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Kurt Busch fined and placed on probation, Tony Gibson receives probation, crew members fined as well.
posted by Mike Neff
Tuesday May 15, 2012
Following the dustup on pit lane after the Bojangles Southern 500 Kurt Busch has been fined $50,000 and placed on probation until July 25th. Busch was fined for violating Section 12-1 (Actions detrimental to stock car racing; reckless driving on pit road during the race; involved in an altercation with another competitor after the completion of the race) of the 2012 NASCAR Rule Book. Busch’s crew member, Craig Strickler, has been fined $5,000 and placed on NASCAR probation until Dec. 31 for violating Section 12-1 (Actions detrimental to stock car racing; interfering with a member of the broadcast media). Tony Gibson, Ryan Newman’s crew chief, has also been placed on probation until June 27th due to the actions of one of his crew members. Gibson was cited for violating Section 12-1 and Sections 12-4G and 9-4A (Crew chief assumes responsibility for the actions of his team members). Andrew Rueger, the gas man on the No. 39 car, has been fined $5,000 and placed on probation until June 27th as well. Rueger, like the others, was in violation of Section 12-1 (Actions detrimental to stock car racing; failure to comply with a directive from a NASCAR official).
New Sponsor For Kenseth, But No Number Change
posted by Thomas Bowles
Monday May 14, 2012
Matt Kenseth has a new backer for Saturday night’s All-Star Race at Charlotte. Fifth Third Bank announced a sponsorship deal with the No. 17 Ford on Monday, becoming the primary sponsor for NASCAR’s primary exhibition race and three additional Sprint Cup events this season: Kentucky, Indianapolis, and the August Michigan race. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but the new “numbers” sponsoring the car will not cause a number change as had been previously rumored. The organization remains hopeful that with another part-time primary stepping up to the plate, one of these companies will step up and expand their support to the majority of Kenseth’s 36 races in 2013. So far this season, the No. 17 has had a plethora of primaries since losing Crown Royal for good at the end of the 2011 season. Best Buy, Zest, Ford Ecoboost and even the Gary Sinise / Tunnel To Towers Project have all shared support on the car. The inability to find a financial backer has been surprising, considering Kenseth is this year’s Daytona 500 winner and sits second in the standings, just two points behind teammate Greg Biffle.
2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Results: Southern 500
posted by Thomas Bowles
Monday May 14, 2012
Eleven down, 25 to go. Here’s the Cup Series order of finish from Saturday night’s Bojangles’ Southern 500 in Darlington, South Carolina: KEY:
*- Led The Most Laps Editor’s Note: Remember, some drivers will score zero points as they’re only allowed to accumulate them in one of NASCAR’s top three series: Sprint Cup, Nationwide, or Camping World Trucks.
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Miss out on your favorite driver's report card / season preview? Just click the link above and you can find them all archived together! It could have been ugly. We got lucky; but it could have been tragic. The 2007 Daytona 500 was marred with crashes. There was no Big One, just a bunch of Little Ones, but a couple of those looked deceptively bad. Bottom line… there was nothing about those crashes in that race that made it fun to watch. It was a funny sort of race, in any case. The early crashes were not the product of errant bump drafting or impatience, but rather a terrible tire/restrictor plate combination that served as a wake-up call. The message is loud and clear : NASCAR needs to find a way to eliminate restrictor plates, and soon. We only have amazing equipment like the HANS device and SAFER barrier to thank for the fact that we haven't lost another driver in the last few years. Saturday’s wrecks became a stark reminder that while aerodynamics and technology have changed drastically since the late 1980's, the limitations of racing around the restrictor plate have not. Out of the incidents on Sunday, only one could be completely blamed on driver error – when Matt Kenseth sent Jamie McMurray spinning – and the rest were attributable to the entity that is plate racing today. The tire combination had former series champions Tony Stewart and Jimmie Johnson chasing loose cars on the edge of control, unable to catch up to the lead pack for laps on end. Remember in Drivers Ed, when they told you how to correct a skid? Just steer into it…and use the throttle, not the brake. In a rear-wheel drive vehicle, that can be correctable, and certainly by the best drivers in the world. But take away that split second throttle response…you can't hit the gas because you already have it wide open, and if you back off, even for a split second, you get run over. And even if by some miracle you don't, the restrictor plate takes away the car's immediate response to the throttle. Basically, Stewart and Johnson, after a certain point, were just along for the ride. Stewart's crash was especially hard, bearing an eerie visual similarity to the crash that took the life of Dale Earnhardt. Sure, drivers get loose and crash on other tracks. But on the restrictor plate superspeedways, where the cars are so aerodynamic as to be almost unstable in the air around them, it takes a much smaller bobble to send them out of control. With the cars in such tight packs, there is little chance of avoiding the wreck for those around the spinning car for the same reason that caused the spin in the first place – no immediate throttle response in these cars. The Car of Tomorrow was supposed to fix this. It was supposed to be boxy and "dirty" enough to not need the plates. However, that focus changed at Daytona testing in January when Kurt Busch topped 190 miles per hour in a CoT. The "answer" to this "excessive speed?" That's right; restrictor plates. It’s no matter that current Cup cars routinely reach straightaway speeds of 200 on tracks like Atlanta and Michigan; the problem is, 190 with full throttle response is probably safer, in the long run, than 180 with that response compromised even a little. Currently, there are two other possible solutions to eliminating restrictor plates. The first would be to build engines for Daytona and Talladega with a smaller compression ratio, restricting horsepower without restricting the engine. NASCAR deems this option "too expensive." That's right; safety is suddenly "too expensive." Another possible solution that NASCAR has had in the Busch Series for years would give cars throttle response via much bigger restrictor plates, although they are not eliminated altogether. The aerodynamic package that series runs is designed to make the car "dirty" in the air, making them slower and more stable as a result. The roof spoiler, coupled with the wicker bill on the rear spoiler, do slow the speeds of the cars. While the closing rate IS faster, there’s more throttle response, meaning the drivers can control that closure better than they can without. One of NASCAR's best plate races in the Cup series (Yes, they once ran it too!) with this package was at Talladega in 2001, resulting in a caution-free plate race. No Big One. Not even a Little One. Just great racing. Unfortunately, Dale Earnhardt had been killed in Daytona earlier that year, and without someone or something specific to blame, NASCAR blamed the aero package…so it quietly disappeared. (Which, of course, DOES beg the question: Why on Earth would NASCAR use this "more dangerous" package in the Busch Series with the LESS experienced drivers if the Cup guys can't handle it?) Was this aero package the final solution? No. But it was an improvement over what the series currently has. Is there an answer, right now, for eliminating the restrictor plate? No. But NASCAR needs to make this a real priority for safety AND the good of the racing itself. The last lap at Daytona, when Kevin Harvick and Mark Marin barely touched, was a perfect illustration of why. Aided by a lack of throttle response, the cars behind them stacked up as the leaders slowed a bit, spinning everywhere; Clint Bowyer got the short end of the stick in that one, going on a wild ride that ended with his car in flames. He almost landed on his roof; luckily, he avoided extreme disaster. At any other track, the hard racing would have been unquestionably exciting to the finish, and almost certainly would not have resulted in the dangerous situation that it put drivers in. Isn't that what we should see every week, drivers being able to race unrestricted? The writing is on the wall; NASCAR needs to find a solution for the restrictor plate tracks that does not include restrictor plates.
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Great article, Amy. I personally believe NASCAR favors plate racing simply because of the “excitement factor”. The more daring the deed, the larger the viewing audience. Great article Amy. Only one problem. Yours is the umpteenth one that I have read on this subject. NASCAR has the answer, but as ChromeHorn says above, they don’t want an answer. The best way for a NASCAR race to make the nightly news is a big crash. The only “big” crashes come at Daytona and Talledega. All they have to do is alter the car aerodynamics and the problem is solved. Take away downforce and box the car up. Make the driver have to drive and outwit his/her opponent. Since even the trucks now have to run the “tapered spacer” to keep them on the ground fans are going to have to admit that today’s engines are so strong that there is simply no way to slow the cars to the point that the plates could be eliminated. Hopefully the COT will be better, but short of making them drag anchors or push bulldozer blades there is nothing that can be done to the aero to get rid of the plates. I hate that fact because I hate plate races, but there it is. Plates or not Daytona and Talladega have always been known for big crashes. The horsepower and aero have outgrown those courses. But, NASCAR won’t change until they see it in the bottom line. IMO bring back Rockingham, Wilkesboro, etc and drop plate races! :P
Recent articles from Amy Henderson: Piquet, Jr. Wins K&N East Opener Want to know more about Amy or see an archive of all of her articles? Check out her bio page for more information.
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