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Denny Hamlin: Things to consider moving forward following Martinsville

Photo Credit: Lowell Jewell

In the midst of a two-week whirlwind period,  lot of has gone down with relation to Denny Hamlin, health issues and the metal in his eye. There’s a lot to be learned from the discussion and certainly things that should be noted moving forward.

1. When a driver speaks, they should be believed for saying truth not as a lie

When Denny Hamlin stated that he missed the race at Fontana due to metal in his eyes, some people stated that they didn’t believe him. Some felt it was a cover-up to cover for something else. Some were saying he was covering a drug test and not wanting to race that weekend on track. After all, it was the track that he got hurt at previously.

Doubting someone is speaking the truth especially on an issue of this nature is not something to be commended or accepted at all. Hamlin could say whatever he wanted, but NASCAR would have copy of doctor’s report and be able to check. In that matter, why would he lie? Obviously, that’s what had him fired up last weekend.

“People who think negatively of me or think that we side-stepped some sort of drug test or something is ridiculous,” Hamlin said. “I’m in one of the top-three cars in NASCAR, I would have to be an absolute moron—moron to risk that. I have a daughter that I have to provide for for a really long time. For people to question who I am inside and outside the race car, I’ve never done anything to even put that in question.”

2. Balancing what should be known, and what should not be known

A person’s health is called their business and a doctor isn’t allowed to comment per ‘patient-confidentiality’ agreement. However, when you’re out there racing against 42 other drivers, those other drivers may worry about your health and whether you are able to compete.

While some people may want a statement released for every situation, it should be sufficient enough to look at NASCAR’s clearance of the driver as why would Dr. Petty clear a driver and risk everyone’s lives without full belief in that driver’s health?

3. Each driver should watch their own behavior surrounding the situation

Whether the direct individual involved or whether not, all driver should watch their behavior.

In this particular situation, there were lots of questions being asked by everybody – though those questions took an even bigger turn with Earnhardt Jr.’s quote mid-week last week to the USA Today.

“I’m worried the perception is bad for NASCAR and the perception is bad for Denny.” Earnhardt Jr. told the USA Today. “If Denny didn’t race because his vision is blurred and he had a sinus infection, NASCAR should put out a release and say, this is the timeline of the events and this is why we made this choice and this is protocol for going forward.”

Instead of releasing a public statement, it may have been better for Earnhardt to either contact NASCAR or Denny Hamlin with his concerns.

Beyond simply stiring more discussion, some people have interpreted Earnhardt’s thoughts into wanting to peep into Hamlin’s life. Based on those words above, he wasn’t trying to peep into Denny’s health or find answers to that or doubt Hamlin’s situation. Earnhardt was more questioning it because he wanted to know how NASCAR handled it and a timeline basis for situations like this that may come up in the future so drivers know what they’re getting into if they have a similar deal. Isn’t that a question that would be better asked in a question to Mike Helton and NASCAR, rather than the public?

4. Focus should remain on-track rather than off-track

Rather than being focused on the off-track stuff and letting it get to him, Hamlin should keep his focus where he needs to – on-track. Last week, Hamlin was not in contention throughout the day at one of his back tracks. Could he have been distracted? Possibly.

As they say, the results will speak for themselves and rather than being concerned with everything, energy directed towards on-track performance could bring Hamlin a win.

Hot 20 – Ducks and guns and controversy, it must mean we’re going to Texas

Photo Credit: Mike Holloway

Last year, it was the NRA. This year the Texas race is brought to you courtesy of Duck Commander, representing the first family of Duck Dynasty.  While some might be a touch torqued to have another gun-endorsing group as a sponsor, I find it less offensive than, say, Chick-Fil-A. The sponsor pays for name placement, but should not take over the identity of the event in total. I think any affair named exclusively after its sponsor of the moment does injustice to the event in the long-term. The Peach Bowl had tradition, the Chick-Fil-A Bowl was a joke. Its return to becoming the Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl is an acceptable nod to both tradition and commercialism.

There is the case of Thai boxer  Somboon Phantasi, also known as Samson Dutch Boy Gym, Samson 3-K Battery, Samson Toyota-Thailand and Samson Elite Gym, or whoever his sponsor happened to be at that moment. It could have been worse, but thankfully there was no Samson Chick-Fil-A. It is, or was, an honor to win such milestone events as the Daytona 500, the Southern 500, the Brickyard 400, the Firecracker 400, the World 600, the Dixie 500, the Volunteer 500, the Delaware 500, the Old Dominion 500, the Pocono 500, the Richmond 400, and the Talladega 500. These were races that had their own, distinct identity. Races a winning driver could refer to proudly in future years, events fans might actually know something about and appreciate. You could even have pride in taking the Viagra Daytona 500, though the sponsor name might not appear on the resume. Something like the Duck Commander Texas 500 has a nice ring to it. If you do not like the sponsor, just refer to it by its real name and all will be happy.

Our thoughts are with Jimmie Johnson and his wife Chandra, following the loss of her brother in a sky diving accident last Sunday.  Jordan Janway was just 27 years old.

It is official. The troubles experienced by teams at Martinsville were not the fault of Goodyear but were, in fact, self inflicted. NASCAR will not be regulating tire pressures at Texas. Six different drivers have won this season, though a repeat of last spring would give Kyle Busch his second of 2014.

Tradition once gave the best on the season the championship in NASCAR. Even so, some might suggest that Matt Kenseth’s 2003 title was something of an upset considering the eight wins that season of Ryan Newman. With the new knockout format this year, the odds of an upset champion are even greater. It would not exactly be unique in sports should that happen. The Giants beat the up to then undefeated Patriots in the 2008 Super Bowl, the Mets beat the Orioles in the 1969 World Series, and the USA eliminated the Soviet Union in Olympic hockey in 1980. Heading to Homestead, we will only know that one of four drivers will take the prize by the end of the day, and the season’s most dominant driver might not even be among them.

However, if we sought out “the” driver of 2014, gave race winners 22 additional points, up to 69 or 70, and eliminated the Chase, this is what our hot 20 would look like heading into Texas.

 

Driver

Races

Wins

Points

1

  Dale Earnhardt, Jr.

6

1

249

2

  Carl Edwards

6

1

239

3

  Matt Kenseth

6

0

218

4

  Jeff Gordon

6

0

216

5

  Kyle Busch

6

1

211

6

  Brad Keselowski

6

1

210

7

  Jimmie Johnson

6

0

209

8

  Joey Logano

6

0

187

9

  Austin Dillon

6

0

179

10

  Ryan Newman

6

0

174

11

  Kurt Busch

6

1

168

12

  Paul Menard

6

0

168

13

  Denny Hamlin

5

0

165

14

  Brian Vickers

6

0

165

15

  Marcos Ambrose

6

0

162

16

  Kevin Harvick

6

1

157

17

  Tony Stewart

6

0

154

18

  A.J. Allmendinger

6

0

152

19

  Clint Bowyer

6

0

150

20

  Greg Biffle

6

0

149

The last to win in the 41 was also an Outlaw

Photo Credit: Motorsports Images and Archives

When Kurt Busch won last weekend at Martinsville, he brought the number 41 its first victory in Sprint Cup competition since 1965. To put that in perspective, that victory was in the very first race at Rockingham, the beloved North Carolina track that has been off the Sprint Cup schedule since 2004. And who, possibly, could have won the American 500 on a cool Halloween day?

A driver by the name of Curtis Turner.

Kurt Busch’s nickname is the “Outlaw”, but in reality Turner was a true outlaw. He was barred forever from NASCAR in 1961 because he tried to start a drivers union. You might be saying “What? Why did he try to start a drivers union?” Let me elaborate.

Turner often made fortunes in the timber business and raced as a hobby. He was arguably the greatest character in NASCAR history, reputedly holding week long parties with his sidekick Joe Weatherly, calling every male “pops” and every female “baby doll” and rarely racing without being either hung over, drunk, or getting drunk. He supposedly loved to pour out the water from his driver bottle and sneak in some 7 and 7.

Dispute all of this Turner was a legend, winning 17 races in the Cup series and was the Kyle Busch of the short lived NASCAR Convertible Series.

Although he never won a championship in either series as he, like many drivers in those days, didn’t care for the championship, he won 38 races in 78 starts in the Convertible Series and was the very first NASCAR driver to be on the cover of Sports Illustrated, who called him the “Babe Ruth of NASCAR.” He even won the biggest and most important stock car race of the year before Daytona International Speedway opened its doors, winning the Southern 500 in 1956.

In the early 1960’s, Turner, along with Bruton Smith, who has called Turner the greatest driver he’s ever seen, built Charlotte Motor Speedway, but lost a lot of money in building and hosting races. To put it simply because if I didn’t we’d be here all day, the Teamsters approached Turner about financing him a loan, with the only caveat being he needed to form a union of race drivers. Turner recruited two other ringleaders in helping him form a union, Tim Flock and Fireball Roberts. Only Turner among these three is not in the NASCAR Hall of Fame (Turner has been on every ballot so far however), and although this was in the twilight of Flock’s career all three were arguably NASCAR’s biggest stars. You could make an argument for Lee and Richard Petty but Lee had been in a horrible accident that year and rarely raced afterwards, while Richard wasn’t as huge as he was five years later and was still fairly new to the sport.

It all came to a head with NASCAR founder Big Bill France famously announcing that he’d plow up Daytona and plant corn in the infield before letting a union come into the sport, and banned all involved with it. Eventually Fireball Roberts and any other driver involved switched sides, with the exception of Turner and Flock. They stayed banned for life for four years until they were reinstated in 1965.

It isn’t like France had decided to be nice or anything, rather his hand was simply forced. Chrysler had pulled out that year. This is what I like to call the era of toddler automobile makers. They would throw a tantrum and quit NASCAR for a year for whatever reason and come crawling back because their competition won a lot of races and got  lot of press from it, which left NASCAR without, for the only time in its history, the name Petty.

In 1964 NASCAR had also gotten a lot of bad press due to an uptick in fatalities, among them were the two most popular drivers on the circuit. Those two were two time defending champion Joe Weatherly, (the only other driver to pass away while defending the championship was Alan Kulwicki) and the superstar of NASCAR Fireball Roberts. It should be noted that after Weatherly’s death and after stepping up his game in the aftermath of Turner’s life-time ban, Turner changed. According to most accounts, he was never the same again.

The only two really big name drivers left at this point were NASCAR Hall of Famers Junior Johnson and Ned Jarrett. However, Junior was a part time driver, and while many loved Ned he couldn’t carry NASCAR by itself. Therefore Big Bill didn’t have much choice but to reinstate Turner. Flock was reinstated as well but at the age of 41 and having not won in nine years, he choose to retire, which leads us to Rockingham.

Turner had been hired by the Wood Brothers to run a second car at “The Rock”. On race day morning, the legend goes that Leonard Wood, who took racing incredibly seriously and was no nonsense, found Turner sleeping on the hood of the 41 Ford after a night of hard partying. Turner woke up, bid Leonard a good morning, then went out and won the race.

Turner never won again, and he perished five years later in a mysterious plane crash. To this day nobody is quite certain what the cause was. His legacy is secure in NASCAR, where it is likely a Hall of Fame induction will come at some point in the near future. Charlotte, after the union failed and the Teamsters and Bruton Smith pulled out, was taken over by the public until Smith came back 13 years later and bought it, where it remains today as the model NASCAR track, a home track for everybody involved in the sport.

Kurt Busch is in no way, shape, or form the same kind of Outlaw Curtis Turner was. But it was nothing but poetic that his victory in the 41 came at Turner’s home track of Martinsville, (he was from nearby Roanoke), and he brings a level of excitement to the sport like Turner did. It’s always entertaining to watch him race whether he’s in first or 41st.