Dodge announces exit from NASCAR racing after 2012 season
Aug. 7, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
The Dodge era in NASCAR racing is over -- again -- but perhaps not for good.
The
car maker announced Tuesday that it was withdrawing from NASCAR
competition at the conclusion of the 2012 season, ending a 12-year run
that to date has produced 55 victories
with 11 different drivers in the Sprint Cup Series.
Dodge
won't support any programs in NASCAR next year, but Ralph Gilles,
president and CEO of the SRT (Street and Racing Technology) brand,
didn't rule out a presence for the Dodge
after 2013.
Rumblings
that Dodge was planning its exit strategy began making their way
through the Cup garage even before the series arrived at Pocono for
Sunday's Pennsylvania 400. The conspicuous
absence of a Dodge entry from the roster for this week's Goodyear tire
test in the new 2013 cars at Martinsville fueled the speculation.
Penske
Racing's defection from Dodge to Ford, starting next season, also was a
significant factor. That announced move, which preceded the unveiling
of the 2013 Dodge Charger
at Las Vegas, took the manufacturer by surprise.
"I'm
still kind of licking my wounds and trying to figure out the world
right now," Gilles told the NASCAR Wire Service at the time.
Though
Penske continued to develop the 2013 Charger, Dodge's participation
beyond 2012 was anything but guaranteed. All of the top-tier teams in
Cup racing are aligned with other
manufacturers, and the teams that have been in discussion with Dodge
this year -- notably Furniture Row and Richard Petty Motorsports --
don't currently have proven marquee drivers to offer.
"We
had a very elegant situation with the Penske group, having a one-stop
shop, and engine, a shop -- everything -- a very high-quality team to
work with," Gilles told reporters
on a teleconference Tuesday afternoon. "When that changed, the equation
changed dramatically . . .
"It's
not as easy as you would think to configure a team at the level we're
accustomed to racing and at the level we want to perform. Not
undermining the people that came to talk
to us, but at the end of the day, it's a big machine to put together
and to do it right."
Gilles emphasized that the decision to leave NASCAR was not a matter of reallocating the NASCAR budget elsewhere.
"It's
really more a matter of going racing at the level and quality we were
accustomed to, not necessarily budget management," he said.
This
is not Chrysler's first adieu to NASCAR racing. Despite a phenomenally
successful run with Richard Petty -- not to mention manufacturers'
championships in 1970 and 1975 --
Dodge withdrew factory support from the Cup series in 1977 and didn't
return until 2001, when owners Ray Evernham and Chip Ganassi put Dodges
back on the track.
Likewise,
Dodge's decision this year comes in the aftermath of recent success.
Dodge drivers have won 44 races in NASCAR's Nationwide Series since
2002, and Penske driver Brad
Keselowski won the Nationwide championship in 2010.
Keselowski
currently is tied for the Cup series lead in victories with three and
is an all-but-certain qualifier for the Chase for the Sprint Cup this
season. It's not inconceivable
that Keselowski could win a Cup title for Penske in Dodge's last year
in the series.
"It would be almost a fairy-tale story to leave on the highest note possible -- for now," Gilles said.
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