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- Martinsville: Less of a wildcard than we first thought
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Martinsville’s logo; Vickers’ injuries
Brian Hunsicker
Mar 30, 2007
In the pre-race coverage, perhaps you’ve seen the logo for this weekend’s race at Martinsville, the Goody’s Cool Orange 500.
When I saw the logo earlier in the week, it looked atrocious. After a few days, it’s still not great, but I guess it’s more the name than the logo that bugs.
Tony Stewart: jinxed?
Brian Hunsicker
Mar 29, 2007
Watch your step, Tony.
Sure, it’s an honor to grace the cover of a video game, particularly a mass-marketed one, like EA Sports announced last week: Stewart’s mug will be plastered on the cover of its latest NASCAR game, due out later in the summer.
Enjoy Martinsville while you can. If you can.
Brian Hunsicker
Mar 28, 2007
The smallest and tightest track on the Cup circuit doesn’t have long left. Whenever schedule changes are announced, it’s the track that gets first mention as the prime candidate to lose a date.
At some point, the schedule will change, a new track will open. Whether Martinsville will suffer is impossible to say, but it’s as good a candidate as any (with a close finish ahead of Pocono).
The drivers don’t like it. And the racing isn’t very good either, though one positive is that it brings out the alpha male in many of the drivers.
Keep on talking, Kyle
Brian Hunsicker
Mar 27, 2007
Apologies for the late entry — office-wide net issues. You know how it goes.
Kyle Busch, as you’ve no doubt heard, won Sunday’s race and was rather critical of the Car of Tomorrow. In a transcript e-mailed from Chevy, he wasn’t quoted as saying the COT sucks.
If you believe David Poole, well, then, there’s a little conflict. Not that it’s a big deal; media relations folks have a job to do. And that job, generally, doesn’t include their clients making controversial statements. (The difference between what I record and the transcript I get from the Redskins sometimes borders on a gulf, it’s that different.)
Initial thoughts, not final judgments, on the COT
Brian Hunsicker
Mar 26, 2007
Certainly, the story of the Car of Tomorrow is a long way from its conclusion. With just one race under its belt, it’s impossible to make any sort of conclusive judgments about the project, positively or negatively.
In that spirit, we present what happened Sunday at Bristol within the framework of two of the COT’s stated goals: Improve driver safety and improve competition.
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I do understand that Goody’s has a product to sell and, as the primary race sponsor, can name the race whatever it darn well pleases. That doesn’t mean that it’s a great name.