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Petty: Chrysler problems affecting Dodge teams

Team owner Richard Petty says the Chrysler bankruptcy has put cash flow from the manufacturer to the Richard Petty Motorsports organisation he co-owns with George Gillett 'in a holding pattern'.

From the point of view of the Dodge Motorsports programme, however, the commitment to racing is undiminished.

“They've stopped everything,” Petty said Saturday in the garage at Dover International Speedway, “They went into bankruptcy, and they're sort of in a floating stage right now. They're trying to see where they come out of this at. If they've got new people running the show, are they still going to continue to back everything exactly like they are, or whatever?

“They're in a holding pattern right now. I think GM's that way - I don't know about Ford - and I know Chrysler's that way. The rest of them I don't know. I don't deal with them.”

Walter Czarnecki, vice chairman of Penske Racing, which has three Dodge teams, confirmed on Monday the legal proceedings also have held up payments to his organisation.

“In the legal procedure, you have to file what's called a 'Cure Letter' that lists all the things that you are owed," he explained, "And when it's submitted and approved, they'll pay. We have money that was due 30 April that has not been received yet and probably won't be received for several weeks.”

Czarnecki expects, however, that with Chrysler's imminent emergence from bankruptcy and the pending merger with Fiat, the situation will straighten itself out relatively soon.

Mike Accavitti, director of brand marketing and strategy for Chrysler, acknowledged the reorganisation has affected the flow of cash from Chrysler, but affirmed the company remains committed to Cup racing and that at-track services provided to the teams continue to be available.

“The amount of engineering and other technical services, along with supply of racing components we provide to the Dodge factory-backed teams has not changed,” Accavitti said in a statement to Sporting News, “NASCAR remains a strategic part of our marketing plan and the Dodge brand. We have commitments to the sport and our teams and plan to continue our sponsorship into the foreseeable future.”

Cash payments, however, have fallen victim - at least on a temporary basis - to the supervision that comes with a bankruptcy filing. A race team might have to forgo a session on a seven-post rig, for example, if the money from Dodge that typically pays for such a simulation of suspension dynamics isn't available.

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AJ Allmendinger and Richard Petty celebrate their contract extension   [pic credit: NASCAR/Getty]
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