Got milk??

S

smack500

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I ment Got money???

Monday, July 15, 2002

NASCAR Winston Cup Career Money Leaders

After Race 18 of the 2002 Season: Chicago



1. Jeff Gordon $48,312,244
2. Dale Earnhardt $41,742,384
3. Dale Jarrett $35,402,995
4. Mark Martin $32,584,848
5. Rusty Wallace $31,658,622
6. Bill Elliott $29,142,728
7. Terry Labonte $28,262,113
8. Bobby Labonte $27,967,888
9. Ricky Rudd $26,548,473
10. Jeff Burton $24,387,765


*note this a couple races back all the active drivers have more money then that now
 
Just think Smack, In 10 years Gordon will probably have well over 100,000,000! Thats a ton of $$$. And I dont even want to get into what Jimmie Johnson will have by the time he is 45!
 
WoW 66, I never knew that. Maybe I should start to watch F1 a bit more than I do....
 
"Yeah, he got $52 million last year. Highest paid athlete in the world."

That was the answer I got when I asked Paul how much do F1 drivers get. He was talking about Michael Sch...... You know what I mean.
 
Originally posted by 66mustang
Atleast that is what Paul said.

Paul said that???? Must have missed his meds that day.

Whatever..... F1 doesn't race EVERY WEEK, doesn't have a 30+ race season, race and test 12 months a year, nor do they have the sponsorship or fans like Na$car does.

I love open wheel racing, but how many in Nascar today came thru the open wheel bunch to make it here??
 
Originally posted by 66mustang
"Yeah, he got $52 million last year. Highest paid athlete in the world."

That was the answer I got when I asked Paul how much do F1 drivers get.  He was talking about Michael Sch...... You know what I mean.

With Jeffie's 48 mil after Chicago it looks like he will do more than 52 mil this year:) Don't you just know that frosts Brooke's butt to no end!!:ROFLMFAO:
 
Originally posted by 66mustang
"Yeah, he got $52 million last year. Highest paid athlete in the world."

That was the answer I got when I asked Paul how much do F1 drivers get.  He was talking about Michael Sch...... You know what I mean.

66, could that have been from just the races? Kat seems to be right, they dont race every week or have 30+ races in a year. I would bet that Paul was including whatever Ferrari? (i think) gives him too.
 
I don't know, I guess we will have to ask paul when he gets back from Canada.
 
Originally posted by DE Wrangler 2


With Jeffie's 48 mil after Chicago it looks like he will do more than 52 mil this year:)   Don't you just know that frosts Brooke's butt to no end!!:ROFLMFAO:

OK, who has the frosting to freeze that butt?? I'll bring the ice
 
Yea, I will look it up in a sec but im pretty sure micheal shoemocker has made around that much on one race.
 
here this should solve any arguments

Forbes Faces: Michael Schumacher
Davide Dukcevich, 10.10.00, 4:13 PM ET

In the United States, Formula One automobile racing is usually relegated to the eighth or ninth page of the sports section, sandwiched somewhere between the local racetrack results and rifle advertisements.

In Europe, on the other hand, grand prix victories are greeted with ringing church bells, celebrations in the street and triumphant declarations from heads of state.

That, at least, is what happened October 8 in Italy after Germany's Michael Schumacher won the Formula One title, becoming the first driver on the Ferrari team to win a championship since 1979. Schumacher clinched the crown after finishing first at the Japanese Grand Prix by 1.8 seconds.

Schumacher's elation at the victory rivaled that of the millions of Italians who watched the contest on television. "It's difficult to find proper words for such feelings," the overcome 31-year-old said, according to Reuters. Ferrari's president called Sunday the best day of his life and telephoned Schumacher immediately after the race to congratulate him before the driver got drunk and "out of [his] head."

Schumacher has reason to celebrate. Last year, he earned an estimated $49 million, more than Michael Jordan ($40 million), Tiger Woods ($47 million) and NASCAR racer Dale Earnhardt ($26.5 million). His $35 million annual salary is larger than any other athlete in the world. Advertisers want every piece of him: A German investment firm agreed to shell out $8 million over three years to have him wear a four-inch ad on the baseball cap he wears before and after races.

Although making more money than Jordan and Woods carries with it superhuman expectations, Schumacher has performed, well, superhumanly. After having won two previous world titles with the Benetton racing team, he is just two championships shy of the all-time record, held by Juan-Manuel Fangio of Argentina. The German has triumphed in 43 races during his career, second only to France's Alain Prost, who won 51.

And unlike Jordan or Woods, Schumacher puts his life in danger every time he competes. Past greats, including French Canadian Gilles Villenueve and Brazil's Ayrton Senna , have died on the racetrack. A look at the numbers from the Japanese Grand Prix attests to the risks: During the approximately hour-and-a-half race, Schumacher traveled 193 miles, most of them in the rain, and averaged about 130 mph. And unlike the Indy circuit, where cars travel at faster speeds around oval speedways, the tracks for Formula One races have deadly curves.

On October 8, however, "Schumi," as his fans affectionately refer to him, was invincible. Father Alberto Bernardoni, pastor of a Catholic church in Maranello, Italy, where Ferraris are made, was presiding over a mass when Schumacher sped to victory.

"We tried to pray well and, of course, Michael tried to race well," said Bernardoni, whose church bells christened the victory after the Mass. "I'm really very happy. What a joy!"

http://www.forbes.com/2000/10/10/1010faces.html
 
You need to look at the numbers you're comparing a little more carefully.

The 48 million you're showing for Jeff is his career purse winnings. All the money that he's won in NASCAR WC races since he started. It does not reflect his personal income.

The numbers you're showing for Schumacher are his personal imcome for last year. That includes salary, appearance, endorsement, and other money he was paid. It does not in any way reflect the purses F1 pays for its events.
 
f1 drivers do make alot more money then nascar drivers though I know thats a fact
 
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