Greg
Profile


URL:  /gregmcc


Member since: 08/03/2007


Number of hits: 3108


Location: Atlanta


Quote/Motto: "you can't fix stupid"


Favorite Driver: Jeff Burton


Favorite Track:
Atlanta Motor Speedway


How I discovered Rowdy, and why I Listen:
Through Cingular/AT&T


Why I'm a race fan:
Lisa did it to me!!


What car/truck I drive now:
Jeep Cherokee


My dream car:
A NASCAR at a major speedway


Heroes:
My Dad



Greg's FRIENDS:

Dsc00149 Alicia_katie_joe Img_5012 Profile Bobby_tippy Johnavitar
Greg's PHOTOS:

31caterpillar-2009 1nascar_shuttle 31and29 31_crash Bud8 Images




07/29/2008

NASCAR Fan Council Survey


Thought you guys might find this information interesting, This came from the NASCAR Fan Council.

Results from recent surveys on the NASCAR Fan Council

Members of the NASCAR Fan Council are a passionate group. You love to tell us your thoughts on the sport, the good and the bad, and we appreciate it!

From our recent drivers survey, the drivers you selected:

Kyle Busch
Driver you root against the most
Most confident
Driver with the most potential in the future

Carl Edwards
Best post race celebration
Healthiest driver
Most athletic driver

Mark Martin
Most traditional
Most knowledgeable

Kenny Wallace
Most comical

Jeff Gordon
Most skilled

Tony Stewart
Most competitive

Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Most sincere

Kasey Kahne
Most youthful

Jeff Burton
Flies under the radar

Robby Gordon
Most adventurous

Kyle Petty
Most charitable

07/10/2008

NEW CAT Car for Burton


Found this on Jayski, Here is the new 31 car for 2009.

http://www.jayski.com/schemes/2008/scup/31caterpillar-2009.jpg

09/10/2007

THE CHASE IS ON


The Chase is on and I was curious to see how my fellow Rowdians think the season will turn out. So what is your predictions for the final 12? Have a great week...

09/07/2007

Breaking News Regarding AT&T and NASCAR


Just got this information from a friend. Its seems that cooler heads made some smart decisions regarding the NASCAR/AT&T drama. Check out the link below.

http://www.speedtv.com/articles/nascar/nextel/40063/

06/26/2007

Penalties for 24 & 48


It appears that today is "D-Day" for Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon. What does everybody on ROWDY think the penalties will be??

06/25/2007

If I was Casey Mears and Kyle Busch.......


I don't know if anyone touched on this yet... But if I was Casey Mears and Kyle Busch I would be wondering why Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon had their cars set up differently then they did. Why just those two and not the others. Am I missing something here. Seems that if they thought they found a "legal" way to make JJ and JG's car better they would pass it along to the entire team. Please correct me if my thinking is wrong, but just seems very strange to me. Hope everybody had a great weekend..

06/22/2007

NASCAR since Bill France Jr's passing away....


I was going to write a blog about what the heck is going on with NASCAR this morning, then I came across this article from the Orlando Sentinel and it really said it all. So check it out and let me know what you think. The issue with Kentucky is something that we really have not talked to much about here on ROWDY...

Changes are inevitable in Bill France Jr.’s sport

By The Orlando Sentinel

ORLANDO, Fla. – I’ve gotten this question a lot lately: Will we eventually see obvious effects of the passing of NASCAR czar Bill France Jr.?

On first thought, I answer that we already have just in the weeks since France died June 4.

That very day, Kurt Busch committed an offense for which I felt France would have parked him for the rest of the season. He forced a pit crewman to jump onto the hood of Tony Stewart’s parked car to avoid being hit as the raging Busch brushed alongside Stewart.

The penalty, announced the day after France’s funeral, was what has become a standard wrist slap: a $100,000 fine and a 100-point deduction.

I got the question again June 13 as mobs of media people waited outside Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s racing complex, most of us knowing already that Earnhardt would announce he’ll join NASCAR’s dominant team, Hendrick Motorsports.

Teaming Earnhardt with Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson concentrates so much star power in one place that it might have been too much for France’s comfort. The gut instinct here is that France would have found away to keep that alignment from happening.

And now the sponsorship uproar among AT&T, NASCAR and Nextel has become a free-for-all of litigation.

NASCAR on Sunday filed a $100 million counter lawsuit against AT&T, which won an injunction last month in federal court in Atlanta to allow a change of logos on Jeff Burton’s car from Cingular (a brand being discontinued) to AT&T.

On Monday AT&T counter-punched, announcing it had signed a new three-year extension of its contract to sponsor Burton and his Richard Childress Racing team.

Yet to be heard from is Nextel, which in 2004 began a 10-year, $700 million deal to sponsor NASCAR’s elite Cup series. Grandfathered in were wireless providers Alltel and Cingular. NASCAR has maintained all along that the grandfather agreement did not allow for a wireless brand other than Cingular to be advertised on Burton’s car.

With the counter suit, NASCAR appears to be protecting its position with Nextel. What if Nextel and its parent company, Sprint, should decide to sue for breach of the exclusivity agreement and get out of the sponsorship deal? Six more years remain on the current contract, so NASCAR – and more importantly, its member teams and drivers – could be out $600 million in series sponsorship.

So the first thought was that France, being as close to team owner Richard Childress as he was for 30 years, would have summoned Childress to dinner. Maybe they’d have worked something out before the litigation got so hot and heavy that the law firms are making more money than drivers.

But upon further consideration, all around . . .

My memories of France and his modus operandi are etched in the granite of his rule in his prime, at the height of his powers.

Even if he were alive and healthy today, and using the old methods – a “benign dictatorship,” he allowed his reign to be called – maybe not even a czar could have stopped the forces that play on a vastly larger and more complex NASCAR.

In 2002, after Tony Stewart thumped a photographer in the garage area at Indianapolis following a race, word from inside was that France wanted him suspended for the rest of that season.

But younger members of NASCAR’s inner council knew this was not like throwing out some good ol’ boy of yore and telling some small-time sponsor to take a hike. This was Stewart, a skyrocketing star whose absence would create a nationwide uproar and be mentioned every Sunday on Cup telecasts. And this was Home Depot, huge corporation, huge sponsor not only of Stewart but of NASCAR itself.

So maybe now, even with such an egregious offense by Busch, France’s iron fist couldn’t have come down on racing mogul Roger Penske and sponsoring Miller Brewing Co.

Maybe with such a national microscope placed on the five-week free agency of Earnhardt Jr., NASCAR’s most popular driver – and with Earnhardt being so open about his feelings and wishes – there could have been no backroom manipulation, even by France as chieftain.

Certainly, it was one thing to run off some small manufacturer of off-brand automotive products as a sponsor, and it is quite another to stare down a monster corporation like AT&T.

France in his time told an awful lot of people what to do, and he meant it, and they did it, or else.

That doesn’t work with federal judges.

As the AT&T storms intensify in the federal Northern District of Georgia, threatening NASCAR’s long-running dictatorship over who may or may not be a sponsor, and under what brand, the horizon holds even more ominous clouds in the Eastern District of Kentucky.

Kentucky Speedway’s lawsuit, which once merely sought a Cup race date from NASCAR, has turned into a straight-up antitrust action. Veteran observers have long wondered whether NASCAR could stand federal-court scrutiny under the Sherman Act, what with the France family owning NASCAR outright, and also controlling International Speedway Corp., which owns 12 of the 22 tracks on the Nextel Cup tour.

So maybe now the storms buffeting NASCAR are reaching such typhoon force, from so many directions, that not even Bill France Jr. firmly at the helm could steer a steady course from here on out.

06/21/2007

The Ward thing made me think...


You know the Ward impostor thing made me start to think.....

You know it really would be cool to have some NASCAR drivers joinROWDY. Most of them have a myspace site... But here at ROWDY we have aaudience that loves NASCAR and would love to have the interaction withthe drivers. So I think we should start a campaign to get as manydrivers to join ROWDY as possible. Let's spread the word to ourfavorite drivers and ask them to join. You never know they mightactually enjoy this format. So what do you think?? Buck and Bass whatdo you think?

06/04/2007

THE BUSCH BOYS


I don't know about you guys, but I am really getting tired of the Busch Boys.... I just saw Kurt Busch just about take out one of Tony Stewart's crew members... I hope NASCAR makes a strong statement and fines KB big time.

05/24/2007

The new AT&T car might look like????


I have had a few people ask what the new AT&T car might look like, well nobody really knows but here are two examples of AT&T sponsored cars from the past.




GREG'S SHOUT BOX

Carlpouringchampagne07/29/2008 No problemo! haha! I'll be around, TTYL!


Carlpouringchampagne07/25/2008 Happy Friday to you too! Yes, I hope to test/try chatting this weekend. So far Max and Poet are sign...


Chief18707/24/2008 I posted a blog about the PVGP weekend. How was your weekend? Any trips planned this summer with you...


SHOUTOUT Greg 306 More Shouts

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