THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: Wednesday, June 5, 1996 TAG: 9606050542 SECTION: SPORTS PAGE: C5 EDITION: FINAL SOURCE: BY BOB ZELLER, STAFF WRITER LENGTH: 78 lines
Winston Cup driver Elton Sawyer is out of work and his No. 27 Thunderbird is out of action until further notice.
Sawyer, of Chesapeake, is a victim of a lack of sponsorship for the David Blair-owned team, which literally and figuratively hit the wall at Charlotte.
``I was sort of proud of some of the small accomplishments we did have - some good qualifying runs - but as we all know, this sport hinges on sponsorship and we were unable to secure that,'' Sawyer said.
Sawyer's crash during pole-night qualifying at Charlotte left him with a rib injury from which he's still recovering.
Sawyer said he won't be driving the car ``unless I brought sponsorship. They're not going to run unless they get sponsorship to run. To the best of my understanding, they're going to only run four more races, and that hinges on sponsorship.''
Team manager Mike Hill said he doesn't know when the car will be back. Neither does he know who will drive it
``I can tell you the next race easier than whose driving it,'' Hill said.
``I want everyone to know I love Elton Sawyer. He's like my brother. For us to have to let him go really hurt. But it was a business decision.''
Hill said Blair already has spent $1.5 million of his own money this year supporting the team. ``We could not keep on going to every race hoping we could get a sponsor,'' he said.
Sawyer said he's concentrating on recovering from his Charlotte crash and being more personally involved with the Grand National team he owns with his wife, Patty Moise, who is the driver.
T-BIRD BECOMING EXTINCT? Ford Thunderbird fans had to shudder a bit Monday with the published report that Ford's NASCAR Winston Cup mainstay will be gone by 2000.
A top Ford racing official had little to say Tuesday on the T-bird report, but said Ford will stay in Winston Cup even if the T-bird doesn't.
``We are still considering all of our options,'' said Ford's Lee Morse. That includes a new car (T-bird or not), a new special production vehicle, a Lincoln Mark VIII or no major change, he said. ``That does not include leaving Winston Cup racing,'' he added.
As to the fate of the T-bird, ``it's pure speculation that the Thunderbird is going away,'' he said. ``I do know that as a fact, the T-bird in its current configuration is around through 1999, and beyond that, even the product planners have not made up their minds.
``As for Winston Cup racing, we're fairly happy with the Thunderbird body. We've been able to make some gains with NASCAR in terms of balancing aerodynamics with the Chevy. We're still not fully where we need to be to have parity, but we're a lot closer than we were in January.''
The Bloomberg Business News reported Monday that the Thunderbird, as well as the Mark VIII and the Mercury Cougar would be dead in the north American market by the end of the decade, according to company and supplier documents obtained by the publication.
The paper said the Thunderbird would be phased out in about two years and the Lorain, Ohio, plant where T-birds and Cougars are assembled would be retooled to build a new small sport utility vehicle.
``It's pure speculation and we don't talk about future products,'' Morse said. ``Whoever let that story out, they don't know what they're talking about.''
PARROTT OK: Buddy Parrott's heart scare at Dover Sunday was just that - a scare.
A battery of tests at Kent General Hospital in Dover revealed no heart problems and he was released Sunday evening, said Roush Racing's Lori Halbeisen. The likely cause? A pulled muscle.
A DIFFERENT DRIVER: Jimmy Spencer says he's a different driver than he used to be and there's no cause for people like car owner Felix Sabates to take pot shots at him.
Sabates, complaining about Kyle Petty's five-lap penalty for rough driving at Charlotte, said last week that Spencer ``hits everything but my bus in the garage every week'' and NASCAR never penalizes him.
``For Felix to bring that up, I think he's totally out of line,'' Spencer said. ``I think if you asked all of the competitors, they'd tell you they see a different Jimmy Spencer.
``I won't deny it, I've crashed many times by being dumb. But then all you've got is a wrecked race car and you've got a bunch of crew guys mad at you because they've got to fix it, and it rubs off on the next race. I've changed. I'm driving as hard as I can, but with patience.'' by CNB