Leaner Michael Waltrip Racing poised to rebound
Jan. 30, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- There's a Phoenix Racing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, owned by Harry Scott.
But
there's also an organization that more aptly embodies the nature of the
mythological phoenix, which is reborn when it rises from the ashes.
In
its debut season in 2007, in the wake of a fuel-system cheating scandal
at Daytona, Michael Waltrip Racing came perilously close to becoming
a soot-covered carcass, before financier Rob Kaufmann stepped in with a
much-needed infusion of cash.
Six
years later, in the September event at Richmond that determined which
drivers make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and which don't, MWR
again incurred the biggest financial penalty in NASCAR history
($300,000) for trying to manipulate the outcome of the race.
The
negative fallout cost MWR a $16-million-a-year sponsor (NAPA), one of
its marquee drivers (Martin Truex Jr., who departed for Furniture Row
Racing) and a Chase spot for Truex, who was knocked out of the 10-race
playoff because of a points penalty.
MWR
reduced its roster of full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup cars from three to
two. The organization sold its airplanes and will fly to 2014 races via
charter.
Kaufmann explained the economics of that last decision.
"We're
not running an airline," Kaufmann said Thursday on the final day of the
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Media Tour hosted by Charlotte Motor Speedway.
"We're running a race team. With the aircraft, the cost -- with two
full-time teams rather than three -- you just went below the break-even
of where it made sense.
"So
we were able to get out of the aircraft business, which is good. It's
not a core function. My accountant and my insurance people are very
happy
about that."
That's
not to say there's not good news for a streamlined MWR. Aaron's has
committed to a full season on Brian Vickers' No. 55 Toyota, after
remaining
with the organization in the wake of last year's debacle at Richmond.
In fact, the loyalty of Aaron's and Toyota may have been the critical factor in keeping MWR afloat.
"It
was huge, beyond comprehension," said Vickers, who was sidelined last
year for the second time in his career due to blood clots, but has
received
medical clearance to race. "Everything that I went through, everything
the team went through last year, having a company like Aaron's stand
behind you through thick and thin just means a lot and makes you want to
go out and work that much harder.
"It makes you appreciate what they do, and I think that resonates with the customers. I think it resonates with the fans."
Clint
Bowyer, who qualified for the Chase last year and finished seventh in
the final standings, is back in the No. 15 Camry. Owner Waltrip and
Jeff Burton will share a limited schedule in the No. 66 Toyota, which
will function as an R&D team.
In
fact, as MWR opened the final day of the media tour, Burton was in
Nashville for the second day of testing in nine-degree weather at
1.33-mile
Nashville Superspeedway.
"We expect to make the Chase and we fully expect to race for a championship," Waltrip said. "That's what our focus is."
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