Home Subscribe
Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo
IN-DEPTH



SPORTS EXTRAS
Local Events




Tuesday, September 21, 2004
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

Kvapil's Tundra tough in debut

Driver's gamble with first-time owner pays off

By JEFF WOLF
REVIEW-JOURNAL


NASCAR Craftsman Truck series driver Travis Kvapil, left, and 24-year-old team owner Alex Meshkin have teamed to win two races this season.
COURTESY PHOTO

The past year of racing for Travis Kvapil has been so unique it makes the spelling of his last name seem like Smith or Jones.

It started at the end of the past NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season when he had to sit in his truck after the finale in Homestead, Fla., until race officials determined whether he or Ted Musgrave had won the season championship.

Although the ruling favored Kvapil, his reign started under clouds of uncertainty as owners of his truck team had decided to cut him from its 2004 lineup.

So the 28-year-old from Wisconsin hooked his championship wagon to a team owned by Alex Meshkin, a 24-year-old Internet entrepreneur who never had owned a race team before starting Bang Racing late last year.

Adding to Kvapil's gamble: Meshkin's team would rely on the new Toyota Tundra in the truck series. The Japan-based manufacturer had a proven history in other forms of racing, but this would be its first in one of NASCAR's three major series.

It was a pair of long shots for Kvapil, but both gambles have paid off.

He will start Saturday night's Las Vegas 350 truck series race as one of three drivers through 18 races who have won more than once this year. He has six top-five finishes.

With one year left on his contract with Meshkin, Kvapil has no regrets that he joined the youngest team owner in a major NASCAR racing series.

"I really believed in the program he was building, and I knew that Toyota would put good motors and trucks on the race track," Kvapil said.

Kvapil and teammate Mike Skinner, the series' first champion in 1995, are among four teams using Toyota equipment, but Kvapil is the only one who has won.

His second win was Saturday in Loudon, N.H.

"To get the second one makes a statement that this team is for real," Kvapil said. "We're contenders."

Kvapil's team is sixth in the standings with six races left and 188 points behind leader Bobby Hamilton. While Kvapil remains a contender for the season title, he also is looking toward next season when he and Meshkin move up to the NASCAR Busch Series.

"That's the plan," Kvapil said. "I wouldn't say it's 100 percent solid, but our sponsors are behind us to move up to Busch. (Meshkin is) working on some other sponsors, so we really have the money we need."

Kvapil also denied rumors published last weekend that he was in line to replace Las Vegan Brendan Gaughan in the No. 77 Dodge for Penske/Jasper Racing in the Nextel Cup Series.

"It's that time of year for rumors," Kvapil said. "No one from Penske has talked to me."

Meshkin, a native of Washington, D.C., said he expects to make an official announcement about his NASCAR plans in 45 to 60 days and it could include a second part-time team in the Busch series. He also said Kvapil will compete in some truck races next year to support one of the team's sponsors that makes products geared to pick-up trucks.

"When we go Busch racing, it's more competitive and you're racing Cup teams," Meshkin said. "It's an opportunity to beat (teams like ) Hendrick, to beat RCR (Richard Childress Racing). That will give us the momentum when we go Cup racing.

"We won't go racing in any series unless we're going to be competitive."

Meshkin's first year in NASCAR has included a learning curve. A disagreement with Toyota over unspecified issues led the manufacturer to announce three weeks ago that it was pulling support from the team that would have forced Meshkin to find Fords, Dodges or Chevrolets for his drivers to finish the truck season.

A week later, however, Toyota backed off the threat, but Skinner left Meshkin's team and began driving for Bill Davis Racing, another Toyota-backed program.

"When there's stuff like that there's always going to be distractions, but it was neat the guys in the shop never missed a beat," Kvapil said.

Meshkin brings a new approach to NASCAR's tradition-based world.

"I think we're the most successful new team in NASCAR history," he said.

"You can accomplish anything; it's how you go about it. I think we're more relaxed than other teams. By having a culture that has created unity, we are a more competitive team."





Auto Racing in Las Vegas
More information


DOUBLE DOWN IN THE DESERT

WHAT: NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Las Vegas 350K, 146 laps (219 miles); Champ Car World Series Bridgestone 400K, 166 laps (249 miles)

WHERE: Las Vegas Motor Speedway, 1.5-mile tri-oval

WHEN: Friday, Saturday

SCHEDULE: Friday -- Champ Car practice, 12:15-2 p.m.; Champ Car qualifying, 4:30-6 p.m.; Champ Car qualifying, 8-9:30 p.m. Saturday -- Truck practice, 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; truck qualifying, 3:30 p.m.; Champ Car warm-up, 5:15-5:45 p.m.; truck race, 7:30 p.m.; Champ Car race, 10 p.m. (30 minutes after truck race)

INFORMATION: 644-4444, LVMS.com


Advertisement


Contact the R-J | Subscribe | Report a delivery problem | Put the paper on hold | Advertise with us
Report a news tip/press release | Send a letter to the editor | Print the announcement forms | Jobs at the R-J

Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1997 -
Stephens Media   Privacy Statement