GOOD OL' BORE OF NASCAR.Byline: STEVE DILBECK The cheaters are coming, and aren't you just so excited? Those rule-bendin', death-defyin', rebel-yellin' conglomerates masquerading as simple good ol' boys. It is Southern California's turn to host the strangest, would-be athletic event in the country. It's NASCAR NASCAR (National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing), organization that sanctions American stock-car races, est. 1948. It held its first race in Daytona Beach, Fla. , which is so huge it defies mortal logic. NASCAR, which has easily become America's most popular form of autoracing. NASCAR, which is so marketable its sponsors have sponsors. It's a phenomenon and I do not get it. I am absolutely amazed. Guys drive around a narrow oval in supposed stock cars at ridiculous speeds, trying to squeeze into miniscule min·is·cule adj. Variant of minuscule. Adj. 1. miniscule - very small; "a minuscule kitchen"; "a minuscule amount of rain fell" minuscule openings for hours at a time, and people are stunned when they go bouncing like pinballs? Where is the great attraction? If you like breathtaking turns and high- speed shenanigans shenanigans Noun, pl Informal 1. mischief or nonsense 2. trickery or deception [origin unknown] , drive the 405 some evening. NASCAR is the dullest major spectator activity in America. Ever actually gone to one of these goofy things? You sit crammed in the bleachers In The Bleachers is a podcast and website that focuses on Division I-A college football. It is recorded and aired weekly during college football season and features college football experts from the Big Ten, Big East, SEC, ACC, Pac 10, and Big 12 conferences. watching cars go flying by for mere seconds. They drive 500 miles and you see maybe 4 miles of the actual action. Oooh, be still my beating heart. You see almost no real racing, unless you're watching the monster video screen. Might as well stay home and save the ears. Listen, it is not a sport. Got that? Not a sport. A sporting event doesn't rely on something mechanical. It is not about who has the best engineers. Not about who has the best tires or spark plugs or cleanest motor oil. That's not to say the drivers aren't highly skilled, aren't courageous and don't sweat alot. But they're not athletes. Kobe Bryant Kobe Bean Bryant (born July 23 1978) is an American All-Star shooting guard in the National Basketball Association (NBA) who plays for the Los Angeles Lakers. flies past opponents who are all wearing the same clothes, playing on the same court and using the same ball. Dan Gable Dan Gable (born October 25, 1948 in Waterloo, Iowa), is a well-known American amateur wrestler. He is considered one of the greatest American amateur wrestlers of all time. wrestled his way through an entire Olympics without allowing a single point because of will and ability and training, not because he had a better carburetor. If a driver doesn't finish a race because his engine blows, that's about a machine, not athleticism. I used to watch my dad make some pretty nasty moves on Foothill Boulevard The following streets are named Foothill Boulevard:
This was all much easier to take when NASCAR was mostly this Southern abnormality that you could just sort of write off as a bunch of frustrated ex-moonshiners who still thought it was really cool to fly the Confederate flag and drive around in circles. NASCAR is big-time nationwide now, however, and this week it comes to Fontana for the Auto Club 500. Now this is a city that deserves something nice to happen to it, with its steel mill long closed and the once powerful Fontana High football team reduced to prep afterthought. No doubt it does wonders for the local economy, although NASCAR remains a tougher sell in Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, and the speedway can't fill its 90,000 seats. Maybe we're just too sophisticated, or at least, rational. Still, Fontana bellies up a week after "The Great American Race Great American Race may refer to:
That's supposed to be like the Super Bowl of auto racing -- only you don't play another regular-season game in the NFL NFL abbr. National Football League NFL (US) n abbr (= National Football League) → Fußball-Nationalliga the week after the Super Bowl. And wasn't Daytona an interesting race last weekend, in a soap opera soap opera Broadcast serial drama, characterized by a permanent cast of actors, a continuing story, tangled interpersonal situations, and a melodramatic or sentimental style. kind of way? Before the week began, Dale Earnhardt This article is about the elder Dale Earnhardt. For his son, see Dale Earnhardt, Jr.. For the racing team he founded, see Dale Earnhardt, Inc.. Ralph Dale Earnhardt, Sr. Jr. announced he wanted out of his racing contract, which only belonged to Dale Earnhardt Inc. Something about him and his step-mommy not getting along. Then five different drivers had to go without their crew chiefs, all suspended for cheating. They mostly did small things to give their cars slight advantages, because the cars are all so similar that any small advantage is seen as huge. Then they ran the race, which offered 400 miles as NASCAR's answer to insomnia, 100 miles of destruction derby This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details. This article has been tagged since September 2007. and two ultimately silly bonus miles that included yet another multi-car crash. Yet curiously not a yellow flag, as the rules state, allowing Kevin Harvick For the racing team owned by Kevin Harvick and his wife Delana, see . Kevin Michael Harvick (born December 8, 1975 in Bakersfield, California) is an American race car driver and car owner, competing in the NASCAR NEXTEL Cup and Busch Series for Richard Childress Racing, driving to sneak ahead of Mark Martin -- leading at the time of the crash -- by the width of a Ricky Bobby whisker. All that NASCAR high ground during the week as it suspended crews, and then it couldn't find its little yellow flag? And apparently people just ate it up. It killed in the ratings, an estimated 17.5 million tuned in to watch this snoozefest on wheels. P.T. Barnum laughs somewhere. The unspoken attraction to watching NASCAR, and all auto racing, is the thrill so many receive in viewing the crashes. There's nothing like the sound of metal scraping metal and cars going airborne. These are the same people who jam freeways, slowing to a crawl to get a good view of the accident on the other side of the interstate. If they actually ran these things for 500 miles without a crash, ratings would plummet. NASCAR would turn into lawnmower racing, though at least the grass would get trimmed. Crashes, of course, can lead to injuries, and in extreme cases, death. Three drivers have died at Daytona in the past 14 years, most notably, Dale Earnhardt Sr. There's something macabre about watching an event, and in the back of your mind, wondering if today someone will eat it for the final time. I get none of it. Truth be told, my mind isn't even open to it. I'd call it a sport for the easily entertained, but that would require that it was a sport. And entertaining. I would continue, but by now I'd be going in circles, and we all know how mind-numbing that can be. stephen.dilbeck@dailynews.com (818) 713-3607 |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion