Saturday

2014 Barcelona MotoGP FP3 Results: Bradl Posts A Scorcher

Stefan Bradl has topped the timesheets in the third session of free practice for the MotoGP class. The LCR Honda rider looked destined to have to battle through Q1, but a blistering lap at the end of the session saw him leap to the stop of the standings. Bradl dislodged Marc Marquez, who had been fast early and was circulating fast throughout, but ended the session in 2nd. Bradley Smith improved on his own very impressive time from yesterday, grabbing 3rd ahead of Dani Pedrosa, the Repsol Honda rider having found a big improvement since Friday.

The Movistar Yamahas ended the session in 5th and 6th, Jorge Lorenzo finishing ahead of Valentino Rossi, though both men showed a decent race pace later in the session. Aleix Espargaro was the only rider not to improve his time from Friday, but still managed a 7th fastest time and is through to Q2 on merit. Yonny Hernandez posted a very impressive lap on the Open Pramac Ducati, though his best times were posted in Rossi's slipstream. Hernandez still finished as best Ducati, ahead of factory rider Andrea Dovizioso, and the second Monster Tech 3 Yamaha rider Pol Espargaro.

Results:

Race Details
Round Number: 
7
2014

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/MotoGPMatters/~3/EHNgtDInhbU/2014_barcelona_motogp_fp3_results_bradl_.html

Eric Bernard Enrique Bernoldi Enrico Bertaggia Tony Bettenhausen

Friday

Matt Kenseth has a novel idea for the Sprint All-Star Race

With every All-Star Race, there's chatter about changing up the format and/or location of the race. 2014 is no different, especially after Jimmie Johnson has won the last two in dominating fashion.

The format of the race has been tweaked a lot. It isn't sacred. The location? Well, it has been sacred. Since its inception, the race has always been held at Charlotte Motor Speedway save for 1986 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Charlotte is home base for most teams, so that's an added benefit. But if you follow NASCAR at all, you know that a 1.5 mile track like Charlotte isn't the most conducive for close, side-by-side racing.

It's why switching location of the race has started to dominate that chatter. Should the race go to Bristol? Martinsville? Richmond? Opinions vary, but if there's a consensus, it'd be that the race should go to a short track.

Matt Kenseth likes the idea of moving the All-Star Race, but he suggests none of the three tracks mentioned above.

?Here?s what my idea for the All-Star race has always been ? this might not be popular, but I thought of this a couple year ago.� I think the All-Star race should move every year and I think it should go to a track that we don?t currently race at, but is equipped to have a NASCAR race.� I think it should go to Iowa and Milwaukee and St. Louis and Pikes Peak and maybe even Memphis�? you have to have enough grandstands.� I think it should move around and go to tracks like that�? I think that would be great for all those markets that don?t have a NASCAR race. I think you would sell them out whether that?s 30,000 or 40,000 people, whatever that is. I think the racing would be good and it?s not a points race. I think that would expose a lot of fans to our product live that don?t get to see it now and I think it would be fun.?

Kenseth's on to something here. NASCAR doesn't need the money from attendance at an All-Star Race. It can afford to host it at a track that doesn't seat 80,000 or more people and not even notice it on the overall bottom line. Butts in the seats isn't an issue.

NASCAR is looking for new fans, too. And what better opportunity to get people who may not be normally able to get to a race than to move it to a different market? With potentially good or surprising racing in store at a track where the Cup Series doesn't normally race at, you not only can win over fans who are at the race, but those tuning in to see what the heck NASCAR is all about.

Nothing against Johnson's dominance, but a 10-lap runaway isn't the best way to convince people your sport is awesome.

Plus, it'd be a goodwill gesture to many fans who think NASCAR has "lost its way" or left the racing "back in the day" behind. There wasn't a bad review around of the Truck Series race at Eldora in 2013. There's little reason to think it wouldn't be the same for a race at Memphis, or, say, Gateway, which produced some great Nationwide and Truck Series racing.

But we're also going to be realistic; Kenseth's idea probably isn't going to happen. SMI, the company that owns Charlotte, won't want to let the All-Star Race leave. It owns Bristol, so if the race departs Charlotte, it could satisfy the short track wailing by moving to Bristol.

We appreciate the originality, however. The more logical and reasoned options for the All-Star Race, the better. Because if it's another ho-hum race Saturday night, the cries for changes are only going to intensify before the Coca-Cola 600.

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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/matt-kenseth-has-a-novel-idea-for-the-sprint-all-star-race-195623759.html

Fernando Alonso Giovanna Amati George Amick Red Amick

Thursday

F1 WAG: Fernanda Gallegos

Despite a flop 2013 season with McLaren Sergio Perez made it back onto the grid this year with Force India.�Here is an image gallery of his one-time girlfriend Fernanda Gallegos, she’s quite a looker! CLICK ON FERNANDA GALLEGOS TO REVEAL OUR GALLERY

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/AT1qKgqeTHM/f1-wag-fernanda-gallegos

Chris Bristow Peter Broeker Tony Brooks Alan Brown

Tuesday

It's been almost 20 years since Jeff Gordon's first Cup Series win

How old were you when Jeff Gordon scored his first Sprint Cup Series win? Heck, you might not have even been born yet.

May 29 is the 20th anniversary of Gordon's first career win in the Cup Series. It came at the 1994 Coca-Cola 600, 87 victories ago.

Those victories must have clouded Gordon's memory, because he said he doesn't remember too many details about the win. His win was honored Wednesday morning at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in honor of the anniversary.

"That's why I love this event that I just did," Gordon said. "They showed video from that day and some crucial moments. It really makes me want to go back and get the whole video and watch the race because it was such a special day. There are so many things that I don't remember about that day.

I remember I started on the front row, that we had a good car.� We led quite a few laps.� But Rusty (Wallace) was the car to beat. (Crew chief Ray Evernham) made that great call."

Actually, Gordon didn't lead quite a few laps. He only led 16 of the race's 400 laps. Wallace led 187. After leading the first lap, Gordon didn't lead again until lap 300. He then led the race's final nine laps.

"Even watching me coming down pit road for that final pit stop made me chuckle because they didn't measure pit road speed the same way we do now so it looked like I was speeding, but they didn't have a way to measure other than by a stopwatch," Gordon said.

"I'd love to go back and relive the race because there are a lot of things that I don't remember."

We'll make it easy for you, Jeff. Here's the entire race, and just looking at the starting grid is one big blast from the NASCAR past. Gordon's pole lap of just over 181 MPH is approximately 14 MPH slower than the pole speed at the 2013 Coca-Cola 600. And that year, John Andretti did what Kurt Busch is attempting this season; run both the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day.

Gordon says he still has the trophy from the race, but it's not being displayed at the moment. He and wife Ingrid built a house a couple of years ago and Gordon needs to find a spot for it.

"Something I've really never done at home was display really many trophies.� If I had a shelf maybe in an office or somewhere, I might put one or two," Gordon said. "The 600 from '94 has always been a prominent trophy that I've displayed."

"When we did this house, we made an area that has very, very important trophies to me.� I have the four Cup trophies there. I have the first Brickyard, a couple helmets.

"The 600 is in the house but it's not currently being displayed there. It's one that has always been the one that I've displayed, it just didn't fit in there," Gordon said with a laugh. "I have to redesign that area so I can make sure it's there."

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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/it-s-been-almost-20-years-since-jeff-gordon-s-first-cup-series-win-192645364.html

Carlo Abate George Abecassis Kenny Acheson Andrea de Adamich

Just six hours after the race

Formula 1 put on a hell of a show in Montreal on a sunny Sunday afternoon as the Mercedes team fumbled and victory went to Infiniti Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo, the Australian’s first Grand Prix victory. The race was breathless in the closing stages as Nico Rosberg tried to hold off Sergio Perez, Ricciardo, […]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2014/06/09/just-six-hours-after-the-race/

George Amick Red Amick Chris Amon Bob Anderson

Monday

Tony Stewart playing it coy about when he'll race a sprint car next

Tony Stewart drove laps in a sprint car this week for the first time since he broke his right leg in August, a crash that forced him to miss the conclusion of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season. But he's not saying when he's going to be in a race in one.

"I will be able to tell you how it went," Stewart said Friday at Dover. "Let?s put it that way.� You won?t know when it?s coming.� When I do go nobody is going to know about it.� I?m going to just slide in and do it.� I want to enjoy it.� I don?t want it to be a cluster.� Judging off the fact of how many people showed up just to talk to me about going and testing for a couple of hours I can imagine what the group is going to be like after I run my first race.?

Oh, Tony. Had you not tweeted the pictures of getting into the car on Monday, few, if anyone, would have known about the matter. When you scream into a megaphone, you can't even fake that you're mad when it gets people's attention.

?I?m smiling because I am laughing at you guys because it?s like my God I went and tested a sprint car," Stewart said. "I still laugh about how big a deal this has all been made.� We had Cup drivers get hurt last year.� One had a broken wrist, one had a broken back and nobody said anything.� It was all minor news.� I?ve made more news by getting hurt in a dirt car than any of these guys.� It?s bigger news than the guy that had the same injury I had falling off a bicycle last week. I get chuckled.?

Well, a scar that size in the picture below looks like a big deal, right? And Denny Hamlin missing four races was a big deal at the time, while Martin Truex Jr. didn't miss a race with his wrist injury. And no offense to either Hamlin or Truex, but neither of them are a three-time Sprint Cup Series champion.

We're not chastising Stewart -- next to racing sprint cars, one of his favorite hobbies is ribbing media members, his comments aren't unexpected. But it's important to note that not everyone can have everything on his or her terms.

Stewart knows that too. He just wants to show he's the same old Tony Stewart. And what better place to do that than at the site of his last Cup win?

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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/tony-stewart-playing-it-coy-about-when-he-ll-race-a-sprint-car-next-185022485.html

Martin Brundle Gianmaria Bruni Jimmy Bryan Clemar Bucci