Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category
The Usual Suspects
Monday, April 28th, 2008Photos from the 2008 Samsung 500 are finally up
Tuesday, April 8th, 2008Every year I take a bajillion pictures at the races, yet every time I’m surprised at just how much work I’ve made for myself pulling them off the camera, sorting them, editing them and uploading them. I took somewhere in the neighborhood of 1500 shots on Sunday alone. Of those, I have processed and uploaded 33. You can check out the set here.
At the next race I hope to have some time to wander the campgrounds and document the culture as much as the cars.
Seriously, stuff like this just NEEDS to be on the internets:

2008 O’Reilly 300 Pictures
Monday, April 7th, 2008My pictures from the Nationwide Series race on Saturday are now up over on Flickr.
So are the pictures from Friday’s qualifying. (Check ‘em out here.)
Sunday’s Samsung 500 pictures will be coming Monday evening. (I’ve gotta sleep sometime.)
Enjoy!
Michael McDowell Qualifying Crash Photos
Saturday, April 5th, 2008During qualifying for the Samsung 500 Michael McDowell plowed the #00 “Aaron’s Dream Machine” nose first into the turn one wall at nearly 200 miles per hour. After impact the car flipped into the air, rolling sideways, belching fire and leaving a trail of parts until it finally came to rest about a quarter mile away at the bottom of turn two.
Without a doubt, I can say that it’s the most gruesome and spectacular crash that I have ever seen live.
McDowell pulled himself from the car and walked away with only bumps and scratches.
Luckily, I had my camera aimed that direction and started firing quick enough to catch most of the carnage. Click the image above to see a composite of the scene stitched together from the nine or ten frames I was able to fire off as the car careened down the track.
Or click here to download the original size and scroll around to your heart’s content.
You can also check out the individual photos in a set by clicking here.
Michael McDowell is one supremely fortunate dude.









