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Sprint Cup Visits Bristol Motor Speedway This Weekend

 

The fourth race of the 2011 Sprint Cup season will be held this Sunday March 20th at Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee. The Jeff Byrd 500 will begin around 1:00 p.m. Eastern time. This is the first of two Cup races at Bristol this season -- the series will return there on August 27th. JIMMIE JOHNSON and KYLE BUSCH won the two Cup events at Bristol last year.


Bristol Motor Speedway Likely Won't Have Sellout for Sunday's Cup Race


Tickets are still available for this Sunday's Sprint Cup event at Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee, and that likely won't change in the next 48 hours. Bristol president JERRY CALDWELL says ticket sales are strong but are still down slightly from last year. NASCAR.com quotes him as saying that fans are "very cautious with their money -- so they're probably going to come onto one event and not two. Ticket sales are playing out that way."
 

By comparison, Bristol had had 55 consecutive sellouts until last March. Bristol hosts the Jeff Byrd 500 this Sunday at 1:00 p.m. Eastern time. The Cup Series will return there in August.

 


Rick Crawford Signs Deal to Act as Manager of Mobile International Speedway

 

Veteran Truck Series driver RICK CRAWFORD will serve as a manager and promoter for Mobile International Speedway in Mobile, Alabama as part of a contract announced Tuesday, according to the Alabama news website Al.com. He signed a three-year deal with the track, with an option for three more. Crawford has made 330 starts in the Truck Series over the course of his long career. (03/15/11)

 


NASCAR Chairman Brian France Cautious About Early Ratings Success

 

Television ratings are up for the first three races in the new Sprint Cup Series season, but NASCAR Chairman BRIAN FRANCE remains cautious about the early success.  In a conference call with reporters Wednesday, France said, “No one around here is celebrating. We’re obviously pleased we’re up dramatically in our ratings, but we know that is an ebb and flow thing.” 

 

NASCAR doesn't race this weekend, but France isn’t too concerned about a loss of momentum, telling reporters, “In my view, all things being equal, we’d probably like to be racing this weekend, but I don’t believe that to be a significant challenge for us because we happen to have an open week.  We have a long season.  We’re going to have some open weeks.”  (03/09/11)

 


NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Moving to January in 2012

 

The NASCAR Hall of Fame induction ceremony will be held in the offseason, beginning in 2012. NASCAR announced Wednesday that the ceremony will be moved from May to January next year. NASCAR chairman and CEO BRIAN FRANCE said in a statement, "After holding the inaugural induction ceremony in May of 2010, we quickly decided a move to January would give this event a life of its own and would ensure the inductees garner the appropriate amount of attention from the fans, the media and the local community."
 
This year's induction ceremony is scheduled for May 23rd in Charlotte. The Class of 2011 features BOBBY ALLISON, NED JARRETT, BUD MOORE, DAVID PEARSON and LEE PETTY.  (03/03/11)

 


Bayne becomes youngest Daytona 500 winner

Twenty-year-old, in throwback paint scheme,

Returns Woods to Victory Lane

Photo and story courtesy of NASCAR.com

 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Sunday, Feb. 20, 2011 -- The planets aligned. Heck, the heavens stood still. And Trevor Bayne recaptured the magic of David Pearson in the Wood Brothers throwback No. 21 Ford, winning Sunday's 53rd running of the Daytona 500.

 

On the second attempt at a green-white-checkered-flag finish at Daytona International Speedway, Bayne crossed the finish line .118 seconds ahead of Carl Edwards, returning the Wood Brothers to Victory Lane for the first time since 2001.

 

 

Bayne became the first driver to win the Daytona 500 in his first attempt since Lee Petty won the inaugural event in 1959. By winning in his second start in the Sprint Cup Series, Bayne tied Jamie McMurray for quickest victory at the start of a career.

 

In a war of attrition that set track records for lead changes (74), number of different leaders (22) and number of cautions (16), David Gilliland finished third after pushing Edwards toward the front on the final two laps. Bobby Labonte was fourth in his first race for JTG/Daugherty Racing, and Kurt Busch, last Saturday's Budweiser Shootout winner, ran fifth.

 

With three-time Cup champion Pearson in attendance for the start of the race as a member of the 2011 NASCAR Hall of Fame class, Bayne gave Wood Brothers its 98th victory and first at Daytona since Buddy Baker in the 1983 Firecracker 400. It was the Wood Brothers' fifth Daytona 500 victory, the last by Pearson in 1976.

 

"I keep thinking I'm dreaming," Bayne said in Victory Lane. "Our first 500 -- are you kidding me? To win our first one in our second-ever Cup race, I mean this is just incredible. Wow, this is unbelievable. How cool is it to see the Wood Brothers back in Victory Lane? "It's crazy to get my first win before a Nationwide win -- I didn't know how to get to Victory Lane."

 

Bayne's accomplishment was doubly remarkable, given that his car was wrecked in the final few hundred yards of Thursday's second Gatorade Duel 150 qualifying race. He missed both practice sessions Friday as crew chief Donnie Wingo and the Wood Brothers team repaired the car.

 

Edwards said the runner-up finish would haunt him for days, but he didn't begrudge Bayne the victory.

 

"Look, right now this is going to be a long night for me," Edwards said. "I'm going to go back to the motor home, I'm going to watch the replay, think about a hundred things I could have done, think about, 'Man, what would it have been like to [win] the race?'

 

"You know, as a competitor, in a way it really doesn't matter who beats you. But as a person, as a friend of Trevor's, it's amazing to watch him have that success. I've only known him for a short time, but he's what seems to be truly a good guy. I think a lot of people in the sport see that. Hopefully, a lot of the fans see that. So that's good for the sport.

"I still would have liked to beat him -- that's for sure."

 

Every time Daytona is paved, something out of the ordinary happens. In 1959, a year after the speedway was built, Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500 in a three-way photo finish. Daytona was repaved in 1978 before the first live flag-to-flag TV coverage of the Great American Race in 1979.

 

That event ended with Cale Yarborough and Donnie Allison wrecking each other in Turn 3 on the last lap, and with Yarborough and Bobby Allison fighting on the infield grass while Richard Petty came from nowhere to win the race.

 

Small wonder there was an electric buzz in the air when the field came to the green on Sunday. But who would have guessed this year's 500 would get its youngest winner ever? Bayne turned 20 the day before the race.

 

Jeff Gordon had been the youngest driver to win the 500. He was 25 years, 6 months and 12 days in 1997. The oldest driver to win the 500 is Bobby Allison, who was two months past his 50th birthday in 1988.

 

The event was not quite 29 laps old when a wild melee in Turn 3, triggered by contact between the Toyotas of Michael Waltrip and David Reutimann, trashed a dozen cars and set the tone for the entire race.

 

On this day, however, even if all the contenders had been running at the finish, Bayne had a good enough car to beat them all.

 

Polesitter Dale Earnhardt Jr. led three times for nine laps but was involved in a wreck during the first green-white-checkered finish and finished 24th.

 

Five-time defending Cup champion Jimmie Johnson was collected in a 17-car pileup on Lap 29. He returned to the race and finished 27th, 19 laps back.

 

This was the first race under NASCAR's new points system. Because Bayne is racing the for the Nationwide Series points championship, he did not earn any Cup points for the victory. Edwards is now the points leader with 42 points.


Changes for 2011 include emphasis on winning

Final two Chase spots based on victories; simpler points system identified

Official Release, January 26, 2011 
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- NASCAR on Wednesday, January 26th, 2011, announced that it has added a wild-card element to setting the Chase for the Sprint Cup field and it has simplified its points system for 2011, making it easier for fans, competitors and the industry to understand.

While the 12-driver Chase field remains intact, the final two spots will be determined by the number of victories during the first 26 races.


Positions 11 and 12 are "wild-card" qualifiers and will go to non-top-10-ranked drivers with the most victories, as long as they're ranked in the top 20 in points. The top 10 Chase drivers will continue to be seeded based on victories during the first 26 races, with each win worth three bonus points. The wild-card drivers will not receive bonus points for wins and will be seeded 11th and 12th, respectively. It's a move aimed toward rewarding winning and consistency during the regular season.The top 10 in points following Race No. 26 -- the "cutoff" race -- continue to earn Chase berths.

NASCAR chairman and CEO Brian France made the announcements at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, N.C., during the Sprint Media Tour.

"The fans tell us that winning matters the most with them, so we're combining the tradition of consistency in our sport with the excitement that comes along with winning," France said. "This makes every race count leading into the 26th race of the season at Richmond, when we set the field for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup."

The new points system -- which applies to all NASCAR national series -- will award points in one-point increments. As an example, in the Cup Series, race winners will earn 43 points, plus three bonus points for the victory. Winners also can earn an extra point for leading a lap and leading the most laps, bringing their total to a possible maximum of 48 points.

All other drivers in a finishing order will be separated by one-point increments. A second-place finisher will earn 42 points, a third-place driver 41 points, and so on. A last-place finisher -- 43rd place -- earns one point. In the Camping World Truck Series, the last-place finisher receives eight points, to account for that series' 36-driver race field.

"Many of our most loyal fans don't fully understand the points system we have used to date," said France, referencing the system that has been in use since 1975. "So, we are simplifying the points system to one that is much easier to understand. Conceptually, it is comparable to our previous system, but it is easier to follow."

During his remarks Wednesday night, France reflected on the outstanding competition the sport enjoyed in 2010 and expected to see that high caliber of racing to continue once the green flag drops for the 53rd running of the Daytona 500 on Feb. 20.

"NASCAR enters 2011 with positive momentum and a great sense of excitement and optimism," France said. "We're extremely excited for the launch of the season. Leading the season off with Daytona, Phoenix and Las Vegas, we believe our fans are in store for some of the best racing the sport has to offer."

 

Other competitive enhancements announced Wednesday:

Pick a Series -- Drivers in all three national series now must select the series where they'll compete for a drivers' championship. Drivers still may compete in multiple series and help their teams win owners' titles in series where they're not competing for a drivers' title. The move helps spotlight young talent in the Nationwide and Truck series.

New Qualifying Procedure -- The qualifying order will be set based upon slowest-to-fastest practice speeds.

Inclement Weather Qualifying -- If bad weather cancels qualifying, the final starting lineup will be determined by practice speeds. The same rule book procedures will be used to determine eligibility to start a race. If weather cancels practice sessions, then the starting lineup will be set by points, per the rule book.

Tire Rules Revision -- Cup teams now are allowed five sets of tires for practice and qualifying instead of six. They must return four of those sets to Goodyear in order to receive their race allotment, and may keep one set of practice/qualifying tires. Tire allotments for race weekends will vary according to historical performance data.

Closed Loop Fueling System -- Introduced in the Truck Series, this goes into effect for all three national series in 2011. It combines a more efficient fueling system with the elimination of the catch-can man, considered the most "vulnerable" pit-crew member. Teams now will use six, rather than seven, over-the-wall pit-crew members.

Evolution of Cup Car -- NASCAR continues to work with the manufacturers and teams to enhance the look of the Cup Series car. The cars have new fronts this season and the body makeover will continue to help appeal to fans and aid manufacturer identity.