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IndustryWeek March 1, 2006 John Teresko |
Rebuilding U.S. Manufacturing: California Dreaming Haas Automation Inc. is the largest volume producer of CNC machines. And as far as Haas and his executive team are concerned, it's going to stay that way.  |
Popular Mechanics March 2008 Alex Hutchinson |
NASCAR's New 180-MPH Mega-Treadmill: First Look When it opens in Concord, N.C., later this year, a full-scale, high-speed race car treadmill, the first of its kind in North America, will provide teams the chance to crunch on-track performance data indoors.  |
Entrepreneur March 2008 Jake Kilroy |
Start Your Engines Ricky Dennis was born into the sport of auto racing, and now he's making money doing what he loves.  |
Inc. October 2005 Allen P. Roberts Jr. |
So You Want to Burn Rubber Get the family car out to the racetrack at one of the 1,300 amateur races held every year.  |
CFO August 1, 2007 John Goff |
A Wild Ride Is Nascar finally beginning to slow down? For CFOs at other businesses, the typical response to rising costs amid a market slowdown would be to limit budget increases. But for many teams, winning is the only KPI that matters.  |
Car and Driver February 2004 Bob Zeller |
CART vs. IRL: Who Won the War? In the struggle for dominance of open-wheel racing, it looks like everyone lost.  |
AskMen.com July 20, 2014 |
Patrick Dempsey On Racing What you probably don't know about him is that the man is a racing enthusiast -- fanatic might be the better word.  |
IndustryWeek October 1, 2007 John Teresko |
Measuring Trends Help Haas Sales Trend Upward In 2006, machine tool buyers seeking a manufacturing edge helped push Haas Automation Inc. to its best year in history.  |
Sports Illustrated February 28, 2001 Frank Deford |
Honorable pastime NASCAR and its fans get bad rap...  |
The Motley Fool August 27, 2008 Rich Duprey |
Talladega Dreams for Home Depot The NASCAR sponsorship is a costly bit of vanity, but Home Depot will continue sponsoring NASCAR racing teams.  |
CIO August 1, 2002 Malcolm Wheatley |
Putting the IT in Pit Crew Technological progress at this level of racing is marked by the accumulated result of hundreds of tiny incremental performance increases. As the search for those improvements intensifies, race teams are increasingly turning to IT.  |
BusinessWeek February 7, 2005 Mark Hyman |
A Wild Ride At NASCAR Just a year ago, NASCAR insiders were hailing Bang as a team to watch and Meshkin, its irrepressible owner, as a farsighted entrepreneur. His dream of melding the speed of NASCAR with cutting-edge technology impressed racing insiders and sponsors.  |
Sports Illustrated April 3, 2000 Mark Bechtel |
Ganassi is no Pied Piper Motor sports Q&A: more CART teams... NASCAR vs. open-wheel racing... Aren't there some drivers who are just amazing drivers, no matter what they drive?...  |
CIO May 15, 2004 Stewart L. Deck |
Moving to a Real Fast Lane - CIO Careers It's only now that Whyte has started a business that seeks to combine his interests in IT and auto racing that he acknowledges being a tad nervous.  |
Sports Central June 19, 2010 Diane M. Grassi |
Horse Racing Industry Saddled With Financial Meltdown The 2010 thoroughbred horse racing season has seen its Triple Crown races pass, yet thoroughbred racing fans can still look ahead to some key summer races.  |
Sports Central June 6, 2009 Jeffrey Boswell |
Putting the Drama Back in NASCAR Here are a few changes sure to ratchet up the suspense for racing fans.  |
AskMen.com February 28, 2013 |
Alex Bowman: The Next Generation of NASCAR At only 19, Alex Bowman is only in his third year behind the wheel of a stock car. It's a reality that immediately puts him behind the curve as he enters his first season driving full-time on NASCAR's Nationwide Series.  |
Salon.com May 27, 2002 King Kaufman |
Start me up At the Indy 500, the thrills come at the beginning, the end -- and whenever the green flag comes back out...  |
Sports Illustrated May 13, 2000 Mark Bechtel |
Taking time for mom Mother's Day, Easter will be only down time next year... NASCAR pit row spot... what do you have to do to have NASCAR strip a win from you?... etc.  |
BusinessWeek February 23, 2004 Tom Lowry |
The Prince Of NASCAR Brian France, son of stock-car racing's founding family, has taken charge at a critical moment. Can he make the multibillion-dollar machine go even faster?  |
Sports Illustrated July 7, 2000 Mark Bechtel |
Trying to get along Standing firm despite the noodle treatment  |
Salon.com February 20, 2001 King Kaufman |
Red asphalt A sports fan wonders how auto racing enthusiasts can enjoy something so plagued by sudden, predictable tragedy...  |
Sports Illustrated July 14, 2000 Mark Bechtel |
Taking NASCAR 'North of the Border' Our first letter comes from a fan lobbying for a NASCAR race in the Great White North, a notion I stand firmly behind.  |
Fast Company May 2005 Chuck Salter |
Driving Ambition As CEO of a car and truck recycler, and a throttle-stomping race-car driver, Sherri Heckenast knows what it takes to beat the guys at their own games.  |
Popular Mechanics April 2007 Ben Stewart |
NASCAR's Controversial Car of Tomorrow, Here Today To improve safety and cut costs, NASCAR decreed that cars be built to spec. But will teams lose their edge?  |
BusinessWeek July 3, 2006 Andrew Park |
NASCAR For Newbies NASCAR fans can now sit in luxury boxes and eat sushi. But for a new convert, the thrill is on the track.  |
Salon.com February 21, 2001 Allen Barra |
Forced grief The media's portrayal of Dale Earnhardt as a hero of Michael Jordanesque proportions is nonsense...  |
PC Magazine April 26, 2005 John Blazevic |
NASCAR SimRacing In one of the most ambitious, PC driving/racing games to date, players compete against 60 drivers and teams on 28 tracks in career mode.  |
Sports Illustrated April 24, 2000 Mark Bechtel |
Student driver 19-year-old Sarah Fisher looks to put IRL on the map  |
Sports Illustrated May 21, 2002 Mark Bechtel |
Scorecard The Indy 500, along with all of open-wheel racing, has been skidding for years. Here's how it can get back on track...  |
The Motley Fool April 6, 2005 Stephen D. Simpson |
International Speedway in High Gear Attendance and sponsorship aren't letting up for this racetrack operator. Growth can be powerful stock fuel indeed.  |
PC Magazine November 2, 2005 Joel Santo Domingo |
Forza Motorsport This is what fans have been clamoring for on the Xbox: a racing sim with (mostly) realistic physics and plenty of licensed cars.  |
The Motley Fool February 4, 2009 Chris Jones |
International Speedway's Sputtering Future If the economy hurts NASCAR, this racetrack operator will suffer, too.  |
Popular Mechanics November 2002 |
Offshore Racing's New Look The American Power Boat Association is making major changes in the way it conducts races and does business.  |
The Motley Fool February 23, 2005 Jeff Hwang |
Viva Gran Turismo! After several delays, highly anticipated Sony PlayStation 2-exclusive Gran Turismo 4 is finally here.  |
Sports Illustrated August 4, 2000 Mark Bechtel |
Enjoying the good eats of Indy Good racing and good shrimp cocktail make Indianapolis one of my favorite stops on the tour.  |
Inc. January 2004 Larry Olmsted |
Wheeling and Dealing The entrepreneurial set has taken wheeling and dealing to a whole new venue: go-kart courses. It's the new golf.  |
Car and Driver May 2004 Csaba Csere |
Golden Oldies Racing Vintage racing offers an excellent way to explore the driving challenges posed by such geriatric machines, as I learned last November behind the wheel of a race-prepped Jaguar E-type at the Palm Beach Sports Car Classic at Moroso Motorsports Park in Florida.  |
The Motley Fool June 30, 2010 Kris Eddy |
Ponies on the NASCAR Racetrack Ford is creating a buzz by bringing its Mustang to the NASCAR track this week. Dodge will follow suit, bringing its own pony car, the Challenger, to the Nationwide Series.  |
InternetNews May 27, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Drivers, Start Your IP Engines Cheever Racing will use Cisco wireless IP gear for communications between its cars and crews at Sunday's Indy 500.  |
Sports Illustrated August 21, 2000 Mark Bechtel |
Racing toward the Olympics? Couldn't the auto racing gods figure out a way to make theirs an Olympic sport? Auto racing right now is represented by many different countries, as far as drivers and crews.  |
Sports Central February 23, 2005 Jeffrey Boswell |
NASCAR Top 10 Power Rankings Jeff Gordon --- Gordon is clearly the best driver in NASCAR, as his mastery in the closing laps at Daytona attests.  |
IEEE Spectrum February 2005 Linda Geppert |
Ossi Oikarinen: At the Races Professional race EEs are a small group; in the very highest ranks of Formula 1 racing, there are only about 30 race engineers--roughly one for every car competing in the Grand Prix series.  |
IEEE Spectrum February 2006 Justin Mullins |
Rick Townend: Driven Designing and building cars that can handle rallysport terrain is the dream of many an aspiring engineer. For the Subaru World Rally Team's chief engineer, it's both his day job and his life.  |
Inc. June 1, 2002 Andrew Raskin |
Dossier: Secrets From the Fast Lane Everyone talks about doing business at breakneck speed. Few mean it quite so literally as Eddie Cheever Jr., the only Indy Racing League driver who owns a majority stake in his own team and manages its business side...  |
AskMen.com February 1, 2006 |
F1 Racing - Behind the Scenes There is a lot criticism directed towards F1-Racing nowadays. People feel that the sport is boring and predictable. Many critics argue that the cars decide the race and not the drivers' skills.  |
AskMen.com September 17, 2003 Matthew Simpson |
Top 10: Most Expensive Classic Cars If you thought your convertible was expensive, check out some of the costliest collector cars ever sold. To make the list, cars must be classics (at least a few decades old) and must have been sold for a quantifiable amount.  |
Inc. July 2008 Patrick J. Sauer |
Behind the Scenes: Companies At The Heart of Everyday Life Small businesses that make products for Nascar drivers  |
Sports Illustrated July 23, 2002 Tim Layden |
Prince's death leaves a hole in racing His value to the sport of racing was unquestioned. Prince Ahmed was willing to spend big money in the sales ring. He liked to race good horses in big races. His personality and his stock attracted attention for a sport that needed it. He made noise. Horse racing is a quieter place today.  |
AskMen.com Steve Seepersaud |
Wealthy Animal Athletes Successful athletes raking in thousands or even millions of dollars aren't always creatures of the human variety.  |