Thursday, May 7, 2009
Mark Martin News Brings Out "NASCAR Now's" Best
It has been awhile since viewers of NASCAR Now have seen veteran writer Ryan McGee. After leaving the NASCAR Media Group, McGee wrote several solid articles for ESPN.com and appeared on NASCAR Now several times. Then, he was gone.
McGee had branched out to other sports for ESPN and that left a void on the NASCAR side. While it is nice to see the faces of the NASCAR on ESPN announcing team, journalists like Ed Hinton and McGee are missed on ESPN's various TV networks.
Wednesday, the news of Mark Martin returning to drive fulltime in the Sprint Cup Series in 2010 brought McGee to NASCAR Now. He addressed the pros and cons of the Martin decision and then talked about Brad Keselowski. McGee's advice was for Keselowski to stay right where he is, even if that means no fulltime Sprint Cup Series ride until 2010.
Brad Daugherty was on next and voiced his perspective clearly, but having members of the ESPN broadcast team on the air is different from having journalists who are assigned to gather and report the news. Daugherty confirmed that McGee hit on the right points and agreed with his statements. Enough said.
What a pleasure it was to see Ned Jarrett as the next special guest. Host Nicole Manske followed the script and asked about Darlington, but passed on the opportunity to ask this NASCAR legend his feelings on the breaking Mark Martin news. Sometimes, NASCAR Now's tightly scripted format misses the obvious. Jarrett decided to retire at the young age of only 34. Martin is perhaps a tad over 50.
Changing gears to a conversation between Cale Yarborough and Joey Logano at the Darlington museum led to a hilarious moment. Logano innocently asked Yarborough if the cars he raced back in the old days really came from the showroom floor. I guess the term "stock car" is something Logano had never confirmed. Yarborough talked about the early cars, but this piece left a lot on the table in terms of what is in the museum and Yarborough's personal history at Darlingon.
It was up to McGee to get things back on track by relating the always funny story of Yarborough and Pearson taking a ceremonial last lap before the start finish line was moved to the other side of the track to allow for more grandstands to be built. The duo was in pace cars, the year was 1998 and the photographers were ready.
As some fans will understand, David Pearson is David Pearson. With some chosen fans in the back seat, Pearson floored the Camaro from the drop of the green and took his last lap at full speed to the delight of the crowd. Even casually, Pearson was not going to be remembered as finishing second to Yarborough. Good story.
McGee has been put in charge of the ESPN.com power ranking for NASCAR teams and has Tony Stewart at the top. In explaining his decision, McGee made sure to thank all the ESPN.com readers for the hate mail. Then, he defended his decision by saying the normally slow-starting Stewart is set to explode over the summer.
NASCAR Now is a program that needs the wit and wisdom of McGee and Hinton as well as the regular contributions from Lead Reporter Marty Smith. It certainly would be interesting to see McGee and Hinton put into some Monday roundtable shows. Ray Evernham, McGee and Ricky Craven would be a combination that might click.
Manske continues to work her way into the host role and this Saturday will be alongside of Craven on the 10AM hour-long preview version of NASCAR Now. This is the ESPN version of RaceDay on SPEED and features Mike Massaro and Smith as reporters in Darlington this week.
Hopefully, as the season progresses, NASCAR Now will sprinkle a little more Hinton, Smith and McGee on the daily shows. Last year, once the Fox portion of the coverage was over, Hinton and Darrell Waltrip had a great live conversation.
Now in its third season, expanding the role of journalists in this series will only bring more credibility as NASCAR Now continues to mature.
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Except for the occasional Tom Higgins piece, there is not a better writer about NASCAR than Ryan McGee. He could not be on N-Now too much.
ReplyDeleteFrom the first days that Totally NASCAR took to the air Ryan was behind the wheel and made it a solid show that over took RMP Tonight in a short 6 months. No fancy offices, no highend edit bays and just one office trailer tucked into a back parking lot in Charlotte. Yes, the "Totally Trailer"
ReplyDeleteAs Ryan will tell you I have always been a big fan of Ryan's writing and continue to hound him to bring back Racy Ryan.
Whatever Ryan does is right on track with facts to back him up and a history of the sport second to none. There is no better writer in NASCAR.
Mike P.
Enjoyed the program tonight. Not surprised that Mark will drive next year. Ryan presented the story very well as expected. I wanted to also hear from Mark also.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed listening to Ned. Really miss him on tv.
JD:
ReplyDeleteCould the fact that not all interviews are live be part of the reason why Nicole Manske didn't ask Ned Jarrett about Mark Martin returning full-time in 2010? The interview may have been taped earlier in the day, or possibly on another day.
I haven't watched it yet, so I don't know, but was Nicole wearing the same clothes during the interview as she did the rest of the show? I've noticed a change of clothes with other hosts before between interviews and the actual show.
Robyn,
ReplyDeleteYour comment is one of the reasons I always find it strange that NASCAR Now rarely uses location graphics on the liveshots.
Fans don't need to be tricked, they want the straight scoop. If something is from earlier in the day, tell us.
I worked with Ned on Inside Winston Cup Racing back in the day, he is a great guy.
JD
I really enjoyed McGee. What a great story about Pearson & Yarborogugh I never heard that before. And what a delight listening to Ned Jarrett but what a waste of a question asking him what the best race he ever called. Yes, Evernham, McGee & Craven might be a good trio on the show.
ReplyDeleteI did not see NN, but I can only imagine Ned Jarrett. What a class act. He just seems like everyone's great uncle who is always so calm and gentleman-like (hence his nickname "Gentleman Ned"). JD, the question about Martin returning would have been a perfect question for Ned, and I wish it was asked. I've always wondered why he retired at age 34, in the prime of his career nonetheless.
ReplyDeleteRyan McGee is someone I really did not hear of until he worked with FOX, I believe it was, when they began broadcasting in '01. I was skeptical in the beginning having never seen him, but he is just full of a million racing stories, and reports in a very poised way. It didn't take me long to become a Ryan McGee fan, and love all of his work.
I agree the journalists of NASCAR on ESPN need to be featured more than the on-air crew we see at every Nationwide and Cup race. I feel that we see enough of their opinions and such during the weekends, it becomes redundant during the week, even if the stories differ in some way. If I were ESPN, I'd feature Ryan, Ed Hinton, or Marty Smith every night. It would certainly build some credibility to a show which is relatively new (3rd year).
It is fascinating the amount of press Mark Martin gets for still racing at 50, while the only attention Morgan Shepherd (at 67) gets is when he trips on a hole while rollerskating, even though the last driver over 50 to win a Cup race before Mark Martin was Morgan Shepherd.
ReplyDeleteI agree, but if the media were to have to choose between Mark and Morgan, they'll pick Mark every time. He's won more races, he races in Cup, he's more of a high profile, more "famous" driver than Morgan.
ReplyDeleteI will say this, Morgan Shepherd deserves a lot more recognition than a 10-second clip of him on roller skates before Cup qualifying. He's running the No. 89 team out of his own pocket, I believe. Plus, with help from drivers like Tony Stewart, he has been able to put together several respectable finishes. I wish he did get more TV time, but Mark Martin will always get the nod over Morgan.
It's always a pleasure to listen to Ned Jarrett. He's truly a class act. DJ proves that the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. Mc Gee was interesting to listen to. Manske repeatedly stumbled through that one interview.
ReplyDelete@jack from PA: in re: ned jarrett's retirement from racing. may 24, 1964, charlotte: jarrett and junior johnson got tangled up on the track and fireball roberts swerved to avoid their wreck, hit the wall and burst into flames. jarrett climbed out his own car -- also on fire -- and was the first person to reach fireball roberts. as jarrett pulled him from the vehicle, roberts is reported to have said "my God, ned, i'm on fire!" jarrett suffered burns to his hands as he worked to help pull roberts out of the wreck. roberts died from pneumonia 39 days later.
ReplyDeletejarrett said he wanted to go out on top and he did. but clearly the roberts' wreck and fireball's death shortly after had an impact on him.
Ned Jarrett has some really humorous stories he can tell about racing and announcing. As I recall it, once he called an unexpected pit stop on the radio by sound on his way back from the portolet.
ReplyDeleteI think it would be really super to have Jerry Punch interviewing people like Ned Jarrett, Richard Petty, Junior J., Ken Squier, David Hobbs, etc. from the NASCAR Hall of Fame - maybe as a Wednesday NASCAR Now segment and expanded on EESPN Classic.
Tangential to this column: It's a shame there was no column about May 8th's edition of NN: Nicole Manske continues to do journeyman work as host, and though she's not yet grown into a "personality" she has definitely grown. Last night she hosted a show with two outstanding pieces, one a taped interview with David Pearson and Ed Hinton, which I only caught the end of and didn't see who else was there. Hinton and Pearson were very entertaining.
ReplyDeleteMost importantly Nascar Now chose to do what ESPN is best at: a live remote interview with Ricky Craven and Kurt Bush discussing their legendary finish at Darlington in 2003 (year?). Bushand Craven described the last few laps in detail (I'd never known that Kurt lost his power steering at the end of that race) face to face in director's chairs in a studio. Manske left them alone for several minutes and just let them go at it.
The combination of Bush & Craven's comfortableness with TV and one another was wonderful. I will remember it for a long time. Nothing like this has shown up in any of my NASCAR viewing this past week.
Great Job, ESPN.