5/24/05
Contingency Letters, part
2.
To read the Contigency Letters from May
12th, click here
CONTINGENCY #1
Jok, I agree with some of (what you said), but I think IHRA
is trying to show the contingency sponsors that they have
their back by making the racers have the decals on to start
with. If this policing of the decals will make the sponsors
happy and maybe bring more to the sport then I like the idea.
If not then it is ridiculous to do it. Is it fair to the
poor guy who they busted? No. I hope the sponsors still pay
him. But do I have my decals right because of it? YES. It
is not that hard to do. They do not care over in NORA so
you can slap decals.
Steve Furr
CONTINGENCY #2
Mr. Nicholson, First I want to say that I enjoy reading
your columns and opinions. Drag Racing Online is a great
news forum and you and your colleagues do a great job keeping
your readers up on what is going on in the sport.
I just read your Dead On column from May 5th, and wanted
to comment from a manufacturer's point of view on slapping
decals.
I served as Holley's drag race motorsport manager from 2002-2003.
Prior to my tenure in this position, I worked in our tech
dept. for several years and worked many NHRA and IHRA races.
I have a lot to say about contingency programs, but I will
limit my comments to the issue you wrote about in your column.
Contingency policing by the sanctioning bodies has been
an issue for many of the major contingency sponsors, including
Comp Cams, Moroso, Auto Meter, Edelbrock, Barry Grant, and
Mickey Thompson. These manufacturers, along with Holley and
others, have been pressuring the sanctioning bodies for several
years to tighten up on policing contingency program violations.
It became a huge issue for Holley a few years back when we
were posting more than 10M dollars in drag racing contingency
through all our combined brands (Holley, Hooker, Lunati,
Earl's, Weiand, and NOS).
Slapping decals is an issue, and I can assure you that Holley
as well as the manufacturers listed above all DO care if
a racer has our decals on for the duration of the event.
I have personally worked the staging lanes between rounds
with reps from all of the above companies watching for cars
going rounds and checking to see who is slapping decals.
We have even noted if we spotted someone slapping decals
from other manufacturers, including competing companies!
So, even though you weren't specifically asked if you had
them on the whole race when you won or runnered up, someone
was probably watching you.
So, why is it such a big deal for sponsors to want their
decals on your car throughout the event? Because that is
what we are paying for. When we post contingency for a product
for a race, it is for the entire event, not just one round.
You stated that all the other rounds except the final round
are worthless, that no one purchasing race products is watching
anyway. Then why the hell are all of us manufacturers spending
hundreds of thousands of dollars every season to advertise
on your car if no one is watching? I agree that at an IHRA
points race in Cedar
Falls, IA, no one is watching, but there are other racers
participating who are potential customers. At a national
event, with thousands of spectators walking the pits, there
are thousands of opportunities for consumers with street
rods, bracket cars, or even a 4WD to see a Holley carb or
Comp Cam decal on a participant's car. This is the exposure
that we are paying for.
How many winners circle photos of race cars from events
appear in magazines or on websites? Just check out the event
photo section from the NHRA Bristol race on DRO; none of
the photos taken were from the winners circle. A photographer
can snap a picture of your dragster at any time during the
event, and that photo can end up in a magazine or online.
We want to see our decals on your car in that photo. We want
Joe Blow consumer to see those decals on your car. That is
what we are paying for. If contingency sponsors only required
their decals on for final rounds, we would be missing out
on the largest percentage of the media exposure.
What if a picture snapped of "Project 4-Link" from
an early round of a race showed up in one of the drag mags
without a Demon sticker on it? Would it be fair to Barry
to pay you winner or r/u contingency for that same race?
If the picture was part of race coverage for the same event?
|