NASCAR drivers start your engines: It's about the most athletic thing you'll be doing during the Samsung 500.

Eddie Gossage thinks I'm an April Fool.

Texas Motor Speedway's president told me so—in no uncertain terms—when I trial-ballooned my thesis that NASCAR drivers aren't athletes.

"You've lost your mind," Gossage retorted from his office overlooking TMS, home to this weekend's Samsung 500 out in Fort Worth. "That's the dumbest thing you've ever said, and that's saying something."

I stubbornly repeat: NASCAR drivers are not athletes.

Gentlemen, start your angers! This is gonna dadgum piss off sum racin' rednecks.

Before you start hollerin' about how I couldn't tell the difference between a toy Yoda and a Toyota, let me preface my premise. No, I've never been behind the wheel of a stock car. I've also never sacked Tony Romo, yet I have a pretty good feeling for how difficult that would be.

I was at TMS the day Kenny Brack's IRL car crashed and disintegrated into vapor. I took an aerial tour of the track in a blimp piloted by Casey Mears. I served as an honorary member on Ken Schrader's pit crew. I've attended—and chronicled—dozens of races. Even went to the Daytona 500 and gave the three-fingered salute in front of Dale Earnhardt's statue.

I know NASCAR. I just don't get it.

The racing, I mean. I totally appreciate the event. What's not to like?

This week approximately 180,000 fans will transform TMS into a Woodstock on wheels. Around the infield and adjacent campgrounds, NASCAR nuts with blue collars and red necks will basically spend their vacations smoking, drinking and chasing women. There will be $1 million RVs and $12 pup tents. There will be seniors rooting for Junior, Chevy stickers peeing on Ford, Confederate flags proudly flying and Santa Claus hung in effigy because December is the only month without racin'.

On Sunday the crowd will look for big wrecks, but during the week it's obsessed with big racks. Trust me, NASCAR fans attend races just as much for chicks with loose morals as cars with tight steering. Walk around the infield and there's so much focus on the female anatomy you'd think the Sprint Cup was Victoria Secret's sleek, new bra.

Combine weekend concerts by Pat Green and Foreigner with the most fun, fellowship and frivolity this side of a Hee-Haw reunion, and if the Samsung 500 were canceled, most of the fans wouldn't leave. Or, for that matter, even notice.

Which is totally understandable. Because in NASCAR, when the green flag starts, the fun stops.

I respect that the sport doesn't have labor disputes or drug problems or Terrell Owens. But it also doesn't have any athletes.

"That's just not true," Gossage contends. "In fact, they are every bit as athletic as anyone in other sports. I'm telling you right now, if they stood side-by-side with a driver and took their shirts off, there would be some NFL players pretty embarrassed."

Maybe, but there's a difference between being in shape and being an athlete.

Psst, it's the car that moves the man, not the man moving the car. Capiche?

Certainly there is amazing hand-eye dexterity required to be a NASCAR driver. But maneuvering a pampered car around an oval track in what most of us civilians would consider "light" traffic is a refined skill, not an athletic feat.

"Nonsense," Gossage says. "It's very dependent on cardiovascular conditioning. You sit in a car for a 500-mile race for three hours in 140-degree temperatures inside the cockpit with no timeouts or no halftime and tell me fitness isn't at a premium. If you're not an athlete, you'll spend the last 100 miles falling out of your seat. Bobby Allison used to stay in shape by taking his rowing machine into the sauna and working out for 90 minutes every night."

Sorry, you lost me at "sit."

G-force, heat and lack of power steering notwithstanding, driving is a sedentary endeavor. I just imagine Jimmie Johnson winning another thrilling race and being offered a comfy chair to rest his weary body. "No thanks. Been sittin' all day."

I saw Carl Edwards win a race and celebrate with a backflip off his car, making NASCAR the only sport where the athleticism takes place after the competition.

"Jeff Gordon didn't have a good year in 2008," Gossage says. "But he made a commitment to his conditioning, and now he's leading the points race. It's a year-round thing with these guys."

NASCAR drivers are no more athletes than jockeys. Both are powered by—and at the mercy of—horsepower. Drivers, in fact, rank below golfers on the athletic scale because while Tiger Woods actively swings his club, Tony Stewart is passively propelled by his engine. Lance Armstrong's machine moves only when he pedals; Kurt Busch's machine moves when he simply pushes a pedal.

If you don't grasp that, then swig a beer, ogle some boobs and listen up. NASCAR is 75 percent machine and 25 percent man.

The worst driver in the best car might win Sunday's race. But the best driver in the worst car won't even finish. I was at TMS one year when Greg Biffle was done in by a loose lug nut. Imagine the Mavericks losing because Dirk Nowitzki snapped a shoelace.

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  • Eric 11/12/2009 1:16:00 AM

    Is this guy for real. How about this. Go sit your ass in a accelerometer set it to about 6 g's turn the heat up to about 140 degrees and swing a 50 pound weight in your hand for 4 hours without stopping. Then tell me they are not athletes. What a moron.

  • Dominick Casola 04/07/2009 8:15:00 PM

    First off let me say i do not in any way intend any disrespect to the writer of this story, Secondly i am a competitor in ARCA NATIONWIDE HOOTERS CUP AND THE NASCAR EAST SERIES i have many top finishe in all the series listed above and anyone in doubt of this fact may look it up on offical series sites or visit my website at dominickcasola.com and i will say without a doubt that drivers are most definately athletic, when i first started in pro racing i was not in shape and my results showed that fact, in a racecar that reaches 140 F and with Gforces that reach up to 4 G,s (akin to a fighter pilot) for hours on end , anyone that would claim that fitness is not important is a complete FOOL, once i started on physical fittnes my results drasticly improved, if you have never been to Nashville superspeedway in 110F heat and inside a racecar that generates engine temps of over 800F for 3 hours, than dont talk like you know what you are talking about your muscles cramp your vision blurrs and your head unde force weighs over 35 lbs, try putting a 35 lb weight on your head for even 10 miniutes and walking around, not gonna happen , i am 21 and in great physical shape and after the ARCA race there in 2007 i climed out of my car (along with many other competitors) and basicly climbed into a cooler full of ice used for soft drinks, and was mentaly and physicaly drained , it makes you look bad a a writer to say things that are both not true and more importantly not total BS so for all you athletes out there or should i say DRIVERS! we know what we are talking about and let the nay sayers think and write ehat they so desire,

  • spungo 04/06/2009 11:55:00 AM

    Nope, these guys are most certainly NOT athletes. If they are, then one has to consider a little lady working a sewing machine for a 14 hour shift in a sauna-like sweatshop an athlete. And what about marathon episodes of drunken sex in a trailer home with a busted window AC unit? Is that athletic? Well....having done it, I'd have to say maybe. The most athletic thing I've seen in the races is the TV commentators trying to keep yapping for all those hours. Sometimes they'll have 4 redundancies in a sentence, beating out even the heavyweight champs of redundant speech: police spokespeople.

  • Wanderer 04/06/2009 9:03:00 AM

    NASCAR is a driving skills competition, nothing more. For Pete's sakes guys - *women* can compete in racecar driving. Ergo, it is NOT a sport. NASCAR is even less of a sport than hockey (also mainly a skills competition - eg. skating skills). We get it .. you like to watch cars go in circles .. good for you ... it's not a sport.

  • Barnzey 04/06/2009 7:07:00 AM

    Please. When 5'0, 100 lb. Danica Patrick can compete with men in motorsports, that pretty much throws Gossage's argument out the window about the athleticism and fitness of racecar drivers. Gordon, Stewart et al may be athletic and in very good shape, and Gossage could've said drivers are athletic and driving is physically demanding, and no one would've argued the point. But he comes across like a wrestling promoter trying to convince fans that WWE isn't staged when he suggests those guys could hang with the likes of Beckham, Donovan, Rooney and Ronaldo.

  • Fraggy 04/05/2009 5:45:00 AM

    why does it offend nascar fans that drivers are not considered athletes? some of them maybe athletes outside of their day jobs, but driving a car doesn't qualify them as such. driving is a skill, not an atheletic endeavor. there's nothing insulting about that, it's just a fact. it shouldn't be seen as something that diminishes what they do, it just "is".

  • Ben 04/03/2009 4:29:00 PM

    First off, I am a huge NASCAR fan. I watch as many races as I can every year and go to Daytona for both races when I can. I think term sport has been taken out of context for sometime now. NASCAR loses credibility when old men like Mark Martin, the old guy who tries to qualify for Daytona every year (cant remember his name), and even when they had the legends race at Bristol. Each sport requires a skill. Baseball requires a different skill than Football, Football requires a different skill than Golf, golf requires a different skill than racing. That doesnt mean these arent sports. Now I do agree that Gossage is crazy. You can not compare NFL athletes to NASCAR athletes. If you put Carl Edwards on the defensive line against the best O-line man in the country he is going to get killed, but at the same time, if you put that 300 pound o lineman in a race car at the Coke 600 he probably isnt going to last either.

  • IamZardoz 04/03/2009 7:51:00 AM

    No other sports where a split second decision can decide if you and/or others live or die. Try making those decisions after driving maybe 450 miles at 200 mph sitting in a 140 degree ambient temp with heat coming up through the floorboards into your feet. Dont tell me drivers arent athletes.

  • Jim Buxton 04/03/2009 1:29:00 AM

    I don't even know why I read such a stupid story. Anyone who has never driven a race car and then makes assumptions about drivers is blind.

  • Baylee Smith 04/03/2009 1:06:00 AM

    I don't know who you think you are, but you have no idea what your taking about. So why don't you keep your screwed up, backwards opinions about the number one sport in America to yourself. You don't know what the hell your talking about and i bet you wouldn't last 20 laps in a race with these so-called "non-athletes." Give me a break.

  • chickenpants 04/02/2009 6:45:00 AM

    Criticizing NASCAR in any way and including a picture of Ricky Bobby is pretty much a wash.

  • Don 04/01/2009 9:54:00 PM

    A few years back, some writer asked Tony Stewart if he was an athlete. The gist of his answer was "take a look at me, do I look like an athlete? The most athletic thing I do is channel up, channel down". I think Stewart has a lot of crediblity on this.

  • Fake Lowvoice 04/01/2009 9:20:00 PM

    Fake Lowvoice has obviously never driven a vehicle in any race of any length. The intense focus and precision required on the part of the driver, coupled with the endurance, the heat, the danger, and the skill, all qualify auto racers as athletes. skiers don't slide across the snow without the skis. motocross, same deal. Golfers don't THROW the ball, they use the club. They swing the club - - kind of like stepping on the gas, but in short intervals. Oh, let's see....archery, nope; tennis, they use that racket, baseball they pretty much stand there. Many many sports would not qualify as athletic under Fake Lowvoice's guidelines.

 

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