Front Page
MLB
World Series
NBA
NFL
Super Bowl
Super Bowl Packages
NHL
Stanley Cup
NASCAR
Soccer
World Cup
NCAA Football
NCAA Basketball
Ticket Buying Guide
Contact Us
Link Request
Sports Links
gls55 holdings
Blog
Website Agreement
Site Map
e-mail me



NASCAR News - Sports News | Archive March 18, 2008

 

Run What You Brung!

By Floyd Tilton


Racing should be about who can go the distance the quickest

I personally am getting tired of seeing the weekly list of rules violations that NASCAR publishes following each race. Rarely does a week go by where NASCAR doesn't find three or four teams in violation of something.

Rules Are Made To Be Broken

I've often heard the phrase, "Rules are made to be broken," but this is getting to be ridiculous. It seems as if no one follows the rules anymore, and fines and disciplinary action have become the rule rather than the exception. Why not go back to the old standard that we used to run at the old Ozark Speedway in Joplin, Missouri, "Run What You Brung!"

Let Them Race

Let's let the crew chiefs, mechanics, engine builders and drivers just do their thing, and let the best man (or woman) win. Racing is designed to see who can go the distance the quickest.

Why not let them do it? Why put so many restrictions and regulations on the teams that the cream is unable to rise to the top?

Safety Still Rules

Of course we need some rules to ensure the safety of everyone. but when it comes to performance, the current rules just serve to bring everybody to the least common denominator. Ricky Craven suddenly is as competitive as Jeff Gordon; Rusty Wallace finds himself racing for position with Todd Bodine. It's getting to be a joke.

Just because I've got a cowboy hat doesn't make me Richard Petty, and having a Cup series ride doesn't make you the equal of Gordon or Wallace. I even know some good stories, but it doesn't make me DW. When our founding fathers said, "All men are created equal," they weren't talking about racing.

Breaking Up The Big One

The "pack mentality" of NASCAR was the cause of the massive pile-up at Talladega that damaged over half of the field. It makes no sense to put 43 cars on the track and make them all equal. When the mechanical advantages are taken away, the only thing left is driver skill and that's where trouble starts.

IROC can get away with it. They only invite the best. NASCAR can't do that. Instead, inexperienced drivers, often moved up to the Cup series too fast by over eager owners, find themselves running at 180 mph along side veterans who have decades of experience. When an incident occurs, and it's bound to happen, the results are predictable. If you don't believe me, ask the drivers.

At every restrictor plate race you will hear the drivers say things like, "I don't know what this is, but it isn't racing," and "This is an accident looking for a place to happen." This isn't the attitude we need at the track. Everybody in the garage knows that something is going to happen, and their predictions are too often right.

Let The Slow Guys Be Slow!

Let's face it, some drivers are hazards on the track and when you throw them into the heat of competition, they cause accidents. Let's face facts. If they can't be competitive, then let them run at the back of the pack. In the "good old days" these drivers would have been 4 laps down by the first pit stop. Now, they're contenders and they end up taking out the best of the best.

It's time to put a stop to this and let these drivers be the also-rans they really are. Maybe someday they'll improve, but the way it's going the cost of their driving lessons is getting too high.

Sports Ticket Depot -
NASCAR News Archive | Index


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Jeff Burton Leads Childress Sweep at Bristol Motor Speedway

From Steve McCormick
March 16, 2008


Bristol Showed Why it is the Toughest Ticket in NASCAR with Thrilling Finish

Bristol Motor Speedway demonstrated today why they are one of the few tracks that still sells out every single event. Today's race had some slow moments as drivers were bracing for the finish. That finish did not disappoint as the last 15 laps saw three different leaders, differing pit strategies and some Bristol beating and banging.

Qualifying

Qualifying was rained out so the field was set by 2007 car owner points.

2006 and 2007 Sprint Cup Champion Jimmie Johnson started on the pole with teammate Jeff Gordon along side in second. Richard Childress Racing's Clint Bowyer started third with Roush-Fenway Racing's Matt Kenseth on the outside of row two. Casey Mears rounded out the top five in his Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

Drop Of The Green

Jimmie Johnson lead lap one as Jeff Gordon settled in behind him.

Matt Kenseth jumped to the outside and starting working on laying down some rubber on the outside lane but the top five didn't change through the first ten laps.

It rained hard on Saturday night which washed all of the rubber from the Nationwide Series race off of the race track. This took away the outside lane and caused everyone to get in line and run the inside lane.

Clint Bowyer had his car working at the start and he moved past the Hendrick teammates to take the top spot and lead to the safety caution that NASCAR threw at lap 50.

Storylines

Joe Gibbs Racing drivers were dominating the middle portion of the race. Denny Hamlin was leading when the caution came out for an unrelated incident. Even though the field was frozen when the yellow came out Juan Pablo Montoya dove under Hamlin in a attempt to get back on the lead lap. He hit Hamlin and Hamlin slid up and hit Casey Mears. Hamlin was injured enough to effectively drop from contention.

Hamlin's Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch took over the lead during the following pit stops. When the race went green again Busch had a power steering problem and crashed, backing it into the inside wall and putting him out of contention.

This was a bad break for two of the Joe Gibbs Toyotas. However, when the green flag flew again Tony Stewart found himself leading the pack in his Toyota.

Chasing The Checkers

Tony Stewart dominated the second half of the race.

Stewart lead by .33 seconds over Kevin Harvick and .9 seconds over Denny Hamlin with 15 laps to go. The caution flew with 11 laps to go. Harvick pitted but Stewart and Hamlin stayed out.

Stewart got a great restart with five laps to go but Hamlin tracked him down and passed him just two laps later. Kevin Harvick was slicing back to the front on fresh tires when he got into the side of Tony Stewart and spun him out.

Denny Hamlin lead Jeff Burton and Kevin Harvick to the final green-white-checkers finish. Something happened to Hamlin on the restart and Jeff Burton took the lead and the win.

Richard Childress Racing swept the top three spots as Jeff Burton, Kevin Harvick and Clint Bowyer all finished on the podium.


Top Ten


1. Jeff Burton
2. Kevin Harvick
3. Clint Bowyer
4. Greg Biffle
5. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
6. Denny Hamlin
7. Kasey Kahne
8. Aric Almirola
9. David Gilliland
10. Matt Kenseth



The Points

Point leader Kyle Busch was running up front again when bad luck struck. He ended up tw laps down but it was good enough for 17th. He maintained the point lead but gave up a little bit of his cushion.


The top twelve are now:

1. Kyle Busch
2. Greg Biffle -30
3. Kevin Harvick -33
4. Jeff Burton -37
5. Dale Earnhardt Jr. -96
6. Kasey Kahne -108
7. Tony Stewart -126
8. Ryan Newman -147
9. Clint Bowyer -176
10. Kurt Busch -177
11. Matt Kenseth -178
12. Martin Truex Jr. -187



Next Week

NASCAR will take its first break of the season next week as the sport traditionally takes Easter weekend off. In two weeks the Sprint Cup series will return to action as the short track at Martinsville Speedway will host on March 30th.

Sports Ticket Depot -
NASCAR News Archive | Index


 













For Email Marketing you can trust

Convert Currency here



HONESTe Online Member Seal
Click to verify - Before you buy!





Sports Ticket Web Masters,
       Submit your sports event, venue, news, and memorabilia link(s) as ‘articles / advertisements’. Your article(s) will occupy their own EXCLUSIVE and UNIQUE page directly linked to a Sports Ticket Depot sports section of your choice.

Submit details here.