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Apr 02, 2008
Max Mosely fired a shot across the bow today when he issued a formal statement saying “I shall now devote some time to those responsible for putting this into the public domain.” So I guess that means the guys at Autosport.com, who cherish their FIA issued F1 press credential and have no problem with self-censorship, are safe. Likewise, the guy at Jalopnik responsible for writing the “tags” for articles shouldn’t expect his newly minted F1 credential to be arriving in the mail anytime soon. The collection of words below are from the ‘tag cloud’ associated with the Jalopnik.com story regarding Formula 1 President Mosely’s…well, just read the tag cloud.
CLIPS, DEADSPIN, F1, F1 HOOKERS, F1 SEX HOOKERS, F1 SEX SCANDAL, FIA FIA BOSS SEX, FORMULA 1 SEX SCANDAL, FORMULA ONE, FORMULA ONE OSS HOOKERS, MAX, MAX MOSELEY, MAX MOSELY SEX, MAX MOSLEY, MAX MOSLEY NAZI ORGY SCANDAL, MAX MOSLEY NAZI SEX VIDEO, MAX OSLEY SEX SCANDAL, MAX MOSLEY SEX VIDEO, MAX MOSLEY VIDEO, MAX MOSLY, MOSLEY, NAZI, NAZI SEX VIDEO, ORGY, RACING NEWS, SCANDAL, SEX
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on Jul 01, 2008
Roush-Fenway’s marketing arm is free to seek sponsorship for Yates entries. But the question is whether the sponsors already affiliated with Roush-Fenway paid additional money to be on the Yates cars, or whether any of that sponsorship money came from existing contracts with Roush-Fenway. And if so, would diverting those funds count as one team underwriting another, thereby violating the rule?
A Roush-Fenway spokesperson said that issue should be addressed by Yates Racing personnel. And Yates Racing’s response through its PR staff was, “We do not disclose any terms of our sponsorships to media nor other teams,” later adding, “All of our activities with Yates Racing are in compliance with NASCAR rules.”
But what exactly are those rules?
By David Klein on Jun 30, 2008
Unless some of the Saturday night hot-shots start getting some time in the IndyCar feeder series we are soon going to see the Indy Car TV ratings and attendance numbers go the same direction as the zipper on Danica’s firesuit.
on Jun 27, 2008
Fulfilling the sponsor obligations of the current contract can make inking the next one darn near impossible.
“Absolutely. If you can’t get to the office, there’s no way you can sit down and work out details,” said Biffle, who added that the deal might have gotten done this week if not for the trip to LI. “So that’s been one of our things. In May, I had one day off in May. We had something going every day. So it makes it difficult to actually get to sit down and think about it and look it over.”
on Jun 25, 2008
Six months ago, during the negotiations between Indy Car and Champ Car to merge the two series, many were saying “don’t get your hopes up” because unification would not result in some “magic bullet” that would instantly catapult American open-wheel racing back to the prominence of yesteryear. And while that still might be true, two things we now know for sure is unification has already shown significant positive results and the people at the Indy Car Series offices are feeling very good about their prospects for the future.
Let’s look at a few of the positive trends that are shaping American open wheel racing since “the split” ended:
By Josh Stewart on Jun 16, 2008
As much as NASCAR leaves the National Hockey League it its (brake) dust, there is one rulebook item in the land of puck that stock car racing needs to adopt. Hockey, like NASCAR, markets itself on its physical, take-no-prisoners play. It doesn’t want to feminize the sport by not letting the players police themselves. But in hockey there’s a difference between toe-to-toe fisticuffs and something that is considered an “attempt to injure.” The NHL has drawn a clear line between dropping the gloves and parting someone’s molars with a stick. NASCAR has not done nearly as good a job at defining what is aggressive and what is egregious.
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CIA Stock Photo, Inc.
“I’ve got to thank Kyle for sticking with me there at the end. The only way we don’t win this is if Kyle goes for the win. I knew Kyle could go for the win and maybe not succeed, but I knew, as long as he stuck on my bumper, we’d have a 1-2 finish.”
Funny Car driver Scott Kalitta, 46, died June 21 from multiple injuries suffered after his car went out of control and crashed in a high-speed racing accident at Old Bridge Township Raceway Park during the fourth and final round of qualifying at the Lucas Oil NHRA SuperNationals.
Giorgio Pantano put in a stunning performance in Feature Race at Silverstone, the Italian driver showing a wonderful combination of speed and intelligence as he increased his lead in the Drivers Championship.
McLaren
Heikki Kovalainen produced one of the best qualifying performances in recent years to take pole position in Silverstone and will now try for his first victory in the series in British Grand Prix.
ForceIndia
Giancarlo Fisichella looked set to move himself into the top 15 on his very last lap, until a spin in the last sector put paid to his chance. The Italian will start in 20th position, with team-mate Adrian Sutil just ahead in 19th.