Wednesday, April 22, 2015

The Frontstretch Newsletter: Steve Byrnes Passes Away

THE FRONTSTRETCH NEWSLETTER
Presented by Frontstretch.com
The Best Seat at the Track, The Best View on the Net!
Apr. 22, 2015
Volume IX, Edition LIX

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What to Watch: Wednesday

- Today, NASCAR continues to grieve the passing of Steve Byrnes.  However, there is still work to do.  Teams are scheduled to roll into Richmond tomorrow, so final preparations are underway.  If anything substantial breaks, we'll have it for you at Frontstretch.

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Wednesday's TV Schedule can be found in Couch Potato Tuesday here.

Top News
by the Frontstretch Staff

NASCAR on FOX's Steve Byrnes Dead at 56

On Tuesday, FOX NASCAR's Steve Byrnes, an on-air commentator with nearly 30 years' worth of experience in the sport, died after a long battle with head and neck cancer.  He was 56 years old and leaves behind his wife Karen and son Bryson.  Read more

Kansas Speedway, Toyota Partner for Camping World Truck Series Race
 
On Tuesday, Kansas Speedway announced that they have reached a deal with the Toyota Motor Company for the manufacturer to serve as the title sponsor of the upcoming Camping World Truck Series race at the 1.5 mile tri-oval.  The race will be known as the 15th Annual Toyota Tundra 250.  Read more

Have news for The Frontstretch?  Don't hesitate to let us know; email us at phil.allaway@frontstretch.com with a promising lead or tip.

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FRONTSTRETCH JOB: WEBMASTER
Frontstretch.com is looking for a talented and motivated individual to fulfill the role of the site's webmaster. The ideal candidate must be highly proficient in WordPress, as the site recently converted from Textpattern to WordPress as the content management system. The webmaster will assist with leftover conversion tasks, work with the management team to implement site enhancements and help troubleshoot problems as they arise. The candidate must also have a working knowledge of search engine optimization strategies to help improve search rankings for the site. Motorsports knowledge is preferred, but not required. The candidate should have on average at least 1-2 hours per week to devote to Frontstretch initiatives. If you are interested, please contact our Business Manager, Tony Lumbis at Tony.Lumbis@gmail.com.
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Today's Featured Commentary
On This Day in NASCAR History
Professor of Speed

by Dr. Mark Howell

Today marks the 25th anniversary of Brett Bodine's first – and only – NASCAR Sprint Cup victory. Bodine, who now drives the pace car in Cup events, won the First Union 400 on a sunny afternoon at North Wilkesboro Speedway, the famed .625-mile oval that hosted NASCAR races from 1949 to 1996. Brett's win was a controversial one over Darrell Waltrip – who argued against Bodine's win to no avail – but one that helped push NASCAR into the modern era with the eventual acceptance of electronic scoring.

A lot of life has gone by since that Sunday afternoon in North Carolina....

A 26-year old driver named Kenny Wallace (yeah, THAT Kenny Wallace) made his Sprint Cup debut that day. Wallace spun his No. 36 Pontiac in turn 1 on lap 321 to bring out the race's tenth and final caution. Yellow flag pit stops took place just moments after Brett Bodine pitted under the green for tires and fuel. NASCAR told the pace car to pick up Dale Earnhardt since it looked like the No. 3 – in the midst of confusion during a rash of pit activity – was leading the event.

Scoring was still done by hand back in those days, and the system was anything but foolproof. Long story short: it took NASCAR officials 18 laps under caution to sort out the scoring snafu and decide that Bodine's No. 26 Buick was the proper leader of the race. Waltrip and team disagreed with the decision, and even ESPN's broadcast team was confused by the standings (they had three cars on the lead lap – Earnhardt, Waltrip, and Ricky Rudd – with Brett a lap down in fourth).

Once the green flag dropped again on lap 339, Brett Bodine maintained his lead for the final 83 circuits and took the checkered flag .95-seconds ahead of the No. 17 Tide Chevrolet to earn his first career Sprint Cup win. For the 31-year old driver from Chemung, New York, it was the crowning achievement of his life's work.

I first met Brett Bodine in 1981 when he drove a NASCAR Modified out of a race shop in my hometown of Dallas, Pennsylvania. Brett rented a mobile home behind the shop and earned a pittance (less than $100 a week, if my memory serves me) for countless hours of work to make races all through the Northeast. I helped a bit with his Modified when he raced at Shangri-La Speedway near Owego: the same track where Jimmy Spencer cut his teeth when hoping to make the big time down South.

By 1990, Brett was living in North Carolina and driving for King Racing and drag racing legend Kenny Bernstein, while I was now the one living in a rented mobile home. Mine was in the tiny farming village of East Salem, Pennsylvania, and I was in the process of completing my Master's degree at Penn State University. I didn't have access to ESPN, so keeping up with race results back then meant Sunday evening telephone calls from my dad.

On April 22nd, my dad called with the news that Brett had won his first Cup race. Everyone in my neighborhood was pretty thrilled given that Brett was something of a "local" guy. He was following in his brother Geoffrey's winning tire tracks, no matter if his win at North Wilkesboro was clouded by controversy.

As far as the NASCAR record book is concerned, a win is a win.

The 1990 First Union 400, by today's standards, resembles an artifact one might find in the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Many drivers in that day's lineup are no longer competing: recognized names like Harry Gant, Jimmy Spencer, Morgan Shepherd, Ricky Rudd, Mark Martin, Kyle Petty, Sterling Marlin, Ken Schrader, and Hall of Famers Bill Elliott and Dale Jarrett.

Two other Hall of Famers – Darrell Waltrip and Rusty Wallace – eventually made the transition from the driver's seat to the broadcast booth. Such a career transition was anything but unusual, however; Ned Jarrett and the late Benny Parsons were part of the ESPN team covering the First Union 400 that day.

Looking back at that Cup race in 1990 – today we see not only drivers Waltrip and Wallace doing network TV commentary, but also two crew chiefs who worked on pit road that afternoon: Jeff Hammond (who was Waltrip's crew chief) and Larry McReynolds (who was crew chief for Bodine's winning car).

Here's hoping old grudges eventually transition into distant memories over time….

Other transitions that led to wholesale change in the Cup Series involved the loss of makes once common in NASCAR competition. Brett Bodine steered a Buick into Victory Lane that April day. Terry Labonte finished 15th in an Oldsmobile, while Michael Waltrip came home 27th in a Pontiac.

Other losses to come during that quarter-century were more difficult to take. Drivers Ernie Irvan and Mike Alexander had their careers cut short because of serious head injuries. The deaths of legendary drivers like Alan Kulwicki, Davey Allison, and Dale Earnhardt rocked NASCAR Nation to its roots, while the deaths of then-Rookie-of-the-Year contender Rob Moroso (who died in a drunk driving accident soon after the race at North Wilkesboro that fall) and Dick Trickle (who committed suicide nearly two years ago) spoke to larger, more pressing issues facing the world of professional sports.

One other tragic loss to come in the 25 years since Bodine's victory at North Wilkesboro is that of the speedway itself. Once North Wilkesboro was dropped from the Sprint Cup schedule by NASCAR in favor of adding intermediate-sized tracks in more populated and marketable areas, the historic oval fell quickly into disrepair.

I drove by North Wilkesboro Speedway a few years ago on my way to Charlotte. Seeing the once-beloved stop on NASCAR's calendar with peeling paint, rusted fences, and grass growing through cracks in the asphalt turned my stomach.

The years since Brett Bodine's win in the 1990 First Union 400 may have seen much by way of growth in NASCAR's popularity, but that period of time has also reflected much by way of how too much growth too soon can be a bad thing.

Some points to ponder on this April 22nd as we mark the anniversary of one very significant NASCAR race run at one very significant (and missed) speedway. We've all changed over the past quarter-century, but maybe not entirely for the better….

Dr. Mark Howell is a contributor for Frontstretch. He can be reached via e-mail at mark.howell@frontstretch.com.

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TODAY AT FRONTSTRETCH:

by Greg Davis

by Amy Henderson

by Phil Allaway

compiled by Michael Mehedin

by the Frontstretch Staff
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FRONTSTRETCH TRIVIA:

Q: In 1998, NASCAR moved the Spring race at Richmond International Raceway to June for the first time, making it into a second night race at the track in the process.  Why was this move made?

Check back Thursday for the answer, here in the Frontstretch Newsletter!

Tuesday's Answer:

Q:  The 1982 Richmond 400 is best known as the last of five races that Dave Marcis managed to win in his decades-long career.  However, he was not really in contention to claim that win until right before the race was stopped.  How did he do it?

A:  Joe Ruttman was leading in his No. 2 J.D. Stacy Buick when he crashed on the frontstretch to bring out the yellow.  Marcis was actually a lap down at the time and right behind Ruttman at the time.  Avoiding the wreck put Marcis and his Malibu back on the lead lap.  At this point, it started to rain hard.  All the leaders except Marcis pitted under the yellow.  As a result, Marcis claimed the lead and eventually the win after the race was stopped and declared complete after 250 of the 400 scheduled laps.  As NASCAR races were hand-scored at th etime (electronic scoring wasn't introduced full-time until 1993), it took a few minutes before everyone was sure that Marcis was leading.  Ruttman's incident and Marcis getting back on the lead lap can be seen here.
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COMING TOMORROW
In The Frontstretch Newsletter:
We'll have any news that breaks in the world of NASCAR.  In addition, John Potts returns with another interesting commentary

On Frontstretch.com:
Toni Montgomery is back with another look at the NHRA in Nitro Shots.
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