ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Saturday, February 17, 1996            TAG: 9602190118
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: B5   EDITION: METRO 
COLUMN: SPEEDWEEKS NOTES
DATELINE: DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. 
SOURCE: BOB ZELLER STAFF WRITER
MEMO: ***CORRECTION***
      Published correction ran on Feb. 18 in the Sports section.
      
         SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT: Because of inadequate reporting, an item
      was included in Saturday's racing  notebook that failed to include Rick 
      Mast's version of an incident with Morgan Shepherd in practice Friday.
         After they collided, Shepherd called the incident the ``stupidest 
      thing I've ever seen down here.''
         Mast said he received a barrage of phone calls about it Saturday 
      morning because he did not have an opportunity to respond to Shepherd's 
      statement.
         Mast said he and Shepherd talked it over soon after Shepherd's 
      comment.
         ``If it was a stupid move, it was a stupid move by both parties,'' he
      said. ``It was not that big a deal.''


FORMER CAR OWNER FACES PRISON TERM

Sam McMahon III, who owned the now-defunct Team III Winston Cup stock car team in 1991, was convicted Thursday of 25 counts of bankruptcy fraud in U.S. District Court in Charlotte, N.C., and faces up to 15 years in prison without parole.

McMahon siphoned some $9 million in 1990 and 1991 from two failed hotel partnerships owned by his family and spent it on his race team, a helicopter and a motor home, among other things, prosecutors alleged.

Purchases included a $312,000 condominium at Charlotte Motor Speedway, a $22,500 payment for a VIP suite at Atlanta Motor Speedway and $101,038 to redecorate the condo.

McMahon will be sentenced in 60 to 90 days, but was ordered to jail immediately after the conviction.

``I'm relieved to have this part of my life behind me. I'm ready to move on to the next step,'' McMahon told the judge after his conviction, according to the Charlotte Observer.

GOODY'S 300: A 46-car field, including six rookies, gets the green flag at 12:30 p.m. today in the 38th annual Goody's 300 with Jeff Purvis leading the pack.

Purvis won the pole for the race with a speed of 189.733 mph, faster than the lap Dale Earnhardt drove (189.510 mph) to win the Daytona 500 pole.

One of the rookies is United States Auto Club sprint and midget car veteran Tony Stewart, who is making his first Grand National start.

Stewart has help from veteran Winston Cup engine builder Waddell Wilson, who said, ``We've got rookie guys and a rookie driver, but we sent professionals home. There's no question in my mind that boy has talent and feel. When you've worked with as many drivers as I have, you just come to know them.''

AMICK WINS DASH: Lyndon Amick, 28, of Batesburg, S.C., won the Daytona USA 200 for Dash cars Friday by several car lengths over Will Hobgood. Mike Swaim Jr., of High Point, who won the pole, was third.

DNQ: Eight drivers who brought Winston Cup cars here for the Daytona 500 went home early after failing to qualify.

The most notable was Bobby Hillin, driver of the No.77 Jasper Engines Ford. The others were Jim Bown, Chuck Bown, Steve Seligman, Jim Sauter, Tracy Leslie, Joe Ruttman and Delma Cowart.

PRACTICE INCIDENT: Morgan Shepherd got clobbered by Rockbridge Baths native Rick Mast as Shepherd drove his car onto the race track at the beginning of Friday's practice, and Shepherd was none too happy about it.

``I'd just pulled onto the race track, getting up to speed on the back stretch and going into turn 3, and he just drove into the side of me and knocked all the panels out of the car.

``Stupidest thing I've ever seen down here. We hadn't even got started yet.''


LENGTH: Medium:   74 lines
KEYWORDS: AUTO RACING 




















































by CNB