Tag Archives: Sprint Cup

Report: NBC recaptures NASCAR coverage through 2024

By Brandon Turkus

NASCAR Sprint Cup Race at Bristol Motor Speedway

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NASCAR has pared its broadcasts down to two providers – Fox and NBC. According to a report from USA Today, the recently inked deal will give the Peacock Network exclusive rights to the last 20 Sprint Cup races, the last 19 Nationwide races, all K&N and Whelen Modified races, the NASCAR Toyota Mexico series, Hall of Fame and banquet ceremonies, live-streams for both Sprint Cup and Nationwide races, and Spanish broadcasting rights on Telemundo and Mun2. Got all that?

The deal is in effect until 2024, but won’t officially kick off until the 2015 season, when NBC and Fox will begin sharing in earnest. The two networks are likely to air some of the races on the NBC Sports network and Fox Sports 1 (which replaces Speed TV), respectively.

Financial details have not been revealed for the NBC deal yet. Fox and NASCAR’s tie-up, which was renewed last fall, was valued at $2.4 billion, and gets the News Corp-owned network broadcast rights for the Daytona 500, 12 Sprint Cup races, practicing and qualifying, and the Camping World Truck Series.

The network shift will see ABC/ESPN and Turner Broadcasting end their NASCAR programming with the 2014 season.

NBC recaptures NASCAR coverage through 2024 originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 24 Jul 2013 14:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

NASCAR Takes to the Dirt in the Middle of Ohio on a Wednesday

By Steven Cole Smith

There hasn’t been much in the way of positive NASCAR news this year. Rather than building more grandstands for overflow crowds, some tracks are reducing seating capacity—flagship Daytona International Speedway is trimming its bleachers by around 15 percent. Five-time champion Jimmie Johnson seems to be rolling along uneventfully to a sixth crown. And Danica Patrick, who NASCAR publicists were hoping might have won three or four races so far in first full season, is turning out to be a mid-packer at best. But , if you dig deep enough, there is some unexpected good news to be found, in all places, smack in the middle of a bunch of corn fields in western Ohio. And it will occur, of all times, on a Wednesday night. And it has been sold out, nearly 18,000 seats, since January.

Eldora Speedway, the half-mile dirt track that isn’t on the way to much of anywhere, is hosting the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series on July 24th. It’s the first time a major NASCAR series has run on a dirt track since September 30, 1970, when Richard Petty drove a Plymouth to victory at State Fairgrounds Speedway in Raleigh, North Carolina. State Fairgrounds Speedway isn’t around anymore. Neither is Plymouth, for that matter. Has anybody seen Richard Petty lately?

Stewart is the proud owner of Eldora Speedway, as well as a few cars in the Sprint Cup series, too.

Wednesday’s race, the CarCash Mudsummer Classic, is the result of a conversation a couple of years ago between the track’s owner, former Sprint Cup champion Tony Stewart, and NASCAR. Stewart bought Eldora from Earl Baltes, who owned it for 50 years. To understand Eldora, you have to understand Earl Baltes, now 92.

The CIA could not have done a better job of disguising a brilliant, savvy promoter as a backwoods hayseed, complete with dungarees, suspenders, a baseball cap with the bill turned up, and Elvis sideburns. A former bandleader, Baltes turned Eldora into a magic place—where else could a fan sit at the top of the grandstands, lean over while watching the race, and order a shot from a full bar? Baltes made Eldora into one of those valuable properties that is known worldwide by just one name, like Daytona, Talladega, Sebring, or Le Mans.

In 2001, he ran a late-model race that paid $1 million to the winner, which was Donnie Moran. Afterward, when we asked Baltes how the night went, he answered with his trademark line: “If I coulda sold one more hot dog, I woulda broke even.” If Baltes is there Wednesday night, ask him about the time he had Pancho Carter preside over the wedding of two gorillas. No, we are not making that up. With Earl Baltes, you don’t have to.

When the time finally came to sell Eldora, the list of buyers who might operate Eldora in the manner in which we’ve become accustomed to was pretty short. At the top was Stewart, an Indiana native who raced …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Car & Driver

NRA flap has NASCAR scrutinizing sponsors

By Terry Blount NASCAR plans to become more involved in race sponsorship decisions by speedways in light of the continuing controversy surrounding the National Rifle Association sponsorship of the Sprint Cup race Saturday at Texas Motor Speedway.

From: http://espn.go.com/racing/nascar/cup/story/_/id/9163799/nra-flap-nascar-scrutinizing-sponsors

Hendrick Motorsports Tops List Of Nascar's Most Valuable Teams

By Kurt Badenhausen, Forbes Staff

The 2012 Nascar season started with great optimism in the garages after a thrilling 2011 Chase and a TV ratings increase for the first time since 2005. Yet, for each step forward, the sport seemed to take a step back last year. The season’s first and biggest race, the Daytona 500, was rained out and pushed back to Monday night. Then the old problems cropped up during the year: sponsorship departures, dwindling attendance and another drop in TV ratings. But now three races into 2013, the optimism is back thanks to a new car, a rich TV contract and a jolt from a Sprint Cup rookie. This time, Nascar might keep the momentum going. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Danica Patrick Merchandise Flying Off Shelves Since Winning Daytona Pole

By Kurt Badenhausen, Forbes Staff

Danica Patrick made history last weekend when she won the pole position for Sunday’s Daytona 500. It was the first time a women won the pole at Daytona or at any Sprint Cup event for that matter. The previous best starting position by a woman in a Nascar race was accomplished by Janet Guthrie who qualified ninth at two races in 1977. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Kiss Another NASCAR Record Goodbye as Danica Patrick Takes Daytona 500 Pole

By John Lamm

Since June 19, 1949 there have been 2354 top-level NASCAR races called everything from Strictly Stock to today’s Sprint Cup and in every event there was a male driver starting on the pole. You can kiss that record goodbye. Danica Patrick, driving a Chevrolet SS for Stewart-Haas Racing, put the car on the pole for next Sunday’s Daytona 500. That quickest lap came in at 196.434 mph, making Patrick the only driver to hit the 196-mph mark other than her partner on the front row, four-time champ Jeff Gordon, also in an SS. Their spots are set for Sunday, while the rest of the field will race for their starting positions in a pair of 150-mile races on Thursday.

Unsurprising, many comments made regarding Patrick’s success claimed the qualifying session was rigged, a setup to get NASCAR publicity. Consider, though, that Patrick has been quick in practice all week, and took the pole for last year’s Nationwide race at Daytona. Remember, too, that she finished third in the Indy 500 in 2009 and won IndyCar’s Motegi race in 2008.

Patrick wasn’t the only woman driver making her mark at Daytona over the weekend, as Venezuelan driver Milka Duno—a naval engineer with numerous masters degrees—started from the front row of the ARCA race on Saturday, and led the first 11 laps.



As for the Patrick doubters, they’ll have to wait until the end of next Sunday to determine whether they’ve been proved right or wrong. The only problem for Patrick is that no pole-sitter has won the Daytona 500 since 2000.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Car & Driver

Danica Patrick Makes History At Daytona

By Kurt Ernst

Danica Patrick, with her Daytona Pole Award - image: Stewart-Haas Racing

Danica Patrick, with her Daytona Pole Award – image: Stewart-Haas Racing

Love or hate the marketing machine that is Danica Patrick, there’s no denying that she’s managed to accomplish quite a bit in her racing career. To date, she’s the only woman to ever win an IndyCar race, the first woman to lead the field in the Indianapolis 500 and the first woman to earn a NASCAR Nationwide Series pole. To her resume, Patrick can now add one more first: the first female driver to earn a pole position in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series.

On Sunday, Patrick turned a lap of 45.817 seconds, at 196.434 mph, at the Daytona International Speedway. That was fast enough to put her on the inside of row one for the Daytona 500, arguably the most significant race on the NASCAR Sprint Cup schedule. What’s more impressive, perhaps, is that Patrick beat veteran drivers in what is only her second Sprint Cup start at the track.

Patrick’s teammates at Stewart-Haas racing also ran well, with Ryan Newman fourth-quickest and Tony Stewart fifth-quickest. Since Sunday’s qualifying set only the front row, all we know for sure is that Jeff Gordon will be beside Danica Patrick on row one. The remainder of the 43 total starting positions will be set during Thursday’s Budweiser Duel races, which consist of two 150-mile events.

While Patrick’s run is impressive, the Stewart-Haas driver has struggled in traffic. The switch to the Generation Six cars for 2013 won’t make things any easier, as the number of crashes racked up to date have shown that successful drafting will require new techniques. Any chance of winning the race will require Patrick to stay out of trouble for the duration of the event, then partner with other drivers for a charge to the front.

Patrick has always been a reasonably strong qualifier, but can she pull out a win in the Daytona 500? We’ll find out on Sunday.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Automotive Addicts