Thursday, May 6, 2010

Alert: Kyle Busch is acting like Kyle Busch again!


On Saturday night in Richmond Va. a Kyle Busch Spotting has been reported. I repeat Kyle Busch has been spotted lapping the entire field, well almost. By the time the first caution flag waived Busch had lapped all but 8 cars. Luckily for the field the caution came when it did or else we really would have nothing to talk about, besides Kyle Busch.

Busch led 226 of the 400 laps run during the Saturday night shootout. What does this mean? Trouble for the pack. We have seen this type of dominance from Busch in the past, weekend sweeps, annihilation of any contenders, and trophies hoisted. For a brief while the sentiment around the garage was "where did Kyle go?". Well not to worry, old shrub is back. Let's rephrase that, time to worry old shrub is back!

All we are looking for is someone to stick it to JJ and the 48, and every week I prognosticate about how this weeks winner will get hot and make a championship run. I guess I am saying it again here. If Busch can revisit the form he had in '08 it will only spell trouble for the rest of the pack, most of which are used to watching in awe as the 18 zooms by them.

Meanwhile Kevin Harvick has slowly planted his flag atop the standings. This marks the first time Harvick has been atop the leader board since he won the Daytona 500 two years ago. Take that Shell/Pennzoil! Shell/Pennzoil, Harvick and the 29 teams primary sponsor, announced last week that they will no longer fund the 29 car. Next year they will back the other Busch, Kurt, when he moves to the Penske racing #22 car. This move will free up the legendary Blue Deuce for none other than Brad Kaslowski. Not exactly sure why Roger Penske is shaking things up, but for all intents and purposes this move makes BK his franchise driver. Not bad for a spoiled private school kid from the affluent suburbs of Detroit, Michigan.

Jeff Gordon looked sharp as well last weekend and almost made me look real good with my prediction that he would end his win less streak with a win at Richmond. Gordon finished 2nd, and as for all that acrimony between the 24 and 48, yeah they did what champions do, they got over it. I am sure that Gordon still wants nothing more than to see the 48 fail, however he is a good employee, and continues to tow the company line.

Next week its "The old Lady in Black" that's right Darlington! Get your spray guns out cause there's going to be a lot of touch ups come Monday morning. Darlington is famous for the Darlington stripe, a phenomenon that occurs when the track that is too tough to tame causes tires to ware out so bald that the cars begin to drift towards the wall, eventually the wall "grabs" you as you proceed, and leaves the right side of your car with a lot less paint on it. Now a days its more like a Darlington Grind, but the smaller retaining rails used in the past would leave a perfect stripe down the side of your ride. Darlington is like the ocean you better respect her or you could find yourself lost at sea.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

4 time takes on 4 peat; wild weekend @Talladega


The racing was tight, and the track was dry, at least on Sunday it was. Another rain soaked, stormy weekend for NASCAR to navigate only this time we went green on Sunday, like it was meant to be. This weekend at Talladega will be remembered more for the turbulent winds coming from two of the sports top drivers, not the legendary draft created by the thunderous machines displacing air.

For the second straight week the 24 and 48 are at each others throats. Jeff Gordon has simply had enough of the 48 and his act, and he believes it's about time he does something about it. Flashback to last week at Texas and the 24 trying to go all beastie boys on the 48 and sabotage his afternoon and the integrity of his tires. Radio monitoring the 24 revealed the malice behind Gordon's actions, he was heard saying "looks like ol 4 time didn't like that too much". 4 time referring to Jimmie Johnson, who in 4 short years has matched the amount of cup championships that took Gordon over 15 seasons to amass. So in essence we have 4 time picking on 4 peat.

Chatting to an associate of mine revealed the marginal hatred that comes along with massive success. He exclaimed to me that for no warranted reason he simply does not like the 48, in fact he actively roots for someone to dethrone ol "4 peat". It's kind of like the Yankees or the Lakers, fans love to hate, heavy is the head that wears the crown. If you are on top we want to see you fall, if you are on top for as long as the 48 has, it's a long reach to knock you off the pinnacle. Can Gordon reach that high? Can he be the one to ruffle the untouchable feathers of the 48? Only time will tell. In the mean time we are in for a real treat as this story continues to unfurl.

Jimmie Johnson has tried to extend an olive branch in the direction of the 24, but it seams that the only thing that will satisfy Gordon is a pound of flesh. He was the golden boy, he was the one that the ladies loved and the dudes hated, he was the one that had his number plastered along every novelty tee shirt stand along the boardwalks of the Jersey shore. Gordon wants his title back, and it just may take a steel cage match to settle this, and crown an undisputed heavyweight champ.

On the track we saw Kevin Harvick end his win less streak with a last lap pass for all the marbles.
Because of the unique configuration of Talladega, with it's start/finish line at the end of the front stretch, this pass was possible. It amazes me how someone 50 years ago thought to mix it up a bit, and go against conventions by giving the finish line its placement. How could they have had the foresight for so many exciting finishes. Genius or accident? We will go with a little bit of both, for every idiot there is also an idiot savant. Genius is just not a term I like to use lightly (thanks Margo Tenenbaum).

Next week we roll into Richmond VA. The biggest little short track out there. Look for another win less streak to end next week in the form of Dale Jr. or perhaps the very hungry Jeff Gordon. Look out for VA. native and one of the hottest drivers on the circuit right now, Denny Hamlin to contend as well. He loves to ham it up for the home crowd.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

A Texas two-step


After a rain soaked weekend in northern Texas, there were 800 miles of racing that took place on Monday afternoon. Both the Sprint Cup, and the Nationwide races were canceled leaving us with yet again a Monday morning race, only this time I was lucky enough to avoid finding out the results yielding an enjoyable Monday night race viewing for me (conveniently the Yanks were off).

The race was dominated by Hendrick Motor Sports, with the 24, 48 and 88 combining to lead 209 out of the 334 laps run. Unfortunately for HMS none of these drivers lead the money lap. However the domination by the 24 of Jeff Gordon was an eye opening experience for the entire field of drivers. With flashes of the Gordon of the '90's, the 24 set the pace and demanded the lead all afternoon. If Gordon can rekindle his old ways we just might have a driver and a team good enough and with enough experience to dethrone team 48 (remember Gordon has 4 cups on his mantle as well). When challenged for the lead it was as if Gordon were a lion protecting its cubs, Jimmy Johnson found this out the hard way. Johnson tried to pass his fellow team mate and was ungraciously and acrimoniously slammed on the driver side door panel causing a plume of smoke to rise like a genie from a bottle from the 48's wheel well. This is the kind of rubbing that gets the good ol boys out of their seats, it also caused the 48 to fall a lap down. But this is the 48, they are not going to let a little thing like being a lap down hinder their performance now are they? Of course not.

As luck would have it the 48 came to pit road, took 4 fresh goodyears and returned to the track. Moments later the caution would wave and the leaders would hit pit road. Chad Knaus made the decision to stay on the track being that their tires were merely 5 laps old, so once again, just like Henry Higgins, a little bit of luck and the 48 just might win! They were back on the lead lap and poised to deal with the 24. Like a fortune cookie once told me "the best revenge is massive success", the 48 would have their revenge by simply avoiding a late race wreck that hoovered up about 15 cars including the dominant 24. Gordon would finish 32 after leading 124 laps, the 48 finished 2nd. 1 more lap and they would have been driving to victory lane yet again.

Meanwhile we had another cherry picking victory for Denny Hamlin. The 11 car led a whole 12 laps in his winning effort. Bad but not that bad, last week Ryan Newman won on the dog-leg of Phoenix notching an entire 4 laps out front. This is the paradigm in NASCAR now a days, dominant performances by dominant drivers and their teams, a late caution flag waives, and a less deserving driver steals the trophy, and drives off in to the sunset with the big purse. Parody, yes, fair, of course not. Dale Jr. spoke about this in a post race interview, stating that "we go out there and run a clean 450 miles just to have the whole thing jumbled around at the end there".

Don't get me wrong, I absolutely applaud the gritty performance by Hamlin, who won just weeks after having his knee scoped. This amazes me, recently a good friend of mine had ACL surgery and was laid up for weeks, withering in pain. It is not just the win by Hamlin that has me so impressed, his 30th place effort last week in Phoenix has to be the greatest 30th place finish in NASCAR history. Why you ask? Because at three different times during the race in the desert Hamlin was offered relief from his wheel-man duties by stand by driver Casey Mears, each time he refused to get out of the cockpit. Hamlin's reasoning for not exiting stage left, "The only thing I was going to gain was maybe some respect of the team guys just because I knew our day was shot," He went on, "I wasn't going to give up on them. I wasn't going to lay down on them." Hamlin also mentioned that he would have been embarrassed to hand off such an ill fated car to Mears. "To be honest with you, I would have been too embarrassed to give Casey (Mears) the car I had today, It's not what we're accustomed to."

The spoiler was given rave reviews by the drivers after its first true test at a super-speedway. The consistency of the spoiler in the corners was a welcome difference from the wayward performance of the wing in turbulent wind. We will see how this new set up will effect the cars when restrictor plate racing commences next week In Talladega.

Note: Kyle Busch raced 800 miles on Monday finishing 3rd in the cup event and then winning the Nationwide series event that started about an hour after the completion of the cup race. This capped off the "weekend" sweep for Joe Gibbs Racing. Of the 15 drivers to pull double duties on Monday, Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick and Greg Biffle were the only ones to complete all 534 laps.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Granderson fitting in nicely


After 3 games in historic Fenway Park, Curtis Granderson has already submerged himself right smack in the middle of the storied rivalry between the Yanks and BoSox. Granderson went over the wall in his first at-bat as a Yankee, and it doesn't stop there. Although Granderson homered in his first at-bat he was scrutinized by the NY media for striking out to end the first game of the season. Welcome to New York.

CG continued his hot hitting with some late inning heroics last night, taking Red Sox closer Spencer Pratt, I mean Jonathan Papelbon (ever notice how those two douches look eerily similar?) deep into the right field bleachers. No pie in the face yet for Curtis, but indeed a game winning longball none the less.

I have been a fan of Granderson since first I first saw him play at Comerica Park in beautiful downtown Detroit in 2005. Needless to say I was delighted by the trade, funny how having a slight connection to a player makes him become "your" player. My wife grew up in Detroit so I frequent the city regularly, and being a former speedy centerfielder myself, I was naturally drawn to Curtis. It goes to show that people do actually listen to you when you talk, after Grando's first homer in pinstripes my text inbox became flooded with phrases like "there's your boy!" or "you are gonna love having this guy". I hope the same can be said about Johny Damon in D-town but time will tell, I reassured my Detroit contingent that they were going to love having the Sheff wearing the old english D, but that did not go quite as swimmingly as I had prognosticated.

As anticipated John Sterling of WCBS has come up with another zinger of a homer call for the new Yankee, waxing off his golden vocal chords, Sterling coined the phrase "The Grandy man can!". As usual Sterling reached deep into his bag of puns for this one.
Check out this article debating what Sterling's "Grand" call will be.


The Yanks Are off and running, and now head back to Tampa to take on the Rays at the Trop. Javier Vazquez vs David Price should make for a great Friday night match up.


Michael Clark (emsea)

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Madness at Martinsville


What a finish to a great race! Even though I knew that Denny Hamlin was going to end up in victory lane the finish still had me on the edge of my seat. Hamlin and the Fed Ex 11 team were having a rough go at it until just about the halfway point of the race, then they got their ducks in a row and "pulled a 48". They were able to fine tune the car enough to make a charge for the lead, and dominated the entire second half at Martinsville.

The drama began as I sat there watching the 11 lead the race with 10 to go and thought to myself, "well its over", I know he wins (thanks Ben!) so he is just going to hold off the field for the victory right? Wrong.

Suddenly the caution flag waived and the Joe Gibbs cars (at this point Kyle Busch and Hamlin were running 1-2) threw caution to the wind and hit pit road for four freshies and a splash of fuel. DW and the Fox sports crew were baffled by this, stating that they just threw the race away, Why would you pit now? Are you crazy? ect. ect... But I knew the outcome, I knew Hamlin had won the race, however, even I wasn't sure how he was going to pull this one off.

The restart with about 7 to go and Hamlin is somewhere back in the 10th position. This is Martinsville, not exactly the best place to try and pass 9 cars in 7 laps. The paper clip shaped track gets congested and will give you the squeeze. So I sat there just waiting to see how this would play out. 4 laps later Kyle Busch is dumped into the corner in turn 4 and the caution waves yet again. This is a common trend in present day NASCAR, you can expect 3-4 cautions in the last 25 laps, reminiscent of the last few minutes of an NBA game where one team fouls constantly thinking they still have a shot to win.

Now the restart with 2 to go. The good ol' green white checkered we all have become accustomed to. Hamlin now is restarting 6th, but remember he is on fresh tires and needs to save his crew chief's you know what with a win that they all but handed away.

Hamlin dives to the middle bullying his way 3 wide into turn 1 like a bat out of hell. Gordon and Kenseth, both former champions and Martinsville monsters are all that stands in his way. The 17 of Kenseth was bumped hard by Gordon and losses all his momentum. As this rubbing is playing out between the two champs, the 11 sneaks by on the inside followed by youngster and fellow teammate Joey Logano in the Home Depot 20. The two Joe Gibbs car finish 1-2, a feat accomplished for the first time in a long time for the organization.

Even though I knew the outcome, I could not have been more pleased with the quality racing that took place at Martinsville.

Jeff Burton had a great race and looked strong all day, but his good run was ended when he was sideswiped into the wall with about 50 to go. The 31 team is a sleeper for any NASCAR fantasy league. These guys are as consistent as Hideki Matsui, who's middle name translates loosely to consistency. They always run up front and are usually good for a top 5 on any weekend.

The proud owner of many a grandfather clocks (the race winner at Martinsville gets a grandfather clock in lieu of a trophy), Mr Jeff Gordon, had a dominant car all afternoon as well but just could not close the deal.

A bad day for our points leader (going into the race), Kevin Harvick. The 29 battled a balky car all afternoon and eventually ended up behind the wall to repair an blown engine. He finished 35th, leaving him looking up at our new points leader, you guessed it, Jimmy Johnson.

The spoiler made its return to the cup series this weekend and fans could not be more pleased with the cosmetic appearance of the cars. The aesthetically pleasing cars actually look like stock cars again! We will see how the drivers handle the new package at Texas next weekend. The high banked 1.5 mile speedway is known for its high top speeds. The spoiler effects the aerodynamics and down force of the cars much differently than the wing, last week on the short track it was more about the integrity of your bumper than your aero package. We may see some drivers doing their best impression of the Tokyo Drift next week, we are talking "slideways" all day folks!

Michael Clark (emsea)

Monday, March 29, 2010

Gosh darnit! Hamlin wins at Martinsvile.

I made many attempts to avoid all media today with the hopes of watching the race on my dvr with an element of surprise.

I lowered ESPN radio during all updates, I avoided Yahoo's homepage, and of course definitely did not log into NASCAR.com.

Come 5:00 I am still making it happen, keeping the dream alive. I begin to pack my stuff to go home and watch the race when an unnamed coworker (Ben Sandler) hipped me to the winner.

Denny Hamlin wins at Martinsville.

More to come after my viewing session is completed.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Thunder Valley recap: Johnson wins again!

Under the auspices of Chad Knaus, Jimmy Johnson and the 48 did it again. Running mid-pack all afternoon the 48, as usual made their hunt for the front with about 100 laps to go in the bull ring known as Bristol motor speedway.

What is so amazing about watching a team like this is the pressure they put on other teams with their mere presence. Kurt Busch and the blue deuce were far and away the team to beat on Sunday, but eventually found themselves in a familiar position, the rear-view mirror of the 48. This is beginning to get old for every driver on the circuit. Kurt Busch stated in a post race interview that he would have rather lost to any of the other 41 cars out there, but to watch the 48 doing doughnuts for the third time in five races was a bitter pill to swallow.

Not to worry myrmidons of Busch, there is one thing that is different about the #2 this year. A name that is synonymous with the surname Busch and winning, Steve Addington.
Addington took the helm of the Miller lite team this season after being unceremoniously told to pack his wrenches at seasons end last year by Joe Gibbs Racing. Addington and Kurt's younger brother Kyle were a tandem to be reckoned with the last 2 seasons in the #18 car, racking up 12 wins, and considered the team to beat week in and week out.

Kurt Busch looks poised to be one of the only drivers ready to dethrone the regal 48. Busch, a former Sprint Cup Champion knows what it takes to win a title, but what he possesses now that he did not as a champion is maturity. Kurt was known as rubber head, a colloquialism developed around his team 97's sponsor "Rubbermaid". Busch was an abrasive young talent known for his arrogance and intransigence. This attitude often left him with a target on the back of his fire suit.

Busch now knows the importance of earning the respect of his fellow drivers. Like the 48, Busch has cleaned up his on track conduct and tries hard not to rub anyone the wrong way. There is a reason that Jimmy Johnson does not get dumped into the wall every week, that reason, he races clean and hard. Nobody wants to lose to the 48 but everyone respects the hell out of him.

Johnson is a class act, unlike most sporting superstars of his magnitude (think Tiger Woods, Michael Jordan, A-Rod, Kobe Bryant). In an interview on Showtime's Inside NASCAR, Johnson was asked by Michael Waltrip about how it feels to be the one guy no one wants to see with the checkered flag. Johnson stated how it's an honor to be "that guy", how he grew up watching the drivers hate loosing to guys like Earnhardt Sr., Richard Petty, and of course Jeff Gordon. Now he is that guy, and he loves the honor, but heavy is the head that wears the crown. It is now JJ that finds himself in the cross-hairs of the pack.

NASCAR is ditching the wing and reinstating the spoiler this week at Martinsville. A move long anticipated by the die hards out there. Before you go thinking that this will even the playing field, and bring the rest of the pack closer to the bumper of the 48, consider this, Johnson and the 48 team won a title in a full season with the spoiler, in a season where half the races were the car of tomorrow and half were the car of yesterday (COT with the wing, COY with the spoiler), and in a full season with the wing. Whatever you throw at them the wizardry of Knaus and Co. will figure it out with about 100 miles to go, and charge to the front. In 92 races with the winged car the 48 team won 23 of them! Time will tell how the 48 team will react to the new spoiler, but if history has taught us anything, this change will not slow them down.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Tynan the traitor: tenor to wear red stockings..



Finally some Yankee talk! I just heard that internationally famed tenor Ronan Tynan will ditch the pinstripes for red stockings?!?

I just watched the press conference where Tynan dons a red sox jersey and sings his spirited rendition of "God Bless America" including the unfamiliar first verse that he has made so popular over the past decade during 7th inning festivities in Yankee postseason play.

Yankee fans hypothesized that the long rendition would effect the warm weather teams visiting the Bronx on benumbed October nights. Now Yankee fans are left with a bitter taste for the tepid tenor.

Just another second rate move by a second rate organization in a second rate city. Boston enjoy yourselves, and to steal a line from Ron Burgundy stay classy!

Michael Clark (emsea)

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

WHITE GLOVES vs WHITE KNUCKLES




So we all have seen the footage over and over again, and just like Keslowski's # 12 car we are flipping out. But are we?

It seems to me that no one is overly concerned with the fact that Carl Edwards used his #99 Ford as a potentially deadly weapon. It seems to me that the only way any one would care is if this, god for bid, ended in a driver's death.

NASCAR stated earlier in the year that the cuffs were off, as stated by NASCAR vice president Robin Pemberton, “Boys, have at it, and have a good time.” I agree the racing this year has been the best since the early part of the decade, but do we need to be reminded of our own mortality while leisurely watching racing? The Boys are having a good time out there for sure, but any more of this nonsense and we will be back to the sterile white gloves racing rather than the intense white knuckle racing we are enjoying on a weekly basis.

Another interesting point to make is the lack of remorse from Edwards. To be honest I kind of admire such candor. Edwards stated in plain English that Brad [Keslowski] knows the score between the two of them, and in no way alluded to this wreck being an accident. The guy is not going to lie to a couple million race fans in his post race interview, he could have "toed the NASCAR line", acted remorseful and not been placed on probation. Instead he spoke from the heart, although as heated as he was he still managed to plea the fifth in a way, he did not come right out and say "I wrecked him cause I hate him". Edwards was handed a 3 race probation for his on track antics.

In fact Edwards went on his Facebook page and waxed philosophically about the code he lives by, he stated:

“My options: Considering that Brad wrecks me with no regard for anyone’s safety or hard work, should I: A) Keep letting him wreck me? B) Confront him after the race? C) Wait til Bristol and collect other cars? or D) Take care of it now?”

“I want to be clear that I was surprised at his flight and very relieved when he walked away,” Edwards continued. “Every person has to decide what code they want to live by and hopefully this explains mine.”

It is obvious that he chose option "D" and lives by a code not too far from that of Billy the Kid, but hey Carl this is NASCAR not The Wild West.

Michael Clark (emsea)





Monday, March 1, 2010

Is J.J. Nascar's M.J.? or perhaps D.J.



So it has been 2 weeks since the 48 teams hard luck 35th place finish at Daytona. Two weeks since the talking heads started the debate as to weather the 48's luck has run out. I know hind site is 20/20 but does anyone still think Jimmy and co. are done with their dynastic run?

Two weeks and two wins later JJ and the 48 team are right back on top of the mountain. For those of you who don't know NASCAR, you still know Johnson. He is on Sportcenter every week, and is clearly becoming the most recognizable driver in the sport.

I watched the California race with a NASCAR virgin, "The Bomber", and asked him who he thought was going to win? He said "I have no fucking clue what's going on but I would go with Jimmy Johnson", the only driver he has heard of besides Earnhardt Jr. He was right on the mark, and proclaimed that he was now a fan of the 48.

The problem with Jimmy is that he is so good at what he does off the track as well as on the track, leaving haters scrambling for any reason to hate on the 48. He says the right things. He conducts his business with poise and grace, answers all the questions the right way, and has a hot wife.

Remind you of anyone? Ever hear of a certain New York Yankee who wears the # 2 on his back? An athlete that says all the right things to the press, and wins title after title? Is never caught up in a scandal, or a lawsuit? Jimmy Johnson is NASCAR's Derek Jeter. A winner, A champion, and a great human being.

I know it is early but it seems like there will be allot of folks in the garage area trying anything they can to dethrone the Champ. Not only does the 48 win when they are running good, but they seem to just be plain lucky. In California a few weeks back the 48 was on pit road seconds before the yellow flag waived. Normally being on pit road during a caution is a disaster, pit road closes when the yellow flag waives resulting in pass through penalties for any one who enters before the pits re-open. The 48 was on pit road seconds before the caution, got fuel and tires and ended up in first place, leading the race with 20 laps to go. Johnson then held off a hot driving Kevin Harvick, who was poised to pass the 48. This is why JJ is a champion, he refused to let Harvick pass even though his car was inferior to the 29.

Yesterday, while most were watching the gold medal hockey game between the US and Canada, the 48 passed his teammate, the legendary Jeff Gordon, with 16 laps to go for his second win of this short season. Gordon led almost 200 laps but could not hold off the relentless Johnson.
With 8 cup titles between the two teammates, they are indeed the cream of the crop. Although Gordon's last title came almost 10 years ago he is still one of the toughest drivers around.

Gordon knew what he was doing when he convinced Rick Hendrick to sign Jimmy years ago. He liked Johnson so much he bought in, he is the half owner of the 48 team.

Speaking of Hendrick motor sports, they had a great weekend with the 48 winning, the 24 finishing 3rd, and Mark Martin in the 5 car finishing 4th. Great weekend for all at HMS with the exception of Dale Jr. who finished a meager 16th, battling a loose car all afternoon.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Pot holes get us all, Even at Daytona..


We have all experienced it, the uncertain feeling you get after you plow through a pot hole on your way to work. You hope first that your tires didn't blow, or that your axle is still in one piece, or maybe you are just left with a misaligned steering column. I was pissed off to all heck when I received a nice V shaped notch in the rim of my '88 Nova. I paid $400 bucks for that car, and after one pot hole disaster the cost of operating the fickle machine almost doubled.

These are the breaks, hey shit happens right? You move on, register in your files where the hole was and swerve like hell at the last minute every time you approach said pot hole. What if your car cost you several million dollars, and you are driving on the nonpareil circuit known as Daytona International Speedway? Yeah you would be pretty ticked off about a gaping hole conveniently located on the exalted track. Not only do you now have to repair the millions of dollars worth of damage to your car, you also have not won the big one, not taking home the big purse, not kissing your wife in the winners circle, not on Letterman the following Monday. That is a whole lot harder a pill to swallow than a dented rim on a Nova.

This is the scenario that played out for 4 time defending champ Jimmy Johnson. The 48 hit the hole, lost a tire and pretty much saw their Daytona 500 dreams fall through the cracks in the pavement.

While the race itself was spectacular, the best plate racing I have seen in years, these delays were almost too much to handle. Needless to say I ran out of DVR space as the final restart was shaping up. I set the dam thing for 3 extra hours thinking I was in the clear. Did my Valentines day diligence then sat down for the race. I had avoided all media up until that point, no facebook, no internet, and no television for the entire day. While in the grocery store I even managed to avoid eye contact with a man wearing a Jeff Gordon #24 hat. But this all came to an abrupt halt on lap 206, just as the third restart flag was waiving. I missed the 88's white knuckle driving and his stampede to the front. Had I seen these laps The edge of my seat would have been worn thin.

This brings me to my next gripe, all these restarts. Like Jr. said in the post race, its like the last few minutes of an NBA game, with all the fouling, and timeouts, and posturing for the minimal chance that you could erase that 9 point deficit in 34 seconds (flashbacks of Reggie Miller in the Garden just filled my head). Had the race ended under the old rules Kevin Harvick would have won, and Jr. would have finished in the high teens. But these are the rules and we love to follow them right?

On a side note Jamie Mcmurray won the Daytona 500.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Friday, February 12, 2010

Serious business

So we are in for a real treat this year judging by the performances in the duels last night. Both races were decided by less than 6/1000ths of a second, that is about the same amount of time it takes to blink your eye, literally. There, I just blinked, that was the difference in both duels at Daytona. In fact you have probably blinked 40 times already while reading this post.

NASCAR got it right this year with the new rule tweaks, pleasing race fans from coast to coast. A larger restrictor plates and a leniency towards the good ol' bump draft will have all 200,000 plus fans in attendance as well as the TV audience all on the edge of their seats come Sunday.

Talking with a co-worker of mine, Ben, who is new to the sport but quite enthusiastic about it, we have come to the realization that taking the cuffs off the drivers will help draw in marginal fans. Fans who want action not science. Most people look at me like I have two heads when I tell them how much formulaic science goes into the preparation and execution of a winning race team. And believe me the science part of the sport is as important as the tires themselves, but people want to be entertained not quizzed. We want to see the "sling shots" and the bumping, and the wrecks. Heck 9 out of 10 of us know and associate the legendary phrase "rubbing is racing", the phrase that Robert Duvall's character Harry Hogge made famous, with NASCAR.

So lets see it play out the way it was meant to. Put the race in the drivers hands and let them sort it all out. Give them an inch and they will take a yard, and that my friends is a good thing, a real good thing.

Michael Clark (emsea)

Thursday, February 11, 2010

SHH don't tell

I have dvr'd the twin 150's and am anxiously awaiting the evening bell here at work so i can go indulge in some racing!

The twin 150's are like a great appetizer right before you delve into a perfectly cooked filet mignon! It is just the right amount to wet the pallet before the main course.

With the Daytona 500 being on valentines day, I know a bunch of y'all are facing the same problem as me, what to do? My wife tolerates my racing addiction but will she sit through 500 miles of it on what is supposed to be the international day of amore'? She did say I can watch the race but warned that my time spent in the living room feeling the draft may cost me some time in another room in my house, if you know what I mean. Oh what to do? One way or another I will see the race pole to pole, but it is a matter of when, not if!

Michael Clark (emsea)

here it goes (again)

With the new season upon us it is hard to ignore the obvious, one Danica Patrick, two i did not make an entry all last year following the Daytona 500. Well my friends that with any luck will change this year. over the wall will be a double entendre. I will hope to make this site a Nascar/MLB blog. the focus will be on the reigning champions the New York Yankees, and all things nascar.

with the 500 just around the corner and pitchers and catchers reporting in a few short weeks things will start to heat up real soon.

more to come!

michael clark (emsea)