Roush revving up the rhetoric



The Ford team owner isn't shying away from Toyota -- on the track or off.
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) -- With Toyota poised to enter NASCAR's Nextel Cup series this season, Ford team owner Jack Roush is revving up the combative rhetoric.
Roush, the loudest critic of NASCAR's decision to allow the Japanese automaker to enter the Nextel Cup series this season, said he's "preparing myself for siege" on the track and in the boardroom this year.
"I expect to hand Toyota their head over the short term," Roush said on Wednesday during NASCAR's preseason media tour.
Roush, who has said in the past that Americans shouldn't buy foreign cars because it hurts the economy, believes that Toyota's entry will hurt NASCAR because the automaker will outspend teams affiliated with domestic automakers.
But he's ready for a fight.
"Nobody's frightened," Roush said. "We're going to go to war with them, and they should give us their best shot."
Soapbox speech
Given current events, this might not be the most sensitive time for Roush -- a war history buff who owns two World War II-era P-51 Mustang fighter planes -- to compare sports to war. But at times on Wednesday, Roush seemed to be channeling Winston Churchill.
"Toyota will not find that the established teams and manufacturers will wither in their path, as has been the case where they have tried to engage elsewhere," he said.
But Roush's preparations to take on Toyota go beyond tough talk. He is negotiating to sell a significant stake of his team to an investment group headed by Boston Red Sox owner John Henry to raise more money to race. And Roush somehow prodded financially troubled Ford Motor Company to help him meet the extra 10 million he said he had to spend in research and development in the offseason.
"In their time of greatest need, they're standing shoulder to shoulder with us," Roush said.
Toyota will field three Nextel Cup teams this season, and is going to great lengths to remind fans that they build cars in the U.S. New Toyota driver Dale Jarrett recently said that Toyotas aren't any more foreign than some Fords or Chevys.
"We could get into the argument about where the Ford Fusion is built; every one of them are built in Mexico," Jarrett said. "The Monte Carlos are built in Canada. So we could go through all that stuff and see who is right and who is wrong. But there are a lot of Toyotas that are built in the United States. They employ a lot of people."
Asked if this was a legitimate point or simply spin, Roush turned a pirouette on stage.
No imminent worries
Roush and other team owners aren't necessarily worried that Toyota will dominate right away. After all, Toyota is believed to have the biggest budget in the elite Formula One racing series but isn't winning.
"I don't see them spanking the Ferraris in Formula One," Chevrolet team owner Rick Hendrick said.
Hendrick said that because NASCAR places such strict limits on technology, winning in NASCAR is more about hiring the right people. And Hendrick figures it will take Toyota a while to figure that out.
"Yeah, Toyota will probably win a race here or there," Hendrick said. "But until they get the human capital side of it straight, they're not going to be running for the championship."
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