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NASCAR and MotorSports – From a Queer Perspective

Jimmie Johnson dominates Martinsville for his eighth win at the track

[ via NASCAR Wire Service - by Reid Spencer ]

Credit: John Harrelson / Getty Images

Jimmie Johnson made eight the easy way.

Leading 346 of 500 laps in Sunday’s STP Gas Booster 500 at Martinsville Speedway, Johnson racked up his eighth NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win at the .526-mile short track and the 62nd win of his career. For the second straight event at Martinsville, Johnson won from the pole.

Clint Bowyer ran second, followed by Jeff Gordon, Kasey Kahne and Kyle Busch.

The first repeat winner through six 2013 Cup races, Johnson regained the series lead by six points over sixth-place finisher and defending champion Brad Keselowski.

If a victory at a short track can ever be called a walk in the park, Johnson enjoyed a Sunday stroll from start to finish. At no point in the race did he run below fifth.

“I think the fact that we had just such a calm weekend was the biggest part,” Johnson said. “It’s easy to start chasing things here and get yourself off track. We always race well, and fortunately here you pit a lot and you can make big changes to your race car to get you in the ballgame.

“We’ve won races where we were just terrible to start the race, having no fun. (Crew chief) Chad (Knaus) is throwing spring rubbers in the car and the track bar is coming up or down, wedge in and out, all those huge, huge changes, and we get ourselves in contention.

“I don’t know where we were – someone said the worst I was on the track today was fourth [actually, fifth]. We just executed from the first laps in practice to where we were at the end of the race, and that was fun. We weren’t chasing a setup or track conditions or a variety of things that we’ve done in the past.”

Danica Patrick ran 12th in her first visit to Martinsville, her career-best Cup finish at an open-motor race track. Patrick was the top finisher from Stewart-Haas Racing.

NASCAR red-flagged the race on Lap 487, after the brakes failed on Kurt Busch’s No. 78 Chevrolet SS and sent the car hard into the Turn 1 wall. The car rolled along the fence, spewing flames from beneath the hood.

Busch had the presence of mind to trigger his fire extinguisher before the exited the car and climbed from the driver’s-side window apparently none the worse for the flames.

After the stoppage, Johnson led the field to a restart on Lap 493 with Bowyer beside him in the outside lane. But Johnson pulled away over the final eight laps to beat Bowyer to the finish line by .628 seconds.

To say that Hendrick Motorsports in general and Johnson in particular have a handle on Martinsville is a massive understatement. Johnson gave owner Rick Hendrick his 20th Martinsville victory, breaking a tie with Petty Enterprises for most ever at the paper-clip shaped speedway.

“There’s just certain tracks where the drivers that Hendrick has had over the past, as well as now—and just our race cars—it just really suits that,” said Gordon, who had a strong car on long runs but couldn’t keep up with his teammate over the short haul. “Qualifying up front really can be huge here.

You get a driver like Jimmie and a team like the 48—or ours as well, or the 15 (Bowyer)—you put them on the pole in that No. 1 pit stall (closest to the exit from pit road), and it’s going to be really, really hard to beat them.”

Bowyer’s winning chances suffered a blow during an 11-car incident on Lap 180. As caution flew for a crash on the backstretch, Bowyer ran into Jamie McMurray’s Chevrolet, which had checked up suddenly off Turn 4, and was clobbered from behind by his Michael Waltrip Racing teammate, Martin Truex Jr.

Bowyer had been strong in practice but qualified 15th and felt the mediocre performance in time trials had hurt him.

“I qualified bad, got ourselves back there, got it wrecked—got it tore up on both ends,” Bowyer said. “You get up there, and you’re door-to-door with the 48 that’s been enjoying clean sailing all day long, you look at him, and it’s ready to go back to the next short track.

“Mine is all tore to hell and ready to go put a new body on it. You know what you’re up against. You want to say, ‘Bad luck,’ and everything else, but you make a lot of your own luck. We did a lot of things well this week but missed it in qualifying and ultimately paid the price.”

Patrick, who started the race at the rear of the field because of an engine change, restarted 20th from the outside lane on Lap 369 and promptly dropped five spots as cars in the inside lane freight-trained her.

But Patrick patiently and methodically drove back to the 17th position and was running there when Brian Vickers cut a tire and spun on Lap 448 to cause the 10th caution of the afternoon.

The yellow gave drivers a much-needed opportunity to pit for new tires. Out first after the stops, Johnson led the field to green on Lap 459 with Gordon beside him. Yellow flew again shortly when chain-reaction contact between Vickers, Patrick and Dale Earnhardt Jr. sent Earnhardt spinning in Turn 4.

Johnson passed Earnhardt as the driver of the No. 88 Chevrolet tried to re-fire and right his car, putting Earnhardt a lap down. Earnhardt finished 24th and fell from first to third in points, 12 behind Johnson, his Hendrick Motorsports teammate.

Notes: The 346 laps led are the most for Johnson in a single race in his career. Johnson also became the seventh driver in Cup history to lead 2,000 or more career laps at Martinsville. His total now stands at 2,327. … Despite fighting the handling of his No. 11 Toyota for much of the afternoon — and despite a snafu on pit road when he left before his left-front tire was mounted – Mark Martin salvaged a 10th-place finish subbing for injured Denny Hamlin.

 

Danica Will Continue Her Rule as the Go Daddy Girl

credit Q4G - Michael T. Myers

Danica Patrick and her boss Tony Stewart today at Go Daddy headquarters in Scottsdale, AZ.  Joining Smoke and Danica were Bob Parsons – Go Daddy’s Chairman and his wife who is instrumental in the Bob & Renee Parson’s Foundation.

The foundation is teaming up with the Semper Fi Fund:  a non-profit organization set up to provide immediate financial support for injured and critically ill members of the US Armed Forces and their families.

You can donate by visiting: SemperFiFund.org  Go Daddy will match all donations up to 1 million dollars and to kick it all off, SHR Boss Tony Stewart donated 50K to the Semper Fi Fund.

Additionally, Danica will sport the Semper Fi Fund’s logo on both her Nationwide and Cup cars this weekend in Phoenix.

Patrick and Bob Parsons were asked about Danica’s role in Go Daddy’s advertising.  Rumors abound last month when a new ad agency was hired by Go Daddy and speculation arose that Danica’s role may be decreased.

Bob Parsons dispelled those rumors and stated Danica and he heels will be featured in both of Go Daddy’s Super Bowl Ads.  This means more “racy” spots and to the delight of teen boys everywhere…..Parson’s confirmed the Go Daddy/Danica relationship will continue for years to come.

 

 

Danica Patrick Presser at PIR

credit Michael T. Myers

Danica Patrick came off an awful Speed Weeks in Daytona before arriving at her home town track here in Phoenix.  She came into to speak with the press – and most of the questions, obviously, were about her struggles at Daytona.   Bob Pockrass from Scene Daily also asked her about the Sports Anchor in San Diego that called her “a B word” and has since been suspended.

Click here to listen to the audio:  

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Podcast: Out of the Tunnel – Show 5

Hannah is back – and you’re gonna be in trouble… Hey now, hey now Hannah’s back.

On this week’s show we talk about Hannah’s trip to Daytona – the insanity that was the Daytona 500:  The Pack, The Rain, and the Fireballs.   Plus, Brad Daugherty hates Twitter, and a news anchor in San Diego hates Danica.  All that and more……

Click play to listen:  

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if that embedded player did not work for you – you can download the show by clicking here.

The Out of the Tunnel is sponsored by Audible.com.  Listeners of the show can get a FREE audio book download by visiting:  www.audibletrial.com/OutOfTheTunnel

 

Podcast – Out of the Tunnel – Show 2

credit Hannah Rickards' iPhone

It is time for show #2 of “Out of Tunnel.”  Hannah and I are getting a better handle on the equipment and I hope the sound qualilty is going to improve each week.  This week our voices should be coming out of both sides of your speakers.

In show #2 – we “almost” have an interview with Kevin Harvick.  Well, I lost all the audio, so Hannah and I re-create the interview through theater of the mind.  We talk about all the big news from the Media Tour last week, plus our take on Danica buying a spot in the Daytona 500.  That plus: DeLana is preggers and Kasey Kahne can’t get out of Jury Duty.

We also welcome our new sponsor: Audible.com.  Listeners of the show can get a FREE audio book download by visiting:  www.audibletrial.com/OutOfTheTunnel

 

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THE SHOW:

 

Indycar: Twitter Tells the Tales

All numbers below were as of the morning of October 31, 2011.

Credit Chris Jones/IZOD Indycar Media Site

I’m about to expose how nerdy I can be.  I love math.  Yes, we Mississippians are taught math and a few of us happen to be pretty good at it.  Luckily for me, my job requires a lot of math, data, and analysis.  Because I often times work with a LOT of important data, I started creating a couple of spreadsheets with “useless” data to experiment with.  If I wanted to try something new, I could use one of the “useless” sheets with no worry of screwing anything up.  One spreadsheet is the daily number of Twitter followers for each Indycar driver.  When I started, it just seemed like easy data to dump into a file that I could track daily and could be manipulated easily.  However, over the course of a few weeks the data started to become more interesting to follow.

I love Twitter and think it is an amazing way to keep up with small bleeps of information.  Instead of taking 5/10 minutes to read some article about Wall Street, I can read the same basic information in 140 characters or less.  Also, the amount of followers someone or something has can be a great indication of relative popularity and how visible someone is on the radar screen of the world.  For instance, Snooki (you know who she is) has almost 3.6 million followers.  The official White House Twitter has just over 2.4 million followers.  Heck, Snooki has more followers than the official Twitter of the NBA, NFL, and MLB.  People are more interested in knowing what a drunk girl from New Jersey is doing than what is going on in their country.  Think about that.

So, who do you think has the most Twitter followers in Indycar?  Well, if you guessed Danica Patrick you would be correct.  With 425,815 followers, Danica has 40,401 more followers than Tony Kanaan, the 2nd most followed driver.  But, TK adds about 595 new followers each day on average versus the 270 average of Danica.  It is also important to note than Danica’s average would be a good bit lower, but she experienced a huge spike in follows the day of her big announcement that she would be moving to NASCAR full-time in 2012.  In the span of a week, Danica added 5,447 followers.

Have I lost you yet or peaked your interest?  Numbers are fun!

More than 340,029 followers BEHIND Kannan in 3rd is Helio Castroneves with 45,385 followers.  This brings up an interesting thing…the strength of the Brazilian drivers.  2011 rookie Ana Beatriz is the 6th most followed driver in Indycar with 23,647 followers (this is omitting Dan Wheldon’s Twitter).  That is a very interesting statistic considering her lackluster results and 21st place in final points.  She has more followers than Ryan Briscoe, Paul Tracy, Will Power, and Graham Rahal among others.  When we see those numbers, it makes a little more sense as to why Indycar races in Brazil and is exploring a second race.

One thing is for certain, any news coverage increases follower counts for a driver whether the news is good or bad.  For example, after the New Hampshire flying fingers incident, Will Power gained 1,831 followers over the course of a week.  His daily average for August, the month of the incident, was 88.74, but his average for September was 38.14.  Before the race at Kentucky, Ed Carpenter had added just over 300 new followers since the end of July, a 2 month span.  Immediately after the Kentucky race, Carpenter added over 350 new followers in a day.  When Justin Wilson was injured at Mid-Ohio, he experienced a 519 follower jump.  However, neither Ryan Hunter-Reay nor Scott Dixon saw those kinds of jumps in followers after their respective wins.  Dixon added 212 the day after his win and Hunter-Reay added only 238 even while his win was mired in controversy.  Are these 2 guys less interesting?  Were those wins not as important to fans?  It is interesting to think that Justin Wilson’s broken back at Mid-Ohio stirred up more interest than Scott Dixon winning the race.

Sadly, after the tragic incident at Las Vegas, drivers had huge jumps in followers easily eclipsing any previous daily totals.  Indycar drivers that were not even participating in the race experienced large jumps in the number of additional daily followers.  Martin Plowman, for example, had previously averaged 4.34 followers per day.  For the 2 weeks following Las Vegas, Martin added an average of 19.14 followers a day.  The number of followers of Dan Wheldon’s official Twitter more than double in a single day after his death going from 15,699 followers to 31,856.  Drivers directly involved in the 15 car pile-up had even more dramatic increases.  Pippa Mann had added only 201 followers in the month of September, but after her injury at Las Vegas, Pippa added 2,296 followers in October.

There are also many other interesting facts.  Pippa, with only 3 starts under her belt, has 8,860 followers.  This is more than full-time rookies James Hinchcliffe (7,960) and Charlie Kimball (4,178) and more than Takuma Sato (7,804), and Kentucky race winner Ed Carpenter (7,862).  Even Katherine Legge, who didn’t even started a race in 2011 has more followers at 2,047 than full-time rookie James Jakes (1,892) and part-timer Wade Cunningham (1,905) who are the 2 least followed of the drivers tracked.

Had enough numbers yet?

In the end, why is any of this important?  Well, at a time when marketing budgets are tight and funding is hard to come by, Twitter can be a gauge to see how much “reach” a driver has for a sponsor.  Just look at Ana Beatriz.  Although on-track performance may not be stellar at this point, she can connect with over 3x more fans than Oriol Servia (7,617 vs. 23,647) who finished 4th in points.  Sadly, popularity in racing isn’t just about results anymore.  I will dub this the Junior/Patrick Syndrome.

Even though when you click “Follow” on someone’s Twitter it may not seem very important, who you follow speaks volumes about yourself and others like you.  It gives a peek into what is popular, what is interesting, and what catches the attention of people.  I’ll continue to track the trends in followers through the offseason and see what else I can unearth. So, get on Twitter and follow away!  Oh, and remember…numbers can be fun and Mississippians can do math!

Ross (@driverswanted07)

Top 15 in followers:

  • Danica Patrick – 425,815
  • Tony Kanaan – 385,414
  • Helio Castroneves – 45,385
  • Dario Franchitti – 36,826
  • Marco Andretti – 31,313
  • Ana Beatriz – 23,647
  • Will Power – 19,122
  • Graham Rahal – 19,106
  • Paul Tracy – 18,851
  • Ryan Briscoe – 17,256
  • Ryan Hunter-Reay – 17,012
  • Scott Dixon – 16,842
  • Simona de Silvestro – 13,639
  • E.J. Viso – 13,593
  • Tomas Scheckter – 12,838

Friday: Indycar World Championship Weekend

Good morning from Las Vegas Motor Speedway!  I’m here covering the happenings on and off the track live!

Not only is this weekend Championship weekend for the series, it is also a weekend filled with a lot announcements and rumors.

Last night Las Vegas shut down the famous Strip for an Indycar exhibition parade.  Fans lined the street to see the 34 entries for this weekends finale burn rubber down the street.

Credit Tom Donoghue

Yesterday Michael Shank Racing, of the American LeMans Series, announced that they would field a full-time Indycar entry in 2012.  The announcement marked the first team to state they would be powered by Lotus next year.  Former Michael Shank Racing driver A.J. Allmendinger is partnering with MSR on the venture.  No driver or sponsor announcements have been made as of yet.  MSR is expected to run the #60.  See the official announcement here.

HVM Racing (Simona de Silvestro) team owner Keith Wiggins stated that his team would be the Lotus anchor team in 2012.  This will fuel speculation that HVM Racing will have a teammate for Simona in 2012.

Simon Pagenaud is expected to be with Sam Schmidt Motorsports in 2012.  The 2011 super-sub has all but been confirmed for a full-time Honda-powered SSM ride next year.

Despite his long association with Honda, expect Dan Wheldon to announce he will head to Andretti Autosport to pilot the Chevy-powred #7 GoDaddy.com ride next year.

In the first practice on Thursday, Danica Patrick paced the field with a fast lap of 224.719.   Points leader Dario Franchitti was 9th fastest and title contender Will Power was 14th.

Stay tuned to Q4G for announcements, pics, results, and news!

Ross (@driverswanted07)

Indycar: Kentucky and Las Vegas Preview

With the 2011 IZOD Indycar Series season closing in on the last two races of the season, action on the track and in the rumor mills has heated up.  The past couple of weeks have resembled an episode of Days of Our Lives with partner swapping, deal-making, and story-lines that even Talk Soup would have a hard time covering.  But, let’s take a look at some of the major headlines rolling into the last two races of the season.

  • Kentucky and Las Vegas will be the last two races for the current Dallara/Honda chassis/engine package.  Dan Wheldon, the official 2012 Indycar development driver, has been busy ramping up on-track testing of the new car.  The Dallara faces its biggest challenge yet today (Sept. 27) through Thursday as it heads to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval for the first time for high-speed testing.

Credit Brad Kelly/IZOD Indycar Media Site

  • The 2012 car will run hot-laps before the Saturday truck race in Las Vegas.  This will be the first formal introduction of the car to fans on the track.
  • Dario Franchitti and Will Power are locked in a tough championship battle with Power only 8 points ahead of Franchitti heading into the final two races.  Despite a win at Texas earlier this season, Power does not dominate ovals as he does road and street courses.  Keep a close eye on strategy for both during the races.
  • Season finale weekend in Las Vegas will be busy to say the least.  There will be a kick-off party on Thursday evening followed by the cars parading down The Strip, there will be a charity blackjack tournament on Friday night, Indycar Nation Champion fan appreciation events, the Championship celebration will take place on Monday night, and Lupe Fiasco will perform as well.  Oh, and don’t forget there’s an Indy Lights race and the season finale that will decide the 2012 champion as well on Sunday.  WHEW!
  • Indycar is the promoter for the finale in Las Vegas.  If the event proves financially feasible and is deemed a success, Randy Bernard has stated it is possible Indycar will promote some future oval events.
  • Kentucky and Las Vegas are Danica’s last races as an Indycar driver as she heads to the NASCAR Nationwide Series full-time in 2012.  Keep an eye on her because the 1.5 mile ovals are her strongest events.  With nothing to lose, she could be a contender for a win.
  • With GoDaddy.com remaining as a sponsor, Andretti Autosport has a sponsored, open seat for the taking.  Dan Wheldon has been rumored for the ride, but his long association with Honda and Andretti Autosport’s partnership with Chevrolet next year could be a deal-breaker.  Look for the rumors to intensify in coming weeks as the Andretti’s determine whether they will have 3 or 4 cars in 2012.
  • Dan Wheldon will be vying for $5 million dollars if he can win the Las Vegas race from the rear of the field.  If he wins he will split the money with a lucky fan.   Sign up for the challenge, sponsored by GoDaddy.com, here.
  • Wheldon will be replacing Alex Tagliani in the Sam Schmidt Motorsport #77 for the final two races of the season.  Keep in mind this is the car that sat on the pole for the Indianapolis 500 and the first Firestone 275 at Texas.  Rumors state that Tagliani will be in the Bryan Herta Autosport ride in Las Vegas.  Remember that SSM and BHA teamed up in Indy and Bryan Herta has stated the two teams could form a partnership in 2012 if neither team has funding for a second car next year.  The Wheldon/Tagliani swap could be an indication of what is to come in 2012.
  • Speaking of Sam Schmidt Motorsport, the organization has been the “pimp” team of 2011 for any driver bringing money to the table for a ride.  Drivers have included Townsend Bell, Wade Cunningham, Martin Plowman, Hideki Mutoh, and now Dan Wheldon.  SSM has also had partnerships with AFS Racing, Bryan Herta Autosport, and Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing.  It will be interesting to see if any of these endeavors prove fruitful for a full-time 2012 ride.
  • Wade Cunningham will be making his 2nd and 3rd starts for Sam Schmidt Motorsports/AFS Racing at Kentucky and Las Vegas.  The rookie will be looking to improve upon his results at the Firestone Twin 275’s when he was tangled in an accident with Charlie Kimball in the first race.  Cunningham will pilot the #17 despite running the #99 in the Texas events.
  • Buddy Rice will be in the Panther Racing #44 sponsored by Fuzzy’s Vodka for Kentucky and Las Vegas.  Panther has stated interest in fielding a 2nd full-time entry in 2012 if they have the additional funding.  Rice’s performance in the final two races of the season could prove pivotal for next year.  Also, look for Panther Racing to announce partnership with Chevrolet for next year very soon.
  • Pippa Mann returns to action with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing in the final races of the season after suffering from fractured vertebrae as a result of a practice crash at New Hampshire.  Performance in these races will be key to her quest for a full-time ride in 2012.
  • Jay Howard will return to Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing at Las Vegas for  his 3rd start of the season, although it will be his first in the #15 as his first two starts were in the #88 in partnership with Sam Schmidt Motorsports.
  • Tomas Scheckter announced he will be piloting the #57 Angies List Special for Sarah Fisher Racing in Las Vegas.  Earlier this season, SFR was very quick at Indy and Texas and has a past history of being very fast at 1.5 mile ovals.  With Scheckter’s knack for the 1.5 mile ovals as well, look for the #57 to be very strong.  Once again, a great showing at Vegas is important as Scheckter is seeking a full-time ride in 2012 and SFR is seeking funding for a 2nd entry in 2012.
  • Serving as the replacement for injured Justin Wilson, Townsend Bell will be in the Dreyer & Reinbold Racing #22 for the final two races.  It will be interesting to see how well Bell performs as his last non-Indianapolis 500 Indycar start was in 2008.
  • 49 year-old Davey Hamilton will make his 3rd start in the HP #11 for Dreyer & Reinbold Racing at Las Vegas.  Hamilton has qualified well in his previous two starts this season, but race performance has been lacking.
  • Following sponsorship issues, rookie Sebastian Saavedra was ousted from the #34 Conquest Racing ride at Motegi.  Conquest tested rookie Dillon Battistini at Kentucky last week and he should make his first start there.  However, Saavedra has been rumored to return to the ride for Vegas.  It will be interesting to watch how the off-season unfolds for Conquest and their plans for next year.

It is important to note that the Las Vegas finale is still 3 weeks away.  There is a possibility of more entries into the race being announced.  With teams having no use for the current chassis after the race and if anyone can bring sponsorship to the table, the field at Vegas will most likely be the largest starting grid in Indycar history…more than the 33 at Indianapolis.  One thing is for certain, the race at Kentucky and the Las Vegas finale are races you will not want to miss!

Ross (@driverswanted07)

Gaynalysis: Indy Japan The Final

For the straight recap of the final Indycar race at Twin-Ring Motegi, click here.  Otherwise, buckle up for the gaynalysis!

I’m going to be straight up like Paula Abdul:  I did not watch the race.  I know, bad Ross.  But, you can’t blame me for not being in the gym on a treadmill at 1AM on Sunday morning to watch the race live.  However, I stayed up-to-date with the race on Twitter and have watched the race highlight reel from Indycar.

For those of you unfamiliar, Indycar has raced at the Twin-Ring Motegi oval since 2004.  Unfortunately, the oval was damaged during the earthquake earlier this year.  Instead of aborting the event, Indycar agreed to race on the road course.  If any of you have Gran Turismo 4 at home, you can race on both the oval and the road course.

First off, I want to start by saying that the restarts were some of the most pitiful I have seen all year.  Additionally, the restarts at Baltimore were just as bad.  Kindergarteners with A.D.D could form better double-file rows.  Seriously, come on guys.  It isn’t that hard.  I raced go-karts with a bunch of redneck kids in the woods of South Mississippi and we could do it.

In similar fashion to the race at Mid-Ohio, Scott Dixon started from the pole and won.  If he starts up front he is going to be relentlessly fast.  That is a guarantee.  In other Scott Dixon news, before leaving for Japan, Scott and his wife Emma welcomed their 2nd child, Tilly, into the world.

Apparently, the race was neither a snoozer like Infineon, nor as exciting as Baltimore.  For most Indycar fans that was fine.  We all were hoping for a drama free face.  No flubbed calls, no mad drivers…just a good race.  However, that wasn’t the case.  There are 2 moments that define this race:

1.)  Dario Franchitti’s kamikazi move into Turn 1 could be, in the coming weeks, the tide turner of the 2011 championship.  Approaching turn one after a restart, Dario attempted to make it 3-wide.  Obviously, this did not work out at all.  Not only did he spin out Ryan Briscoe, he also spun out teammate Graham Rahal and caused another teammate, Charlie Kimball, to go off course and into the sand trap.  Mr. Chip Ganassi was not happy at all that one stupid move took out 3 of his cars that were running in the top 10.  Dario was “penalized” by being sent to the end of the field on the restart.  Many fans were upset stating that the penalty was not severe enough and he should have been given a green-flag drive thru penalty.  Nevertheless Dario carved through the field to finish 8th.  Dario did man up and admit fault.  For Dario to admit he messed up you know it was a very obvious mistake.

2)  Helio Castroneves took to Twitter after the race complaining about the officiating and Brian Barnhart because he was penalized after the checkers for passing someone under yellow.  The rant can be read here.  Whether the penalty was the correct call or not, I’m not sure.  I haven’t seen the pass in question.  However, the questioning of the officiating can be traced to the word “discretion” used in the Indycar rule book.  What “discretion” creates is the ability for fans, drivers, and teams to question almost any call by race control.  Instead of having hard and fast rules that if you do X then Y will happen every time no matter what, discretion allows leeway, bias, and favoritism…or so it may appear.  So, Helio can be somewhat justified by ranting that officiating is biased.   I say we have a big bonfire at the conclusion of the season and burn the current rule book.  A fresh start is what is needed.  No discretion!

All that being said, I’m personally tired of all of the complaining.  I’m just glad this was the last race at a road or street course for the current Dallara package.  The car has been past its prime for some years now.  The cars were never designed to run on road and street courses, so it is time for them to be taken out to the back of the pasture and be put down for good.  Additionally, I listened to Speed TV reporter Marshall Pruett on Trackside last week with Kevin Lee and Curt Cavin.  Pruett stated that Dan Wheldon has had great things to say about the new car.  It seems like the road and street courses will be a lot more interesting next year with the drivers being able to drive the car much harder and attack the corners more.  I get the feeling it will be like going from racing a Ford Crown Victoria to a Ford Mustang.

One last thing before I stop rambling.  I’ll first say, again, that I’m neither a Danica Patrick hater nor a fan.  I’m neutral to her.  But, she made a comment in reference to Brazilian drivers in an interview with the Associated Press following the Nationwide race at Richmond that really irked me.  You guys can read for yourself if you haven’t already and draw your own conclusions.  I’ll just say that I will be more than happy when NASCAR inherits the joy of Danica next year.

And that’s it from Japan.  I apologize for not being able to watch the race live, but I was certain I wouldn’t have made it very long on the treadmill at 1AM.  The next Indycar event will be the Kentucky Indy 300 at Kentucky Speedway broadcast live on October 2nd on Versus at 2PM Eastern.  Trust me, it will be an event you will not want to miss.

Ross (@driverswanted07)