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Carl Edwards was a little surprised at being passed by wrestler John Cena.

Fast cars and superstars make for reality TV, Part 3

Celebrities learn quick, especially the aggressive ones

By Ron Lemasters, Special to NASCAR.COM
June 1, 2007
10:09 AM EDT
type size: + -

CONCORD, N.C. -- John Cena has a market all his own.

If you've ever seen the guy, he'd take over any market he wanted. As a superstar in the world of professional wrestling, he's already as big a deal as just about any NASCAR driver.

But as part of the celebrity team in Fast Cars & Superstars: The Gillette Young Guns Celebrity Race, he's just one of the guys.

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Fast cars and superstars on ABC

Beginning June 7, ABC will present the latest reality TV series, the first based on NASCAR, with the show "Fast Cars & Superstars."

Matching NASCAR stars like Carl Edwards with a rock-and-roll wrestler like Cena is just good marketing. The two have separate followings, and by teaming them up for the purposes of a made-for-TV reality show, it gives them a chance to blend a bit.

There is some evidence that professional wrestling and NASCAR fan bases are about the same, and while the degree of overlap is variable depending on the day, the stars and the mood of the populace, there's plenty of room to maneuver around.

So how does a guy like Cena, used to calling his own shots -- and delivering them -- take to instruction from a NASCAR driver? Quite well, actually.

"All the Gillette Young Guns really had some great feedback," said Cena, who was at Lowe's Motor Speedway over the Coca-Cola 600 weekend to help launch the ABC program. "They were all open for some comments and questions. Carl [Edwards] kind of helped me and was one of the guys to really kind of focus with me on execution and driving when it came down to performing."

Well, there's a limit to what one driver can do with someone who has the natural aggression of a World Wrestling Entertainment champion like Cena.

"He is pretty good," Edwards quipped, with Cena sitting right next to him. "We had a lot of fun. We really did."

Edwards told a story about how the training went.

"I tried to come up with a strategy to be fast at the end," he said. "I was supposed to lead him around the track and I was going to go ahead a little bit when we got on pit road, and let him catch up to me. I was looking in my mirror and trying to figure out where he was and then he came flying by me 100 mph faster and got in front of me. He is definitely very aggressive." (Continued)

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