Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Speedway Children’s Charities Teams With The NASCAR Foundation And Motorsports Charities To Offer Fans The Ride Of A Lifetime


CHARLOTTE, N.C. (Feb. 20, 2010) – The NASCAR Foundation has teamed up with Speedway Children’s Charities and several other motorsports charities to offer fans the experience of a lifetime by taking a lap around the track with their favorite NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver and help support children’s organizations across the country through the “Ride of A Lifetime” charity auctions.

Lucky race fans will have the chance to ride in the pre-race parade lap with their favorite driver at several race tracks prior to NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races throughout the 2010 season. The pre-race parade lap rides with select drivers will be available through both online and live auctions throughout the season at 10 race tracks based on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season schedule including Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Atlanta Motor Speedway, Texas Motor Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Infineon Raceway and New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Speedway Children’s Charities has partnered with The NASCAR Foundation, the official host of charity auctions on NASCAR.COM, to run the online auctions for rides at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Infineon Raceway and New Hampshire Motor Speedway, while live driver auctions will be held in Las Vegas and at both races at Texas Motor Speedway.

The Ride of A Lifetime program launched this week with bidding on the first event at Atlanta Motor Speedway on March 7. Fans can bid on the chance to ride with a number of drivers including Greg Biffle, Clint Bowyer, Jeff Burton, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Carl Edwards, Jeff Gordon, Robby Gordon, Denny Hamlin, Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne, Matt Kenseth, Brad Keselowski, Bobby Labonte, Joey Logano, Mark Martin, Jamie McMurray, Ryan Newman, David Ragan, David Reutimann, Scott Speed, Tony Stewart, Martin Truex Jr., and Brian Vickers. Rides start at $500.

All of the proceeds from the Ride of A Lifetime program will benefit numerous children’s organizations across the country through The NASCAR Foundation and Speedway Children’s Charities.

For more information, a list of auction dates and locations, or to bid on a ride with your favorite driver, please visit www.sccrideofalifetime.com or www.nascar.com/foundation.


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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Ratings slide tied to motorsports' move


For the first time in 34 years, the Daytona 500 wasn't on the FM dial in Charlotte last weekend.

Motorsports are moving this year from WSOC-FM (103.7), their home since 1976, to sports station WFNZ-AM ("Fan" 610).

Charlotte, the heartland of NASCAR, without a strong FM signal for the races?

It's another sign of the fast-changing media landscape, particularly regarding sports programming.

While motorsports have dedicated fans, the ratings have been dipping in radio along with a three-year slide for TV. This year's Daytona 500 TV ratings were off about 15 percent from last year, though there were two long viewer-bleeding delays while the track was repaired.

And a new challenge for radio is the personal people meter, which will be introduced in Charlotte this year. Racing is one of those formats that doesn't do as well under the new measuring devices.

"It was a business decision" to move the races to AM, says D.J. Stout, WFNZ's operations manager, one he says he's thrilled with. His station has added Tar Heels sports and the Bobcats broadcasts, and he says NASCAR belongs there, too.

"I just wish the race didn't have a two-hour delay because of potholes," he says.

"It's a sports station," says Bill Schoening, market manager for CBS Radio's Charlotte stations, which include both WSOC-FM and WFNZ-AM. "It'll allow a further connection between the talk shows and the broadcasts."

David Hyatt, president of Concord-based Motor Racing Network, says he was surprised by the switch "with the racing industry based here."

Most of MRN's affiliates are FM stations, with about 450 stations carrying Sunday cup races during the season.

Nationally, there have been concerns at some stations about what the new personal people meters will mean for race ratings, but he says he thinks with proper promotion motorsports will continue to thrive on radio.

Cheryl Knight, director of affiliates for MRN, says WSOC-FM was the No. 1 station in Charlotte on Sunday afternoons during racing, according to Arbitron figures.

MRN has talked to other Charlotte stations about picking up the coverage, but no one was prepared this season. "My biggest hope is that WSOC will come around and put the cup races back on the FM," Knight said. "We'd like to continue the relationship for years to come."

Racing won't entirely disappear from WSOC-FM. May and October races at Charlotte Motor Speedway will still be carried on the station. Race fans on the northern end of the city can also get racing from WTQR-FM (104.1) out of Greensboro.

Station still on standby

Technical problems are delaying the debut of WZGV-AM ("The Groove" 730).

Lanny Ford, general manager of the station that will feature classic hits of the late '60s to early '80s, had hoped to have WZGV on the air in early February. Now it looks like it will be early March.

"Weather messed us up some with construction delays," said Ford. Now tests on the transmitter in Belmont are being conducted. Ford says he's just awaiting FCC approval to launch.

Media movers

News 14 Carolina anchor Heather Childers has left the Time Warner Cable channel after eight years. That leaves chief meteorologist Jeff Crum and sports director Mike Solarte as the last of the original on-camera workers at News 14 there since for the station's launch in 2002. ...

Natalie Pasquarella moves up from the WSOC (Channel 9) morning newscast to 10 p.m. anchor on sister station WAXN (Channel 64) and will also co-anchor Channel 9's "Eyewitness News at 5:30 p.m." with Blair Miller beginning at the end of March. "They told me they thought I was a great fit for the shows, and I think I said 'yes' immediately ... I thought, wow, I get to sleep in until 8 in the morning now," says Pasquarella, who was anchor in her native Steubenville, Ohio, before moving to Channel 9 in 2008 ...

Replacing Pasquarella on the morning and midday news will be Robyn McGlohn, formerly morning anchor at the NBC affiliate in Huntsville, Ala. ... Former Channel 9 anchor Kim Brattain will travel to Haiti next month with the Charlotte-based charitable group A Hand Up for Haiti. A medical team will spend a week in the countryside, and Brattain will send video blogs and develop a documentary ...

Bonita "Bo" Griffin, the S.C. native best remembered locally as a host of "Blue Ribbon" on the old Turner South network, died of intestinal cancer at age 51 ... From the Facebook site "Friends and Fans of Jon Robinson," where news of the former TV anchor's struggle against drug addiction is posted: "We feel we have a responsibility to report that Jon left the 'Refuge' treatment program in Ohio over the weekend. He apparently went on a binge but has checked himself in to the detox center in Mecklenburg County and promises to get into another treatment program. Anyone who knows about addiction treatment knows it often takes several tries to stick." ... That was Monroe's Jason Looney playing a bell clerk in this week's episode of the CW's "One Tree Hill."


Monday, March 1, 2010

Honda 2010 Motorsports Overview


TOKYO, – February 19, 2010 – (Motor Sports Newswire) – In its motorsports activities, the symbol of Honda’s challenging spirit, the company has aimed for the world’s top level from the days of its founding and taken on challenges in a variety of racing categories. Last year marked Honda’s 50th anniversary of first racing at the Isle of Man TT, in the Road Racing World Championship Grand Prix (WGP). With the know-how and challenging spirit cultivated in its motorsports activities, Honda will develop activities to meet more customers’ expectations. The company will bring joy to customers in each racing category and share with them the dreams and excitement generated by these activities.

1. Motorsports Strategy

- Motorcycle activities

In the MotoGP, the premier class of the Road Racing World Championship Grand Prix (WGP), the Repsol Honda factory team will compete with two riders: Dani Pedrosa and Andrea Dovizioso, while the satellite team will enter three teams with four riders. Their machine, the RC212V has been matured to develop a more highly competitive model. Through improvement of both team structure and machines, Honda will take on the challenge of winning all three championship titles, capturing the rider’s title as well as the team and constructor’s.

The Moto2 class has been established as a new WGP racing category this season. Honda will participate in this category as the sole official engine supplier. Honda will supply all teams with engines developed exclusively for the Moto2 class but derived from the in-line 4-cylinder engine of Honda’s commercially sold, supersports model CBR600RR.

Repsol Montesa Honda will compete in the World Trial Championship Series (WCT), entering two Honda riders in this class: Toni Bou, who puts up an impressive set of skills, and Takahisa Fujinami, a veteran Japanese rider. Honda aims to capture both the rider’s and manufacturer’s titles as it did last season.

Honda will carry out a wide range of racing activities that include Suzuka 8hours Endurance Road Race, all categories of the All-Japan Championship Series, and international championships, and compete in each race aiming for the highest height.

- Automobile activities

In North America, Honda began its participation in open wheel racing in 2003 and has been the sole engine supplier to the IRL(R) IndyCar(R) Series since 2006. Once again this year, Honda will provide all teams with a V8 HI10R engine running on 100% ethanol fuel. Japanese drivers show full participation in the IRL(R), including Hideki Mutoh racing for Newman/Haas/Lanigan Racing and Takuma Sato, who was active in Formula One, racing for the KV Racing Technology team this season.

For racing activities within Japan, Honda will compete in the Super GT Series with a newly developed HSV-010 GT, entering five teams and five race cars. As part of the Honda GT Project, this new machine was developed under the leadership of Honda R&D Co., Ltd. with the collaboration of M-TEC Co., Ltd. and Dome Co., Ltd. With this machine in hand, Honda is shooting for a title win in this machine’s debut.

In Formula Nippon, where Honda won the dual titles of driver and team championship last season, Honda will enter three teams and equip five cars with the 3.4-liter V-8 HR10E engine.
With the objective of developing drivers who can claim the podium at top-level races both inside and outside of Japan, Honda will actively strive to develop young racers through the Honda Formula Dream Project (HFDP). Honda will promote the cultivation of new talent through the Suzuka Circuit Racing School Kart (SRS-K) and Suzuka Circuit Racing School Formula (SRS-F) racing schools in addition to Formula Challenge Japan (FCJ), the Japanese Formula 3 Championship and Formula Nippon.

2. Expanding the Popularity of Motorsports

Mobilityland Corporation will continue to host racing events and actively create venues and opportunities for people to watch, participate in, and enjoy racing, contributing to the further growth of motorsports culture in Japan.

Mobilityland will be hosting the Grand Prix of Japan, Round 2 of the Road Racing World Championship; the Grand Prix of Japan, Round 3 of the World Trial Championship Series at Twin Ring Motegi; and the Japanese Grand Prix, Round 16 of the 2010 Formula One World Championship at Suzuka International Racing Course. Through these races, the company provides fans with opportunities to watch and feel a variety of Japanese and international motorsports events including these premier two- and four-wheel races.

To provide Honda vehicle owners with opportunities to watch, participate, and enjoy, the Enjoy Honda program will be held again this year and is scheduled for Suzuka Circuit on April 17-18 (Sat.-Sun.) at the same time as the Suzuka 2&4 Race and for Twin Ring Motegi on August 7-8 (Sat.-Sun.) during Formula Nippon Round 4.

The Honda Exciting Cup One-Make Race – Civic Series will also continue this year, with events held in a variety of areas where customers can participate and enjoy.

To read the full Honda release with the complete “Overview of Motorcycle Racing Strategy” and “Overview of Automobile Racing Strategy”, please go to http://world.honda.com/news/2010/c100219Motorsports-Overview/.
About Honda

Honda Motor Co., Ltd. (TSE:7267/NYSE:HMC/LSE:HNDA.L) is one of the leading manufacturers of automobiles and power products and the largest manufacture of motorcycles in the world. Honda has always sought to provide genuine satisfaction to people worldwide. The result is more than 120 manufacturing facilities in 30 countries worldwide, producing a wide range of products, including motorcycles, ATVs, generators, marine engines, lawn and garden equipment and automobiles that bring the company into contact with over 19 million customers annually. For more information, please visit http://world.honda.com .


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