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Max Papis Creates New Role in NASCAR with Dillon Brothers

[media-credit name=”Gary Buchanan” align=”alignright” width=”164″][/media-credit]Massimiliano Papis, best known to NASCAR fans as Max, has a great racing resume, from the 24 Hours of Le Mans to Formula One, Champ Car and NASCAR.

But for Papis, the best part of his career has just begun as he forges a new role in the sport, that of coach for young up and coming drivers Austin and Ty Dillon.

 “First of all, it’s a great opportunity to be involved with RCR Racing, working with people like Richard Childress and everyone involved there,” Papis said. ““I was talking to Mike Dillon in the winter time about what I could do besides driving for the team.”

“We were talking about the fact that in every kind of sport, everyone always had a coach, but in racing, for whatever reason, people don’t really have a coach,” Papis continued. “So, I told them I would love to work with both Ty and Austin to develop them, on the road course and on the others.”

“We started slowly and here we are now being kind of like the big brother/tutor of both of them.”

One thing that Papis is adamant about, however, is that there really is no such thing as the Dillon brothers. In his eyes, they are two distinct individuals and that is how Papis approaches his work with them.

“First of all, the things that I tell people that it doesn’t exist, the Dillon brothers,” Papis said. “It’s Ty Dillon, with his own personality, his own goals and his own way of being and the same for Austin Dillon, with his own goals, way of being and personality.”

“They happen to be that both are race car drivers with RCR but I want, and they want, to be seen like their own individuals,” Papis continued. “That stands on everything I do with them.”

“We work out on separate times,” Papis said. “We spend time together analyzing the races, all of that in a separate way.”

“When it’s important to learn from each other, we have time together,” Papis continued. “But obviously I work with them as two different individuals.”

While many may see the role of coach as more motivational or inspirational, Papis takes a completely analytical approach to his coaching of both Ty and Austin Dillon.

“I put lots of studies behind it and I really apply myself to this coaching part,” Papis said. “Coaching, first of all, does not mean teaching someone to speak.”

“What I do with them is helping them to speed up the process of being who they want to be and being the leaders that they want to be,” Papis continued. “That goes from physical training to the mental approach to the races to knowing how to say certain things and how to react to certain situations.”

“I want them to raise up to 42 years of age because they are competing with people that have that amount of experience.”

Papis is also analytical when it comes to coaching both Austin and Ty Dillon on their physical fitness, consulting with professionals and utilizing fitness equipment both on and off the track.

“Obviously fitness is one of the biggest parts of the sport,” Papis said. “Jimmie Johnson didn’t win five championships in a row sitting on the couch.”

“Austin and Ty are very different individuals with different athletic backgrounds,” Papis continued. “At the beginning of the year, we made a physical fitness test for both Ty and Austin to understand how big their motor is.”

“Once we learn how big their motor is, then we work a program around that for strength and conditioning and endurance,” Papis said.” We have an agreement with Polar Electronics, a leading company with heart rate monitors.”

“So, every single training session we do with both Ty and Austin, we record their heart rate in the races at the beginning of the year so we learn how many RPMs their engine works as I like to say,” Papis continued. “And we try to work around that to improve their fitness in general.”

“This is a very technical, analytical and methodical approach,” Papis said. “It’s not just let’s lift some weights and go.”

Papis has already seen this regimented physical fitness approach pay off, with increases in stamina and endurance for Austin in particular when he ran two series races in one weekend.

“This year, when Austin ran Nationwide and Cup in Michigan on the same weekend and he came out of the car and gave me a high-five because he was tired as he was supposed to, but he still had some energy to go,” Papis said. “I feel that even if we’ve been working for months, we are starting to see the results on the physical side.”

Papis is equally as dedicated, however, to this methodical approach on the mental side of his drivers’ development.

“I use exactly the same approach both on the mental side as the physical side,” Papis said. “One example is that we’ve been working on the tone of voice we use when we open the radio and talk to the crew chief.”

“We’ve been working on the importance of what you say, when you say it and what words do you use,” Papis continued. “Not that you don’t be yourself, but I ask if they want to be the guy that opens the radio and everybody laughs at you or do you want to be the guy that opens the radio that inspires pride and motivates the crew to go extra because of the tone of voice and words.”

Papis fully realized the fruits of his coaching labors when Austin Dillon went to Victory Lane for the first time in the Nationwide race at Kentucky just a few weeks ago.

“I have never felt in my entire career that I would have been happy to see someone else winning,” Papis said. “I know that people say that I’m emotional, but I very well know how to control myself.”

“But I really felt that when Austin won that race that a part of me won it too.”

“The way that Austin made me feel and the appreciation I got made me understand that I’m making a difference,” Papis continued. “I had opportunity to go to Victory Lane by other friends but I never felt I belonged there but this time, I walked there without thinking because I knew that I belonged there.”

“I had tears in my eyes when I made my Daytona 500 and I had tears in my eyes when I went to the Victory Lane.”

Papis admits that he is in this new role of coach for the long term. And he has definite goals for his two protégés in the sport.

“I have a long-term goal with Austin and Ty,” Papis said. “Obviously with Ty, it is a little longer process because he is a younger person and he is in the beginning of his career.”

“I know everyone looks at them like experts and like they should win all the races,” Papis continued. “But I remember when I was 20 years old and when I was 22 years old and I couldn’t even polish their shoes.”

“I like to feel that I am the person that can tell them what their father and their grandpa would like to tell them but can’t because they are their parent and grandparent,” Papis said.

“And I told Austin that I will not be satisfied and I will continue to help him all the way until I will sit in the winner’s circle when he is a Cup champion.”

“He doesn’t need to prove anything to me but I want to show everyone who says that he is there because he is the son of Mike Dillon or the grandkid of Richard Childress that is not the truth,” Papis continued. “He’s there because he’s a bad ass like Ty.”

“They really deserve their positions.”

However satisfying his work has been and will be, Papis is most proud of the new role of coach that he is creating in the world of NASCAR. And his greatest achievement will be continuing to share his vast knowledge with both Austin and Ty Dillon as they forge their own paths in stock car racing.

“I feel in one way that I’m creating a new position in the sport,” Papis said. “It’s pretty unique and I wish that I had me on my side when I grew up in racing.”

“I had great people but I had to learn a lot of things on my own skin,” Papis continued. “And that’s why maybe I took a little longer to achieve my own goals and it’s still taking a little bit more of my time.”

“My happiness will be that we get to see what I learned at 42 years of age into Austin and Ty and 22 and 20 years of age,” Papis said. “I love them like they are the younger brothers to me.”

“I know that I’m working to keep a certain distance  as their coach, but at the same time I allow myself to give them a hug from time to time because I really love them a lot.”

Jimmie Johnson’s success and the repercussions on the NSCS

What’s astonishing to the record books may not translate into being the best for the sport of NASCAR.  We may be waiting for generations to see another driver crank out five Sprint Cup Championships in a row, but that could prove to be a good thing for racing.  One must ask themselves, why tune in every Sunday afternoon to watch 43 cars race against each other on America’s most famous tracks?

For the sake of argument, watching a sporting event such as a race, is like going to the movies.  You watch because you’re interested in what might happen, what the outcome may be, any excitement that may ensue throughout the course of the viewing.  How might your feelings be if a group of friends aspires to go to a movie with you that you’re already familiar with?  You could possibly be less inclined to go because of the entertainment that you’ve already been exposed to and experienced.

This story seems to parallel that of Jimmie Johnson’s championship winning streak between 2006 and 2010.  Sure, if you’re a Johnson fan the aforementioned years are probably some of your favorite throughout the history of the sport.  But not all NASCAR fans root for the No.48 Lowe’s Chevrolet Impala every weekend.  Like all things that become repetitive in life, we can eventually get sick of too much of the same thing.

To aid in elucidating this concept, we can extract some information from the amount of viewers tuning into the Daytona 500 on a yearly basis.  In 2008, right in the middle of Johnson’s dynasty, 17.8 million people had their television’s set on NASCAR’s famous 500 mile race. The following year in 2009, 15.9 million people watched Daytona on Sunday, that’s about an 11% decrease in viewers. 2010 saw a further drop in viewership by accumulating only 13.2 million viewers for an approximate 26% drop off from the 2008 Daytona 500. In short, NASCAR’s most prestigious race of the year dropped significantly in the amount of people tuning in to watch it while Johnson was king of the Sprint Cup Series.

Johnson is like any other athlete, he wants to win, therefore no blame can be put on the man himself for this drop in viewers.  Rick Hendrick, Johnson’s owner puts it best when talking to the Los Angeles Times back in 2009.

“That’s his job, to come out here and do the best he can.”

No personal vendetta should be put on Johnson because of his success. But quickly looking at the other end of the spectrum, the annual season finale race at Homestead, similar figures can be drawn to illustrate how his dominance may have contributed to the declining viewers in NASCAR’s top series.  The final race of the season in 2008 attained 6.6 million viewers.  In 2009 and 2010, 1 million people dropped from the total tally, leaving 5.6 million viewers to watch the last race of the season.  Interestingly, viewership boomed back up to 6.7 million at last year’s Homestead-Miami race when Johnson was not in the hunt for the championship.  Tony Stewart and Carl Edwards were brawling amongst each other at the 2011 season’s end.

Whether you are a fan of watching a similar story unfold every season or not, there are key elements that keep fans glued to the television.  The notion of uncertainty is certainly one of them, who might be successful in the Chase and win the title this year?  Uncertainty and variety in a sport keeps anticipation, which in turn keeps attention of viewers very high.  Breaking this attention because of a repetitive outcome can cause any sports biggest fear, loss of fans and viewers.  While it’s safe to say Johnson is one of the most successful drivers in the history of NASCAR and his streak of five consecutive Sprint Cup Championships may never be accomplished again, the sport saw a shrinking in its viewership during the times of his dominance.

NASCAR Nationwide Series Practice 1

As the Sprint Cup Series get a week off to prepare for Indianapolis, the NASCAR Nationwide Series race on Sunday at Chicagoland Speedway.  43 teams completed the first practice session on Saturday.

Kyle Busch, driving for his own team Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM), was the fastest with a speed of 171.450 MPH.  Busch, the only Sprint Cup Series regular looked very worn out when climbing out of the car due to hot conditions.

Elliott Sadler was also battling sickness during this session. Sadler, who told ESPN reporters that he would rest for 20 hours and get a IV.  Sadler ran 20 laps during the session with the 5th lap being the fastest.

Danica Patrick was 13th quick and ran a total of 35 laps.

Cole Whitt went out for 41 laps.

Travis Pastrana was helped by Matt Crafton, who practiced the car and then went up and spotted for him. They ran 41 laps combined.

Kenny Wallace was the fastest go or go homer as he drove the No.09 for RAB racing. This is the first time for RAB racing that they are entering two cars. Kenny ran 27 laps and was 9th fastest.  Wallace posted on twitter that the car is handling really good and can not wait for the race tomorrow.

The margin between first and 42 cars, that ran practice, was 3.533 seconds.

Jeff Green was the only car that did not run in the first practice.

Practice Results
STP 300, Chicagoland Speedway
July 22, 2012 | Race 18 of 33 | Practice 1

Pos. No. Driver Make Speed
1
54 Kyle Busch Toyota 171.45
2 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 171.021
3 12 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 170.951
4 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 170.74
5 22 Parker Kligerman Dodge 170.622
6 88 Cole Whitt* Chevrolet 170.159
7 18 Ryan Truex Toyota 170.025
8 3 Austin Dillon* Chevrolet 169.651
9 11 Brian Scott Toyota 169.635
10 30 James Buescher Chevrolet 169.566
11 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 169.311
12 199 Travis Pastrana Toyota 168.845
13 7 Danica Patrick Chevrolet 168.645
14 44 Mike Bliss Toyota 168.608
15 43 Michael Annett Ford 168.434
16 33 Brendan Gaughan Chevrolet 168.256
17 109 Kenny Wallace Toyota 167.858
18 38 Brad Sweet* Chevrolet 167.489
19 14 Eric McClure Toyota 166.687
20 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 166.656
21 23 Jamie Dick Chevrolet 166.446
22 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 166.389
23 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 166.164
24 39 Josh Richards Ford 166.128
25 81 Jason Bowles* Toyota 165.163
26 117 Tanner Berryhill Toyota 164.916
27 42 Blake Koch Chevrolet 164.795
28 41 Timmy Hill Ford 164.77
29 50 T.J. Bell Chevrolet 164.679
30 19 Tayler Malsam Toyota 164.363
31 70 Johanna Long* Chevrolet 164.363
32 4 Danny Efland Chevrolet 164.268
33 108 Tim Andrews Ford 164.019
34 40 Erik Darnell Chevrolet 163.855
35 174 Mike Harmon Chevrolet 163.098
36 89 Morgan Shepherd Chevrolet 162.788
37 47 Stephen Leicht Chevrolet 162.558
38 124 Benny Gordon* Chevrolet 162.401
39 52 Tim Schendel Chevrolet 162.342
40 171 Matthew Carter Chevrolet 161.958
41 46 Chase Miller Chevrolet 161.069
42 15 Carl Long Chevrolet 154.158
43 10 Jeff Green Toyota

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