He did win the race, driving Paul Smiths car...I meant it was '94Hmmm, I thought Jeff Arend won his first race driving Paul Smiths car at Reading in '96. Seem to remember Jeff telling me the story, maybe I have the year wrong.
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He did win the race, driving Paul Smiths car...I meant it was '94Hmmm, I thought Jeff Arend won his first race driving Paul Smiths car at Reading in '96. Seem to remember Jeff telling me the story, maybe I have the year wrong.
NothingI don't think they are that closely guarded. This was the payout for the Route 66 Nationals posted on nhraracer.com
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My question is, since there were only 15 TF cars in Sonoma, what does NHRA do with that extra 25,000 they don't have to pay?
I thought I knew lots of trivia, but I've never heard of the Paul Smith rule before. While I might not think so if I were on the losing end of his actions, I think it's hilarious to hear some of the stories posted here. My brother's a NASCAR fan and told me James Hylton did similar things, qualifying for a race, running a few laps then parking the car and collecting some generous last place money. According to my brother, he ran the same tires for two seasons of that stuff!
That still happens, not in the Cup series, but in the others. It's known as "Start and Park"
Alan
You must study the history of that rule first! Some call it the "Paul Smith Rule"...……..he would make the show, then sell his spot to the highest non-qualified bidder.
Wasn't it a woman TF driver with a big sponsor that also sponsored the race that broke the straw on the camels back, which finally caused the implementation the rule.
Go a little further...Schumacher said the cars cost him 20k per run, all qualifiers & winning the race cost 160k...to win 50k. We all are aware of the purses when we invest and show up to race, so no one should be complaining about purses...it’s the same as complaining about making less money than someone else doing the same job.^^ While this is true and very understandable on the "grass roots" and sportsman level, it is not understandable on the professional level. This is the "big show" and for NHRA to not pay a purse that is even remotely commensurate with the level of professionalism demonstrated by these racing teams is completely unacceptable...…...Note: Since Alan has deleted his post, I want to clarify that I was responding to his original post in where he was rationalizing the fact that racers have always spent more than the purses justify, and that the racers were aware of the purses before entering.