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NASCAR Beginnings Featuring ‘Tiny’ Lund

DeWayne Louis “Tiny” Lund

DeWayne Louis “Tiny” Lund was named as one of NASCAR’s 50 best drivers in 1998. The list is a mix of drivers with varying qualifications. Some won a lot of races and some won multiple championships. Often the reasons are not as obvious as numbers on a piece of paper but they all have one thing in common. Each had a huge impact on the sport of stock car racing.

Lund was born in Harlan, Iowa in 1929. He began his career racing motorcycles but later moved on to midget and sprint cars. Lund eventually found his way to the Modified Division where he quickly became a dominant force.

He made a name for himself as a hard charger who never lifted. Iowa was his proving ground and he excelled on every kind of short track. From dirt to clay, from flat track to banked, Lund became a master at his craft. No one can say for sure how many features that he won but estimates are as high as five hundred.

Lund was a bear of a man at 6’6” tall and weighed in at around 300 pounds. He towered over most of his fellow competitors who jokingly referred to him as “Tiny.” Those who knew him best will tell you that this big man had an even bigger heart.

He also had a reputation as an aggressive driver who loved fast cars and wild parties but off the track he was better known for his practical jokes. His booming laugh was often heard echoing through the garage.

There was a gentle side to Lund too, especially when it came to his younger fans. It was not uncommon for him to give away a trophy to a child who came up to him wanting nothing more than an autograph.

The early part of Lund’s career was spent driving for different owners including A.L. Bumgarner and Gus Holzmueller. One of his most explosive partnerships was with Lee Petty. Lund drove about five races for Petty in 1957 but their partnership ended abruptly after the two had a disagreement.

The specifics of the argument aren’t known but they put on quite a show during driver introductions at the Greensboro Agricultural Fairgrounds on April 28, 1957.

Tom Higgins of ThatsRacing.com was researching an article on NASCAR fights and talked to Tim Flock who was there that day.

“Oh, by far the best fight I ever saw was between Tiny and the Petty family,” Tim said. “Even now, 30 or so years later, when I think about it, the thing makes me laugh so hard it brings tears to my eyes.”

“Lee and Tiny passed each other on the stage, and one of them made a remark to the other. Then the fists started flying.”

“Lee was as tough a guy as they come. But at about 6-3 and maybe 175 he was no match for Tiny.”

Petty’s sons, Richard and Maurice rushed over to help their father.

“Danged if Tiny wasn’t putting a whipping on all three of them. Tiny was so big and stout they couldn’t handle him.”

At this point Flock was laughing so hard that he had tears in his eyes, as he continued the story.

“This is when Mrs. Petty got into it,” he continued. “I couldn’t believe my eyes when she went on that stage and started pummeling Tiny in the head with her purse.”

“She was putting pump-knots on Tiny’s head with that handbag. The reason that it was such a weapon was because Mrs. Petty had a .38 pistol inside it!”

The fight ended quickly after that. Although no one is sure what started the fight, the victory clearly belonged to Mrs. Petty. Higgins later verified the story with Richard Petty and asked if his mother would be embarrassed if he included her part in the fight.

Petty’s answer says it all.

“Embarrassed? Man, she’s right proud of it.”

After his association with Petty Enterprises ended, Lund continued to work with A.L. Bumgarner but soon ended up fielding his own cars.

At the end of 1963 Lund headed to Daytona, Florida in the hope of finding a new ride. With this decision, Lund put himself in the right place at the right time.

His first career win was in 1963 at NASCAR’s biggest venue where he won the Daytona 500. But the story of how he got to compete in this particular race is almost more impressive than the win.

In 1963, the preliminary race leading up to the Daytona 500 was a sports car event named the Daytona Continental. Marvin Panch, a driver for the Woods Brothers, was testing a Maserati sports car and got together with another car. The crash sent Panch spinning out of control. His car flipped over and burst into flames.

Panch was on fire and trapped inside his car. Lund, who was a spectator at the race, immediately ran over to the burning car and pulled Panch from the wreckage. Panch suffered burns to over two thirds of his body and faced a long recovery.

Lund was awarded the Carnegie Medal of Honor for his heroic actions that day.

It is rumored that while in the hospital recovering from his injuries, Panch asked the man who had saved his life if he would be interested in driving his car for the Daytona 500. There’s another story that the decision was made by the Wood Brothers. It’s said that they simply asked themselves who was the last person they would want to see in the rear view mirror when leading a race.

Regardless of who made the decision, Lund was handed the opportunity of a lifetime.

Lund teamed up with the Woods Brothers who had already prepared a unique strategy for winning the race. Their plan was to run the entire event on one set of tires and to make one less pit stop than everyone else.

Lund patiently worked his way through the field and took the lead late in the race. The race was winding down when Fred Lorenzen passed Lund for first place but with less than ten laps to go, Lorenzen had to make a last minute pit stop for fuel and handed the lead back to Lund.

A few laps later, Lund was passed by Ned Jarrett but on lap 197, Jarrett had to pit for fuel too. Lund once again took the lead.

It was a nail-biting finish as Lund fought to hang on to first place with Lorenzen and Jarrett closing in fast. The fans were on their feet cheering. Did Lund have enough gas to finish the race?

Running on nothing but fumes, Lund hung on to capture the checkered flag and coasted into the winners circle to claim the victory.

The Daytona 500 win revived Lund’s career but success was fleeting. He continued to work with the Woods Brothers but after Marvin Panch’s return, Lund was out of a job. By 1964, he was back to journeyman status and found work with a revolving door of different car owners.

Lund teamed up with Lyle Stelter at the end of 1964. Although his association with Stelter had more downs than ups, Lund added two more wins to his resume. They parted company after the end of the 1967 season.

After teaming up with Bud Moore, Lund found more success in the newly formed Grand American division. This series was designed to run pony cars like Mustangs and Camaros. Lund won his first Grand American Championship in 1968.

He may not have been one of the most accomplished drivers but Tiny Lund went on to become one of the most loved and memorable drivers in NASCAR. His accomplishments are varied and many. Lund won races in USAC, ARCA, the Pacific Coast Racing Association and the Grand American Series.

He won the Grand American Championship three times in 1968, 1970 and 1971 and the Grand National East Championship in 1973. Lund was also a fan favorite and won the Most Popular Driver title in the Grand National American Series four consecutive years from 1969-1972.

Sadly, Tiny Lund’s life was cut short on August 17, 1975 after an accident on the sixth lap of the Talladega 500. Lund got together with J.D. McDuffie and caused a chain reaction that ended when rookie driver Terry Link was turned, running straight into the driver’s side door of Lund’s car.

Lund was killed instantly.

Link’s car burst into flames and two spectators, along with driver Walter Ballard, pulled the unresponsive Link from his car. The accident was eerily reminiscent of what Lund had done for Marvin Panch in 1963 at Daytona.

NASCAR had lost one of its most endearing stars. Buck Baker won the race that day but there was no celebration in Victory Lane. After being told that his close friend had died, Baker fell to his knees, overcome with emotion.

Achievements:

Awarded the Carnegie Medal of Honor for heroism

Won Most Popular Driver Award–Grand National American Series: 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972

Won Grand American Championship – 1968, 1970, 1971

Won Grand National East Championship – 1973

Inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame – 1994

Named one of NASCAR’s 50 greatest drivers – 1998

A Tiny Lund Grandstand at Daytona International Speedway named in his honor.

The Tiny Lund Memorial Race – Annual race in Lund’s hometown of Harlan, Iowa

Bodine dominates at Nashville

Todd Bodine won his second race of the season in Saturday night’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Nashville Superspeedway. Bodine started from the pole and dominated the race by leading twice for 91 of the 150 laps including the final 88 laps at the 1.33-mile concrete oval.

“I’ve been so close so many times. Even at the (Nashville) fairgrounds I was close. We were close with this truck before.   The Germain team is awesome — these guys are the ones that do this every week.”  

Rookie Austin Dillon finished second, Aric Almirola third, Timothy Peters third and Johnny Sauter finished fifth.  

Bodine continues to lead in the series standings by 174 points over Almirola.  

Unofficial Results

Pos. St. No. Driver Make Pts. Bon. Laps
1 1 30 Todd Bodine  Toyota 195 10 150
2 2 3 Austin Dillon * Chevrolet 170 0 150
3 5 51 Aric Almirola  Toyota 170 5 150
4 3 17 Timothy Peters  Toyota 165 5 150
5 7 13 Johnny Sauter  Chevrolet 155 0 150
6 10 33 Ron Hornaday  Chevrolet 150 0 150
7 6 88 Matt Crafton  Chevrolet 146 0 150
8 11 18 Brian Ickler  Toyota 142 0 150
9 9 7 Justin Lofton * Toyota 138 0 150
10 4 2 Ken Schrader  Chevrolet 134 0 150
11 15 5 Mike Skinner  Toyota 130 0 150
12 18 21 Donny Lia  Chevrolet 127 0 150
13 12 39 Ryan Sieg  Chevrolet 124 0 150
14 20 81 David Starr  Toyota 121 0 149
15 14 4 Ricky Carmichael  Chevrolet 118 0 149
16 13 31 James Buescher  Chevrolet 115 0 149
17 22 60 Narain Karthikeyan  Chevrolet 112 0 148
18 25 7 Butch Miller  Dodge 109 0 147
19 23 10 Jennifer Jo Cobb * Ford 106 0 147
20 27 85 Brent Raymer  Ford 103 0 144
21 28 1 Joe Aramendia  Chevrolet 100 0 142
22 30 57 Norm Benning  Chevrolet 97 0 141
23 26 46 Clay Greenfield  Dodge 94 0 140
24 19 6 Bobby Hamilton Jr.  Chevrolet 91 0 132
25 33 47 Brett Butler * Chevrolet 88 0 131
26 17 12 Mario Gosselin  Chevrolet 85 0 64
27 35 48 Michelle Theriault  Chevrolet 82 0 38
28 8 23 Jason White  Dodge 79 0 37
29 21 187 Chris Jones  Chevrolet 76 0 29
30 34 89 Chris Lafferty  Chevrolet 73 0 16
31 31 124 Mike Harmon  Ford 0 0 14
32 32 216 J C Stout  Chevrolet 67 0 9
33 29 93 Mike Garvey  Chevrolet 64 0 8
34 16 15 Johanna Long  Toyota 61 0 3
35 24 95 Carl Long  Dodge 0 0 1

Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen; Montoya wins

Road racing at its finest. Describing the race today here at Watkins Glen. Today’s race was full of action and extraordinary weather. This capped off once of the nicest race weekends I can remember here at Watkins Glen.

Juan Pablo Montoya claimed victory in the Sprint Cup Series for just his second time in 131 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts. It was not for lack of effort as Montoya had been close to victory in a few races this season, most notably last month in Indianapolis at the Brickyard. His victory breaks a 113-race winless drought as his last victory came at the second road-course that the Sprint Cup Series visits at Infineon Raceway in 2007.

Pole-sitter Carl Edwards did not last long at the front of the field as Jamie McMurray slid past for the lead on lap number two. McMurray was also the next driver to see only a brief stint at the front of the field, as Juan Pablo Montoya wasted no time showing that his car was the one to beat today. Montoya made a pass on McMurray to gain the lead on only lap number five. The 42 car had all but checked out in the first stint as the race as other pre-race favorites like Marcos Ambrose and Tony Stewart were caught in traffic behind Montoya.

Road course pit strategy started around lap 27 when Montoya pitted from the lead for four tires and fuel. The field followed pace with leader Montoya the following lap where Ambrose, Stewart and Carl Edwards all came to the pit lane under green for four tires and fuel.

A Caution on lap 29 bunched the field up and was the first time where we saw that there was more than one car that could win. When the green flew on lap 31, Marcos Ambrose made it a statement that his car was good enough to win, passing Carl Edwards for second and keeping pace with Montoya at the point.

It took around nine laps for Ambrose to finally make a move on Montoya for the lead, gaining the top spot on lap 40. This move, like many others here at Watkins Glen came as a dive-bomb into the right hand turn one, out-breaking Montoya for the lead.

Just after Ambrose took the lead, the caution flag waived for the second time as Bobby Labonte was sidetracked in the Inner Loop. During the caution, Crew Chief for Juan Montoya told his driver to “Drive it like a maniac”. And drive like a maniac did Juan as the green flew again on lap 46, as Ambrose and Montoya made it to Turn 1, Montoya trapped Ambrose on the bottom and drove off with the lead.

The field went single file with a few changes, but the mix came on lap 60 when Montoya hit pit road for tires and fuel, followed by Ambrose. Again, the leaders caught a break when the third yellow flag of the race came out for debris on lap 62. When the dust settled from that yellow, Juan Montoya and Marcos Ambrose were shown at the top of the leaderboards.

The next news came from defending Sprint Cup Champion Jimmie Johnson on lap 70, when he spun in Turn 7, sending he and Denny Hamlin into the outside wall. The wreck collected two of this years Chase contenders out for the win here as Hamlin later stated that drivers were “dive-bombing” each other when racing for position.

When the field took the green with 15 laps to go on lap 75, the top two spots had remained stagnant. Montoya leading Ambrose, Kurt Busch, A.J. Allmendinger, and Jamie McMurray into Turn 1 following the fifth caution of the day.

From then on it was smooth sailing for Montoya at the front of the field as he stretched his lead to over four seconds over Kurt Busch by the time the checkered flag flew on lap 90. Montoya had lead an amazing 74 laps when his Chevy crossed the stripe, winning the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen in commanding fashion.

The rest of the top five looked like this; Kurt Busch in second, yesterday’s winner in the Zippo 200 Nationwide Series race here at Watkins Glen – Marcos Ambrose in third, AJ Almendinger in fourth, and pole-sitter Carl Edwards in fifth.

In the points, Denny Hamlin took the biggest hit out of all the Chase contenders dropping three spots to sixth, where Kurt Busch did the opposite and gained three spots with his second place finish. Mark Martin traded places with Clint Bowyer for the twelfth and final spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. The top twelve after today’s race looks like this:

Kevin Harvick

Jeff Gordon

Jeff Burton

Kurt Busch

Jimmie Johnson

Denny Hamlin

Kyle Busch

Tony Stewart

Carl Edwards

Matt Kenseth

Greg Biffle

Mark Martin

Another successful weekend comes to a close here at Watkins Glen, and again I have to give Kudos to the staff at Watkins Glen International for treating all the members of the media to the always-delicious fare of Dinosaur Barbeque.

Straight From The Glen: Saturday; Ambrose dominates NNS race

The 2.45-mile road course was not empty for long today here at Watkins Glen International. Starting this morning with Nationwide Series Qualifying, the track was hot for the duration of the day, finishing with a fantastic Zippo 200.

The Nationwide Series race here at Watkins Glen was dominated by Marcos Ambrose since the #47 JTG-Daugherty Racing Toyota was rolled off the hauler. The #47 car sealed the top starting spot in this morning’s Coors Light Qualifying with a time of 122.410 mph. At a place where starting spot is crucial and almost directly related to finishing position.

Marcos ensured he would not have to pass many cars in his quest to become only the second driver in Nationwide Series History to win three-consecutive series races at Watkins Glen International. The only other driver to accomplish this feat was Terry Labonte, winning here at The Glen from 1994 to 1996.

When it came time for the green flag to drop, Ambrose wasted no time stating that his machine was the car to beat. Ambrose lead the first 18 laps after Crew Chief Frank Kerr decided to play the fuel strategy game and stay out about five laps longer than the rest of the field.

The first major incident occurred on lap 25 when the 38 car of Jason Leffler got of shape coming out of turn one following a caution for debris. One of the drivers involved was the 12 car of Justin Allgaier, who said following the accident “I saw the 38 get out of shape coming out of (Turn) 1. I knew that he was going to probably be more than I wanted to see. Unfortunately, he came back across the race track. Unfortunately, there was nowhere to go. Its s so tight right there going into (Turn) 2 that you’re just at the mercy of everybody else making sure that nobody gets bottled up and blocks the race track. That’s what happened and we ended up paying the price for it.”

Following a 25-minute red flag to clean up the mess at the entrance of turn 2, racing resumed with the 20 car of Joey Logano shown in P1. It did not take long for Kyle Busch to get his turn at leading the race with a pass on Logano on lap 27. He would ride out a lead for 14 laps before eventual race-winner Marcos Ambrose finessed his way to the lead on lap 40.

The pass came on the backstretch’s Bus Stop chicane in tremendous fashion. Ambrose spoke of setting up Busch for the lead; “He’s hard to pas and whenever you’re going to do it you’ve got to do it in style. I couldn’t pass him (Kyle Busch) on straight-line speed. He just had too much top end on us so I just waited for some lapped traffic to try and get around him and just out-foxed him there coming across the top of the hill.”

Kyle Busch had one more opportunity on a lap 66 restart to try and get past Ambrose, but the Aussie proved to be just down right too quick. Ambrose rode his lead right to victory lane, a place he is extremely familiar with here at The Glen.

Ambrose speaking about his win in the Zippo 200 following the race, “It’s just a huge win for us. Frank Kerr (crew chief) has been so good to my career and I have to thank him so much for every opportunity he gets me to victory lane. What a great day for our guys. I’m saying goodbye to JTG Daugherty Racing at the end of the year and it’s just nice to get some wins for them…We’ve got another job to do tomorrow so not too many beers tonight.”

The top three starters remained unchanged when the checkered flag waived on the Zippo 200 as it was Ambrose in first, Joey Logano second, and Kevin Harvick in third. Points leader Brad Keselowski finished in fourth, lengthening his lead in the standings. The 18-car of Kyle Busch rounded out the top-five.

On the Sprint Cup side, Carl Edwards won the Coors Light Pole Award for the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen (25th running) with a lap of 70.882 seconds, 124.432 mph. This is his first pole here at Watkins Glen with his best start of third came in 2008. Points leader Kevin Harvick will start 20th and defending race champion will start 6th.

More to come tomorrow from The Glen!

AJ Allmendinger New Alpha Dog at Richard Petty Motorsports

With the signing of AJ Allmendinger to a multi-year contract, the driver of the infamous No. 43 Petty blue race car officially becomes the lead alpha dog at Richard Petty Motorsports.

In fact, Allmendinger may be the only dog left at RPM, with Kasey Kahne and Elliott Sadler both announcing plans to leave after the close of the 2010 season. Even Paul Menard is rumored to be taking his family sponsorship elsewhere, most likely to Richard Childress Racing.

Given those circumstances, with drivers and sponsors alike apparently jumping the RPM ship, Allmendinger was skeptical about re-upping with the ‘King’. In fact, it was not so long ago that the two had a very heated exchange with one another after a particularly disappointing day on the track.

“We have potential here,” Allmendinger. “But I needed the right answers. In the end, we got the answers we wanted, that this is a stable place and a place where we can build the future.”

“It excites me to know I can the ‘the guy’ here,” Allmendinger said. “That was another huge selling point.”

RPM principal Foster Gillett was a major playing in selling Allmendinger on the concept of staying with the company and being the lead dog in the RPM pack.

“AJ has a passion for the sport,” Gillett said. “That’s obvious. He is in our shop daily and knows every single person on our team. Our guys root for him.”

“One of the great moments for an athlete is the chance to choose what team he wants to be with,” Gillett continued. “We wanted AJ to choose the right reasons to be here. AJ is a big part of what we do and a bigger part of the future.”

Allmendinger acknowledged that he did talk to several other teams before deciding that he would re-up with Richard Petty Motorsports. He cited not only the ability to be that ‘alpha dog’ but also the potential he sees in his team as reasons for staying.

And quite frankly, the ‘Dinger, at age 28 years, just did not want to have to start over with a new group at this stage in his career.

“For me, it was tough to go out there and know everything that we’ve built up and maybe go to a different team and just completely start over,” Allmendinger said. “You look at all the great teams and they’re not one or two-year teams, they’ve been around five, six, seven years and I look at that and it just made it easy to know that we had potential here. That’s all I wanted to see.”

One of the other major factors in Allmendinger’s decision to stay with RPM was the support that Ford has provided, particularly with the new engine. The ‘Dinger shared that the proof of that was seeing Greg Biffle in victory lane at Pocono Raceway last weekend with the new Ford engine under the hood.

“Ford gives us all the tools that we could ask for to go out there and have a chance to win races every weekend,” Allmendinger said. “Obviously the new motor is getting better and it was great to see Ford finally back in Victory Lane last week with the new engine.”

Allmendinger joined Richard Petty Motorsports late in the 2008 season after a tumultuous period in his career, especially his time at Red Bull Racing. In his four year NASCAR Cup career, he has one top-five, eleven top-tens, and one pole.

With the ability to now build upon this record, Allmendinger may not only be the alpha dog at RPM, but he may be the savior of the team as well. And he may just be the one that attracts other drivers, perhaps even Marcos Ambrose who is now homeless after leaving JTG Daugherty Racing, and new potential sponsors to replace the most likely outgoing Budweiser.

When asked about these possibilities, the ‘King’ just smiled mysteriously and said that future announcements would be forthcoming.

“We have a lot more good news coming as an organization in a few weeks,” Gillett said. “I think AJ saw how committed we are. And we have some partners that will continue to support us. Some things already are done. Things are very good here.”

For Allmendinger, who just marked the milestone of his 100th career start in the Brickyard 400 at Indy, his RPM contract extension also seems to have settled him.

“It’s the first time in my career I can say I’m in a place where I can build something special,” Allmendinger said. “A lot of great things are happening at Richard Petty Motorsports.”

“We’re not where we want to be, but I see the potential to get better and contend for victories and ultimately win a championship. It’s a good energy here. Hopefully this is the start of great things.”

“I am ready to be a leader of this race team,” Allmendinger said. “It is something that I thrive on and excites me every day to know that I can be the guy. I have the confidence in myself to know I can lead this team and represent it to the best of its abilities.”

Alpha dog Allmendinger will race this weekend in the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen on the road course at Watkins Glen. The ‘Dinger was eighth in first practice and ninth in second Cup practice at the Glen.

Straight from The Glen: Friday

The talk in the garage today focused on the news of Atlanta Motor Speedway losing one of its two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races starting in the 2011 season. Drivers reactions were mixed as news came from Atlanta that one of its two Cup Series bids would possibly be moved to the Cincinnati area’s Kentucky Speedway.

Jeff Gordon was disappointed to see Atlanta have one race removed, but also was excited to have an opportunity to experience new horizons. “I’m a big fan of Atlanta. I love going to Atlanta. You hate to see a race go, but you also have to understand the business of the sport. When we go to Atlanta and they’re having a hard time selling it out, and there’s an opportunity to go somewhere and grow our fan base, and take the series somewhere they’ve never been before, which is potentially what’s going to happen, I think that’s exciting and a good move.”

Sprint Cup Series points leader Kevin Harvick was also enthused to experience a new track, and referencing NASCAR’s expansion in 2001 to Chicagoland Speedway and Kansas Speedway. “The biggest boom we have ever seen in this sport came in 2001 when we went to new venues in Chicago; we went to new venues in Kansas and you had all this movement with the schedule and you created all these new fans. Sometimes things become stale. It is a constantly evolving sport… This sport is too popular to not go to new venues that are not sold out. If its not sold out, you need to be held accountable as a race track.”

17-year NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Veteran, Jeff Burton was also on board for the change of venues. “I’m not a big believer that change is good, I’m a believer that good change is good. We’ve seen in Atlanta some good racing, but we haven’t really seen the crowds there… If race tracks aren’t supported by the fans then we’re going to see those tracks moved somewhere else where the fans are going to support it… If there’s another venue where more people can come in and more people can enjoy it then that’s where you can expect the show to be going.”

On the contrary, many drivers in the garage are upset that one race at Atlanta Motor Speedway is being removed from the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Schedule. Carl Edwards talked of the sadness associated with losing a race at the track where he tallied his first two Cup Series wins. “I think Atlanta is one of, if not the greatest oval that we go to. I think that track has all of the things that make racing fun. It has history and a surface that is really fun to race on. The fans there are very knowledgeable about racing and it is a very grueling race. It is fast and exciting, so to lose a race there to me is a little sad. I love that place and every time I come through the gates reminds me of my weekend that I won my first to races in this series.”

Also displeased with the removal of one race weekend at Atlanta was Clint Bowyer. “I don’t mind a schedule change. I think it is probably time. Some races make sense; some of them don’t in my opinion. Losing Atlanta is a disappointment to me. I think there are a couple of other tracks that have two races that I would have my rather of, if it was my pick, of going once… I think its going to be sad to lose Atlanta, I think that is one of every driver’s favorite race tracks and if we do lose it, its going to be a bummer.”

We have to look back at what drives this sport or ANY sport for that matter. The single most important element that keeps these drivers in the cockpits of these Stock Cars is the fans. Without the fans this sport will eventually flounder. NASCAR has the opportunity to expand its horizons and reach out to new fan bases.

In another sense, is it time to reward other tracks that pack fans in the grandstands year in and year out? Take for instance our fans north of the border. They have been enthusiastically attending the NASCAR Nationwide Series races at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve for 3 years now and will likewise be sold-out again later this month. Is it time NASCAR truly rewarded tracks with Sprint Cup Series races that year-after-year sell out the grandstands?

On Pit Road: Yes for Kentucky, No for Indy

It really came as no surprise to anyone that follows NASCAR Thursday, when Atlanta Motor Speedway President Ed Clark announced that the track would cut back to a single NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race for 2011.

Ever since Speedway Motorsports Inc. signed the deal to buy Kentucky Speedway in 2009, everyone anticipated a Cup date moving to Cincinnati area track. There was a lot of speculation about just where that date would come from. The guessing grew more varied after O. Bruton Smith and SMI later purchased New Hampshire International Speedway. But if you were among the media, or the few fans that were present at the spring Atlanta race, the handwriting was on the wall.

I spoke with Smith last year at Kentucky and although he would not commit to the source, he made it clear that an SMI race would move to Kentucky Motor Speedway in 2010 or 2011. When the track didn’t get a race date in 2010, due to the unsettled litigation with the former owners, Smith began talking about changes coming to KMS. In June of this year Smith was at the track for the NASCAR Nationwide Series race and he talked openly about leveling the infield and rebuilding it to mirror the new infield at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

When Smith spoke openly about his displeasure with the security cost at his newly acquired New Hampshire Motor Speedway, many fans felt it was a signal that NHMS would indeed be losing a date to KMS, but that was never considered a serious by most of the media. Remember folks, NHMS does have a ‘Chase’ date and Smith has again been very vocal about wanting a second Cup date for Las Vegas, and also his desire to make that the final race on the schedule. So, if we do see a second date at LVMS soon, it probably will come via NHMS.

On the NASCAR Nationwide Series schedule, the folks at Indianapolis Motor Speedway went public last month suggesting that they were actively pursuing the NNS race date now held by O’Reilly Raceway Park. Never mind that ORP has hosted that race for 28 years and it is an extremely popular race weekend that also includes a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race, and a night of USAC open wheel cars, it is a fan favorite weekend.

This comment by IMS CEO Jeff Belskus was not accepted well by the folks over at the NHRA (owners of ORP) and they quickly pounced on NASCAR to keep the date safe. The IMS move came about as the track has seen their attendance figures plummeting over the past few years. Going from about 300,000 fans a few years ago for the Brickyard 400 to a reported 140,000 this year, says a lot about the track itself and the racing that it provides. Although all NASCAR tracks have suffered attendance problems for 2009 and 2010, none have seen the drastic cut that IMS has. All the while, just down the road at ORP, they are still selling out on the same weekend.

Hats off to NASCAR for not letting this one drag out as only three days after the IMS announcement, they contacted NHRA to assure them that the NNS date will indeed stay at ORP. In other news, SPEEDTV reports that Chicagoland Speedway will host the first Chase race in 2011 while New Hampshire motor Speedway will move one week to the second Chase race.

Road Course Veteran Ron Follows to run for JR Motorsports at the Glen

Road course ace, Ron Fellows will make second start of the season this weekend at Watkins Glen International Raceway for JR Motorsports. He will be driving the No. 88 Chevrolet in the NASCAR Nationwide Series Zippo 200.

Fellows, finished second earlier this season at Road America for the No. 88 Chevrolet team. In 2008, they teamed up to win at Montreal. Fellows is no rookie when it comes to racing at the Glen. In nine starts Fellows owns three wins (1998, 2000 and 2001), five top five and six top-10 finishes with 189 laps led – the most among current drivers at the Glen. He earned two poles at the facility and has an average finish of 12.2. Fellows holds the additional distinction of being the oldest winner of the 82-lap race at 41 years, nine months and 10 days of age following his 2001 victory. In last year’s event with JRM, Fellows raced to a fifth-place finish, completing 48 total green-flag passes according to NASCAR Statistical Services.

Fellows, had this to say about tthe upcoming race, “I’m excited to get back to racing with the GT Vodka Chevrolet and all the guys on this No. 88 crew. We not only raced well at Road America last month, but we had a lot of fun in the process. It’s a pleasure to be working with Tony Eury Sr. again. I’ve known him for a long time and he’s one of those guys that have spent a lifetime in the racing world, and he always has a great setup under the car”.

Fellows had this to say about Crew Chief Tony Eury Sr, “It’s a pleasure to be working with Tony Eury Sr. again. I’ve known him for a long time and he’s one of those guys that have spent a lifetime in the racing world, and he always has a great setup under the car.”

Fellows, also said, “This GT Vodka team certainly was up for the challenge at Road America, now we just need to do the same at the Glen this weekend. JR Motorsports preparation is top-notch and that puts you at ease when you climb behind the wheel of their equipment. We ran well in this race last year, even after we had some pit trouble. We managed to drive from the back to finish fifth, so I want to top that this time around.”

In addition to his Nationwide effort, Fellows will also be attempting to qualify for the Sprint Cup race with Tommy Baldwin Racing. The team is 38th in owner points and therefore must qualify for the race on speed.

Speedway Media News and Bits NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

NASCAR News and Notes 8-04-2010.

  • We will see a new and improved track this weekend at Watkins Glen.

Several significant track improvement await drives at Watkins Glen for this weekends’, Helluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen. These improvements have come during the off-season, which included paving over gravel traps, installing SAFER barriers, new run-off areas, and rumble strips in specific places.

In turn 5 (known as the Carousel) we will see a new run-off area, rumble strip and adjusted guardrail, in turn 7 we will see a new SAFER barrier, run-off area, rumble strip and partially paved gravel trap, and finally in turn 6 we will see a new SAFER barrier on the drivers right side, plus a paved-over gravel trap, in the inner loop.

These changes have come inpart, due to an incident last year with Jeff Gordon, Sam hornish Jr., Kasey Kahne, Joey Logano, Jeff Burton, and Andy Lally, who were involved in a frighting crash in turn 5 the Carousel, last year. During a tire test earlier this season, Gordan had this to say of the track. “I love what they have done with the pavement.” “I think you’re going to see a race that is more entertaining because we don’t have to sit there and pull cars out of the sand trap”.

  • There will be several Milestones at this weeks race at the Glen.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. will make his 500th national-series start Sunday at Watkins Glen. All of them are in the NASCAR Sprint Cup and NASCAR Nationwide Series competitions. He has 384 in the former and 115 in latter. Earnhardt is also a two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series Champion in 1998and ’99.

Also, Kurt Busch will make his 350th series start Sunday. Whiles Martin Truex Jr. will make his 175th Series start.

  • Watkins Glen to celebrate Silver Anniversary.

This weekend will mark the 25th consecutive NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at Watkins Glen. The Glen’s first race was in 1957, won by NASCAR Hall of Fame nominee Buck Baker,  who won from the pole. the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series didn’t return again until 1964 and 1965. Billy Wade won the race in 1964, and Marvin Panch in 1965.

  • Driver’s Currently in the Chase and those n the Bubble coming into Watkins Glen.
Position Driver Points Points Behind
1 Kevin Harvick 3,080 0
2 Jeff Gordon 2,891 189
3 Denny Hamlin 2,829 260
4 Jimmie Johnson 2,803 277
5 Jeff Burton 2,757 323
6 Kyle Busch 2,724 356
7 Kurt Busch 2,722 358
8 Tony Stewart 2,719 361
9 Matt Kenseth 2,682 398
10 Carl Edwards 2,666 414
11 Greg Biffle 2,652 428
12 Clint Bowyer 2,564 516
13 Mark Martin 2,530 550
14 Dale Earnhardt Jr 2,435 645
15 Ryan Newman 2,426 654

How ‘Radioman’ Doug Taylor Saved Mark Martin’s Life

by Doug Taylor

Stock car racing has always been a team sport. Each person in the organization plays a key role in the success of the team.  One minor mistake can ruin a driver’s day and the smallest thing can often make the biggest impact.

Just ask Doug Taylor.

After a brief career in the Air Force that taught him electronics, Taylor was looking for a new direction when he heard that 2-way radios were being used in Indy and stock cars. He began to focus on developing a better system for in-car communications.

At first only a few drivers were interested but through word of mouth advertising, more and more seemed to take notice. In 1974 things began to come together when Junior Johnson became his first customer.

You might recognize a few of the legendary names he has worked with in his 25-year long career. They include A.J. Foyt, Benny Parsons, Darrell Waltrip, the Woods Brothers, Paul Newman and many more.

Taylor has lived a diverse life including a short stint as a driver. He’s also had his share of ups and downs. His biggest contribution to the sport was the development of “The Earmold” which is still used in racing today. Unfortunately, he was never able to procure a worthwhile patent on it.

Before Taylor’s innovation the in-car radios only worked during cautions. His new design ushered in a new era where crew chiefs were able to talk to their drivers under green flag conditions.

Talking with Taylor is like talking to a walking encyclopedia of racing. He also has some great stories to tell. This is just one of many.

He began telling me about the Mark Martin he met in the 1970’s as a driver in the American Speed Association where Martin went on to capture four championships.

Taylor likens the young Martin’s driving style to that of Kyle Busch. This was well before Martin evolved into one of the most respected and cleanest drivers in NASCAR today.

But there is one race at Winchester Speedway in Indiana that is one of Taylor’s most vivid memories of Mark Martin.

Martin was competing against driver Mike Eddy for the win.

Eddy, who went on to become a seven-time National ASA champion, was well known for his pedal to the medal driving style. He was feared on the track and was known to many as the “Polar Bear.”

It was on lap 391 of the 1980 Winchester 400 when the trouble began. Martin and Eddy were both going for the win with Eddy in first place and Martin right behind him in second.

Suddenly Martin got under Eddy and they raced side by side until Martin’s car broke loose. His car slid up the track into the side of Eddy who bounced off the wall and back into Martin. The wreck took them both out of the race.

After the race, Taylor walked by Eddy who was talking to several drivers about the race. He saw Taylor, pointed at him, and said, “There’s the guy that saved Martin’s life.”

Everyone turned to look at Taylor who was standing there with his mouth open and no idea of what was coming next.

Eddy continued with the story saying that when he got out of his car, there was only one thing on his mind. He was going to go find Martin and “kill” that kid.

But, as he was getting out of the car, he felt a tug on his helmet and realized that his radio was still attached to his helmet. He remembered how Taylor had always told the drivers that they needed to be careful with their radios and pull the connector apart with their hands, not by jerking on the cord.

Eddy paused for a few seconds to take the time to disconnect his radio properly. That brief moment took his mind off Martin just long enough for him to calm down.

“If it wasn’t for Doug,” Eddy said, there’s no telling what I would have done.”

Taylor chuckles as he tells the story and says he’s happy he could play a small part in helping Mark Martin live to become the icon he is today.

For more information about Doug Taylor, please visit his website at http://taylorscommunicationsracing.com/