Friday, December 5, 2008

No I in NASCAR Team

DECEMBER 5 – Even in New York City, it is still sometimes possible to be overwhelmed. Cipriani is that kind of place.

Located just off 42nd street, the bank-turned-restaurant has the grandeur of a church. The Italian Renaissance style building comes complete with marble columns, a 65-foot ceiling, inlaid floors and massive chandeliers.

It can make a person feel very small. But NASCAR does love a challenge, and has a knack for rising to the occasion. Show them something big, and they’ll find a way to make it bigger.

On this particular day, the occasion in question was the annual NASCAR NMPA Myers Brothers Media Luncheon. Banners bearing the names of the top 12 drivers of 2008 – the guys who made the Chase for the Sprint Cup – covered those soaring columns floor to ceiling. Huge video screens played memorable moments from the racing season.

The room – and in case I haven’t made myself clear, it is absolutely huge – was packed with representatives from race tracks, NASCAR and its sponsor organizations, media members, and other invited guests. If someone wanted a “Who’s Who in NASCAR” photo opportunity, this was it.

Just to give you some idea of what I mean, seated at one table were Jim Hunter, vice president of corporate communications for NASCAR; Bob Bahre, former owner of New Hampshire Motor Speedway and his family; Humpy Wheeler, former president and generally manager of Lowe’s Motor Speedway; Gene Monahan, head athletic trainer for the New York Yankees; and two-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Tony Stewart.

And me, but I’m pretty sure that was just some mix-up in the seating assignments. I chose not to point the error out to anyone, for obvious reasons.

Next to the awards banquet itself on Friday night, the Myers Brothers luncheon is the biggest event of Champions Week. It’s like the special ceremony held the week before the Academy Awards telecast, where they give out the Oscars for things like technical achievement.

The difference is that for the technical Oscars, you know Russell Crowe is not going to be there to pay his respects to the guy receiving the award for best achievement in lighting, or best zombie makeup.

NASCAR, on the other hand, knows that without even the smallest piece of the engine, that machine just won’t roll. So everyone from 2008 Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson to NASCAR president Mike Helton to Brian France, chairman and CEO of NASCAR, was present to celebrate the achievements of those being honored.

One of my favorite moments each year at the Myers Brothers luncheon comes when the top 12 drivers are introduced and come out onto the stage one by one, until at the end they’re all standing there in a line for a group photo.

Obviously this takes some time, since there’s a nice round of applause for each guy. The 11th and 12th place finishers – this year, Matt Kenseth and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. – wind up having to stand out there for a pretty good while. Every year, the guys start talking to one another, and each driver that comes out joins in the conversation. Inevitably, something strikes them as funny.

By the time the champion comes out, everyone’s sort of standing there, a lot of them with their hands in their pockets, grinning and carrying on like school kids. They look like the Little Rascals. You can’t help but smile. It’s great reminder of how much they enjoy what they do out there on the race track every week. Because they have fun, we have fun. I love that.

Bob Bahre was the recipient of the Buddy Shuman Award, which honors individuals who have made significant contributions to racing. Mr. Bahre was one of the few award winners in the building who was honestly surprised by the recognition, which he credited not to himself, but to NASCAR supporters. “We might have built the thing, but it’s been the fans and drivers who have made it what it is,” he said.

Dale Earnhardt, Jr. gave some more love to the fans when he picked up his sixth consecutive Chex Cereals Most Popular Driver Award. No big surprise there. Junior received 1.2 million votes this year. I wonder how his new, full beard would fare if we put that up to a fan vote?

Team owner Richard Childress was the recipient of the NASCAR Home Depot Humanitarian Award, for his work in helping to establish a center for pediatric trauma at Wake Forest University.

The coolest looking trophy was the metallic glove presented to the No. 48 team for winning the Mechanix Wear Most Valuable Pit Award. Those guys might want to consider keeping that thing under heavy security; I couldn’t help but think about Michael Jackson and that famous glove from his career heyday. The 48 team stole that thunder this year. Especially during the Chase, they gave a whole new meaning to the term “Thriller”.

The day’s most emotional moment came when Jim Hunter accepted the NMPA Myers Brothers Award on behalf of the late – and truly great – photographer Thomas Taylor Warren. “T. Taylor,” as he was called, was a much-loved motorsports photographer who succumbed to Lou Gehrig’s disease in October of this year, at the age of 83. His loss has been keenly felt by the entire NASCAR community.

A lighter moment came when Chad Knaus, winner of the Champion Crew Chief Award, told a great story about a football coach team owner Rick Hendrick brought to the shop to serve as a motivational speaker. When asked if the No. 48 team would win the championship in 2008, Knaus replied, “We’re going to do our best”.

The coach’s rejoinder was that sometimes one’s best isn’t good enough. “I told Mr. Hendrick that coach had better be glad the 48 team doesn’t play football,” Knaus said.

Most of the day’s awards went to big NASCAR names. Others were given to folks you might not immediately recognize. Each NASCAR official, for example, all those men and women who work in the pits during races to ensure that all goes well, were listed by name.

In a week basically set aside to honor one exceptional driver, the NASCAR NMPA Myers Brothers luncheon served as a nice reminder of the battery in the bunny, that one component that truly drives this great sport.

Teamwork.

– Cathy Elliott, LIVE from New York

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