Juan Pablo Montoya, Come on Down
by Charlie Turner
Thanks for stopping by OnPitRow.com and the Bench Racing with Steve and Charlie blog. The best NASCAR and IndyCar news and opinion, exclusive pictures and video. I'm Charlie Turner. Follow me on Twitter @onpitrow
February 28, 2007 11:13 pm CST 2 CommentsIf you're new here, you may want to subscribe to our RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
This weekend the NASCAR International Series aka The Busch (for a while longer) Series takes the caravan south of the border to the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez at Mexico City. If the NASCAR stars are aligned as we have come to expect, this will be Juan Pablo Montoya’s moment to shine. Crowds for the first two races in Mexico have been disappointingly sparse after early predictions of upwards of half a million spectators for the inaugural event in 2005. There were local Latin drivers in the first two events and I expect that there will be qualifiers this weekend who are not Busch Series regulars. Still the best chance for a Latin born representative of the NASCAR Diversity program to win this race will come from the trio of Montoya, Adrian Fernandez and Michel Jourdain Jr. All three are hugely popular in Latin America. That should solve the crowd problem. My money is on Montoya. And the NASCAR stars, too.
with friends like NASCAR…
by Charlie Turner
Thanks for stopping by OnPitRow.com and the Bench Racing with Steve and Charlie blog. The best NASCAR and IndyCar news and opinion, exclusive pictures and video. I'm Charlie Turner. Follow me on Twitter @onpitrow
February 28, 2007 3:50 pm CST No CommentsAs if it isn’t hard enough to start a new NASCAR Nextel Cup team; try doing it with NASCAR working against you. Many have asked, "Didn’t Jeremy Mayfield hook up with Bill Davis Racing for the upcoming season?" Well..yes he has, but after not making the Daytona 500 the #36 OTC team went to Calli hoping to start their season on the left coast. But NASCAR’s lengthy inspection process kept the team in the inspection line while the top points teams were on the track, practicing for qualifying.
NASCAR lines the cars up for inspection according to their current rank in points. Not only are the top 35 in points assured of a starting spot in the race, they are the first ones on the track for practice. Once again; those that need it the most, get the least. NASCAR–if you absolutely find it necessary to begin a practice session before ALL cars are through inspection, reverse the order of inspection. Inspect the cars with the LOWEST point totals first. These are the teams that cannot afford to go without even a minutes worth of practice.
And, I’d bet that if you cut Mark Martin’s or Kevin Harvick’s practice time in half, there would be some angry car owners (ones with big time clout) in the Big Yellow trailer having a "sit down" with King Brian. Changes to the system would then be forthcoming–pronto.
Steve
Matt Kenseth Times Two
by Charlie Turner
Thanks for stopping by OnPitRow.com and the Bench Racing with Steve and Charlie blog. The best NASCAR and IndyCar news and opinion, exclusive pictures and video. I'm Charlie Turner. Follow me on Twitter @onpitrow
February 25, 2007 9:51 pm CST No CommentsMatt Kenseth saved me from a total prediction wipeout this week. I had been telling anyone who asked that I thought a Ford and specifically a Roush Ford would win this week. Maybe everyone will forget that the two Fords I actually took were Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle in my two official picks. Close. So close. It was fun though, to hear Matt screaming over the radio as he crossed the line in the cup race. He doesn’t usually let it go like that for all of us to hear. Pretty cool. And a double win, with the Saturday Busch race to boot.
Kenseth is already one of the great drivers of his era. He’s just quiet about it.
Price of fame
by Charlie Turner
Thanks for stopping by OnPitRow.com and the Bench Racing with Steve and Charlie blog. The best NASCAR and IndyCar news and opinion, exclusive pictures and video. I'm Charlie Turner. Follow me on Twitter @onpitrow
February 23, 2007 10:52 am CST 2 CommentsAs the NASCAR circus moves to left coast for a couple of weeks at California and Vegas, whatever your take is on the finish of the Daytona 500, NASCAR has done much more RIGHT than Wrong.
MRN Radio’s Dave Moody quotes, open wheel advocate Robin Miller, concerning the disparity in monies between various US racing series.
"In total, NASCAR’s Nextel Cup Series paid over 219 million in purse money last season. The Indy Racing League paid 24 million; 10 million of which came from a single race, the Indy 500. Champ Car paid a paltry 6.5 million in purse money for its 14 events, and just 1.5 million in point fund money." more..
I believe NASCAR has to be happy with all the exposure they get; good bad or indifferent, the circus is hard to ignore.
Steve
I said this is about sponsors
by Charlie Turner
Thanks for stopping by OnPitRow.com and the Bench Racing with Steve and Charlie blog. The best NASCAR and IndyCar news and opinion, exclusive pictures and video. I'm Charlie Turner. Follow me on Twitter @onpitrow
February 22, 2007 12:15 am CST No CommentsThe cheating talk and controversy won’t let up. Once again, our friend Lee Spenser weighs in with her typical insight on the Michael Waltrip story.
Now, it may take longer to identify the mysterious substance found
in Waltrip’s fuel system than it will to determine the paternity of
Anna Nicole’s baby, but the bigger mystery is this: Why was Waltrip
allowed to race? How did the early rumblings of a four- to six-week
suspension for Waltrip somehow devolve into a $100,000 fine, 100 points
and a vacation for crew chief David Hyder and VP of competition Bobby
Kennedy?
It was a pass for NAPA, it was a pass for Toyota — and
about 10 to 15 percent pass for Mikey," said a source close to the
situation. "If the sponsor was Burger King and the driver was David
Reutimann, he’d be sitting at home. more..
Lee has alot more to say and it’s all good. Check it out.
Think about this though. The paranoia in the NASCAR garages and press about Toyota possibly already using their, supposedly, forboding Formula One knowlege and experience to somehow steal the Nextel Cup, needs perspective. I can argue that Toyota, for all of the massive amounts of yen expended, has been a miserable failure in F1. They, in fact, suck. In the Craftsman Truck Series however, they have been pretty close to dominant. And they didn’t seem to need secret blue fluids to pull it off.
One down and thirty five to go.
by Charlie Turner
Thanks for stopping by OnPitRow.com and the Bench Racing with Steve and Charlie blog. The best NASCAR and IndyCar news and opinion, exclusive pictures and video. I'm Charlie Turner. Follow me on Twitter @onpitrow
February 20, 2007 12:43 am CST 1 CommentOld habits die hard. As I was watching the end of , what turned out to
be a very entertaining Daytona 500, I couldn’t believe I was rooting
against Mark Martin to win. There was only one reason that I didn’t
want him to win. He is the latest Ford guy to defect. Plain and
simple–I don’t want him winning anything while driving a Chevy!
I was happy to see Kevin Harvick beat MM at the line however. That
seems wierd considering Harvick is the lead driver for RCR’s Chevy
stable. But, Harvick is a Chevy driver and I can live with that. I
can’t live with, or accept, the defectors; Jeff Gordon, Jeff Burton and
now even Bill Elliott are all driving Chevies and it bugs me. I wonder
how my overall dislike for Gordon would be different if he had not
jumped from his Ford Busch ride to his Hendrick Cup ride?
With all that said; what a great ending to an overall ho-hum
race. With Harvick making his last turn surge to the win and Clint
Bowyer crossing the finish line on his lid, this 500 will be one to
remember. Lets hope, with the race ending in prime time on the east
coast, the tv ratings will show that a lot of people saw the great
ending and will tune in in the future to see more great racing.
Lets just hope everyone mkes it through post race inspection.
Steve







