Tuesday, May 27, 2003

NASCAR rains on drivers


Decision to halt Coca-Cola 600 met with disdain from competitors

The Associated Press

CONCORD, N.C. - Ryan Newman stood in the garage, held out his hands and looked skyward. The rain had stopped, which made NASCAR's decision to halt the Coca-Cola 600 even more puzzling.

"It looks like it's stopped, and it's a 600-mile race, so it would seem to me we've got some more racing to do," Newman said. "But I don't get to make calls like that so I guess we'll just go home with what we've got."

What Newman got was a fifth-place finish in Sunday night's race, which was stopped after 276 laps and a brief, but heavy rain shower.

Jimmie Johnson was declared the winner after NASCAR called the race 186 miles before the finish, giving him a two-race sweep of the showcase events at Lowe's Motor Speedway.

He also won The Winston May 17, picking up a $1 million payday for that victory.

No one knows what might have happened had racing resumed.

Johnson thinks he was good enough to win - no matter what.

Or perhaps Matt Kenseth would have given Roush Racing its fifth consecutive victory in the longest race of the season, which is considered one of the crown jewels on the NASCAR schedule.

Instead, Kenseth was credited with a second-place finish and went home disappointed.

"I sure wish we would have waited it out a little bit and had a shot at it," Kenseth said. "I'm real thankful and real grateful to finish second and to be with such a great race team, but the racer in me still wanted to race."

When NASCAR called the race, president Mike Helton said it would take three hours to dry the track. Plus, the weather radar showed more rain on the way.

But three hours after the decision, Johnson was still making the celebratory rounds through the corporate suites at Lowe's Motor Speedway and the rain had yet to return.

"Unfortunately in some deals, Mother Nature wins," Helton said. "We did everything we could."

That was up for debate among the teams.

The schedule for the Coca-Cola 600 is unique. Qualifying is on Thursday, and Winston Cup teams are not required to be at the race track on Friday, an extremely rare day off.

But it rained all day Thursday, and NASCAR sent the teams home with orders to come back Friday for a full work day. Early morning showers delayed the start of on-track activities on Friday, stretching the qualifying day even further into the night.

So teams were puzzled when the sanctioning body quickly called an end to the actual race.

"I can't understand it," said Billy Wilburn, crew chief for Rusty Wallace. "We can spend an extra day to get qualified, but we can't wait another 15 minutes to see if we can get this race in? I feel like I've been cheated."

JOHNSON GETS NEW DEAL: Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus received five-year contract extensions from Hendrick Motorsports Monday, a day after completing an impressive two-race sweep at Lowe's Motor Speedway.

Lowe's, primary sponsor of the No. 48 Chevrolet, also agreed to stay with the team another five years. Lowe's Motor Speedway is considered the home track for Johnson and his team because of the sponsorship situation.