Monday, April 28, 2008

Talladega Afternoon

So apparently I got married at just the right time. Last year I was in Jamaica for the 1st ever Talladega to feature the Car Of Tomorrow. I came home to hear complaint after complaint about single file boring racing. Well, apparently something changed between then and now. Yesterday’s race was chocked full of excitement and I don’t care what Poole says, it was fun.

Side by side racing? Check
Lead changes? Check
Fresh faces at the front? Check
Fan favorites leading laps? Check
Big crash carnage? Check

If this is the kind of racing that I can expect from here on out at the 2.66 miler in Alabama then I’m all for it. Maybe they could release wild animals onto the track during caution, but I just don’t see it getting much better from a NASCAR stand point. With that said, I do think after the surface wears down some more, the drivers get more used to the car, and the crews get a better handle on the package we could see better racing…but that’s nothing Mike Helton can address.

Kyle Busch is on fire. There’s nothing else anyone can say but that. He’s winning everything he can win and finishing up front everywhere else. Even with the year he’s having Jeff Burton has the points lead and Jr is looming. Jeff “Gee I’m glad I’m not Ward” Burton is really impressing me over the past 12 months. His resurgence at RCR is amazing and couldn’t happen to a better guy. I hope he keeps on this pace and we seem him involved in the title picture from here on out. As for Jr. I stood in the living room yesterday after the “big one” and said “Jr. has to get in that top 20 and then what does he do? Top 10 again. I know a lot of people want to bash him until he gets that win, but when you get wrecked and turn out a top 10 finish…well, that’s the definition of a Championship year. I’m not saying he’s gonna win it, but I am saying he’s going to be a factor ALL year long.

In Race Updates - Dega

-getting ready for some green flag 'Dega
-Gibbs out the gate quick.
-Kyle can't be happy. This will be fun to watch.
-the 17 can't get a break can he?
-These guys at the front can't just ride all day can they?
-Didnt even take a full commercial.
-"rude" now that's funny.
-I think I'd be nervous with the 15 behind me too.
-I'm not sure I'd be so concerned about swapping leads.
-this blocking is a little rediculous.
-so what exactly was Kyle Busch thinking?
-jr and tony may put on a clinic now.
-time to hit the grill.
-when did Sadler move up front?
-I think Jr and Denny have something to work out next week on the short track.
-this is a really good race.
-this isn't exactly the list of names I thought would be up front.
-Stremme is gonna make a claim for that seat.
-alright, maybe menard won't have the finish I thought he would.
-Why do we need virtual looks when we have good footage?
-26 to go.
-Why do I have the feeling there's gonna be someone we are not thinking of stealing -this win?
-there goes over half the legit contendors.
-wow!
-well, its off to Richmond.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Forget testing the track, test the drivers

In the VERY recent history of NASCAR the France family has changed a lot of things. They’ve changed the car, the schedule, and the name twice. They’ve added the top 35 rule, limited the amount of past champions provisional’s, and changed qualifying procedures. We’ve been given The Chase featuring the top 10 and immediately had it expanded to the top 12. Why is NASCAR so quick to change tradition yet so stubborn to make changes in areas like drug testing?

Auto racing has tons more implications with drug use than the other “stick and ball” sports. If Kobe Bryant snorts to lines and kicks back a few pain pills before a game the risk of serious injury to other players is minimal. Obviously if he were doing those kinds of drugs injuries to himself wouldn’t be a concern. Arguably there’s a chance that he could be out of control and in turn injure another player, but even ending a career pales in comparison to what can happen in racing.

The amount of concentration a driver must have to basically wrestle a piece of machinery that’s easily a step and a half past the edge of scary is amazing. Could you imagine doing that under the influence? Surely even the staunchest of ignorant people who feel they can drive home from the bar half lit wouldn’t even consider trying to run in a 43 car pack at Talladega. A driver who is impaired is a danger to themselves and even more importantly is a danger to the other drivers and crew members. What Aaron Fike did was inexcusable. While I feel he could earn a second chance, he would have to do so under some nearly impossible conditions before I would ever allow him near a wheel. That brings me back to my initial point, testing.
In a sport where your life is literally on the line every time you take the track, including races, practice, and testing, why would you not have mandatory testing? The discussion tends to revolve around random testing, but in this situation I could see mandatory testing for the entire entry list every weekend being plausible.

So why does NASCAR seem so uneager to move forward? I’ve actually come up with a few reasons.

The 1st has to do with repercussions. This morning I heard a caller on The Morning Drive say that testing should be handled by the individual teams. If my phone hadn’t been dead I would have loved to call in to explain how insane that is. Let’s say I’m team owner X and I have the popular driver John Doe on my team. Earlier this season I’ve extended my contract with Doe’s primary sponsor for 3 more years at high money. Why? Well, he’s safely in the top 5 and would be hard pressed to miss The Chase at this point. He’s also a marketing dream. His Super Bowl ad was voted top 5 and women loved it. His merchandise is flying off the shelf and there’s talk he may be taking Michael Waltrip’s seat on TWIN. Then I get back his drug test. He’s apparently smoked some weed and taken high amounts of pain pills. I immediately set a meeting and we discuss the situation. He assures me that he’s only smoked a few times and it was nowhere near race day or the track. Doe also explains that his high intake of pain pills is tied to that accident he had at California. He assures me it’s not a problem and he’s easing back in the coming weeks. Since my drug testers, my driver, and myself are the only ones who know I decide it’s best for my business to sweep this under the rug for the time being. However, what I don’t know is that John Doe is taking handfuls of pain pills before he gets in the car just to get through the race. And 2 races from now he makes an error that causes Jeff Burton to break his neck and possible never walk again.

After running that scenario in my head I thought, “Wow, NASCAR itself could end up in the same boat.” I think NASCAR is somewhat scared of what will happen if a Jimmie Johnson, Tony Stewart, or heaven forbid Dale Jr. fail a test and set on the sidelines for a year or longer. It’s severely short sited and scary, but it could be true as well.

The only way for testing to work is for a 100% 3rd party entity to handle all testing and in turn make the teams, owners, and management hands off except for the results. That’s how the major sports do it and that’s even how the WWE does it. If I live in world where the WWE has more credibility than one of my favorite legitimate sports then we have a problem.

NASCAR’s other big fear has to be in unionizing. When the details of a drug testing policy go into place, someone has to be in the negotiations representing the drivers. Things like penalties, when a test is made public, what parts are made public, etc. are all things that are collectively bargained by the players union in the NFL, MLB, and NBA. True, while NASCAR is using drivers as independent contractors they can decide the rules in which everyone lives by, but this is the kind of issue that could easily bring the drivers together in a union. I’m not sure the drivers even understand their power in this sport. If the next Darlington race comes around and there are 4 cars on the entry list how fast do you think NASCAR would be to listen to union demands? What I don’t think NASCAR is realizing is that by steering away from mandatory testing that they could be encouraging a union even more due to “unsafe work conditions”.

NASCAR needs to pay attention closely to what’s happening in the other sports. In the past 2 years every single major sport, even the ones who score much lower ratings than NASCAR, have been pulled into congress to discuss drug testing. Sure, they were focused on steroids and HGH, but if a congressman with a need for some spotlight gets wind of the Aaron Fike story we could be seeing the same thing and I don’t think that’s what any of us want.