Industry concerns trickle down



Auto makers are tighting their belts, so must the racing industry.
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) -- When asked about Ford Motor Co.'s announcement that it lost a record 12.7 billion last year, the director of Dodge's racing program cringes as if he just swallowed a swig of motor oil.
These aren't the best of times for the U.S. auto industry, and the effects are starting to trickle down to NASCAR. Folks in the race team shops sprinkled throughout suburban Charlotte are worried about tightening their belts -- and not just the ones on their engines.
Mike Accavitti, director of Dodge Motorsports and SRT Product Planning, said teams must start finding ways to become more efficient.
"I've always contended that if it's a money-burning contest, you've got the wrong partner," Accavitti said. "I don't want to say we're cheap, but we never really had a lot of money to just throw at things."
Dodge is here to stay
In an attempt to stop long-standing rumors that Dodge was considering pulling out of NASCAR entirely, Accavitti made a firm public commitment to the sport during NASCAR's preseason media tour Thursday.
"Dodge is here to stay," he said.
But not here to go on a wild spending spree.
At a time when NASCAR teams are making major increases to their research and development budgets to deal with changes in the sport, asking automakers to chip in even more money is a tough sell.
"It's hard to get more, because let's face it: Right now, business is not great," said Dodge team owner Ray Evernham.
Evernham certainly could use the money. He and other teams are developing the so-called Car of Tomorrow, NASCAR's new chassis design that could be more cost-effective for teams in the long run but is costing them millions to design and build right now.
Keeping an eye on Toyota
Evernham also must keep an eye on Toyota, which is entering its first year in the Nextel Cup and has caused widespread concern that they will drive up the cost of racing.
In response, Evernham said Dodge has redistributed some of its racing budget, spending less on advertising and more on research and development.
"[They've] cut some of the frills so they could put more money into the engineering and development so they can make the cars go faster, so I applaud them for that," Evernham said.
Dodge also offers teams technical help, including wind tunnel time and manufacturing expertise. They hope to help teams improve their performance without boosting their budgets -- much like the automakers themselves are trying to do.
"I think the sport here is at a transition point," Accavitti said. "It's going to become more of getting the most you can for that dollar, rather than just throwing more dollars at it."
Contracts between automakers and teams are closely held secrets, but run well into the millions and can make up close to 20 percent of a team's racing budget. Without that money, a team wouldn't be able to survive in the long term.
Roush Racing president Geoff Smith said despite Ford's overall financial difficulties, he has never heard anything from the company's senior management that would indicate that the company is wavering in its commitment to NASCAR.
In fact, team owner Jack Roush talked Ford into increasing its support of the team this year. Roush said on Wednesday that Ford is paying some of the additional 10 million Roush says he had to add to his research and development budget.
Smith sees that as an indication that Ford won't pull out of NASCAR just because times are tough.
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.