|
Our Mission |
DRAG
RACING Online will be
published monthly with new stories and features.
Some columns will be updated throughout the month.
DRAG RACING Online owes
allegiance to no sanctioning
body and will call 'em like
we see 'em. We strive for truth,
integrity, irreverence, and
the betterment of drag racing.
We have no agenda other than
providing the drag racing public
with unbiased information and
view points they can't get
in any other drag racing publication. |
Staff |
Editor/Publisher |
Jeff
Burk |
Editor
at Large |
Chris
Martin |
Managing
Editor |
Kay
Burk |
Senior
Editor |
Ian
Tocher |
Webmaster |
Matt
Schramel |
Asst.
Managing Editor |
Caitlin
Moriarity |
Bracket
Racing
Editor |
Jok
Nicholson |
Nostalgia
Editor |
Jeff
Utterback |
Contributing
Writers |
Cole Coonce
Cliff Gromer
Darr
Hawthorne
Bret Kepner
Jeff Leonard
Pam
Utterback
Dave
Wallace
Dale
Wilson
|
Senior
Photographer |
Ron Lewis |
Contributing
Photographers |
Adam Cranmer
Tim Marshall
James Drew
Steve Gruenwald
Zak Hawthorne
Bret Kepner
Ivan Sansom |
Tech
Contributors |
Dave
Koehler
Darren
Mayer
Jay
Roeder
Jim
Salemi
Wayne
Scraba
Mike
Stewart |
European
Correspondent |
Ivan Sansom |
Poet Laureate |
Bob Fisher |
Director
of Advertising |
Darr
Hawthorne
818-906-8222
Fax:
818-990-7422 |
Accounts
Manager |
Casey
Araiza |
|
Website
Hosting |
|
Website & Ad
Design |
Matt
Schramel |
|
|
|
Tire, Tired, Tiredest
6/30/05
he
newest story line for NHRA's continuing public relations soap opera
is that the self-proclaimed world's largest auto racing sanctioning
body will be involved in yet another high-profile lawsuit involving
its professional classes. Reportedly, because the Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Company and the NHRA didn't meet a deadline imposed by
her lawyer to deliver a detailed explanation of the details of her
husband Darrell Russell's tragic death a year ago this month, Julie
Russell is suing Goodyear and the NHRA for a reported 7.3 million
bucks.
NHRA's management suffered major heartburn and a pick-up truck
load of bad PR over the recently settled Pro Stock Truck fiasco,
but that episode and the bad PR it generated for the sport may be
nothing compared to what they could experience in a protracted lawsuit
with Julie Russell over the death of her husband. Mrs. Russell's
lawyer, John Simpson, unlike the lawyers who represented the Pro
Stock Truck owners, is already trying his case in the press. Stories
about Darrell Russell's tragic crash a year ago and NHRA's reluctance
to release information about it already have appeared in the Los
Angeles Times and the St. Louis Post Dispatch. Those stories were
basically sympathetic to the widow.
The problem NHRA and Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company face here
is
That, unlike the truck case, this one involves a death, a widow,
a product with a documented history of failure in the nitro classes
and a sanctioning body that has all of the openness of the Nixon
Administration.
I can't for the life of me understand why the NHRA and Goodyear
have apparently chosen to fight with the widow of a racer who was
killed apparently as a result of a tire failure. Especially when
you consider that the tires used on Top Fuel and Funny Cars in the
NHRA have had serious, documented, problems that have resulted in
crashed and damaged cars for a decade.
If this case ever goes to court, which I doubt it ever will, can
you imagine the testimony that could be made public as Julie Russell's
lawyer deposes and questions Top Fuel and Funny Car drivers, crew,
and crew chiefs, not to mention Goodyear engineers and NHRA officials.
You talk about a PR disaster for everyone concerned, including the
sport's major sponsors.
Everyone involved in this case from Wayne Dupuy to Ray Alley to
Jerry
Archambeault refused to comment on the issue. Dupuy did an interview
with Jon Asher for internet magazine Competition Plus and talked
with reporter Stu Durando of the St. Louis Post Dispatch prior to
the St. Louis race, but allegedly has been threatened with losing
his NHRA privileges if he talks to anyone else.
VP of racing operations Graham Light has been doing most of the
talking for the NHRA on this subject and he has had little to say
other than apparently what NHRA's legal department authorizes, notably
that if the crew chiefs were worried about the safety of the tires,
it was their responsibility to not put the drivers in the cars.
In a word, NHRA and Goodyear are "stonewalling" the issue.
Friends and neighbors, we now have "TireGate." You can
bet that the question that Julie Russell's lawyer is asking is,
"What did they know and when did they know it?"
In my opinion the management and legal teams at NHRA and Goodyear
are mishandling and misjudging this whole deal. What NHRA and Goodyear
could have done instead of forcing a lawsuit was to answer the Russell
family's questions about the death of their husband and son, admit
that there was indeed a tire problem that has been corrected because
of the accident, negotiated a settlement, and then sent representatives
from the NHRA and Goodyear to Houston to deliver a check and an
apology in person. In all probability the fans and press would have
taken those actions to signify that the NHRA and Goodyear Tire and
Rubber are businesses that sincerely care about their racer/customers
and their families.
After the PR fiasco at the F-1 race at the Brickyard, tire maker
Michelin has announced they will refund money to those who bought
tickets. It's about a $12,000,000 hit, but an action they thought
was worth the price.
Instead of doing something like that, apparently NHRA and Goodyear
would rather go to war publicly and privately with a grieving widow.
You can bet that both the NHRA and Goodyear will eventually pay,
it's just a matter of when and how much. I suspect that before the
big payoff happens, Julie Russell and her lawyer are going to continue
taking their case to the public, and the NHRA, Goodyear and the
sport of drag racing are going to suffer.
There is an old vaudeville bit where a guy is arrested for jaywalking
and the fine is two dollars. He calls his lawyer to come down and
pay the fine. Instead, his lawyer decides to fight the ticket. The
punchline is that the guy ends up spending ten years in the slammer,
spends his life savings paying the lawyer, and in the end still
has to pay the two dollars.
My advice to NHRA and Goodyear is: Pay the two dollars; you can't
win this one.
|