NASCAR INCREASES
POST-SEASON PRIZE MONEY AT
NASCAR DODGE WEEKLY SERIES TRACKS
$1.7 Million NASCAR
Championship Point Fund is Largest in Short Track Racing
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(April 14, 2004)
– NASCAR, Dodge and participating sponsors will once
again distribute the largest championship point fund for
any short track racing series in North America. $1.7
million in post-season awards will be shared by the top
teams and drivers in the NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series,
NASCAR’s championship series for weekly short track
competitors.
For the first time in
several years, NASCAR has increased the portion of this
point fund that is paid out as local track awards. This
new approach is designed to benefit the hundreds of
drivers who compete in the series, while maintaining the
prize money and prestige of the regional championships.
Local track awards, presented by NASCAR and POWERade,
now amount to $3,500 per track and will be shared by the
top 10 drivers in each track’s feature division. In
2003, this amount was $2,000 per track and was paid only
to the top five drivers.
“The NASCAR Dodge Weekly
Series continues to be the leader in weekly short track
competition,” said Chris Boals, director of the NASCAR
Dodge Weekly Series. “This year’s point fund is another
example of NASCAR’s commitment to this important series.
Every year, the quality of competition, race track
management and sponsorship continues to rise in this
series and we are proud to offer these awards to the
best weekly racers in North America.
“The increase in the local
track awards is, we believe, a very important aspect of
this series. Whether they are in contention for a
regional championship or not, these are the drivers who
make their hometown speedways come alive with
excitement. It’s important to provide opportunities for
more and more competitors to share in the prize money at
the end of a hard-fought racing season,” said Boals.
Boals’ reference to North
America reflects the new reality in the NASCAR Dodge
Weekly Series – it’s now an international series with
two race tracks in Canada. Delaware Speedway in Ontario
and Autodrome St. Eustache in Quebec became the first
Canadian tracks to join the NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series
in October 2003. Drivers at more than 60 race tracks
will compete for the awards each week until the season
concludes September 19.
Whether in Canada or the
United States, drivers in the feature division at each
participating track are eligible for NASCAR’s regional
championship awards. Race results from each track are
entered into the NASCAR Competition Performance Index
(CPI), which establishes a regional ranking of drivers
based on each driver’s statistics (including wins,
top-five finishes, starts and the number of cars in the
starting field). Feature divisions can vary between
tracks, and include Late Model Stock Cars, Modifieds,
Dirt Late Models, Super Stocks, Late Model Sportsman and
other classes of cars.
Tracks are grouped into
eight geographic regions (with up to nine tracks per
region) and at the end of the season, the drivers with
the highest CPI in each region are declared regional
champions. In 2004, each regional champion can receive
up to $45,000 in post-season awards. The total payout to
the top nine drivers in each region is over $137,000.
Regional championship
awards are provided by NASCAR and series’ sponsors
Dodge, 3M, Accel, Bell Racing, Centrix, Cintas, Clevite,
Comp Cams, Corteco, Edlebrock, Goodyear, Hoosier,
Holley, JE Pistons, Lincoln Electric, Mechanix Wear,
Mobil 1, Moroso, POWERade, Sonic Racing Products, USG,
Waste Management and Whelen Engineering. This roster of
companies includes six new sponsors in 2004.
$125 K to Series
Champion…
An overall series champion
is determined by comparing the racing records of the
eight regional champions. This driver with the best
results among the eight regional champions wins the
series’ championship and is eligible for additional
bonuses of $125,000, bringing the overall NASCAR Dodge
Weekly Series champion’s prize to $170,000.
Bonus Bucks for
Dodge Drivers…
To boost the participation
of Dodge drivers across the country, Dodge is putting
more prize money up for grabs each weekend. If a driver
in a Dodge vehicle wins a feature race, in a track’s
feature division, they can win a $100 bonus – each time
they win. In any other NASCAR-sanctioned class, a
feature win with a Dodge car is worth an additional $50.
If a driver wins the
overall series’ championship in a Dodge car – as Mark
McFarland did in 2003 – they could receive a $25,000
bonus. The highest-finishing eligible Dodge driver in
each region will receive a $2,500 bonus. If a driver
wins a 2004 regional championship while driving a Dodge
vehicle, they’ll get an opportunity to drive in a “Test
and Tune” session with one of Dodge’s NASCAR Craftsman
Truck Series teams. Drivers must use a genuine Dodge
engine and body throughout the 2004 season to be
eligible for these awards.
McFarland, of Winchester,
Va., took full advantage of Dodge’s incentives last
season. McFarland raced two nights per week at two
NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series speedways, and proceeded to
win both track titles and the 2003 NASCAR Dodge Weekly
Series championship using a Dodge Intrepid Late Model
Stock Car. He collected an extra $27,500 from the
manufacturer for that accomplishment.
McFarland received an
additional $16,000 for finishing fourth in the series’
Southeastern Coastal Region standings. (He earned the
second regional award for his performance at Southampton
Motor Speedway in Capron, Va., where he competed on
Friday nights in addition to his Saturday schedule at
Old Dominion Speedway in Manassas, Va.) Along with his
prize of $170,000 as the series champion, the bonus
awards pushed his post-season winnings to $213,500, a
NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series record.
Short trackers
Score in ShorTrack Division…
Along with a premier
“feature” division, each NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series
track designates a class of cars to participate in the
ShorTrack Division, a regional championship program for
support division racers.
Support classes such as
Modifieds, Sportsman, Street Stocks, Limited Late Models
and Hobby Stocks will once again be eligible for
regional championship awards, just like their
counterparts in the feature division classes at each
track. ShorTrack Division regional championships are
determined using the same CPI formula as the feature
division and ShorTrack Division regional winners can
each receive up to $2,500 in post-season awards. The
overall ShorTrack Division champion will collect an
additional $10,000, courtesy of Connecticut-based
Whelen Engineering, a NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series
sponsor since 2001. ShorTrack Division track champions
will also receive a $1,000 bonus.
Todd Burns,
of Riverside, Calif., won the 2003 ShorTrack Division
championship while competing at Irwindale (Calif.)
Speedway. Burns, who recorded 10 wins and 15 top-five
finishes to claim the award, has stepped up his racing
program. Burns is now competing for the Auto Meter
rookie of the year award on the NASCAR AutoZone Elite
Division, Southwest Series.
Mechanics, Car
Owners & Crew Chiefs Recognized With Special Awards…
Drivers aren’t the only
ones to share in the $1.7 million NASCAR Dodge Weekly
Series point fund. A large number of NASCAR Members are
crew members or mechanics and NASCAR and its sponsors
have several special awards to recognize this important
group – those who help put the cars on the track each
weekend.
Craftsman,
the Official Tools of NASCAR, will once again
sponsor the Mechanic of the Year awards, which recognize
mechanics and crew members at each track. These awards,
which include $1,500 cash and a $2,000 credit towards
the purchase of Craftsman Tools to eight regional
winners, are determined by a vote of NASCAR Members.
NASCAR has recognized Weekly Series crew members and
mechanics with these awards each year since 1986.
For the third consecutive
year, Lincoln Electric will present $5,000 and a
Lincoln Electric welder to the NASCAR Dodge Weekly
Series champion car owner. Lunati Cams will
continue to honor the regional championship crew chiefs
with their awards, which include $2,500 bonuses to each
of the 2004 regional championship crew chiefs and an
additional $5,000 bonus to the NASCAR Dodge Weekly
Series championship crew chief |