Obama Says no to NASCAR...

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Obama Orders Chevrolet and Dodge Out Of NASCAR - Car News/Motorsports/High Performance/Hot Lists/Reviews/Car and Driver - Car And Driver



Obama Orders Chevrolet and Dodge Out Of NASCAR - Car News

With their racing budgets deemed “unnecessary expenditures,” GM and Chrysler are ordered to cease racing operations at the end of the season.

BY JARED GALL, ILLUSTRATION BY ERIC WOODWARD
April 2009



In a move sure to spark outrage, the White House announced today that GM and Chrysler must cease participation in NASCAR at the end of the 2009 season if they hope to receive any additional financial aid from the government. Companies around the globe—Honda and Audi, to name two—have drawn down racing operations, and NASCAR itself has already felt the pinch in the form of reduced team spending. A complete withdrawal from America’s premier racing series is expected to save more than $250 million between GM and Chrysler, a substantial amount considering the drastic measures being implemented elsewhere.

“Automakers used to operate on the principle of ‘win on Sunday, sell on Monday,’ but the Auto Task Force’s research just doesn’t validate that as true,” said the statement from President Obama. While fans have decried the Car of Tomorrow for heavily limiting what little personalization the cookie-cutter series had previously allowed to participating manufacturers, and drivers have slammed its brick-like aerodynamics and unpredictable handling, even the governmental oversight committee sees that the full-scale regulation of the cars leaves the manufacturers very little space for research and development. “NASCAR is a racing series that regulates down to the smallest detail of the cars, where a car badged a Chevrolet or Dodge differs only marginally from a Ford or a Toyota. There’s no technological development to speak of.”

The statement goes on further to say the same demand will be made of Ford if it asks for government assistance. “In order to receive this money, corporations must demonstrate they will spend it wisely. Racing has been said to improve on-road technology, but frankly, NASCAR almost flaunts its standing among the lowest-tech forms of motorsport. NASCAR is not proven to drive advancements that transfer from the racetrack to the road, and this nation’s way forward does not hinge on decades-old technology. We need new, and we need innovation.”

The President realizes this will be an unpopular call, but stands behind the decision, saying, “This is an obvious cut to make, but it is not an easy one. This administration is not ignoring the tremendous sentimental value and emotional appeal NASCAR holds for so many Americans. But now is not the time for sentiment and nostalgia; now is a time for decisive financial action. If our automotive industry is to emerge from this recession intact, then these difficult decisions must be made.”

Both Chevrolet and Dodge see the move as only temporary, and fully expect to resume racing in NASCAR as soon as they have stabilized and the government’s hand in their operations is minimized. “There is nothing really to say at this point,” said one representative, who wished to remain anonymous. “We’ve been doing this since the beginning, and we always assumed we’d be doing this until the end. Heck, nobody ever thought to think that there would be an end. But we ain’t done. As soon as this is over, we’re taking back our spot at the top.”

NASCAR officials remain tight-lipped about the call, but sources say series president Mike Helton and team managers are exploring several options, including other manufacturers to fill Chevrolet and Dodge’s vacated positions. Given the company’s recent interest in motorsport and the steady cash-flow and V-8 engine provided by its new Genesis sedan, sources indicate that NASCAR is pinging Hyundai to gauge the Korean company’s interest in occupying a spot in NASCAR. “Toyota was not well-received their first year in the sport, nor was their first season an easy one,” the source says. “But they learned, they applied the lessons, and they have proven very competitive this year.”

If Hyundai does indeed join the series, there will no doubt be a steep learning curve, and the move would leave Ford the lone domestic battling a pair of Asian makes in America’s most popular racing series. We wonder, however, how long NASCAR could hold that title without two of its most storied participants.
 
Gee, now he is going to fire thousands of people with this..CHANGE it is a good thing..
He doesn't want to piss off a bunch of rednecks..LOL
 
I actually see this as a good thing, the reality is that this could easily happen.....this smacks real folks right up side the head and may send a wakeup call to folks about what Obama and his administration are all about......power, control, wealth redistribution......it's Socialism folks!

Oh, BTW........75 million race fans may find this move somewhat offensive. http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/article/109622

Perhaps the New Deal NASCAR, headed up by Al Gore, will feature the Chevy Volt, Dodge ESX3, Toyota Prius and Ford Fusion Hybrid......races will last approx 75 laps before a 24hr pit stop to recharge. Top speed will be limited to 55 mph, to conserve power.

Let Chevy and Chrysler figure it out for themselves and get our politicians out of the business sector of our country!!!! Chapter 11 is the best option, no tax dollars required.
 
On a side note, why do the manufacturers have to even be involved at all. NASCAR started out as a bunch of good ole boys running their moonshine wheels around a dirt track, anybody could race. Let it go back to that only on the paved tracks with REAL cars ANYBODY can build.
I saw this happen with stock cars on the dirt circuit, rich people coming in with $40,000 engines and blowing the doors off the weekend racers using junkyard motors. Let NASCAR stand on it's own, if it can,
 
The muscle car era happened. Manufacturers quickly learned in the 60's that whoever "won on Sunday sold on Monday." It's been like that ever since.
 
NASCAR killed itself a long time ago. So did Detroit, or should I say the UAW.

But I think the Prez should stay out of it, things are starting to feel a little russian around here.
 
It was an April Fools prank perpetrated by Car and Driver

Ya never can tell, there's been enough January, February and March pranks done by those fools in Washington DC that it's hard to tell anymore...
 
National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) where's the stock? Where can I buy at the dealer what I saw on the track?
 
Ya never can tell, there's been enough January, February and March pranks done by those fools in Washington DC that it's hard to tell anymore...
I believed it at first. I just heard this morning on Fox News about it being a prank
 
If there weren't so many people employed in the circuit, I'd love to see NeckCAR disappear. It's slow, low tech, boring to watch racing. Granted the teams don't and never will spend F1 money, but their product is just horrible to watch. I will watch a few laps when they go to Watkins Glenn. It's hilarious watching those guys trying to turn right!

p.s.
An F1 engine costs as much as an entire NASCAR vehicle (about $400k). Top F1 teams spend around $300M per season.
 
It's slow, low tech, boring to watch racing. Granted the teams don't and never will spend F1 money, but their product is just horrible to watch. I will watch a few laps when they go to Watkins Glenn. It's hilarious watching those guys trying to turn right!,...
It is fun to watch the cars on a road course. I wish they'd let them run the cars at Talladega and Daytona with real engines, of course I also wish they'd have let Dodge run a new Charger body with a Hemi,...

Oh well, 'won't happen.

...,An F1 engine costs as much as an entire NASCAR vehicle (about $400k). Top F1 teams spend around $300M per season.
That's a good thing, is it?
 
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