle Busch                   151    1
     2 Clint Bowyer                 121    2
     3 Carl Edwards                  98    4
     4 Tony Stewart                  97    3
     5 Denny Hamlin                  88    6
     6 Kevin Harvick                 80    5
     7 David Stremme                 72    8
     8 David Reutimann               67    9
     9 Brad Keselowski               66    7
    10 David Ragan                   49   10
       Dale Earnhardt Jr.            49   10
    12 Jeff Burton                   46   12
    13 Mike Bliss                    42   13
    14 Greg Biffle                   40   18
    15 Jason Leffler                 38   14
       Scott Wimmer                  38   15
    17 Brian Vickers                 35   16
    18 Matt Kenseth                  33   17
    19 Kasey Kahne                   27   19
    20 Steve Wallace                 25   20

    Joey Logano's sixth-place finish in his maiden NWS start actually further extends the #20 team's points-lead over Clint Bowyer and the #2 RCR Chevy, who finished ninth.  Carl Edwards' runner-up finish moved the #60 team up from fifth to third, and depsite running only six out of fourteen races, the #18 moves up to fourth with Denny Hamlin's win.

    NATIONWIDE SERIES (TEAMS)
    Rank  Car#  Owner                         Points

     1    20    Joe Gibbs Racing                 186
                Drivers:  T. Stewart (6 starts), D. Hamlin (4), Ky. Busch (3), J. Logano (1)

     2     2    Richard Childress Racing         121
                Driver:  C. Bowyer (14 starts)
     3    60    Roush Fenway Racing               98
                Driver:  C. Edwards (14 starts)

     4    18    Joe Gibbs Racing                  90
                Driver:  Ky. Busch (5 starts), D. Hamlin (1)
     5    33    Kevin Harvick Inc.                85
                Drivers:  K. Harvick (11 starts), C. Gale (2), R. Hornaday (1)
     6    29    Richard Childress Racing          84
                Drivers:  J. Burton (7 starts), S. Wimmer (7)

     7    32    Braun Racing                      78
                Drivers:  Ky. Busch(6 starts), D. Hamlin (3), B. Vickers (3), J. Buescher (1),
    M. Jourdain (1)
     8    64   
    Rusty Wallace Inc.                72
                Driver:  D. Stremme (13 starts), M. Papis (1)

     9    99    Michael Waltrip Racing            67
                Driver:  D. Reutimann (14 starts)

    10    88    JR Motorsports                    66
                Driver:  B. Keselowski (14 starts)

    11     5    JR Motorsports                    63
                Drivers:  D. Earnhardt Jr. (5 starts),
    L. Cassill (4), M. Martin (2), M. Truex Jr. (1), A. Fernandez (1),
                          J. Johnson (1)

    12     9    Gillett Evernham Motorsports      53
                Drivers:  K. Kahne (7 starts)
    , P. Carpentier (3), C. Miller (3), E. Sadler (1)
    13     6    Roush Fenway Racing               49
                Driver:  D. Ragan (13 starts)

          16    Roush Fenway Racing               53
                Drivers:  G. Biffle (6 starts), J. McMurray (3), C. Braun (2)

    15    17    Roush Fenway Racing               42
                Drivers:  M. Kenseth (4 starts), J. McMurray (1), E. Darnell (1)


    NATIONWIDE SERIES POINTS RESET ELIMINATING SPRINT CUP RACE WINNERS
    Rank                         Points

     1 David Reutimann             2166
     2 Brad Keselowski             2110
     3 David Ragan                 2087
     4 Mike Bliss                  2057
     5 Jason Leffler               1928
     6 David Stremme               1922
     7 Mike Wallace                1907
     8 Steve Wallace               1834
     9 Jason Keller                1816
    10 Bobby Hamilton Jr.          1751
    11 Marcos Ambrose              1749
    12 Kelly Bires                 1737
    13 Brad Coleman                1624
    14 Kenny Wallace               1528
    15 Kevin Lepage                1373

    OFFICIAL JACK INGRAM CUP PRESENTED BY JJD STANDINGS
    Rank                         Points

     1 David Reutimann              150
     2 Brad Keselowski              140
     3 David Ragan                  139
     4 David Stremme                133
     5 Mike Bliss                   114
     6 Jason Leffler                 95
     7 Scott Wimmer                  70
     8 Steve Wallace                 67
     9 Mike Wallace                  60
    10 Kelly Bires                   53
    11 Bobby Hamilton Jr.            51
       Marcos Ambrose                51
    13 Jason Keller                  49
    14 Dario Franchitti              47
    15 Patrick Carpentier            35

    For the third week in a row, a previously winless driver went to Victory Lane in the Craftsman Truck Series, as Scott Speed won the AAA Insurance 200 by over three seconds.  Speed joins previous winners Matt Crafton and Donny Lia as newcomers to the NASCAR wins list.  Series veteran Jack Sprague was second, and he moves from 12th to seventh in JJD points, while Ron Hornaday's third-place finish gives him the points-lead back from Kyle Busch, who had transmission trouble while dominating and had to settle for 27th.

    CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES
    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Ron Hornaday                  79    2
     2 Kyle Busch                    73    1
     3 Todd Bodine                   62    3
     4 Matt Crafton                  60    5
     5 Johnny Benson                 55    4
     6 Mike Skinner                  52    6
     7 Jack Sprague                  50   12
     8 David Starr                   48    9
     9 Rick Crawford                 45    7
    10 Chad McCumbee                 42    7

    What did all three race winners have in common this weekend?  All were in Toyotas, and the sweep of the weekend extends Toyota's points-lead to 55 over Chevrolet, whose weekend peaked Friday with a second-place finish in Trucks, and Ford actually outscored Chevrolet for the weekend.

    MANUFACTURERS
    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Toyota                       637    1
     2 Chevrolet                    582    2
     3 Ford                         454    3
     4 Dodge                        237    4
    0 (0 Ratings)

    JJD's updated points standings after Charlotte

    Thursday, May 29, 2008, 07:41 PM EST [General]

    UPDATE:  I haven't had time to post a proper points update since Richmond, but it's all for good.  I took a vacation for the first time in FOREVER, getting on a plane for non-work reasons for the first time since 2003, and the Memorial Day holiday weekend truncated my work schedule for the week.  Here's an abbreviated post to update the points, with a familiar name at the top of a LOT of these lists.

    I should be able to get back into the swing of things next week.  As always, leave a comment!

    SPRINT CUP (DRIVERS)

    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Kyle Busch                   150    1
     2 Carl Edwards                 110    2
     3 Dale Earnhardt Jr.            99    3
     4 Denny Hamlin                  86    4
     5 Jeff Burton                   85    5
     6 Jeff Gordon                   81    9
     7 Jimmie Johnson                77    5
     8 Tony Stewart                  73    7
     9 Clint Bowyer                  72    7
    10 Greg Biffle                   67   11
    11 Ryan Newman                   54   10
    12 Kasey Kahne                   53   15
    13 Kevin Harvick                 50   11
    14 Matt Kenseth                  42   13
    15 Mark Martin                   34   14
    16 David Ragan                   33   16
    17 Martin Truex Jr.              25   17
    18 Kurt Busch                    23   18
    19 Brian Vickers                 20   19
    20 Travis Kvapil                 19   19

    SPRINT CUP (TEAMS)
    Rank                           Points
     1 Joe Gibbs Racing               202
     2 Hendrick Motorsports           172
     3 Roush Fenway Racing            166
     4 Richard Childress Racing       127
     5 Penske Racing                   59
     6 Gillett Evernham Motorsports    55
     7 Dale Earnhardt Inc.             50
     8 Chip Ganassi Racing             30
     9 Yates Racing                    24
    10 Red Bull Racing Team            21
    11 Robby Gordon Motorsports         8
       Petty Enterprises                8
       Michael Waltrip Racing           8
    14 Bill Davis Racing                7
    15 Haas CNC Racing                  2
    16 Front Row Motorsports            1
       Furniture Row Racing             1
       Hall of Fame Racing              1

    JJD's IMPROVED TOP-35 RULE (including Haas CNC penalties)
    31 Michael Waltrip                403 - 24th*
    32 A.J. Allmendinger              393 - 28th
    33 Paul Menard                    391 - 22nd
    34 Robby Gordon                   389 - 29th
    35 Reed Sorenson                  362 - 42nd
    36 Scott Riggs                    347 - 26th
    37 Michael McDowell               335 - 34th
    38 CGR's #40 (Jeremy Mayfield)    313 - 32nd
    39 Joe Nemechek                   299 - 40th
    40 Kyle Petty                     275 - 44th
    *Result at Phoenix, which is dropped after the race at Dover.  A higher finish = more points to replace to stay in top-35.

    NATIONWIDE SERIES
    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Kyle Busch                   150    1

     2 Clint Bowyer                 117    2

     3 Tony Stewart                  97    3

     4 Carl Edwards                  81    4

     5 Kevin Harvick                 80    5

     6 Denny Hamlin                  65    8

     7 Brad Keselowski               60    9

     8 David Stremme                 58    6

     9 David Reutimann               55    7

    10 David Ragan                   49   10
       Dale Earnhardt Jr.            49   15

    12 Jeff Burton                   46   12

    13 Mike Bliss                    42   11

    14 Jason Leffler                 38   13

    15 Scott Wimmer                  37   13

    16 Brian Vickers                 35   18

    17 Matt Kenseth                  33   16

    18 Greg Biffle                   30   17

    19 Kasey Kahne                   24   18

    20 Steve Wallace                 23   18

       Bobby Labonte                 23   18

       Mark Martin                   23   18

    NATIONWIDE SERIES (TEAMS)
    Rank  Car#  Owner                         Points

     1    20    Joe Gibbs Racing                 178
                Drivers:  T. Stewart (6 starts), D. Hamlin (4), Ky. Busch (3)

     2     2    Richard Childress Racing         117
                Driver:  C. Bowyer (13 starts)
     3    33    Kevin Harvick Inc.                85
                Drivers:  K. Harvick (10 starts), C. Gale (2), R. Hornaday (1)
     4    29    Richard Childress Racing          83
                Drivers:  J. Burton (7 starts), S. Wimmer (5)

     5
       60    Roush Fenway Racing               81
                Driver:  C. Edwards (13 starts)

     6    32    Braun Racing                      77
                Drivers:  Ky. Busch(5 starts), D. Hamlin (3), B. Vickers (3), J. Buescher (1),
    M. Jourdain (1)
     7    18    Joe Gibbs Racing                  67
                Driver:  Ky. Busch (5 starts)

     8     5    JR Motorsports                    63
                Drivers:  D. Earnhardt Jr. (5 starts),
    L. Cassill (3), M. Martin (2), M. Truex Jr. (1), A. Fernandez (1),
                          J. Johnson (1)

     9    88    JR Motorsports                    60
                Driver:  B. Keselowski (13 starts)

    10    64    Rusty Wallace Inc.                58
                Driver:  D. Stremme (12 starts), M. Papis (1)

    11    99    Michael Waltrip Racing            55
                Driver:  D. Reutimann (13 starts)

    12     9    Gillett Evernham Motorsports      50
                Drivers:  K. Kahne (6 starts)
    , P. Carpentier (3), C. Miller (3), E. Sadler (1)
    13     6    Roush Fenway Racing               49
                Driver:  D. Ragan (13 starts)

    14    16    Roush Fenway Racing               43
                Drivers:  G. Biffle (5 starts), J. McMurray (3), C. Braun (2)

    15    17    Roush Fenway Racing               42
                Drivers:  M. Kenseth (4 starts), J. McMurray (1), E. Darnell (1)


    NATIONWIDE SERIES POINTS RESET ELIMINATING SPRINT CUP RACE WINNERS
    Rank                         Points

     1 David Reutimann             1996
     2 David Ragan                 1984
     3 Brad Keselowski             1950
     4 Mike Bliss                  1930
     5 Jason Leffler               1822
     6 Mike Wallace                1752
     7 David Stremme               1737
     8 Jason Keller                1686
     9 Steve Wallace               1684
    10 Marcos Ambrose              1649
    11 Bobby Hamilton Jr.          1613
    12 Kelly Bires                 1595
    13 Brad Coleman                1530
    14 Kenny Wallace               1407
    15 Kevin Lepage                1278

    OFFICIAL JACK INGRAM CUP PRESENTED BY JJD STANDINGS
    Rank                         Points

     1 David Ragan                  139
     2 David Reutimann              134
     3 Brad Keselowski              128
     4 David Stremme                113
     5 Mike Bliss                   112
     6 Jason Leffler                 95
     7 Scott Wimmer                  64
     8 Steve Wallace                 59
     9 Marcos Ambrose                51
    10 Mike Wallace                  50
    11 Kelly Bires                   48
    12 Jason Keller                  47
       Bobby Hamilton Jr.            47
    14 Dario Franchitti              44
    15 Patrick Carpentier            35

    CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES
    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Kyle Busch                    70    1
     2 Ron Hornaday                  64    2
     3 Todd Bodine                   61    4
     4 Johnny Benson                 52    5
     5 Matt Crafton                  50    3
     6 Mike Skinner                  45    9
     7 Rick Crawford                 41    6
       Chad McCumbee                 41    6
     9 David Starr                   40   14
    10 Terry Cook                    38   12


    MANUFACTURERS
    Rank                         Points   LW

     1 Toyota                       569    1
     2 Chevrolet                    540    2
     3 Ford                         404    3
     4 Dodge                        232    4
    0 (0 Ratings)

    Making penalties hurt

    Wednesday, May 28, 2008, 08:06 PM EST [General]

    Last year after the Hendrick cars were parked at Sonoma, I wrote a couple of posts about what the penalties should be and why they were ineffective.  Did a 100-point penalty have ANY impact on Jimmie Johnson or Jeff Gordon's seasons?  NO.  NASCAR considered those infractions very serious - 100 points was about as big a penalty as they had handed down, yet it had as much effect as a holding penalty at the end of a 45-0 football game.

    Flash-forward to this weekend, when Haas CNC racing had their two cars confiscated for illegal wing brackets.  Now, the two Haas teams are nowhere near the championship, but with the top-35 rule in place the #66 at least had a locked-in spot in the field each week, while the #70 is currently outside the top-35 and must qualify on speed.  Penalties - ANY penalties - should really hurt them, right?

    Today NASCAR announced *150* point penalties to both the #66 and #70 teams.  "OMG THEIR SEASONS ARE OVER!"  Except...

    - the #66 car moves from 26th in points to 34th - STILL LOCKED IN the top-35
    - the #70 car moves from 40th in points to 43rd - STILL a GOGH car.

    So, the net result for Haas CNC racing is...nothing?

    Sure, the #66 team has a smaller margin of error, but they ARE in and over 150 points clear of the 37th-place car, meaning they really only have to stay ahead of Sam Hornish Jr. and Michael Waltrip to stay in the top-35, AND there are six cars bunched within 14 points of 35th, so if ONE of those cars breaks early or wrecks, the #66 is probably good-to-go as long as they stay out of trouble.  Not really too significant considering they just got the biggest penalty in recent NASCAR history.

    This is yet another reason why the top-35 should be changed to account for only the five most recent races.  Over the last five races, the #66 car was *21st* in owners points.  However, if you dock them 150 points from that total, they end up 36th, 15 points behind Reed Sorenson.  Voil
    0 (0 Ratings)

    Dreaming on the eve of the Indy 500

    Saturday, May 24, 2008, 01:47 PM EST [General]

    On September 9, Tony George had a headache.  It was bad enough that Sam Hornish Jr., IndyCar's three-time series champion and 2006 Indianapolis 500 winner, was planning to run several Nextel Cup races in the coming weeks to prepare for a possible, if not likely, jump to Penske Racing's NASCAR team.  Now his newly-minted 2007 series champion and defending Indy winner - Dario Franchitti - was getting ready to make the same jump from Andretti Green Racing to Chip Ganassi's NASCAR crew.  Something had to be done.  Luckily, the phone call that would change the Indianapolis 500 was about to happen.

    "TG - it's your old pal Robin Miller here.  I just wanted to get your thoughts about Dario jumping ship to drive taxi cabs for the Chipster..."

    ...was how it started, a long conversation where Tony let Robin know he had had enough, and that it was time to do something about it.  A week later, there was a press conference at Indianapoilis Motor Speedway, with the new IndyCar Director of Public Relations at the podium.

    "Folks, thanks for coming out today.  I know a lot of you in this room know me, but for those who don't, my name is Robin Miller, and I've been covering the Indianapolis 500 and open-wheel racing in America since before a lot of you folks were born.  I'm totally sick that the last two champions of the greatest race in the world have decided to try their hand at NASCAR, and I'm also sick of this split between Champ Car and IndyCar.  Now, I agree with my friend Tony George that the Indianapolis 500 is THE greatest event in motorsports, and it is about damn time that we get all of the best drivers in the world - as many as we can - Back to the Brickyard."

    "Our Back to the Brickyard initiative is two-fold:  purse and scheduling.  Tony asked me how it could be that so many of our sport's greatest drivers were opting to drive tintops.  Folks, we all know money talks, and this ain't twenty years ago.  In 1989, Emerson Fittipaldi cleared a million large for winning the 500, and the total purse was over $5.7 million.  Meanwhile, NASCAR was paying a pittance - $185k - to Darrell Waltrip for winning THEIR biggest race, and that year's total Daytona 500 purse was under $2 mil.  Today, the race winners at Indy and Daytona are paid about the same, but their purse is over $8 million more than that of the Indy 500.  Tony and I agree that's not getting it done."

    Today, we proudly announce that the winner of the 2008 Indianapolis 500 will take home a check for $3.25 million, and the entire purse of the race will be $25 million, paying $450,000 for the 33rd-place finisher.  We also announce that we are going too cap entries at five cars per team, lest Michael Andretti try to field eight cars so his entire family can come back in cars that will probably all break in the last ten laps or some such nonsense."

    "Part Two of our Back to the Brickyard program will concern the schedule.  You may notice all of the bulldozers and equipment around the outside of the Speedway.  IMS is installing lights that will be ready for the '08 race.  We won't actually use them in the race unless necessary, but they will be on so that qualifying and especially practice can take place at night."

    "We also proudly announce that the 2008 Indianapolis 500 will take place Monday, May 26, beginning at 1:00 pm, eastern.  Shifting the race to Monday should allow any driver that wants to go for the largest prize in American motorsports to do so.  We will also have three days of pole qualifying, Sunday May 11, Saturday May 17, and Sunday May 18.  Two of those days are not currently being used by certain other racing series, you might notice, but I assure you that is only a coincidence."

    "To answer your biggest question, yes, we will be running spec Dallara-Hondas with Firestone tires for 2008.  That is an issue that we will revisit following this year's race.  We're not exactly taking it one thing at a time, but if we get a lot of teams saying they would bring cars if they could have different makes - something we would actually prefer, given Indy's history - we will absolutely address that.  But for now, we are focusing on increasing the car count and the profile of the drivers here, to get back to the era when ALL of the best drivers strove for Brickyard glory.  Good day, ladies and gentlemen (and you, Despain.  *wink*)"

    October 3 - At the press conference officially announcing Dario Franchitti as the new driver of his #40 Dodge Charger, Chip Ganassi indicates he is strongly looking into adding cars for Dario and Juan Pablo Montoya to his duo of Scott Dixon and Dan Wheldon for the Indy 500.  "We'll probably have a fifth car, too.  Shouldn't be too hard to find a driver, I wouldn't think," says Chip.

    November 10 - Roger Penske announces that despite struggles in qualifying for Nextel Cup races, Sam Hornish Jr. will race the entire 2008 Sprint Cup schedule for Penske Racing.  The Captain also speculates "if Chip's bringing five cars to Indy, I'll most likely add cars myself.  I'm pretty sure Sam would be up for it."

    Feburary 17 - Following his first Daytona 500 win, Ryan Newman jokes that he'd like to thank Kurt Busch for pushing him to victory and that "Roger and I had a deal where if I won the 500 he'd put me in a car for Indy."  Penske tells Newman he'll "look into that."

    February 18 - Tony Stewart asks his guest, Daytona champ-Newman, if he thinks he can get Roger to put him into an IndyCar.  Ryan tells Tony they were semi-seriously joking about it all night, and Tony declares "there ain't no way YOU are running the Indy 500 and I'm not."

    February 20 - Despite failing to make the field for the Daytona 500, February is not an entirely lost month for former Formula One and Indianapolis 500 champion Jacques Villeneuve, as Chip Ganassi announces that Villeneuve will run his fifth and final car at Indianapolis, completing his stable of drivers that will, in fact, include Franchitti and Montoya, along with Dixon and Wheldon.

    February 22 - Despite its best efforts to run a 2008 season, the Champ Car series closes shop.  Immediately, IndyCar announces that all former Champ Car teams will receive additional technical support should they decide to run the IndyCar season.  Only Gerry Forsythe's team declines, and ten Champ Car teams are added to the entry list for Indy.

    February 24 - During a rain delay at the Auto Club 500, Roger Penske concedes that "if Chip's running five cars, I'm probably bringing five, too" and that he "wouldn't be opposed" to putting either of his stock car drivers into one or both of the seats he would need to fill.

    February 27 - At the press conference announcing the National Guard's sponsorship of Panther Racing's single-car team, owner John Barnes states that they do not plan to run only one car at Indianapolis, but that no announcements would be made regarding other cars until late March, at the earliest.

    March 1 - After Mark Martin drives his JR Motorsports Chevrolet to his first win as a Nationwide Series owner, Dale Earnhardt Jr. casually mentions in the post-race press conference that he has seen the Delphi/National Guard IndyCar and that "it looks pretty cool along with my Cup car.  You know, Daddy used to mention around Indy-time that he'd wished he tried the Indy 500 at least once."

    March 3 - Team Red Bull announces Mike Skinner will be replacing the struggling A.J. Allmendinger in the #84 Toyota Camry.  Red Bull GM Jay Frye declares "the team hasn't lost any faith in A.J.  In fact, we're going to field a couple of cars at Indianapolis and he's going to be in the #84 for the Indy 500."  No word on who the second driver could be.

    March 27 - Andretti Green Racing announces they will field a fifth car with team co-owner Michael Andretti behind the wheel of the car #1, just as he was when he finished third.

    April 7 - After a fourth-place finish at Texas Motor Speedway, Ryan Newman is announced as the driver of the Penske Racing #39 entry for the Indianapolis 500, where he will join Helio Castroneves, Ryan Briscoe, and Sam Hornish Jr. as drivers, with a fifth driver to be determined.  Kurt Busch denies he will drive the fifth car.

    April 9 - At the Subway Fresh Fit 500 in Phoenix, Tony Stewart and A.J. Foyt announce Stewart will drive a Subway-sponsored #41 at the Indy 500, with Tony adding that he'll be exclusively eating Subway in attempt to be able to fit in the car better.  Foyt adds that Stewart will join Darren Manning, who will drive the #14, and "probably at least one more guy you have heard of" for the race.

    April 11 - The Indianapolis 500 entry list is released with fifty cars, including five each for Penske Racing (with one drivers TBA), Chip Ganassi Racing, and Andretti Green Racing.  A.J. Foyt lists four entries (with two TBA), as does Panther Racing, who creates a stir with three TBA drivers - #48, #55, and #88.  Newman/Haas/Lanigan adds a third car as TBA, with speculation that Paul Tracy will be behind the wheel.

    April 14 - A.J. Foyt announces that Robby Gordon will drive his #31 car, and that he's "got a pretty hot driver in mind" for his fourth car, but is not ready to announce that driver.

    April 20 - Kyle Busch wins the Nationwide Series Corona Mexico 200, his third straight series win.  Fielding a question about winning in every kind of car, Kyle smiles and replies "not EVERY kind of car, not yet, anyway."

    April 22 - A.J. Foyt announces Kyle Busch will drive his #32 car, completing his group of four drivers.  Tony Stewart says "now Kyle will quit asking me about it, at last, and we'll see who is faster in May."

    April 23 - Panther Racing announces their complete 2008 driver line-up, as joining Vitor Meira will be three well-known American drivers:  former open-wheeler Casey Mears (nephew of four-time Indy champion Rick Mears), four-time Winston Cup champion Jeff Gordon, and the most popular driver in America, Dale Earnhardt Jr.  Junior explains "the National Guard people brought it up kind of off-the-cuff, and I mentioned it to Jeff which was a big mistake, because Mr. Hendrick would let Jeff do just about anything he wants, and then Casey got wind of it while Jeff was pestering me, and eventually we all ended up here."  Jimmie Johnson admits he is intrigued by the idea of joining his Hendrick teammates, but decided to let those guys give it a shot and see about next year because of what we are trying to accomplish in NASCAR with three straight championships."

    April 26 - Dario Franchitti suffers a broken ankle in a crash during the Nationwide Series Aaron's 312 at Talladega.  Franchitti ruefully allows that is is "extremely unlikely" that he will be able to run at Indianapolis, but perks up at the notion of several weeks out of the car with his lovely wife.

    April 27 - Chip Ganassi insists he plans to go forward with five cars for Indy, despite Franchitti's injury.

    April 28 - Penske Racing announces Paul Tracy will complete their five driver-lineup.  PT admits he was close to signing with NHLR, but decided "to go with Roger in better equipment instead of that crap Bourdais used to drive".

    April 29 - Newman/Haas/Lanigan Racing, spurned by Paul Tracy, turns to an unlikely source to fill their third car - Sprint Cup star Carl Edwards.  Edwards says the whole thing was Doug Yates' idea, and as a tribute, NHLR officals say the plan to put the #28 on Edwards' car.

    May 1 - Despite an apparent dearth of available drivers, Chip Ganassi announces that he had found a replacement driver for Dario Franchitti, and yes, he went to an old reliable source - ex-Formula One drivers.  Ganassi rocks the racing world but installing seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher in the car.  Schumacher admits he is "excited to drive in the most famous race in the world", but deflects a question about whether he can win the Rookie of the Year award with "I don't feel like a rookie being seven-time world champion, no?"

    May 11 - Pole Day qualifying goes mostly as expected, with IndyCar's Big Three teams dominating the charts.  Scott Dixon continues his strong performance for the month by taking the pole, fending off challenges from first his teammate Wheldon, then Sam Hornish Jr., who qualifies second to split the Ganassi drivers on row 1.  The reverse occurs on row 2, where Ryan Briscoe and Helio Castroneves sit outside Juan Pablo Montoya's #42, who returns to Indy qualifying fifth.  Motegi-winner Danica Patrick briefly holds the pole, then sits on her time to qualify seventh, with her AGR teammate Tony Kanaan eighth and Schumacher a satisfied ninth.  Marco Andretti sits tenth, and Tony Stewart makes a late run to take the final spot in the top-eleven qualifiers.

    May 17 - Day Two of qualifying sees Kyle Busch take the first attempt, post a speed that would have placed him third on the grid, and leaves the speedway via helicopter to fly to the Sprint All-Star Challenge in Charlotte.  Jacques Villeneuve puts the #44 Ganassi-mobile inside row 5, joining Vitor Meira and Paul Tracy.  Michael Andretti, Robby Gordon and Jeff Gordon in the #48 are solid in row 6.  A.J. Allmendinger lands in the middle of row 7 with Hideki Mutoh inside and Ed Carpenter outside, and follows it up by qualifying for the Sprint All-Star Challenge by winning the Sprint Showdown qualifying race.  Tomas Scheckter leads row 8, with the surprising Townsend Bell and Casey Mears joining him.  Graham Rahal qualified 25th, Scott Speed 26th, and Darren Manning 27th to make up row 9, and Bruno Junqueira seemed to be safely in the field after qualifying 28th.

    May 18 - A mix of IndyCar, Champ Car, and NASCAR veterans looked to lock their place in the field on Bump Day 2008.  Sarah Fisher had her own car bumped from the grid by Ryan Newman, who would qualify 29th.  Justin Wilson's strong qualifying run bumped fellow "transitional" driver, Champ Car alum Will Power out of the field and put him on the outside of row 10, and while they both admitted they would have been "kind of" embarrassed had they failed to qualify, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Carl Edwards both managed to find the tail end of the field, in 31th and 32nd.  The final half-hour of qualifying was extremely action-packed, with a series of bumps that saw Fisher, Power, 1996 champion Buddy Lazier Davey Hamilton, and rookie Alex Lloyd in the field, then out with 2004 Indy 500 champion Buddy Rice bumping Hamilton on the day's final attempt to take the final spot on the grid.

    May 26 - The 92nd Indianapolis 500 waas one of the most anticipated races in recent memory, with nine Formula One championships, seven Indianapolis 500 championships, five Daytona 500 championships, and six NASCAR championships among its competitors.  The early start of the race was Kyle Busch, who had moved from twelfth qualifying spot to fourth in ten laps, then led 46 laps in the early going before cementing his place and the most hated driver in America, spinning out in turn 4 while lapping Dale Earnhardt Jr, a wreck that also collected Danica Patrick, third at the time, for her first Indy 500 DNF.  Robby Gordon and both Red Bull cars were eliminated after Robby but A.J. Allmendinger on pit road, damaging both cars and collecting Allmendinger's teammate, Scott Speed, who was leaving his pit.  Chip Ganassi's team saw mixed results, as the usually reliable Honda engine failed both Scott Dixon and Dan Wheldon while his other three cars were strong all day.  Michael Andretti's lap 183 crash - after gaining a ten-second lead his steering wheel fell off for no discernible reason, sending him into the SAFER barrier - brought the field together for one last restart with twelve laps remaining.  As Michael Schumacher led the field to the restart, he spun the tires and allowed the Tonys, Kanaan and Stewart to pass.  Sam Hornish and Helio Castroneves hounded Schumacher for third, but soon Juan Pablo Montoya was in the mix as well, passing Helio on the backstretch with eight laps remaining to take fifth.  With three laps remaining, Kanaan and Stewart diced it up at the front, exchanging the lead through turns one and two, and again through three and four, with TK out front, while Helio's bold three-wide pass of Hornish and Montoya gave him a run the allowed him to sweep past Schmuacher for third.  On the final lap, Kanaan and Stewart, both victims of repeated bad luck at Indy, locked wheels and both spun into the turn one wall, giving Helio Castroneves the 2008 Indianapolis 500 title, with Montoya second, followed by Schumacher, Hornish, Paul Tracy, and Jacques Villeneuve.  Graham Rahal finished a surprising seventh, Marco Andretti finished eighth, with Vitor Meira ninth, just ahead of his teammate for a day, Jeff Gordon.  Kanaan was scored tenth, with Stewart, trying to accomplish the unprecedented double after winning Sunday's Coca Cola 600, forced to watch Helio climb the fence instead of him.
    0 (0 Ratings)