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CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- When Dan Blizzard, the front tire changer for the No. 31 Chevrolet that usually is driven by Jeff Burton, heard about the rules for Thursday's Sprint Cup Pit Crew Challenge and he immediately hatched what turned out to be a brilliant idea.
Put Jeff's wife, Kim Burton, in the car.
The No. 31 team from Richard Childress Racing thus saved not only on paint by changing just the first name over the driver's side door, but ended up winning the 2009 Challenge in record-breaking fashion at Time Warner Cable Arena.

The No. 31 team has set the bar after the fifth annual Pit Crew Challenge in Charlotte, N.C.
"When they told us what the rules were, as far as the car having to weigh 3,200 pounds for the competition without the driver in it, ding, it goes off in your head -- why not get the lightest driver possible? I mean, she's a tiny lady," Blizzard said. "Who better to put in the car than somebody that weighs 100 pounds -- if she weighs that? That was the idea behind the whole thing."
It wasn't all smooth sailing to the title with Mrs. Burton behind the wheel.
In the second round of the competition, after crossing the finish line, Lil' Kim encountered big trouble in trying to stop the car. It wasn't until after a few folks scrambled out of the way and some team members assisted that she was able to steer it out of harm's way and get it halted.
"I practiced [Wednesday] and I was stopping the car within 10 feet," Kim said afterward, smiling broadly. "The first round we did for the seeding, I stopped it perfect. But the first round didn't mean as much as the second, and going into that round I wanted to make sure I went way past the cones (signifying the finish line) before I tried to stop it. So I did that, but then when I pushed the brake pedal, it wasn't stopping. I just kept pumping and pumping, and I was thinking, 'Oh, Lord, I'm going to crash this car into the wall.'
"Somehow we got it stopped there, and the next two times I was able to stop it right on."
That included in the finals, when the No. 31 team beat out the surprising No. 43 Dodge team fielded by Richard Petty Motorsports that usually is driven by Reed Sorenson.
The important stuff
Of course, "driving" in the Pit Crew Challenge is a bit of a misnomer. The participants were required to jack a car, change front and rear tires, and deposit two 12-gallon cans of fuel without being penalized for "excess spillage." Then, after all that, they had to sprint to yet another car and push it 40 yards across the finish line.
Oh, and they needed to do it in roughly 22 seconds without making any other mistakes. So in a greater sense, Kim Burton wasn't so much driving as she was going along for the ride.
But she had to keep the wheel straight and make certain she didn't brake too early. Those were serious enough tasks that some of the other teams, such as the No. 11 Toyota fielded by Joe Gibbs Racing, actually had their real driver, Denny Hamlin, behind the wheel for the competition.
Let the record show that Mrs. Burton smoked young Mr. Hamlin in the semi-finals.
"Coming over here [for practice on Wednesday], my wife told me that whoever was in front of her better get out of the way, because she wasn't going to stop early. And that's how it went," Jeff Burton said. "I think she figured if somebody was over there in her way, they weren't supposed to be there and if they got run over, that was OK -- because she wasn't going to stop early. That's the kind of competitor she is."
Asked if she was going to bust on her husband because she got the No. 31 to Victory Lane in 2009 before he did, Kim Burton laughed.

"If you're in racing, you try not to bust on anybody too hard -- because the next week it can come back to bite you in the butt," she added. "I have a horse competition coming up in two weeks, and I don't want to jinx myself for that. So I'm just going to say awesome job to these guys [in the pit crew]. They deserve it."
Odd man out
It wasn't until a day before the event that Kim Burton officially replaced Andy Spenner, a road mechanic for RCR, as the pilot of the No. 31 for Thursday's main event. Since it was Blizzard's idea to do so, he was the one who had to deliver the bad news to Spenner, who had been looking forward to sitting in the driver's seat.
"How much is your heart set on driving this car for this thing?" Blizzard asked Spenner.
"Why? What's the deal," Spenner asked in return, sensing correctly that something unusual was up.
Blizzard gave it to the man straight.
"Man, we're thinking about putting Kim in the car. She's like 100 pounds less than you," he said.
Blizzard said Spenner took the news like the team player that he is.
"If it's going to benefit the team, if it's going to help you win, then no sweat, I'm all for it," Spenner told Blizzard.
And so then they went out and won it -- for Spenner, for Jeff and Kim Burton, for Richard Childress, and for one another on a pit crew that also included jack man Adam North, 44-year-old gas man Curt Bowman (who, according to the others, serves as the inspiration to everyone else on the team), catch can man Andrew Childers, front tire carrier Jon Wallace, rear tire carrier Chris Martin and rear tire changer Terry Spalding.
For Spalding, the win was especially sweet. The night essentially was a live audition for a job. He had been unemployed in racing after earlier changing tires for Michael Waltrip Racing.
"I think maybe he's got the job now," pit crew coach Matt Clark said of Spalding. "The salary is non-negotiable, though."
Blizzard said he thought of Spenner's sacrifice as the team celebrated.
"That's what's cool about our deal. We work together and we're one big happy family most of the time," he said.
While making sure to credit his wife as much as possible, Jeff Burton took care to make sure he spread the accolades around to the guys who really earned him his choice of pit stalls for this Saturday's All-Star race at Lowe's Motor Speedway, which went to the winning team.
"These guys work so hard. Ninety-nine percent of the people in this country could not do the fitness program that they do," Mr. Burton said. "They put a lot of effort into it, a lot of heart into it. It isn't just a bunch of mechanics who one day decided to pick up a wrench or a jack. They undergo NFL-caliber training.
"We did not have a good day on pit road last week [at Darlington]. The cool thing about [Thursday night], the cool thing about sports, is that you can come back from those days. What makes Tiger Woods so good is that he can forget about the last shot if it was a bad one. These guys did a good job of that, and this is great for all of us. It's good to see that much work pay off."
It didn't hurt that once the car was jacked and gassed and all tires and lug nuts were in place, the guys had 100 fewer pounds to push to the finish line. For that, they can thank Mrs. Burton -- and a Blizzard of an idea.
The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer.
Joe Menzer is the author of "The Great American Gamble: How the 1979 Daytona 500 Gave Birth to a NASCAR Nation." Click here to purchase.
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