NASCAR to relax in effort to energize sport

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NASCAR to relax in effort to energize sport
January 21, 2010


CONCORD, N.C. (AP) -Have at it, boys.


NASCAR is relaxing some of its rules this season, and encouraging drivers to show more aggression and emotion, in large part to answer a growing fan sentiment that the sport had gone stale.

``There's an age old saying that NASCAR, 'If you ain't rubbing, you ain't racing,''' NASCAR president Mike Helton said Thursday. ``I think that's what the NASCAR fan, the NASCAR stakeholders all bought into, and all expect.''

The first change will be evident when the season opens next month at Daytona International Speedway, where restrictions on bump-drafting will be lifted and horsepower will be increased by the use of the largest restrictor plate since 1989.

NASCAR had been slowly tightening its tolerance on bumping at Daytona and Talladega - the two biggest and fastest tracks in the series, where the horsepower-sapping restrictor plates are used to control speeds - and it graduated into an outright ban issued the morning of the November race at Talladega. The edict sucked the drama out of what's typically one of the most exciting races of the year, and was the final straw for many race fans who had grown tired of watered-down racing.

Even some drivers publicly complained, criticism that is usually frowned upon in NASCAR.

``Let us RACE,'' Denny Hamlin tweeted after the Talladega drivers meeting, later adding, ``We signed up to drive our cars. Not be told how to.''

He's getting his wish.

``We will put it back in the hands of drivers, and we will say 'Boys, have at it and have a good time,''' vice president of competition Robin Pemberton said Thursday.

The yellow out-of-bounds line that circles the bottom of those two tracks will remain, and Pemberton said the majority of drivers did not want that removed.

Another change coming this year will be an eventual switch from the rear wing to a spoiler on the back of the car, a design change that should both positively affect downforce and the aesthetic look that race fans prefer.

Also on tap is an organizational restructuring. The most prominent shuffle is the promotion of longtime Sprint Cup Series director John Darby into an oversight position, and NASCAR is actively looking for his replacement in a role that is effectively the top cop of the garage.

Darby's successor could be in for a busy year, particularly if drivers answer NASCAR chairman Brian France's call ``to mix it up a little bit differently'' going forward.

As NASCAR exploded over the 1990s past its small Southern roots into a billion-dollar, corporate-fueled sport, its participants seemed to morph into robotic sponsor shills too frightened to make waves. NASCAR wasn't immune, either, and started policing on-track aggression and off-track emotion.

Intentional on-track retaliation was met with immediate punishment, while transgressions such as shoving a competitor or cursing in a television interview were met with monetary fines and/or points deductions.

Fans were incensed that the rough and tumble sport they once loved had been molded into boring, follow-the-leader racing, and their favorite drivers had become too vanilla. It wasn't until last fall - when Hamlin waged a monthslong feud with up-and-comer Brad Keselowski, and Tony Stewart and Juan Pablo Montoya intentionally wrecked each other in the season finale - that NASCAR finally saw the lift the emotions and personalities can deliver to the sport.

So France, who in the past has been accused of being out of touch with stock car racing's participants, began a series of offseason meetings with individual teams and drivers to poll opinion on how to re-energize the sport.

All the changes announced Thursday, as well as the promise by France that NASCAR will ``loosen it up,'' came from those meetings.

Still, Helton cautioned it won't be the Wild West.

``It doesn't mean that you get a free pass-out-of-jail card,'' he said. ``But it certainly means that what we are encouraging the competitors ... for their character and their personality, within reason, to be unfolded.''
 

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Drivers get first laps with rear spoiler

Drivers get first laps with rear spoiler

Drivers get first laps with rear spoiler
January 19, 2010


FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -Kurt Busch sees no problems with the rear spoiler that NASCAR is in the process of adapting to replace the rear wing, a move that could enhance the passing ability of cars this season while providing a more traditional look.


``This spoiler, it seems to add front downforce,'' Busch said Tuesday, after being one of the first drivers to try out the change. ``Don't ask me how it does it. ... When you bolt something on the back of the car and it adds to the front, that's how space-age these cars are getting.''

Tony Stewart, Greg Biffle, Brian Vickers and Busch did the first on-track testing of the spoiler, each running several laps with the aluminum spoiler instead of a rear wing during their Goodyear tire test at the 1 1/2-mile, high-banked Texas Motor Speedway.

``I really liked it. I liked the way the car drove, it drove a little bit different on the corner exit than I think the wing did,'' Biffle said. ``I don't want to jump to conclusions (but) it may have had a little feel like the old car possibly in some scenarios. ... It seemed to drive good.''

The two-day tire test is scheduled to conclude Wednesday, when the four drivers will likely do some laps together with spoilers in place.

Three years ago, NASCAR phased in a new model of race car that replaced the spoiler with a wing. The new car has been used full-time since 2008, and fans have complained it has made the racing boring.

NASCAR last May began a series of town hall and individual meetings with teams, and one of the constant cries from participants was a need to alter the car design.

``I think we're stirring up the pot, but it's in a positive direction,'' Busch said. ``It seems like a positive reaction has been made already, and just driving it the first time today, I don't see any problem in at all. I hope that it creates the aesthetic view that the fans want to see with the spoiler back on the decks of these cars.''

Stewart said the balance of the car didn't change dramatically with the spoiler, which is a good thing.

``That means you won't have to reinvent the wheel necessarily,'' said Stewart, who is going into his second season as a driver-owner after finishing sixth in the championship chase last year. ``There's a lot more expensive changes to do than that. It's really not that bad.''

NASCAR plans an informational meeting for teams in mid-March with an open test March 23-24 at Charlotte.

No race has been selected for the spoiler debut, but the package could be in place for the April 18 race at Texas.

``I think it's going to be more receptive to the fans,'' Vickers said of the look of the cars. ``It looks a little cooler, a little more retro.''
 

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Truck series returning to Darlington

Truck series returning to Darlington

Truck series returning to Darlington
January 20, 2010


COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -Chris Browning is hoping the return of NASCAR's truck series to Darlington Raceway this summer will lead to a longer run than the last time.


Darlington officials announced Wednesday that the track would hold the ``Too Tough To Tame'' 200 on the night of Aug. 14. Set up, inspection, qualifying and the race will all take place that Saturday, Browning told The Associated Press.

``It's going to be a neat deal,'' said Browning, the president of the raceway.

Browning and his staff had sought to bring the truck series back to Darlington for several years, given the area's long history of NASCAR racing and its love of pickups.

Darlington had initially tried to attach a truck race to its Southern 500 show over Mother's Day weekend. However, schedules had never worked out, Browning said.

Darlington got an opening when the truck series decided not to run at Milwaukee this year, and Browning pounced on the chance to light up the track for a second event.

``Number one, the competition is great. The guys are so hungry and they race so hard,'' he said. ``The other is that people in our area can really relate to trucks.''

Browning said that was the case in the early 2000s when the trucks rolled for four seasons at the egg-shaped oval. The late Bobby Hamilton won the truck race here in 2001 and 2003. Ted Musgrave won in 2002, and Sprint Cup star Kasey Kahne was a rookie in 2004 when he took the checkered flag in Darlington's first-ever night race.

``I think it will be awesome for the Truck Series to go back to Darlington,'' said Ron Hornaday, last year's series champion.

Hornaday said racers like Hamilton and Musgrave regularly put on a strong show for fans.

``Traditionally, Darlington has been one of those places that have close finishes which the truck series is known for,'' Hornaday said. ``I'm excited to go there.''

It'll be a different, downsized Darlington drivers come back to.

The track, nicknamed ``The Lady In Black,'' had hosted two Sprint Cup races a year from 1960 through 2004, including the Southern 500 on Labor Day weekend. In NASCAR's schedule realignment, that slot was assigned to California and Darlington got the Saturday night before Mother's Day for its lone Sprint Cup date.

Darlington has made a good run out of what some had thought was a dead weekend, gaining sellouts of 63,000 from 2005 to 2008 and coming fewer than 5,000 shy of a fifth straight full house last May.

The track also went though a repaving before the 2008 Southern 500. The asphalt is still new enough to bother racers who haven't driven there recently.

``It is great to go back to Darlington Raceway, one of the most historic tracks in NASCAR,'' said series director Wayne Auton. ``The trucks have had great races there in the past and fans will definitely get their money's worth.''

Browning doesn't see why the trucks can't be a yearly happening for Darlington.

The date comes before the start of school - children 12 and under can attend for free - and before the region turns its attention to college football.

``If it all works out, we'd like to stay with that. It gives us another weekend to be running here,'' Browning said. ``It could be the perfect schedule for us.''
 

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Hendrick adds 2nd airplane to Haiti relief

Hendrick adds 2nd airplane to Haiti relief

Hendrick adds 2nd airplane to Haiti relief
January 20, 2010


CONCORD, N.C. (AP) -Hendrick Motorsports has added a second airplane to the Haitian earthquake relief effort, with both planes making daily flights into the devastated nation.


The NASCAR team initially loaned one 45-passenger plane and an eight-person crew to Missionary Flights International, but gave a second aircraft and additional personnel because of the desperate need.

The Hendrick flight crews have been taking supplies and support teams into Port-au-Prince, and reacting to onsite to situations.

Team owner Rick Hendrick said on Wednesday that one of the planes transported 26 orphans to Fort Pierce, Fla., on Tuesday to meet American families that had adopted the children before the earthquake struck.

Hendrick is covering the cost of the flights.
 
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