Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Dodge expected to leave NASCAR in 2013




A little more than five months after Penske Racing's game-changing decision to leave Dodge, the manufacturer has called a news conference for Tuesday afternoon and is expected to announce its exit from NASCAR.

The move comes after much speculation and drama about Dodge's future in NASCAR that started with the March 1 shocker that Penske would switch to Ford as its manufacturer for Sprint Cup cars in 2013.

This announcement came in 10 days before Dodge unveiled its 2013 Charger  project that took nearly two years at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, where Dodge SRT and Motorsports CEO Ralph Gilles said leaving NASCAR was not an option. "I may have to drive the car myself," Gilles said on March 11.

Penske is the only team running full-time Dodges this year with Brad Keselowski (three wins) in the No. 2 and Sam Hornish Jr. in the No. 22, and there has been speculation about whether the manufacturer could find a 2013 home.

Richard Petty Motorsports, which is in a contract year with the Fords it fields for Marcos Ambrose and Aric Almirola, had been thought to be a top candidate.


The wild-card question is all along was whether Fiat, Dodge's Italy-based parent company, wanted to commit to fielding stock cars at NASCAR's highest level long-term. It appears that Tuesday has shed some light on the answer.

With Dodge expanding its programs to youth-oriented motor sports in motocross, rallycross and sports cars, it seems NASCAR didn't fit Fiat's marketing plans.

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