Wednesday

2012 Silverstone MotoGP Post-Race Round Up: A British Hero, Tire Problems And A Troubled Marriage

For the past few years, attending a MotoGP round has been a disheartening experience for most British fans. After sitting in traffic for several hours, they then faced a day getting soaked to the skin while watching their local heroes - if any were actually on the grid - circulating around at the rear of the pack. At the end of the day, they faced yet more hours sitting in a traffic chaos in a downpour to get home again. They loved it, of course, but it tested their courage.

2012 would be different. The miserable weather magically disappeared for race day - it was far from perfect, but it remained largely dry - Scott Redding got on the podium in Moto2, and Cal Crutchlow put on a heroic and brilliant performance in MotoGP. It might be fair to question the wisdom of Crutchlow's decision to lie about his foot not being broken and race anyway, but there is no question about his bravery or pain threshold, nor, after starting at the back of the grid and slicing through the field to finish 6th, matching the pace of race winner Jorge Lorenzo, about his ability. The British fans have a hero again. More than one, in fact.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/MotoGPMatters/~3/l3_1HBSNrpw/2012_silverstone_motogp_post_race_round_.html

Philippe Alliot Cliff Allison Fernando Alonso Giovanna Amati

Photo of the Week: Ferrari 599 GTO shot in Belgium

Photo of the Week: Ferrari 599 GTO in Belgium

An incredible picture of a Ferrari 599 GTO has already made its way into our ?Photo of the Week? a couple of weeks back, and even though the latest addition to our weekly promotion of stunning car photography features the same car, the following GTO shot by Willem Rodenburg showcases Ferrari?s fastest production car from a completely different angle.

Shot in a desolate forest in Brasschaet, Antwerp, Belgium the 599 GTO is showcased from a high-angle which helps to capture the aggressive stance of the car, while the light bursting through the trees directly behind the car help to create one of our very favorite GTO photos.

Being Ferrari?s fastest production car produced to date, and despite the upcoming F70 set to supersede the old Enzo and the 599 GTO, it still produces an impressive 660HP at 8,250 rpm and 457lb-ft of torque thanks to the 6.0-liter V12 engine directly behind the front axle.

As a result, the 599 GTO can launch to 62 mph in less than 3.4 seconds before hitting a top speed of 208 mph.

Be sure to check out Rodenburg?s facebook and flickr pages!

Photo of the Week: Ferrari 599 GTO shot in Belgium originally appeared on topspeed.com on Tuesday, 19 June 2012 16:00 EST.

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Source: http://www.topspeed.com/cars/car-news/photo-of-the-week-ferrari-599-gto-shot-in-belgium-ar131107.html

Tony Crook Art Cross Geoff Crossley Chuck Daigh

Tuesday

How McLaren got back to the top

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/03/lowe_confident_of_mclaren_succ.html

Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant Felice Bonetto Jo Bonnier

Happy Hour: Should NASCAR shorten its season?

Welcome to the latest Happy Hour mailbag! You know how these work: You write us with your best rant/ joke/one-liner at happyhournascar@yahoogroups.com or on Twitter at @jaybusbee, we respond to your messages, everyone goes away with a smile on their face.

Summertime! And while the great majority of us don't get the time off, we can still cast longing looks out the window and dream of the days when we used to just sit around and do nothing. Got a good summer memory that can be printed? Send it along here and maybe it'll make the cut next week. For now, your letters:

Any chance that Rusty Wallace's idea of cutting back to 32 races goes anywhere?

? Josey Wales
Via Tuesday chat

It's a great idea in theory. Wallace is right, there's too much supply. Do we really need two races at [track redacted to prevent hurt feelings]? We don't, and you know it. Thing is, how do you get that toothpaste back into the tube? Cutting races means cutting revenue, and no track owner is going to volunteer that in this economy. The only hope is if there's a track that's fundamentally losing money year in and year out; then it becomes a lot more justifiable. If removing a race improves the bottom line, there'd be some careful consideration of the idea.

Fortunately, NASCAR doesn't have the same sacrosanct schedule that other sports have; season-long records aren't as big of a deal in NASCAR as in the NFL or baseball, and thus you wouldn't have people rioting the way they would if you were to lop a dozen games off the baseball slate. Back in Richard Petty's day, they used to run more than 1,500 races a year (may be a slight exaggeration) and so there's not the same veneration for a certain schedule length as there might otherwise be.

Cutting the schedule would cause pain, yes, but it could help tighten up the product. Just be sure to keep your non-NASCAR-watching family and friends in the dark; you don't want them learning you suddenly have four extra free weekends. There, honey-do lists await.

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The Coke 600 was the typical 2012 race: ride around in a train and make points. There has been a lack of aggression all season long. Drivers are not taking any chances because there is the possibility of losing more than gaining. This has led to long green-flag runs and lack of cautions. I cannot recall, recently, a season that started this way. Is it because Carl and Tony tied last year and one point would have given Carl the cup?

? Sean
San Diego

I think that's a factor, but you came closer to the point earlier: the points system penalizes you for bad finishes more than it benefits you for good ones. You screw up and finish 35th in a race, you're effectively screwed for a month or more while you try to make up those points; by contrast, you ride around and finish 10th, and you're still right in the mix.

How do we solve this? One way would be to remove the extreme penalty; everybody under, say, 30th place gets the same amount of points. But that smacks of "everyone gets a trophy," so what about the other way: pumping up points for top-10 finishes. As every Black Friday shopper knows, there's got to be an incentive to push harder; right now, the disincentive is too high.

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To borrow from Slim Pickens, "What in the wide, wide world of sports is a-goin' on here?" When did Dale Earnhardt Jr. become possibly not only the most consistent driver at Hendrick, but also also all of NASCAR? No one tops him with nine top 10s in 12 races. And he has no DNFs or even a finish lower than 17th. I know the entire world is hung up on the "when will he win?" debate/conundrum. However, the pairing with Letarte is obviously working, and Junior has grown as a driver. If he continues to show the same maturity, patience, and tenacity (especially on the inevitable weeks when one doesn't have the best car on the track), the wins will come. Just like soccer or hockey, if you keep clanging enough off the goal posts, eventually something is going to go in.

? Eric
Washington, D.C.

Oh, now you've done it. You've both given Junior Nation reason to hope and Junior Hater Nation reason to rage. But you're correct, Earnhardt is in exactly the right position (well, not EXACTLY; that would be in front of the pack). As Edwards showed last year, all you need is one win to challenge for a championship. It'll come, soon enough, but we're through predicting it for now.

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When Brad Keselowski hit Tony Stewart and spun him on pit road and Smoke proceeded to do a 180 burnout on pit road during green flag pit stops and almost took out another driver, why didn't NASCAR give him a penalty for the boneheaded move on his part? He complains about other drivers driving like idiots, but that was clearly a big time incident that did not happen and could have caused some serious injury! Your thoughts?

? Jamie Herschel
New Philadelphia, Ohio

My thoughts are that if Stewart was that close to hitting anyone, he'd have been nailed with a penalty. NASCAR brass often appears to have a tin ear when it comes to charges of differing treatment for different drivers, but in this case, based on the recent Kurt Busch case, I'm thinking NASCAR would have certainly slapped Stewart with some sort of penalty if he'd done something to warrant that. Then again, maybe they, like Keselowski, were afraid of Stewart's reaction if they tried to fine him. You never know.

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With the recent Hall of Fame class being inducted, I was reminded that Bruton Smith didn't make the ballot this year. Some say he's a Hall of Fame track promoter. I've always thought of him as a money-grubber who had no imagination as he brought cookie cutter tracks to new markets. What do you think? Is Bruton Smith a money-grubber, a Hall of Fame track promoter, or both?

? Eric E.
Home of Cousin Carl

Seeing as how Smith smiled as he took a race away from my hometown track, I may not be the best to comment on this. Like everyone who's achieved a certain level of status, he's made a few enemies, but he wouldn't still be around if he wasn't good at his job. I say he deserves a nomination ... and then deserves to get that nomination revoked until he can amass enough people to vote him in.

And on that note, we're out. Thanks to all our writers this week. You want in? Fire up the computer and hit us with whatever's on your mind, NASCAR-wise, at happyhournascar@yahoogroups.com. You can find Yahoo! Sports' NASCAR coverage on Facebook right here, and you can follow me on Twitter at @jaybusbee and on Facebook here. Make sure to tell us where you're from. We'll make you famous!

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/happy-hour-nascar-shorten-season-201211743.html

Andrea de Cesaris Francois Cevert Eugene Chaboud Jay Chamberlain

Silly is the season?

It must be getting into the Silly Season already. We have had a lot of stories of late about Sebastian Vettel perhaps moving to Ferrari in 2014, after Mark Webber has spent a year in the Italian team. That does not sound right to me. At the start of 2011 Vettel signed a deal for [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/06/14/silly-is-the-season/

Marco Apicella Mбrio de Araъjo Cabral Frank Armi Chuck Arnold

European Grand Prix 2011 Highlights

The Formula One road show will once again land in Valencia this weekend for the European Grand Prix. Although overtaking is usually at a minimum on the Spanish coastal circuit, it has still produced some memorable moments in its relatively short time in F1. With searing temperatures and a narrow track layout, there is potential [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/UHSVaUQ7wU8/european-grand-prix-2011-highlights

Frank Dochnal Jose Dolhem Martin Donnelly Carlo Abate

Blue Crown Spark Plug Specials (Part 3)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/VHo_LFZk2TM/blue-crown-spark-plug-specials-part-3.html

Alberto Crespo Antonio Creus Larry Crockett Tony Crook

Monday

2012 Month Of May In Photos

Source: http://www.16thandgeorgetown.com/2012/05/2012-month-of-may-in-photos.html

Tommy Byrne Giulio Cabianca Phil Cade Alex Caffi

How I Saw It? The Adrenaline is Still Flowing Edition

Programming Note: In response to a few questions I have received regarding my pre and post-race reports from new readers, I feel I should shed a bit more light on my ?style?. I have always contended that I am not … Continue reading

Source: http://anotherindycarblog.wordpress.com/2012/06/11/how-i-saw-it-the-adrenaline-is-still-flowing-edition/

Henry Banks Fabrizio Barbazza John Barber Skip Barber

Power Rankings: You know who?s No. 1

The race is done, and that means it's time for Power Rankings. Each week throughout the season, we'll size up who's rising and who's falling, based on current standings, behind-the-scenes changes, expected staying power, recent history and general gut feelings. It is not scientific, nor is it meant to be. And remember, whoever your favorite driver is, we're biased against him and like someone else better. We continue with a guy who likes his perch...

1. Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Well, here we are. Junior got his win. And, yes, the sun still rose in the east on Monday morning. Will this solve all of NASCAR's woes? Of course not. But it does mean we'll have to come up with a new storyline each week. Too bad. We'll miss you, "Can Junior win this week?" article. Last week: 3.

2. Matt Kenseth: Get this: Kenseth has eight top-5s and 11 top-10s in 15 races. He's also placed in the top 10 in 10 of the last 11 races. (That 11th? He placed 11th. Symmetry!) In other words, Kenseth is doing exactly what Carl Edwards did last year with a consistent run of finishes. But did he learn that one win isn't enough? Last week: 2.

3. Jimmie Johnson: You know that Junior Nation was absolutely terrified at the thought of Jimmie Johnson coming up hard behind Earnhardt as the laps wound down. Sure, Jimmie is as sentimental as anyone, but would he lay back just to let Junior win? We'll never know, fortunately for the 88 crowd. Last week: 1.

4. Greg Biffle: Another strong outing from the Biff, who was one of the faster cars all week at Michigan. The guy is serious, folks, and we're ready to declare him a legit championship contender. Which means he'll now go on a run of five straight 30th-place finishes. Sorry, man. Last week: 5.

5. Tony Stewart: Tony, we know your kneejerk reaction is to disagree with whatever the prevailing narrative is, but did you really need to grump about Junior winning a race with your "it isn't a national holiday" line? (Plus, it actually was a national holiday. Father's Day.) Anyway, ease up. It's good news for everybody. Last week: 7.

6. Kevin Harvick: Another good weekend for Harvick, the automotive if not literal heir to Dale Earnhardt Sr. Which allows me to vent about the goofiest element of Junior's win: the whole "he won on Father's Day in a black car" nonsense, like that was supposed to mean something. Look, correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm fairly sure that almost all the other NASCAR drivers have fathers too. And how can Junior outrun his father's shadow if everyone keeps draping it over him?. Last week: 8.

7. Martin Truex Jr.: Hey, guess who's now got the most famous super-long losing streak in NASCAR? Truex's dates back to 2007, which means it always was longer than Junior's, but now? Now the impending free agent has nowhere else to hide. Last week: 9.

8. Clint Bowyer: Rawhide has been quietly putting together some quality races over the last few weeks. He's in ninth place, with a bit of distance between himself and Brad Keselowski in 10th. He'll need to win a race to make things easier; it's about to get very crowded at the low end of the Chase picture. Last week: 12.

9. Kasey Kahne. Another rough go for Kahne, who seems back to his low-finishing (or is it high-finishing? how about bad-finishing) ways. With the logjam of one-win cats in the teens, standings-wise, Kahne will need another victory to distinguish himself. Good thing he's won at Sonoma before. Last week: 6.

10. Denny Hamlin: Another rough afternoon for Denny, but oh, that was a fiendish fire he suffered. All three JGR cars flamed out, literally or metaphorically, in Michigan. Time to panic at Gibbs? Probably not, but time to be a tiny bit concerned, definitely. Last week: 4.

Marcos Ambrose11. Marcos Ambrose: Ambrose is one of those guys who always seems right on the very edge of breaking through big, and you wonder exactly how much of that is talent and how much is based on the cars he's driving. Of course, he keeps running like he has lately and he'll have virtually his pick of teams when his contract's up. Last week: NR.

Jeff Gordon12. Jeff Gordon: Hey, look who's starting to put together some decent runs! Of course, Gordon is ranked 20th in the standings, so he's not exactly able to coast now. Can he make the wild card? Sure, but it'll take two wins in the last 11 races, minimum. That's a tall order. Last week: 12.

Dropping out of the rankings: Joey Logano, Kyle Busch. Tough week for Joe Gibbs Racing.

Lucky Dog: Juan Pablo Montoya. Dude finished 8th, matching his best run of the season. And in honor of that, we won't even mention the jet dryer. Whoops.

DNF: Kyle Busch. Three bad engines, three weeks in a row? Sounds like Kyle Busch has made an enemy somewhere. Could it be ... Junior? (Probably not. But that'd be a great story, wouldn't it?)

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/power-rankings-know-no-1-183404648--nascar.html

Andrea de Cesaris Francois Cevert Eugene Chaboud Jay Chamberlain

Q&A With Alex Tagliani

Source: http://www.16thandgeorgetown.com/2012/05/q-with-alex-tagliani.html

Philippe Adams Walt Ader Kurt Adolff Fred Agabashian

CVC sells half-a-billion dollars worth of its stake in F1 | F1 Fanatic round-up

CVC sells half-a-billion dollars worth of its stake in F1 is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

In the round-up: CVC sells $500 million of its F1 stake ? Kimi looks for success in Valencia ? F1 bribe accused speaks to prosecutors

CVC sells half-a-billion dollars worth of its stake in F1 is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2012/06/17/f1-fanatic-roundup-176/

Walt Brown Warwick Brown Adolf Brudes Martin Brundle

Sunday

2012 Month Of May In Photos

Source: http://www.16thandgeorgetown.com/2012/05/2012-month-of-may-in-photos.html

Kenny Acheson Andrea de Adamich Philippe Adams Walt Ader

Video: Michigan preview, in which we discuss one Dale Earnhardt Jr.

It's Michigan time, and you know what that means: yet another round of stories on whether or not Dale Earnhardt Jr. can break his now-four-year-old loss streak. Can he do it at Michigan? Sure he can. Will he? Ah, that's where things get a wee bit tricky. Regardless, we discuss that, the repaving at the track, and other key matters of note heading into Michigan. Enjoy, friends.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/video-michigan-preview-discuss-one-dale-earnhardt-jr-201803890--nascar.html

Johnny Boyd David Brabham Gary Brabham Jack Brabham†

Who?s got the momentum heading to the Monster Mile?

Dover time! Who's got the momentum heading into the Monster Mile's confines? Jimmie Johnson? Kyle Busch? Greg Biffle? Kasey Kahne? Your favorite Yahoo! Sports Jays, Hart and Busbee, are here to kick around the storylines heading into Dover. Enjoy, and make your picks below.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/got-momentum-heading-monster-mile-121945151.html

Tony Brooks Alan Brown Walt Brown Warwick Brown

2012 Silverstone Moto3 Qualifying Practice Result: Two Men Dominate Qualifying

Results and summary of qualifying for the Moto3 class at Silverstone:

Race Details
2012

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/MotoGPMatters/~3/m0-vd-kgiQ0/2012_silverstone_moto3_qualifying_practi.html

Andrea de Cesaris Francois Cevert Eugene Chaboud Jay Chamberlain

2012 Silverstone Moto2 Qualifying Practice Result: One Man Controls Pole

Results:

Race Details
2012

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/MotoGPMatters/~3/h5NYQEMNAr8/2012_silverstone_moto2_qualifying_practi.html

Mike Beuttler Birabongse Bhanubandh Lucien Bianchi Gino Bianco