Its no secret to any serious drag race fan that
the 1999-2000 off- season was a tough one for the sport in the board
room. Rob Vandergriffs Jerzees backing gone. The Gwynns
Mopar Deal gone. The Interstate Batteries deal that backed Tommy
Johnson Jr. gone, and gone, and gone it went.
However, there was one team over the winter which got a big deal going:
the Kalittas of Ypsilanti, Michigan. As anyone who witnessed the NHRA
Winternationals can tell you, the Kalittas gained the backing of the
largest hotel in the world, the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Its parent
company is the MGM movie studio.
The MGM Grand is so big it can almost claim cityhood status. This palace
boasts over 5,000 rooms with a cool 93 elevators to service customers
who enjoy entertainment in luxurious splendor, so much so that the light
bill alone is $500,000 a month. If there are wonders of the world for
the United States, the MGM Grand would rate high on the list.
Doug
Davenport, Kalitta Motorsports Sponsor Relations boss and the man who
put the deal together, remarked, The MGM Grands trademark
is The City of Entertainment, which is not some idle boast,
but an actual description of the hotel. If you wanted to see and experience
everything the MGM Grand has to offer, you couldnt do it in a
weekend. Plan on setting aside four to five days to take it all in.
For Connie, Doug and Scott Kalitta to take it all in, the 43-year-old
Davenport had to endure what was probably one of the busiest six-month
stretches of his life. During September of last year, Connie, a two-time
IHRA Top Fuel champ, Michigan Motorsports Hall of Fame member, and one
of the great drag racers of all-time, told Davenport that he knew some
guys at the hotel and it might be worthwhile to give them a call. Davenport
made that call and on October 2nd, Davenport and the hotels marketing
people had the first of 25 meetings towards the race-car sponsorship.
At our first meeting, I came in with a big dollar proposal,
said Davenport. I am a big believer in the numbers and also consider
myself an idea man, plus I really do love drag racing. I think the MGM
point people liked what they saw, but they said it was too late in the
year to make any big sponsorship commitments. We agreed to meet again
and that was all the encouragement I needed. As far as Kalitta Motorsports
was concerned, Connie told me that if I had some ideas to go for it
and present them to the hotel people.
Over the latter half of the year, Davenport pitched the proposed deal
as a win-win situation. The demographics showed that drag race fans
would be great customers for the hotel. Souvenirs, die cast models,
racing apparel and other racing paraphenalia would be placed in the
hotel as well as at the various race sites. Fan programs involving the
hotel would be a natural. Davenport figured the movie pull, the
shows, the gambling, the music, how could anyone not be lured by those
amenities?
MGM Grand management had been looking for entry into the high-speed,
jet-setting world of auto racing and the Kalitta deal looked good.
When you think about it, it really was a natural, Davenport
recalled. As one example, the MGM Grand draws roughly 14 million
people a year. If two percent bought race souvenirs, were talking
about six million dollars in that venue alone.
At 2:30 p.m. on January 12, MGM Grand President / Chief Operating Officer
Richard Sturm attended the final meeting and gave Davenport the news
he wanted to hear. He said the upper echelon at the hotel said the Kalitta
program was a go and to make it happen.
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