Note: Cathy and I shared table #83 at the Awards Banquet, and had a great group of people at the table to watch the festivities.

Guest Column By Cathy Elliott

This is the week it sets in.

I’m just back from Las Vegas, the suitcase is unpacked, the washing machine is doing its spinning/cycling thing, and the dog and I are getting ready to cozy up on the couch to watch the Redskins’ latest defeat. Then, it hits me. There isn’t a race today, and I really, really miss it.

Thanksgiving immediately follows the season-ending races at Homestead Miami Speedway, and Champion’s Week activities commence the week after that, so you really don’t have a lot of time to realize we have now entered The Void, those weeks in December and January when the drivers are working on their game plans, the crews are working on the cars, and the tracks are working to sell tickets for the 2011 season.

That’s all great, but it’s still 2010 and I’m excitedly already bouncing in my chair because I really think that as great as this year was, it was merely the appetizer course for what we’re going to see in 2011.

For the moment, however, there’s nothing to see. The stillness and the silence – things we aren’t accustomed to and really don’t care for – encourage that time-honored tradition of reflection.

Top of mind is Champion’s Week in Las Vegas, which runs the aforementioned silence-and-stillness combo platter out of the building in a skinny minute.

While I would support moving Champion’s Week around periodically, to places like Chicago, Miami or Dallas, it is difficult to imagine anywhere more suitable and yes, more fun, than Las Vegas. The reason? Las Vegas makes us feel like they’re lucky to have us, instead of the other way around.

A number hotels and other venues up and down the Strip welcome NASCAR in various ways, from serving as show car locations to hosting events like the Myers Brothers Awards luncheon and the NASCAR After the Lap fan forum following the Victory Lap down the Strip.

Speaking of the Victory Lap, which begins at Planet Hollywood and ends at the Hard Rock Hotel, the way Las Vegas chooses to deal with that is by shutting the Strip down entirely for a couple of hours. I was taking a taxi at the exact time it was scheduled to start, and I asked the driver how he felt about this.

“Well, it’s a little inconvenient, I guess,” he said, “but I can’t complain. Last year the fare I had asked me to stop so I got to watch the whole thing. And the meter was running. It was pretty cool. Are they always that loud?”

Fast, noisy, pretty cool, and it turned a profit for the cab industry. Not much you can add to that. Except that only the top 12 cars participated in the Victory Lap; when you have all 43, they’re even louder.

The Hard Rock Hotel also hosts NASCAR After the Lap, which is quickly becoming the most popular and irreverent event of the week. As Jimmie Johnson put it, “We really torched each other.”

Highlights included Jeff Gordon’s pre-marital advice for Kyle Busch, who will tie the knot with longtime girlfriend Samantha Sarcinella in just a couple of weeks. “Get a pre-nup,” Gordon said.

And Tony Stewart admitted that given the choice, he wouldn’t mind spending a season as the star of the reality TV series “The Bachelor.” “A house full of beautiful women? Sign me up,” said the two-time Cup Series champion.

Phones in the offices of top ABC executives probably burst into flames at this point, although it is important to note that Stewart made no mention of any interest in “Dancing With the Stars.” I guess he already does that every week.

The Myers Brothers Awards Luncheon is the equivalent of the Academy Awards technical awards ceremony, honoring the best in behind-the-scenes achievement.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. picked up the Hamburger Helper Most Popular Driver award for the eighth year, Chad Knaus was once again honored as the Champion Crew Chief, and Kevin Conway was named Raybestos Rookie of the Year.

Far and away the most popular award and the most emotional moment of the day, however, honored the late Jim Hunter, the recipient of the Myers Brothers Award, given to those who have made outstanding contributions toward the betterment of motorsports.

The awards ceremony itself on Friday evening was one of the best in recent memory.
The musical entertainment, including Rascal Flatts and Colbie Caillat, was outstanding, and Martina McBride brought the audience to its feet with her rendition of “America the Beautiful.”

But the very best parts of the party — and I never in a million years dreamed I would say this – were the drivers’ speeches.

When NASCAR told the boys to ‘have at it’ way back in January, apparently they decided to apply this to every facet of their jobs. As a result, their speeches were humorous, honest, a tiny bit risqué at time and very conversational in their delivery.

Again, the best line of the evening, and there were many to choose from, came from Tony Stewart. Stewart elected to address the attitude of some that having the same guy repeatedly win the Cup Series title is getting a little monotonous.

“This is not bad for our sport,” Stewart said, looking directly and deliberately into the TV camera. “This is historic.”

All the appropriate people were recognized and thanked, but in the end, the drivers just seemed like friends up there talking to one another. They have given us one of the most closely contested, controversial and exciting seasons in NASCAR history, with more to come. It was so much fun.

And in that Las Vegas ballroom, all dressed up in designer tuxedos, far away from their familiar milieu, they actually seemed to be having fun themselves.

Isn’t that exactly how it should be?

The opinions expressed in this articles are solely those of the author and not this website.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 6, 2010) – Jimmie Johnson winning an unprecedented fifth consecutive NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship in come-from-behind fashion was voted the sport’s top competition story for 2010 by members of the media.

Members of the media ranked the top competition stories of the 2010 NASCAR season. The media poll was active from Tuesday, Nov. 30 until Monday, Dec. 6 at noon. There were 21 top competition storylines listed in the poll. First-place votes received 21 points, with second-place votes receiving 20 points, third-place votes 19 points and so forth down to one point for a 21st-place vote.

Johnson’s historic accomplishment of winning five straight NASCAR Sprint Cup Series titles while overcoming a 15-point deficit in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway garnered 49 first-place votes and finished with 1,449 points. NASCAR’s“Boys, have at it” philosophy – communicated last January, setting the tone for exciting and hard-fought racing – finished with 17 first-place votes and 1,294 points.

Denny Hamlin battling back from early-season knee surgery, challenging for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship, winning a series-high eight races and finishing a career-best second in the point standings ranked third in the poll.

Kyle Busch claiming 24 national series victories, including an unprecedented sweep of all three national series races (NASCAR Sprint Cup, NASCAR Nationwide and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series) at Bristol Motor Speedway in August, was selected the fourth top story. Jamie McMurray’s breakout season, that saw him win the Daytona 500, Brickyard 400 and Bank of America 500, was voted the fifth top story.

The rest of the top 10 highlights of 2010, according to the media, are: Richard Childress Racing returning to prominence with all three drivers qualifying for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup; the return of the spoiler to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series cars; the introduction of a maximum of three restart attempts prior to the white flag under NASCAR’s green-white-checkered flag finish; Brad Keselowski winning the NASCAR Nationwide Series title, providing owner Roger Penske with his first NASCAR championship; and the most competitive season in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series history, with records for lead changes and leaders.