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Vol. III,No.VIXII- -ON THE ROAD EDITION
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SPEAKING UP
Earnhardt says drivers should have a voice
By Reid Spencer, Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service, March 15

BRISTOL, Tenn. -- Ask someone from NASCAR to name the vilest word in the English language, and you might get a five-letter response: U-N-I-O-N.

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NASCAR At Bristol: Dale Earnhardt Junior talks about a Driver Union

Historically, the sanctioning body has resisted, with all its might, attempts to organize drivers into a unified body -- if that's even possible where the individualists who pilot racecars are concerned.

In 1961, Curtis Turner earned a lifetime ban from NASCAR racing for attempting to create a drivers union -- until Big Bill France commuted his sentence in 1965. NASCAR later squashed the Professional Drivers Association spearheaded by Richard Petty, after France held the inaugural race at Talladega in 1969 despite a boycott of the sport's top stars.

Tony Stewart's outspoken criticism about the hard tires used last week at Atlanta has brought to the forefront the larger question of drivers' input into competition issues. How much should they have, if any? And what form should it take?

Dale Earnhardt Jr., for one, doesn't expect to see a formal drivers organization, but he'd like to believe that NASCAR is listening when those behind the wheels speak their minds.

"There's all kinds -- a million different ways that that could be done -- it's obviously not likely," Earnhardt said of a drivers organization. "The main situation is that, as a driver, you have a hard time listening and believing someone that has never been behind the wheel trying to tell you what needs to happen out on the racetrack, or how things need to be, or should be or this is the way to go."

Only a driver knows what it's like, Earnhardt says, to approach a corner at Daytona that has an awkward transition to the soft walls, or to hit a gap in the backstretch wall at Las Vegas, as Jeff Gordon's Chevrolet did less than two weeks ago.

"We don't sit around and search these things out just to pester," Earnhardt said. "These are things that we actually run into as we go back to these venues over and over and over, and we continue to get frustrated with it and eventually might run into (NASCAR president) Mike (Helton) somewhere or someone and say 'Hey, this is what I think, take it for what it's worth,' and that's that.

"I would like to think that NASCAR does talk to the drivers, the Jeff Burtons and those types. Jeff always errs on the side of safety, and he always has great points and great ideas, in my opinion. I would like to believe that NASCAR does have conversations with those guys somewhere, wherever it would be. I would like to think those things do go on, and that there's a driver influence in a lot of their decisions. I would hope that's the way it is.


This weekend's Race:

What: Food City 500
Where: Bristol Motor Speedway
GREEN FLAG: 2:00 p.m. ET March 16
TV: Fox, 1:30 p.m. ET
Radio: MRN/Sirius Satellite Ch. 128. 
Track layout:.533 mile paved track


Rain washes out qualifying at Bristol
By Reid Spencer, Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service, March 15

BRISTOL, Tenn. -- Steady rains at Bristol Motor Speedway forced NASCAR to cancel Friday's Sprint Cup qualifying session for Sunday's Food City 500 at the .533-mile short track.

Based on NASCAR's rainout rules, which order the field for the first five races based on the previous year's owner points, reigning Cup champion Jimmie Johnson will start on the pole for the fifth points race of 2008, with Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon beside him on the front row.


Stewart Meets with Goodyear Exec
By Reid Spencer,Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service, March 15

BRISTOL, Tenn. -- For his part, Stewart took advantage of Friday's qualifying rainout to meet with Stu Grant, Goodyear's manager of worldwide racing for a conversation both considered productive.

"It was a good meeting, but at the end of the day, it's up to Goodyear to make it right," Stewart said. "If having this meeting helps make things better down the road, then this meeting was a success."


Busch knows there's a price to self-expression
By Reid Spencer,Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service, March 15

BRISTOL, Tenn. -- Sprint Cup Series points leader Kyle Busch respects teammate Tony Stewart for his outspokenness, but he realizes there's also a downside to it.

Stewart made waves last Sunday after finishing second at Atlanta, bashing the hard tire Goodyear supplied for the Kobalt Tools 500. Busch, who took Toyota to victory lane for the first time in the Cup series that same afternoon, says you always have to worry about the reaction when you speak your mind.


Vickers Okay with Rainout
By Reid Spencer,Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service, March 15

BRISTOL, Tenn. --Red Bull Toyota driver Brian Vickers lost a chance to qualify up front for Sunday's race when Friday's rain washed out qualifying, but he's not complaining.

Currently ninth in Cup championship points, Vickers spent last season outside the top 35 in owner points, struggling to qualify for every event. All told, he missed 13 of 36 points races.


Goodyear to test again at Darlington
By David Poole, Charlotte Observer, March 15

BRISTOL, Tenn. --Goodyear will return to Darlington with the same three drivers to test tires on that track's new surface after an initial test this week.

"It was extremely fast," said Greg Biffle, who tested Monday with Jeff Gordon and Ryan Newman. "Too fast for that size of race track."


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NASCAR Number
By Bill Marx, The Sporting News,March 15

69: Consecutive races Hendrick Motorsports has had at least one driver in the top 10 of a Cup race, by far the longest active streak in the Sprint Cup Series. Roush Fenway Racing is next with 10, followed by Joe Gibbs Racing with six. This weekend's race is in Bristol, and the last time no Hendrick driver finished in the top 10 of a Bristol Cup race was August 2000, the only time that has happened in the past 13 years.
This Day in NASCAR History
By Bill Marx, The Sporting News,March 15

1997: Jeff Green wins the Las Vegas 300, the first Nationwide race west of the Mississippi. Dick Trickle finishes second, 2.8 seconds back. It is Green's first Nationwide victory. In 2000, he will win the series championship.

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