NASCAR Racing The worlds largest professional racing series. Are you a fan? Discuss all things NASCAR here.

=======nascar 12.31.09 =========

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Dec 31, 2009 | 02:44 PM
  #1  
BeachBumMike's Avatar
Thread Starter
|
10 Year Member5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 16,095
From: SpaceCoast, Florida
Cool =======nascar 12.31.09 =========


Three stand above all

NASCAR.COM selects Jimmie Johnson, Ron Hornaday and Kevin Harvick as inaugural drivers of the decade for Cup, Nationwide and Truck series.

Career statistics: Jimmie Johnson | Kevin Harvick | Ron Hornaday
Daytona Beach, Fla.
Mostly Cloudy 74°
Forecast



Best, worse paint schemes of season

From steers to steel, crazy colors to dulled down, little was left to the imagination.
Vickers Year in Photos


Photo gallery
'09 Year in Photos

Take a look back at this year's history making moments and events on and off the track.
Complete photo archive


Triumph, tragedy define the decade

Dale Earnhardt's crash and the rise of No. 48 among top stories.
37 Comments
JJ Season in review


Sorting through the best, worst e-mails

Joe Menzer had plenty to say throughout the year, and readers responded.
22 Comments
Join the Community



Johnson our choice as NASCAR's best in '09

Two dissenting votes, however, went for more well-rounded Busch.
69 Comments
Cup Series DOY


Gordon looks to take next step at Dakar

Coming off first-in-class finish and third-place overall result in 2009.
27 Comments
Shop: Gordon gear!


Top performances: Flair for the dramatic

From crashes to history, '09 in Cup offered plenty of excitement.
28 Comments
Top storylines in '09


JJ silences critics with historic title

Jimmie Johnson left competitors shaking their heads after fourth title.






Criteria changed for 2010 Budweiser Shootout field



NASCAR announced a revision to the 2010 Budweiser Shootout at Daytona format that provides fans with a strong lineup of drivers highlighted by last year's top performers and a collection of previous winners at the sport's most-storied race track.

The new criteria are based upon the following qualifications:

• The 12 drivers that qualified for the 2009 Chase
• Past Cup Series champions
• Past Budweiser Shootout champions
• Past Daytona points race winners
• The reigning rookie of the year
Complete story
 

Last edited by BeachBumMike; Dec 31, 2009 at 02:48 PM.
Old Dec 31, 2009 | 02:51 PM
  #2  
BeachBumMike's Avatar
Thread Starter
|
10 Year Member5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 16,095
From: SpaceCoast, Florida
Unhappy Miss Dale Sr 4-Sure : ( Rac'in has not been the same : (


Getty Images
During the first race under NASCAR's national television contract, Dale Earnhardt's crash spurred such a degree of curiosity that the series reached unprecedented heights of popularity in the early 2000s.
Top stories of the decade closely defined by Dale

Even today, Earnhardt crash still felt as NASCAR evolves

By David Caraviello, NASCAR.COM
December 30, 2009
12:15 PM EST



Reviewed in our mind's eye, it seems to take forever. The events unfold slowly, in exact detail, a perfect panorama of color and speed. By now, we know it frame-by-fame -- the black car bending to the right, the climb up the banking, the inevitable impact and the out-of-control slide back down into the grass. But the collision itself, that actual clash of concrete and metal, happened blindingly fast -- 80 milliseconds from 160 mph to zero, according to the final accident report. It seems ludicrous that an entire decade could turn on one incomprehensibly small unit of time.
But not if that decade is the 2000s, and that fraction of a second is the one that took the life of Dale Earnhardt. So much about today's NASCAR has been shaped by that terrible afternoon of Feb. 18, 2001, a dark day that was the epicenter of a larger safety crisis that wracked the sport for the better part of three years. Earnhardt's fatal crash -- preceded by those of Adam Petty, Kenny Irwin, and Tony Roper, and followed by devastating accidents involving Jeff Purvis, Steve Park and Jerry Nadeau -- forced NASCAR to upgrade its safety standards, and did away with the antiquated notion that "implied risk" meant it was OK for drivers to die.

Sad Day for all Race Fans & the MCF
4-RealSure ~>Dale Sr: RIP @ your RaceTrack in your Heaven : )

The effects of the Earnhardt crash radiated well beyond the sanctioning body. To varying degrees, they're also seen everywhere in the garage.





The changes brought on by the Earnhardt crash and the safety crisis, easily the top story of the last decade in NASCAR, were watershed. There were tangible modifications, like the implementation of head-and-neck restraining devices and soft-wall systems -- the two most important life-saving innovations in modern automobile racing -- as well as the addition of on-board data recorders, the construction of a research and development center, and the development of a new, safer race car. The culture changed, too; before Earnhardt's death, drivers who used new safety devices were sometimes needled, and outdated items like open-faced helmets were seen as badges of machismo.
That all changed on Feb. 18, 2001, the day NASCAR began its traumatic transformation from a series seen as lacking in the safety arena to one that is now widely viewed as an industry leader. Thankfully, there have been no fatalities on NASCAR's three national circuits since Earnhardt's death, and drivers routinely walk away from accidents that might have sent them to the hospital a decade or more ago. Every driver wears a restraining device. Every track is outfitted with a soft wall. All accident data is recorded, analyzed, and catalogued. Granted, some of these initiatives were being studied prior to the 2001 Daytona 500. But Earnhardt's death, and the prolonged period of public grief that followed, forced NASCAR to act.
Earnhardt's death, though, impacted NASCAR in far more areas than just safety. Occurring in the first race under the sport's first national television contract, the crash spurred such a degree of curiosity that, ironically, the series reached unprecedented heights of popularity in the early 2000s. In some ways the crash, and the scrutiny that followed, compelled NASCAR to expand in the areas of public relations and competition. Before Earnhardt, NASCAR was a sports league that wanted to be taken seriously, but too often acted small-time and still felt like a family business. After Earnhardt, NASCAR grew into a thoroughly more modern entity much more comparable to the NFL or the NBA.
The effects of the Earnhardt crash radiated well beyond the sanctioning body. To varying degrees, they're also seen everywhere in the garage. There are the roller-coaster fortunes at Richard Childress Racing, the team the Intimidator drove for, and which has suffered through several slumps since his passing. There is the career of Kevin Harvick, Earnhardt's successor, who was thrust onto NASCAR's top level before he was scheduled to do so, and rapidly became a star. There's the small empire overseen by Michael Waltrip, who had never won a race before Earnhardt hired him, but won four times for the Intimidator's team and parlayed that success and his glib nature into the race team he owns today.
There are the remains of Dale Earnhardt Inc., the team Earnhardt owned, which was decimated by the recent economic recession, fought over by his son and wife, and ultimately merged with Chip Ganassi's outfit. There is the career of Dale Earnhardt Jr., who competed eight years for his father's team before a dispute with his stepmom over the organization's direction led him to leave. There is Hendrick Motorsports, the dominant team of the decade, which picked up the pieces and added NASCAR's most popular driver to its stable.
There are surely others, drivers and race teams in some way touched or shaped by Earnhardt, whose fortunes or makeup may be very different today if the Intimidator had lived. You think of his contemporaries, men like Rusty Wallace and Dale Jarrett and Mark Martin, and how Earnhardt's accident affected their decisions to get out of the car or stay in. You think of the garage area, and how different it might look. You think of the series, and how much safer it is now. You think of those 80 mournful milliseconds, and the impact they continue to have to this very day. (Continued)


Previous123Next
 

Last edited by BeachBumMike; Dec 31, 2009 at 02:53 PM.
Old Jan 1, 2010 | 07:43 AM
  #3  
Space's Avatar
Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 33,585
From: Beach`in Florida
Thumbs up

Member's ? Are you a NASCAR Fan ?
Let us know `OK
Only about a month & a half away for the Daytona 500

Broadcast Schedule

Sprint Cup Series
Live NowRace 1 p.m. ET
Sunday, Feb. 14, 2010
Live LeaderboardRaceviewPitCommandScannerMRN Radio
Complete broadcast schedule
NASCAR on SPEED TV schedule

Photo Galleries

Complete Archive Year in Photos: Vickers

View Gallery





 
Old Jan 1, 2010 | 07:45 AM
  #4  
Space's Avatar
Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 33,585
From: Beach`in Florida
Default

Best and Worst paint schemes of '09

Updated
12/30 1:18 p.m.
View
Year in Photos

Updated
12/29 6:13 p.m.
View
Danica tests at Daytona

Updated
12/20 7:14 p.m.
View
Cup winners

Updated
12/15 1:04 p.m.
View
Danica Patrick

Updated
12/8 12:38 p.m.
View
Cup Banquet

Updated
12/5 3:02 a.m.
View
Champion's Week

Updated
12/4 9:24 p.m.
View
Johnson in New York

Updated
12/1 9:38 a.m.
View
Phoenix Cup race

Updated
11/30 1:27 p.m.
View
Rookie of the Year luncheon

Updated
11/25 1:09 p.m.
View
Garage Shots

Updated
11/24 10:32 a.m.
View
Ford 400

Updated
11/22 9:21 p.m.
View
 
Old Jan 1, 2010 | 08:30 AM
  #5  
JuniorCar's Avatar

Monte Of The Month -- January 2013
10 Year Member5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 5,612
From: London, Ontario
15 Year Member
Default

I'm a bit of a fan.

Life is tough for me in the off season because I need racing to live. You think I'm bad? - you oughta see my father. Senial old bugger and if you try talking about something else he won't even follow you. His hearing is screwed because life in the grandstands (where I grew up sleeping as a young-un). He does not realize that the world does not revolve around racing. You could tell him, but he won't hear you.
 
Old Jan 1, 2010 | 11:16 PM
  #6  
seal0716's Avatar
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 120
From: El Paso, TX
Default

Originally Posted by JuniorCar
I'm a bit of a fan.

Life is tough for me in the off season because I need racing to live. You think I'm bad? - you oughta see my father. Senial old bugger and if you try talking about something else he won't even follow you. His hearing is screwed because life in the grandstands (where I grew up sleeping as a young-un). He does not realize that the world does not revolve around racing. You could tell him, but he won't hear you.
At least its not like any other sport where we have to wait only 2 months for the season to start again. Were lucky in that view. Big fan myself, go for another championship Tony, its been awhile. Also good luck to no longer rookie joey logano, mark martin, and hopefully a better season for jr.
 
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
BeachBumMike
Off Topic
4
Mar 30, 2015 09:23 AM
Cowboy6622
Off Topic
0
Dec 29, 2010 10:06 AM
BeachBumMike
NASCAR Racing
0
Jun 3, 2007 11:36 AM
BeachBumMike
General Monte Carlo Talk
8
Oct 11, 2006 01:39 AM




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:26 AM.