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View From the Stands: Danny Kincaid on John Force
May 18, 2008 - 04:05 pmDanny Kincaid of Beckley, W.Va.
Q: Who’s your favorite driver or team to follow?
A: The Force team; John Force.
Q: Why do you follow him?
A: He’s more in-tune with these fans. He’s very fan-personable. We ran into him when they were staging earlier, and he’ll talk to anybody.
Q: How long have you been following him and following NHRA?
A: I’ve been following NHRA for probably about 20 years; John Force for probably about the last 10, 12.
Q: What do you think of Ashley [Force], and John relying on his family to build a powerhouse team?
A: It’s neat. And it’s not just family ... the whole team, he knows how to put it together well.
Q: Do you follow other auto racing? Are you into NASCAR, IRL?
A: NASCAR some.
Q: What do you like about NHRA more than you like about NASCAR or IRL?
A: The feel of that car when it goes by; the smell of nitrous in the morning.
Posted by Brian T. Smith NHRA: Merch Watch/Funnel Cakes
May 18, 2008 - 04:05 pmVendors appeared pleased at the turnout and the payout this weekend at Thunder Valley. And while weather has been an issue, more than one vendor said Bristol has produced the best sales of the NHRA season to-date.
“The best track is Bristol. They’re great to us here,“ said an NHRA vendor who requested anonymity, referring to merchandise sales.
The top-selling item is a John Force/Ashley Force t-shirt, which one vendor sold out of on Friday and had to request an immediate re-order.
Note: Credit to the Bristol Dragway folks for realizing that our nation’s economy isn’t in the best state. Prices for merchandise and food were reasonable. Another big seller: funnel cakes. Man, you gotta love funnel cakes.
Posted by Brian T. Smith COLUMN: The Last, True Rebel of Racing
May 18, 2008 - 03:05 pmJohn Force is a modern-day cowboy.
Fifty-nine years young. Wind- and weather-lined face. Survivor of death. Preacher of life.
Force walks it and talks it and sings it. He is old-school racing cool, incarnate. And Force brings the good word to anyone who will listen.
Funny Car-driver, quote-making machine, walker of the Earth when the doctors said he’d never again, Force is “The King” of the National Hot Rod Association.
Like Richard Petty, no line is too long for Force. No hand too open. No smile too big. If you’re a fan and you care, Force is ready, waiting and willing.
And while NASCAR continues to primp in the mirror, chat on a cell, worry about it who it’s dating and wonder how it looks on TV – all while trying to drive a car – Force and NHRA are rising up. And they’re beginning to show up in NASCAR’s rear view.
“We don’t try to kid anybody, NASCAR’s our big brother,” Force said.
It’s high time that big brother started paying attention to its younger sibling.
Force has become the proud, legend-like face of NHRA. And he’s everything that NASCAR needs right now.
Force didn’t come off an assembly line. He wasn’t cut on a cookie sheet and wrapped in plastic at an early age. And he’s as far removed from Madison Ave. and Wall Street as are Bristol and Thunder Valley.
But, man, could NASCAR use Force right now.
What NASCAR lacks, Force packs the stands with.
Originality, a loose tongue, a genuine smile and an unabashed enthusiasm for everything that is oil, fuel, combustion and horsepower: It’s the Force way.
But Force would never have made it out of the factory in modern NASCAR-land.
He’d have been thrown in the trash heap.
He’s too old. Too honest. Too real. Too uncontrollable.
NASCAR’s all, like, current. It wants cute and young. It wants Kasey Kahne.
Are you cute? Are you young? Can you drive a car? Well, NASCAR just might have a place for you.
But, wait. You mean you can really drive a car and you fall outside the target-audience demographic.
Well, yeah, sorry. NASCAR can’t use you right now. It’s got ad spots to sell and pre-race slots to fill. Maybe in the next life, old man.
NASCAR’s loss is NHRA’s gain.
Force believes in racing. He’s walked through fire just to get back in a car, strap in again and burn. And Force believes in NHRA.
“We fight it from the streets and [we’re] fighting to make it better,” Force said. “And the key is working as a family.”
Force believes in family.
His daughter, Ashley, is the brightest star to hover over a race track in years and has already made the bandwagon racing crowd begin to forget about sullen, stale Danica Patrick.
Meanwhile, three other Force-family relations currently hit the strip, all while Force celebrates his 59th year on Earth by continuing to defy the rules of life and laugh in the face of conformity.
Racing, tradition and family: The foundation of the house Force has built.
Racing, tradition and family: Everything that NASCAR has left behind.
Well, watch out big brother, because NHRA is crashing the party. And Force is tearing up the floor at the old folks’ dance.
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Cannon Ball and other high school thoughts
May 18, 2008 - 12:05 am
Posted by Tim Hayes Bristol Residents Becoming Spoiled
May 18, 2008 - 12:05 am
Posted by Allen Gregory 
