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Nascar SCS GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway May Sun. 3 on FOX at 1:00 PM ET
Nascar ^

Posted on 04/29/2015 6:57:53 AM PDT by ican'tbelieveit



TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Sports
KEYWORDS: alabama; chat; geico500; nascar
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Welcome to the 2015
Nascar at FR race thread!

GEICO 500

May Sun. 3 at 1:00 PM ET on FOX

at the

Talladega Superspeedway

Talladega Superspeedway Website

Qualifying: Saturday, May 2 at 1:00 PM on ?


Click for Nascar race & news threads at FR


Congratulations to the Toyota Owners 400 winner: Kurt Busch !

Congratulations to the Toyotacare 250 winner: Denny Hamlin !



Broadcast Schedule
MRN
PRN
TVRacer.com (has a summary of all televised racing sports)

VIP League has the races streaming for those that don't have access to races on TV.
DO NOT DOWNLOAD ANYTHING - only use links that stream.


FRFL’ers: Deadline to select drivers for this week is:

Saturday May 2 at 5:00 AM ET ( 2:00 AM PT)

Jayski site for race prep info

Remember, you can join anytime! Let us know if you are interested.


Xfinity and Camping World Schedule

Series Race Track Qualifying Time
Channel
Race Time
Channel
Xfinity
Winn Dixie
300
Talladega
Superspeedway
Sat. May 2
11:00 AM ET
FOX Sports 1
Sat. May 2
3:00 PM ET
FOX
Camping World
No Race



May God Bless our Troops, their families, and our Nation
The FR Canteen


FReepmail for addition to the Ping List.


1 posted on 04/29/2015 6:57:53 AM PDT by ican'tbelieveit
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To: ican'tbelieveit
Race Fans! We are off to Talladega!!!!

SprintCup Points Standings:

Driver Points Change
Kevin Harvick
357
-
Joey Logano
324
-
Martin Truex Jr
315
-
Jimmie Johnson
299
-
Brad Keselowski
283
-
Kasey Kahne
275
+1 
Matt Kenseth
273
+1 
Dale Earnhardt Jr
271
-2 
Jamie McMurray
264
+3 
Jeff Gordon
263
-1 
Aric Almirola
250
-1 
Denny Hamlin
245
-1 
Paul Menard
239
+1 
Clint Bowyer
235
+3 
Ryan Newman
234
+1 
Danica Patrick
230
-3 

2 posted on 04/29/2015 6:58:50 AM PDT by ican'tbelieveit (`)
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To: 21stCenturion; 4kids dad; Abigail Adams; advertising guy; al baby; al_c; Alaska Wolf; ...
Oops, forgot to ping!

Xfinity Standings:

Driver Points Change
Ty Dillon
293
+1 
Chase Elliott
285
+1 
Chris Buescher
282
-2 
Darrell Wallace Jr
268
-
Regan Smith
252
+3 
Brendan Gaughan
244
+1 
Elliott Sadler
244
-1 
Ryan Reed
243
-3 
Brian Scott
243
-
Daniel Suarez
240
-
Jeremy Clements
206
+1 
David Starr
198
-1 
Ross Chastain
192
-

3 posted on 04/29/2015 6:59:42 AM PDT by ican'tbelieveit (`)
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To: ican'tbelieveit
Fantasy Top 10 Season Standings:

Team Points Change
Lime City Racing
2,638
-
Limbaugh Institute
2,604
-
MoFo22
2,549
+1
Drago Racing
2,538
-1
Jana's Raiders
2,514
+1
Benders de Fenders
2,504
-1
Ward Burton's Translator
2,452
+3
Keokuk29fan
2,432
-1
Team Hessian Racing
2,431
+2
TeamHatteras
2,424
-2

4 posted on 04/29/2015 7:00:20 AM PDT by ican'tbelieveit (`)
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To: ican'tbelieveit
My brother lives out in the country with no cable. He's elated to get to see some of these races using his old fashioned antenna and TV.
5 posted on 04/29/2015 7:06:22 AM PDT by McGruff (It's not the crime, it's the cover-up they said.)
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To: McGruff

You mean NASCAR that attacked Indiana’s Religious Restoration(Protection Laws).

Religious freedom is becoming the freedom to hate *
www.religioustolerance.org/relfreehate.htm - Proxy - Highlight
The new meaning of religious freedom: attacks and discrimination by ... Religious “Freedom to Discriminate” laws. ... and NASCAR denounce Indiana’s RFRA;

Yeppers FREEDOM to HATE...that’s what they say...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_Freedom_Restoration_Act
Signed by HIllBilly 1993

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_Religious_Freedom_Restoration_Acts

donchathinkAmerika....ever?

Enjoy the race.


6 posted on 04/29/2015 7:33:27 AM PDT by DavidLSpud ("Go and sin no more"-Rejoice always, pray continually...)
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To: ican'tbelieveit; Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; ...
Here is Q Info.

EVENT SCHEDULE
Sprint Cup Series

Event Schedule times are local to the track

Thursday, April 30
6:00 PM NSCS HAULERS ENTER (TRUCK PARKING ONLY)

Friday, May 1
7:00 AM - 6:30 PM NSCS GARAGE OPEN
9:15 AM NXS & NSCS SPOTTERS MEETING
12:00 PM NSCS ROOKIE MEETINGS & RANDOM DRAWING
1:00 - 1:55 PM NSCS PRACTICE
3:30 - 4:25 PM NSCS FINAL PRACTICE

Saturday, May 2
6:00 AM - 2:00 PM NSCS GARAGE OPEN
12:00 PM NSCS QUALIFYING - IMPOUND

Sunday, May 3
7:00 AM NSCS GARAGE OPENS
10:00 AM NSCS DRIVER/CREW CHIEF MEETING
11:25 AM NSCS DRIVERS INTRODUCTION
12:00 PM NSCS RACE

NSCS = Sprint Cup Series
SUBJECT TO CHANGE
All event schedule times above are listed in LOCAL track time

PRACTICE & QUALIFYING
Dates / Times / TV coverage

(these times in eastern time)


7 posted on 04/29/2015 7:51:36 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...

I’ll be back later with the rest of the usual stuff.


8 posted on 04/29/2015 7:52:22 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: mabarker1

Danica lost Go Daddy for next year shame she was doing better this year


9 posted on 04/29/2015 8:12:20 AM PDT by al baby (Hi Mom)
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To: al baby

Yep, Lil Sparkle Pony lost her primary and oldest sponsor. Gonna miss those ads as she still looks fine.

She will find another sponsor as they do like the publicity, whether she wins or not.

SHR will miss them a lot as Go Daddy brought a ton of money to the team.


10 posted on 04/29/2015 9:28:46 AM PDT by biff (Et Tu Boeh-ner)
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To: All

“I’m sad. I’m a little surprised and I’m sad,” Patrick told The Associated Press. “But to say I didn’t imagine this was not a scenario would be a lie. It’s bittersweet. It’s going to be really weird to think I won’t drive the bright green, can’t-miss-it car next year.”

GoDaddy’s decision has been a possibility for several years as the company looked at marketing strategies to grow its international reach. GoDaddy is in the final year of its contract with Stewart-Haas Racing, which fields the car for the 33-year-old Patrick. Patrick is also in the final year of her contract with SHR.

http://racing.ap.org/article/danica-patrick-losing-godaddy-primary-car-sponsor

Will she be back? Tune in tomorrow for the next episode of As The Wheels Turn.


11 posted on 04/29/2015 10:19:54 AM PDT by McGruff (It's not the crime, it's the cover-up they said.)
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To: ican'tbelieveit

Thanks for the ping & the time/work on the threads.

Go Daddy lost $143 million last year and hasn’t made money since 2009. Every million counts, I guess.


12 posted on 04/29/2015 10:57:51 AM PDT by happydogx2 ( Her eyes were beautiful, her soft wet kisses were heavenly..but to be honest she had me at "woof")
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...
TRACK NEWS & LINKS
13 posted on 04/30/2015 3:41:17 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...
Tire: Goodyear Eagle Superspeedway Radials

Set limits:
Sprint Cup: 3 sets for practice/qualifying and 6 sets for the race;
Xfinity: 4 sets for the event

Tire Codes: Left-side -- D-4596; Right-side -- D-4630

Tire Circumference: Left-side -- 87.91 in. (2,233 mm); Right-side -- 88.39 in. (2,245 mm)

Minimum Recommended Inflation:
Left Front -- 27 psi; Left Rear -- 27 psi;
Right Front -- 50 psi; Right Rear -- 50 psi

Notes: Teams in both the NASCAR Sprint Cup and Xfinity Series will run the same tire set-up at Talladega this weekend . . . this is the same combination of left- and right-side tires that Sprint Cup teams ran at this track last October . . . for Xfinity teams, they ran this left-side tire code (D-4596) their last race at Talladega last May, but with a different right-side code . . . compared with what Xfinity teams ran a year ago, this right-side code (D-4630) features a compound change for better wear . . . earlier this season, teams in both of these series ran this left-side code at Daytona in February and this right-side code at Las Vegas in March . . . as on all NASCAR ovals greater than one mile in length, teams are required to run inner liners in all four tire positions at Talladega . . . air pressure in those inner liners should be 12-25 psi greater than that of the outer tire.

14 posted on 04/30/2015 3:42:49 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...
Gibson undergoes surgery to remove kidney stone: Two weeks ago, Tony Gibson, the crew chief to Stewart-Haas Racing's Kurt Busch, thought he had successfully passed his second kidney stone in 33 days, an ailment that kept him from working the #41's pit box during the rain-delayed race at Bristol Motor Speedway. Not so fast. Upon further review, the stone hadn't been passed. Three days after he successfully directed Busch to his first win of 2015 at Richmond, Gibson tweeted Wednesday he was undergoing "little surgery" to have the stones officially removed.(NBC Sports)(4-30-2015)

to have the stones officially removed.

??? Does this mean that He went to a real Doc vs one at a Flea Market???

15 posted on 04/30/2015 3:46:03 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...
Busch-Gibson Combo Morphing Into Championship Contenders: Many predicted this. Dating all the way back to his championship season of 2004, Richmond winner Kurt Busch had excelled with a crew chief who could be defined as "old school" - one who made decisions with a healthy mix of modern engineering smarts and plain old gut. Busch won his title with a professor in old school ideals - Jimmy Fennig - calling the shots. Now, 11 years later, Tony Gibson -- himself a 'racer's crew chief' - takes his perch atop Busch's pit box. And the resulting success is astounding. Since Gibson joined the #41 Stewart-Haas Racing team with three races remaining in the 2014 season, Busch has rattled off some of the best numbers in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. Here are a few, and their relation to the competition (Note: Due to his suspension to open the 2015 season, Busch's stats span nine races, compared to 12 for other drivers)...
- His average finish with Gibson is 8.7, which ranks second only to Kevin Harvick's 5.2
- Busch's driver rating with Gibson is 111.8, second to Harvick's 130.6.
- His average running position is 7.0, second to Harvick's 4.5
- Despite three fewer races, he ranks fourth in fastest laps run (217) and second in laps led (536)(NASCAR)(4-30-2015)
16 posted on 04/30/2015 3:46:58 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...
Pedigree featured on the #18 at Talladega; start 300 for Ragan: Sunday's race at Talladega will be the first of two this season with Pedigree as primary sponsor of the #18 Toyota, the other coming in September at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. David Ragan, an avid animal lover and dog owner, would like nothing more than to bring the dogs riding along on the Pedigree Toyota back to victory lane at Talladega, a place he's quite familiar with. The Talladega race will coincide with the launch of a new tastier and meatier PEDIGREE Dry Dog Food recipe that delivers the variety that pet parents are looking for. The new recipe is loaded with whole grains and protein accented with vegetables, providing a nutritious and delicious difference that pet parents will see and their dogs will taste. On top of his solid track record and Talladega race win, Ragan will be celebrating a career milestone Sunday regardless of the outcome. He'll be making his 300th NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start and his 17th Sprint Cup start at Talladega. Ragan will be filling in for the ninth and final race in the #18 Pedigree Toyota for regular driver Kyle Busch. After Talladega, Ragan will move over to the #55 Toyota for Michael Waltrip Racing (JGR), see images of the car/scheme on the #18 Team Schemes page.(4-30-2015)
17 posted on 04/30/2015 3:52:40 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...

Fastest Monkey in the World

The biggest, tallest, truest tale in NASCAR history happened in 1953 on a half-mile dirt track in Hickory. A monkey named Jocko Flocko beat 26 other drivers to take home the checkered flag.


Jimmy Tomlin

Sixty years ago this month, a man, a machine and a monkey made history. It’s comical, surreal, scarcely believable history, to be sure — but it’s history nonetheless.

Even in the vast lore of NASCAR, a sport known for its boisterous bootleggers and daredevil drivers, the true tale of Jocko Flocko, the only monkey ever to win a stock-car race, laps the field and beats them all.

And it happened on a half-mile dirt track in Hickory.

The year was 1953, and hotshot driver Tim Flock was coming off a dominant 1952 season; he won eight of the 33 races he entered en route to the Grand National points championship. But Tim’s wins sputtered as the new season began, and his sponsor, Ted Chester, was looking for a way to shake things up.

He found his answer in an Atlanta pet shop.

One day in late March or early April, Chester visited the pet shop to buy a puppy for a family member’s birthday. While there, he couldn’t take his eyes off a rhesus monkey whose name, according to a sign on the monkey’s cage, was Jocko. The marketing machine in Chester’s brain kicked into high gear, and he envisioned the monkey — Jocko Flocko had a nice ring to it, he thought — riding shotgun with Tim in his ’53 Hudson Hornet. If nothing else, he figured Jocko would be a great gimmick for keeping his young driver in the spotlight, whether he was winning races or not.

Chester bought Jocko and headed to the race team’s garage, where Tim and his crew were tinkering with the Hudson. When they saw the monkey and learned of Chester’s plan to put him in the race car with Tim, they thought their owner had gone, well, bananas.

“I thought Ted had been hittin’ the jug too much — he couldn’t be serious,” Tim said in Tim Flock, Race Driver, a biography published in 1991. “But the more I got to thinking about it, the more I liked it. Jocko Flocko could race with me anytime — if he proved he could handle the Grand National Circuit.”

A small, hairy secret

Tim died in 1998, but his widow, Frances Flock, heard her husband tell the story of Jocko Flocko countless times.

“I’ve got it memorized by now,” the 84-year-old woman says with a chuckle, speaking by phone from her home in Indian Land, South Carolina.

One thing she remembers is that from the beginning, Tim had his doubts about Jocko riding shotgun.

“He said Ted came into the garage with this little monkey,” she recalls, “and Ted said, ‘I have an idea. I thought we could build a seat for him, get him a little helmet and his own uniform, and we could put him in the racecar with you. We need to do something to get some attention for you.’ ”

Frances says Tim hemmed and hawed until he finally said, “You’re the boss, but I think you’re crazy. NASCAR’s not gonna let us race with that monkey.”

“NASCAR,” Chester replied, “is not gonna know about it.”

Sure enough, nobody told NASCAR officials. Meanwhile, preparations began for Jocko’s inaugural ride: A special seat was installed on the passenger’s side of the racecar, high enough that Jocko would be able to look out the window and wave to spectators or to other drivers as Tim blew by them. Jocko had his own helmet, goggles, and racing suit, with the car number (91) stitched on the back. Then, on April 5, 1953, on the dirt track of the old Charlotte Speedway, Jocko became the first monkey to compete in a stock-car race. With Tim starting the 150-lap race on the pole, his crew smuggled Jocko into the Hudson and buckled him into his seat just before the race began.

Frances laughs as she thinks about the surprise that lay in store for the 27 drivers racing against Tim that day.

“The story goes that as they went through the first turn, one of the drivers looked over and saw the monkey, and he almost wrecked,” she says.

That was probably a common reaction that day among Tim’s unsuspecting opponents who included some of the leading drivers of that era: Buck Baker, Curtis Turner, and Herb Thomas.

Tim and Jocko led more than half the race — 87 of the 150 laps — but faded late and ended up finishing fourth, earning a $350 purse. Following the race, Tim took Jocko to the pits, where spectators clamored to pet the monkey and feed him peanuts.

“The children especially loved him,” Frances recalls. “They would come down to see him after every race.”

The winner that day in Charlotte was Dick Passwater, an Indianapolis native who drove only 14 races in 1953, but they included all eight of Jocko’s races. Now 86 and living in Sarasota, Florida, Passwater doesn’t remember noticing Jocko in that Charlotte race, but he remembers racing against Jocko that year.

“Fastest monkey in the world,” he says, punctuating his statement with a hearty laugh.

Passwater and the other drivers found the Jocko gimmick amusing. “I don’t think it had any effect on anybody,” Passwater says. “It was just something to draw attention.”

Jocko the champion

Tim believed Jocko sometimes gave him an advantage. As Tim tried to pass other drivers, the sight of the monkey staring at them broke the drivers’ concentration just long enough for Tim to gain an advantage and make the pass. Nonetheless, with Jocko aboard, Tim’s winless streak for the 1953 season continued. Following the fourth-place finish in Charlotte, they finished sixth in Macon, Georgia; fifth in Langhorne, Pennsylvania; and second in Columbia, South Carolina.

It wasn’t until Tim’s 10th race of the season on May 16, 1953, at Hickory Speedway’s half-mile dirt track, that Tim took the checkered flag, making history in the process as Jocko Flocko became the first — and still the only — monkey to win a NASCAR race. The Hudson Hornet took the lead after about 30 laps and never relinquished it, beating 26 other vehicles to win the 100-mile race.

The Hickory Daily Record snubbed Jocko in its next-day recap of the race results, reporting only that Tim had “roared to victory … beating off determined threats by many of the nation’s top drivers.” It would be difficult not to notice a monkey in victory lane, and surely by that point word had already spread throughout the Grand National Circuit about Jocko. But the article made no mention of him.

The win earned Tim a $1,000 purse. Tim used to joke about how much he had to pay his monkey codriver.

“All the other drivers at that time were concerned with the percentages they got paid from their sponsors,” Tim told Sports Illustrated for a 1984 article. “I told them that I had it easy. If I got tired after 100 laps, I’d let Jocko drive, and all I had to pay him was a banana and 5 percent.”

Traveling with Jocko proved to be a comical adventure.

“I was turned away from several hotels because they wouldn’t let me bring Jocko in, so I snuck him in a couple of times,” Tim told Sports Illustrated. “He hated maids. Sometimes a maid would come in and see the monkey, and her eyes would bulge out and she would scream. He used to jump on the maids’ backs, ride down the hall for about 40 feet and then jump off. Needless to say, I had a lot of rooms that were never made up.”

Chaos in the car

Back on the track, NASCAR, which today is known to be a stickler for following the rules, turned a blind eye to Jocko. Neither Frances nor Dick Passwater remembers the sport’s sanctioning body suggesting that Jocko might be a bad idea. And considering Tim actually had “Jocko Flocko” painted on the passenger’s side of his car, he wasn’t trying to keep the monkey a secret.

As it turned out, Jocko’s fledgling career would end soon enough. After the historic win in Hickory, Tim and Jocko finished a disappointing 32nd at Martinsville, Virginia, and 22nd at Columbus, Ohio, before arriving at the new Raleigh Speedway on May 30, 1953, for the inaugural running of the Raleigh 300.

Tim believed he could turn his season around with a win at the paved, one-mile track, and sure enough, the Hudson Hornet ran near the front of the pack throughout the race. During the final third of the 300-lap race, only one driver — Tim’s brother, Fonty — was ahead of the Hudson when disaster struck: Jocko slipped out of his seat harness.

Jocko’s curiosity got the best of him. Tim recounted what happened next in the 1983 book Dirt Tracks To Glory: The Early Days of Stock Car Racing As Told By the Participants.

“We had this chain hooked onto the floorboard that we would pull up to check on the wear on the right front tire,” he said. “Well, old Jocko had been watching me do that, and soon as he came unstrapped he went right for the hole and stuck his head through. The tire zipped him on the head, and he liked to have went crazy.”

Jocko screamed and started jumping, and it was all Tim could do to keep his car on the track. Passwater, who finished fifth that day, remembers the chaos.

“Yeah, I saw that monkey jumping around in there, but I didn’t know what was happening,” Passwater says. “He was like a bird in there. He’d be on one side of the car, and the next thing you know he’d be on the other side. … That monkey probably thought somebody was trying to kill him.”

Before it was over, Tim had a monkey on his back.

“It was hard enough to drive those heavy old cars back then under normal circumstances,” Tim once said, “but with a crazed monkey clawing you at the same time, it becomes nearly impossible.”

He had no choice but to make a pit stop and hand Jocko to one of his crew members. The handoff went smoothly enough, but while Tim was in the pits, driver Speedy Thompson passed him to take second place. Tim still finished third and won $1,200, but second place would’ve earned him $1,800.

“The pit stop cost me second place and a $600 difference in my paycheck,” Tim said. “Jocko was retired immediately.”

The next day The News & Observer mentioned Jocko in its coverage of the race, explaining that Tim took a pit stop to unload his mascot. Unaware of what had actually happened, the paper reported the monkey had to get out of the car because “the steady circling of the track made Jocko sick.”

No more autographs

Frances says Jocko was never the same after the Raleigh Speedway incident. He refused to eat and had to be euthanized by a veterinarian.

“Of course, everybody wanted to know where Jocko was,” she says. “Well, a little girl asked Tim about Jocko, and he told her the monkey had passed away, and she couldn’t stop crying. Tim was so tenderhearted, he said, ‘I’ve got to come up with something else.’ So the next week, when somebody asked about Jocko, he said, ‘I couldn’t teach him to sign his autograph, so I had to fire him.’ ”

Tim went on to win 22 more races in his career, including 18 checkered flags in 1955 alone. He won another points championship that year, and after retiring, he was recognized as one of the 50 greatest drivers in NASCAR history. But when Tim died in Charlotte in 1998, even The New York Times couldn’t publish his obituary without mentioning Jocko Flocko.


18 posted on 04/30/2015 4:00:33 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...
Steve Byrnes remembered at memorial service: The late Steve Byrnes was eulogized in a memorial service Tuesday [April 28th] at Calvary Church in Charlotte, NC, where more than 500 mourners gathered to remember the longtime FOX Sports broadcaster, who passed away April 21 after a lengthy fight with cancer.(FoxSports)(4-29-2015)

Video at Fox Link.

19 posted on 04/30/2015 4:05:42 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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To: Chode; nascarnation; SgtBob; McGruff; umgud; al baby; prisoner6; The_Sword_of_Groo; ...

20 posted on 04/30/2015 4:13:43 AM PDT by mabarker1 (congress, The Opposite of Progress.)
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