Friday, January 16, 2009

Do not mess with a good thing NASCAR

I do not know where NASCAR thinks they are helping the sport when we read from Fox Sports the following piece of information that will help reduce cost (supposedly):

 

When the truck series first debuted, the series was able to limit expenses by having teams pit once at halfway under a competition caution and have fewer men over the wall.

A similar plan could be in the works that would bring trucks down pit road according to the order on the track. Teams would be allowed to pit and the trucks would then return to the track in the same order, similar to a TV time out in football or basketball.

One of the things that attracts me to NASCAR is the high speed chess match that takes place each week.  Do we pit now, do we wait to pit, do we take two or four tires?  All of these effect the results.  Do just do a competition caution would increase the yawn factor about 75%.  So much can be gained or lost in the pits.  No NASCAR, do not do it.  I realize it is the TRUCKS and that is a testing ground of sorts, but leave this stuff to your minor leagues or the ARCA Remax series.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Do not listen to the soundbytes and talking heads...

 

Listen to what the man says himself. It is amazing what you hear versus what he said.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

From the Dept. of taking back what was not yours to give in the first place....

GREENFIELD, Calif. — Police have arrested a Greenfield man for allegedly arranging to sell his 14-year-old daughter into marriage in exchange for $16,000, 100 cases of beer and several cases of meat.
Police say they only learned of the deal after 36-year-old Marcelino de Jesus Martinez went to them to get his daughter back because payment wasn't made as promised.
FOXNews.com - Man Allegedly Tries to Sell Daughter Into Marriage for Cash, Beer and Meat - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News
I thought that we had passed the era when woman were slaves about 1000 years ago or so.   Lock this guy up and throw away the key (providing that he is guilty - hard not to be when he admits he did something wrong so he can get his money back).