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Author: Joe VanHoose Created: 1/24/2007 10:37 AM


An inside look at stock car racing's biggest stories, from local dirt tracks to Daytona.

Is NASCAR fixed?
By Joe VanHoose on 4/28/2007 11:28 AM

These two things I know are true about two-time NASCAR Champion Tony Stewart: he's one of the most talented race car drivers on the track, and he's not afraid to tell you his opinion off the track.
 
The latter proved to be the case during Stewart's radio show on Sirius Satellite Radio Tuesday night when he openly accused NASCAR of altering the outcome of races by throwing phantom debris cautions.
 
"It's about the integrity of the sport, and when I feel our own sanctioning body isn't taking care of that, it's hard to support and feel proud about being a driver in the Nextel Cup Series when they're throwing debris cautions," Stewart said. "It's like playing God. They can almost dictate the race instead of the drivers doing it."
 
Stewart has a point. NASCAR has thrown 20 debris cautions in just nine races this season, two of them ...
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Another victory for central Florida racing
By Joe VanHoose on 4/20/2007 3:17 PM
Plus some bits and pieces from NASCAR and FASCAR.
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Ocala regular wins Gulf Coast race
By Joe VanHoose on 4/15/2007 10:48 AM
Get all the results from Ocala Speedway here.
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Gulf Coast Modifieds bring uncertainty to Ocala Speedway
By Joe VanHoose on 4/13/2007 3:48 PM
Ocala Speedway Open Wheel Modified drivers will guard their territory this evening when the Gulf Coast Modified Series invades their home track. The series brings along different cars, different engines, and a different set of rules that could mix up the typical results by night's end.
 
"It's early in the year, so you never really know how many cars you'll have," said Gulf Coast Modifieds Director Rick Hall. "We'll have some running with the series, and I'm sure we'll have some that just run at Ocala."
 
But therein lies the problem. Gulf Coast Modifieds race smaller motors that create less horsepower than the frontrunners at Ocala Speedway who race open motors. To even the playing field, Ocala Speedway regulars must add weight to their cars to match the power-to-weight ratio of the visiting series.
 
Some Ocala racers say that adding weight ...
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Ramblings: NASCAR on Easter break
By Joe VanHoose on 4/7/2007 8:49 AM

It's Easter weekend, which means the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series has the week off. The off week gives race teams some time to regroup for a 15-race stretch, with a race scheduled every weekend until late July.
 
Fortunately for NASCAR, the sanctioning body and its officials also get a week off to sort out some problems of their own.
 
The Car of Tomorrow has raced twice now with trouble rearing its head in both races. Drivers have openly complained about the car's raceability, but that's not the biggest problem with the COT right now. Right now, the biggest concern is how safe the COT really is.
 
In the first COT race at Bristol two weeks ago, several drivers noticed the padding in the right side door smoking. Sunday at Martinsville, Kevin Harvick noticed a lot more than a little smoke.
 
Harvick climbed out of his car on the fron ...
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Finding peace in speed
By Joe VanHoose on 3/29/2007 4:37 PM
A first-hand account of taking hot laps at Ocala Speedway.
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The cost of spectator racing: The death of a Saturn
By Joe VanHoose on 3/24/2007 8:55 PM

Spectator racing: it just sounds dangerous, letting mere fans race their own cars on a track built for professionals.

Of course, anyone who’s been to the races has heard that guy, six beers in, talking about how he could go out there and do just as good as the real racers. But anyone who’s been around a racetrack at speed knows that it’s a lot harder than it looks.

But there are some that just don’t get the message, and that’s what spectator racing is all about. Every once in a while, between the poor lines and slow speeds, someone gets enough conviction in them to go out and test the edge. Unfortunately for them, they typically fall off the speed mountain. 

That’s what happened Friday night at Ocala Speedway. All of the ingredients were present: a middle-aged man in a car that wasn’t his, a front-wheel drive small sedan that can’ ...

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Live from Ocala Speedway
By Joe VanHoose on 3/17/2007 3:17 PM
Stan Butler wins the TBARA feature at Ocala Speedway as Ocalan Ben Fritz finishes second. Check here for a full recap.
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Fritz back in driver's seat tonight at Ocala Speedway
By Joe VanHoose on 3/17/2007 3:03 PM
When Ben Fritz races at Ocala Speedway tonight in his TBARA sprint car, it will be a homecoming and a new beginning. The 24-year-old Ocalan has seen highs and lows in his racing career, but this year he is back where he is most comfortable: the driver’s seat.

In 2005, Fritz was on the verge of making the big time. After successful campaigns in the TBARA, Fritz was picked to drive an Indy car for Sam Schmidt Motorsports in the Indy Pro Series, the stepping stone to the Indy Racing League and Indianapolis 500.

But the deal went dry when a sponsor couldn’t be found for his car. Fritz sat out most of the year, trying to land a ride that never materialized.

“The whole thing turned into a money deal and a sponsor deal, and we just didn’t have any,” Fritz said. “It stole a lot of time, just a lot.

“It sucked, but wha ...
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Anderson wins Ocala Late Model season opener
By Joe VanHoose on 3/13/2007 9:42 AM

Wayne Anderson, who’s dominated Ocala Speedway like no other Late Model driver, added another win to his name Friday night in the track’s season opener.

Anderson, who started third, snuck underneath Daniel Webster ill-handling Chevrolet on lap 3 and held on to lead the rest of the 30-lap Late Model feature. Scott Millar followed Anderson to the front and finished second. Scott Grossenbacher made his way to third with Keith Zavrel and Webster rounding out the top five.

Two cautions for two Perry Lovelady spins slowed the race in its late stages, but Anderson held off the rest of the field on the restarts to secure the win.
 
Modifieds

For a race that took three tries to get started, the 25-lap feature ran caution-free after the first lap debacles. Robbie Cooper shot to the lead from the outside pole and led ev ...
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Ocala's going racing tonight
By Joe VanHoose on 3/10/2007 5:04 PM
The Ocala Speedway will start its season tonight after last week’s show was rained out. As far as  I can tell, tonight's races will be run under clear skies with Chamber of Commerce approved temperatures.

Now, after last week’s column, I received some comments that I may have painted a misleading picture of the race track.
 
This one is straight from the mailbag: HAVE YOU GONE TO RACES AT THESE TRACKS? CITRUS RAN TWICE WAS MANY CARS AS OCALA AND THEY DRAW A LARGER CROWD… IF YOU KEEP TRACK OF THE CAR COUNT THIS YEAR AT EACH TRACK YOU WILL LEARN A LOT. THANK YOU, A RACE FAN.

Well, Mr. Race Fan, I’m not going to disagree with you. Citrus County Speedway does get better fan counts and car counts than Ocala Speedway. But I never said that Ocala was doing better than Citrus County. The two tracks are cooperating instead of competing, which is commendable ...
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Mexico Busch race leaves plenty of anger to go around
By Joe VanHoose on 3/9/2007 7:13 PM
OK, experts tell me it’s always good to take a pause when you’re angry before acting on your anger. Well, I’ve taken three days to collect my feelings, and I’m still angry.

I’m angry at the finish in the NASCAR Busch Series race in Mexico City on Sunday, I’m angry at Juan Pablo Montoya, I’m angry at the antics of road racing. Really, I’m just angry at the world, or at least at NASCAR.
 
For the record, NASCAR got exactly what it wanted. Juan Pablo Montoya, the most-hyped new driver in years, became the first Latin American to win a NASCAR Busch Series race, and the race just happened to be in Mexico. Yes, NASCAR's only Latin American driver won NASCAR's only race in Latin America.
 
Make no mistake about it: NASCAR doesn’t care about race fans in Mexico. NASCAR cares about Latin American race fans in t ...
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Ocala Speedway cancels Friday's races due to rain
By Joe VanHoose on 3/3/2007 8:00 PM
Mother Nature, she's a tough one to figure out. But this I know is true: she hates stock car racing.

Ocala Speedway canceled its opening night earlier today because it just won't stop raining. Even though I used my mind power to clear up the skies, the rain continues to fall.

So race fans will have to wait another week to get their local racing fix. The same program scheduled for this evening will run next Friday, March 9, with racing starting at 7:30 p.m.

Anyways, it looks like my Friday evening has just cleared up. Anybody want to go to dinner?
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Racing returns to Ocala this weekend
By Joe VanHoose on 3/2/2007 2:46 PM

The Ocala Speedway gets back into full swing
Friday evening with its opening points night, the first regular event of the year. But a partnership with Citrus County Speedway, in addition to a number of facility improvements over the last few years, could make this season for Ocala Speedway much more than regular.
 
In a time where many local short tracks in Florida struggle with car counts and attendance, the two central Florida speedways are the exceptions, not the norm.
 
The norm in the state has been mediocre at best. Orlando Speedworld, New Smyrna Speedway and Desoto Superspeedway are all down in attendance both in fans and drivers. In the past five years, Jax Raceways in Jacksonville and Putnam County Speedway in Palatka closed, and Hialeah Speedway and Golden Gate Speedway in Tampa were razed.
 
Ocala Speedway saw its share of p ...
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In this case, NASCAR was right
By Joe VanHoose on 2/23/2007 2:53 PM

NASCAR just can't seem to win, even when everything is seemingly never better. In the past ten days, the sanctioning body has clamped down on cheating like never before, and it witnessed one of the most thrilling finishes in history in its biggest race, the Daytona 500.
 
But yet, everyone seems to be dumping on NASCAR.
 
Critics argue that the penalties dished out by NASCAR to the cheaters in Daytona were not harsh enough. Critics argue that NASCAR should have thrown a caution flag when a wreck broke out in the last lap of the Daytona 500, negating the photo finish that transpired.
 
Critics can whine all they want, but that doesn't mean they're right.
 
In fact, as much as it pains me to point this out, NASCAR has done everything right in the last two weeks. From pre-race penalties to in-race decisions, the NASCAR powers that be ...
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The Daytona 500 turns into an instant classic
By Joe VanHoose on 2/20/2007 12:55 AM

The 49th annual Daytona 500 read like a novel, but it started out as a snoozer. At the half way point, only four drivers had led the race and everyone was still running, quite spread-out to be exact.

Then there was a turning point. Actually, it was Tony Stewart getting turned by Kurt Busch while leading the race that turned this race upside down.

All of a sudden, the two dominant cars were out of the race, and everybody now thought they had a shot to win. And they proved that they would drive through each other to get in position to win the Great American Race.

Five cautions, all multi-car crashes, slowed the field in the final 50 laps, compared to just two cautions in the first 150. The wrecks trimmed the fat from the field a little more, and suddenly there were just a handful of contenders, a small cast of characters indeed, for the Daytona 500 win.

Then there was ...
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Live from Daytona: Daytona 500
By Joe VanHoose on 2/19/2007 8:16 PM
Kevin Harvick wins the Daytona 500 by two feet. Read the lap-by-lap recap here.
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Live from Daytona: Daytona 500 Pre-race
By Joe VanHoose on 2/19/2007 5:37 PM
Take a gander as I break down the entire Daytona 500 field, plus give my take on the race's new starting time.
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Live from Daytona: Orbitz Daytona 300
By Joe VanHoose on 2/18/2007 6:34 PM
Kevin Harvick wins the Orbitz 300. Read the lap-by-lap recap here and check out the full coverage in tomorrow's Star-Banner.
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Live from Daytona: Saturday AM Update
By Joe VanHoose on 2/18/2007 5:45 PM

Did you see the finish last night in the truck race?


If you didn’t, you missed one for the ages. Jack Sprague pulled a Days-of-Thunder-like move to get by Travis Kvapil on the final lap, really the final 100 yards. To top it off, Johnny Benson shot low to make it a three-wide photo finish.

How close was it? Well, Kvapil was leading in turn 4 and he finished third.

That’s the beauty of Speedweeks. You never know what race will be the best. The few folks covering the race in the press box, myself included, were beside themselves. Remember, we media folk aren’t the easiest group to excite. But there we were, throwing high fives and cheering.

That’s what racing will do to you. We knew we had seen something special, and so did the 60,000 freezing fans that stayed until the end, even though it was 30 de ...
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