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8/18/09, 2:36 AM |
#111
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2008 Posts: 21 |
kirk, how many races have you PAID to get into? ill bet the over under is 0 have fun gladhanding everyone
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8/18/09, 2:40 AM |
#112
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Posts: n/a
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Ron Shuman was the biggest beneficiary of Hoosier Tire money in the country during SCRA's prime. It was the reason the USAC/SCRA co-sanctioned shows never got off the ground: SCRA wanted a Hoosier RR, USAC was open tire back then.
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8/18/09, 2:55 AM | #113 | ||
Member
Join Date: Nov 2008 Posts: 75 |
Quote:
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8/18/09, 5:45 AM |
#114
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Posts: n/a
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8/18/09, 7:49 AM |
#115
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007 Posts: 4,041 |
Kirk; To borrow an analogy from Hans Christian Anderson it seems that, while you are admiring the emperor's new clothes, many folks are noticing the fact that he is indeed naked.
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8/18/09, 8:14 AM |
#116
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2008 Posts: 38 |
A word about Kirk and his "free races" I have never seen anyone with as much passion and caring for grassroots racing as this kid. When we first met him in 2003 he was this dusty face kid running around the pits getting racer interviews and posting them on the web along with race reports, sleeping in his car going from race to race making no money , paying his own gas, barely eating, going to school and putting everything on the line to support racers in the press and to have a career in racing. He is no different than the guys who are out there on the trail riding 16 hours and working on the racecar all night during the week to get a chance to tee it up and race their guts out on Fri and Sat . He is a racer and that is why the drivers, car owners and sponsors respect him . At least this one does
He is smart and has been closely observing USAC and many other grass roots series for years. He has also had a spin in the big time. We are lucky to have him and his no-fear of expressing opinions attitiude. Kirk , thanks for your tireless and mostly thankless efforts to keep it real. Steve Pruett |
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8/18/09, 8:39 AM |
#117
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Member
Join Date: May 2009 Posts: 15 |
JMO Not saying I agree 100% with spridge but what is the point of turning this thread into what he hasn’t or has done?
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8/18/09, 8:55 AM |
#118
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007 Posts: 243 |
And about Ron Shuman: He was one of my favorite racers and I thought he did a helluva job running the SCRA. I think he does a great job. But am I right that he was basically mutineed against by his own club? He had a club, and I thought he treated them quite well, and between the racers and tracks, he was basically forced out. So apparently quite a few people were unhappy with him too! Am I wrong?
I do believe USAC came out west and promised television and more money...Of course none of that happened. Shu got screwed by USAC. Ask the guys out west. I am sure you are best friends with all of them. I would guess most would like to go back to the Shuman days. I personally would like to see Shuman come out to Indiana and but USAC down. Sure USAC will always be there but I think most would run a Shuman deal if it was done right. He had the right formula and it was taking off. Usac took it as a threat to their kingdom. Came out west an made promises that they still can not deliver. I do not see the west coast car count at Sprint Week like we did when Shuman brought his boys out. By the way are you even old enough to watch the man race? probably not.
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Last edited by Stagger; 8/18/09 at 8:59 AM. |
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8/18/09, 9:01 AM |
#119
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007 Posts: 1,474 |
Well... According to him he gets invited into the USAC President's office all the time and has his brain picked. Maybe PRI magazine should interview Spridge.......
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8/18/09, 9:09 AM |
#120
Re: Kevin Miller experiment
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Posts: n/a
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One thing that I think gets lost in these conversations (this was stimulated by the discussion about television) is that USAC is far, far from great shape financially. There have been a succession of blows beginning with the loss of the IRL and in particular the 500, many people forget that that the US GP was sanctioned by USAC and was not an insignificant source of revenue, and the last television deal was a dollars and cents disaster. You have to pay for television now and at the moment USAC doesn't have a Lucas Oil or something similar to support them. There have been a variety of cutbacks to keep the ship from taking on more water. Any rehash of the reasons this happened is irrelevant at this time except for those areas where history should not be repeated. Two important area of historical context is the once golden road to NASCAR has narrowed considerably - and some of the growth in areas like midget racing involved the emergence of the wealthy family bankrolling a racing operation (I'm not being critical of this - we all do whatever we can to forward the aspirations and dreams of our kids) as opposed to the "sportsman" owner (like Ralph Potter, Dave Calderwood etc). Then certainly the economy - meaning finding Lucas Oil has become more difficult. For teams in the end it seems like some have decided to race closer to home (Bloomington for one has had excellent sprint car counts) and think even more seriously about the bottom line (i.e. the Billy Puterbaugh debate that erupted on this board). People mention what happened at Belleville and often point to the car count drop and attribute that to USAC - but BELLEVILLE changed (as did Knoxville). It almost used to be more about the party (should have been the Gretchen Wilson Belleville Nationals) than the racing. It was pure fun. Picnics, squirt gun fights during the qualification draw, stink bombs and cutting up at the Belle-Villa motel- then all of a sudden it was knit-brow serious. In the past people would haul their car out there (in better economic times) and if they raced pretty well and made the A that was great - it was more of a vacation. It became less fun when times got tougher, the chance of being truly competitive diminished, and all you had at the end of the day was a depleted checkbook.
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Last edited by psullivan; 8/18/09 at 9:12 AM. |
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