Month: June 2011

  • Justin Allgaier Subway Jalapeno 250 Quick Facts

    Justin Allgaier Subway Jalapeno 250 Quick Facts

    JUSTIN ALLGAIER QUICK FACTS

    No. 31 Trademark Nitrogen BRANDT Chevrolet

    Subway Jalapeno 250 Daytona International

    Speedway July 1, 2011

    Justin Allgaier 2011 Season Starts Poles Wins Top-fives Top-10s Avg. Start Avg. Finish DNFs 16 0 1 4 8 10.7 11.1 2

    No. 31 Trademark Nitrogen BRANDT Chevrolet News and Notes   

        * Allgaier Heads to Daytona International Speedway (DIS) Fourth in Points…Allgaier remained in fourth-place in the NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) championship point standings, just 34-points behind leader and Turner Motorsports teammate, Reed Sorenson.  All three championship contending Turner Motorsports drivers are currently in the top-five, with Sorenson leading and Jason Leffler in fifth-place.

        * Daytona by the Numbers… The 25-year-old BRANDT Chevy driver has five NNS start at DIS.  He is credited with one top-five and two top-10 finishes. He has an average finish of 16.8 and best start of fifth, coming in the season opener this year.

        * Check Out That Paint Scheme…In honor of America’s birthday, Allgaier and his sponsor BRANDT are running a special patriotic paint scheme that will stand out under the lights at Daytona.  The scheme is reflective of our nations colors and symbol of what America stands for.

        * This Week’s Impala… The No. 31Chevy team will hit the track with chassis TMS-110 this weekend at DIS.  This chassis has previously been run in the season-opener at Daytona where Allgaier started fifth and finished 27th.  It has also seen track time at Talladega Superspeedway where he started 17th and finished seventh.

        * Heading home… Rear tire carrier, Kevin Harris, will be heading home this weekend as the Nationwide Series heads to Daytona International Speedway. The Orlando, Florida-native, played four seasons of NCAA football for Wake Forest where he was a running back/fullback. He played in three bowl games, including the 2007 Orange Bowl.  His best season came in 2006 where he carried 78 times for 393 yards, bringing home a team-high six touchdowns.  When not pitting the No. 31 car, the 24-year-old is also a tire carrier for Hendrick Motorsports.

        * All About The Green… Allgaier heads to Daytona in contention for Nationwide’s “Dash 4 Cash” program.  Allgaier, a previous winner of the competition, will be competing for the money along with teammate Reed Sorenson and others in the top-four in the NASCAR Nationwide Series points.The highest finishing NNS points regular of the four will win $100,000 as well as be eligible for the next “Dash 4 Cash” race at Iowa Speedway on August 6th.

        * In the Loop… Thus far in 2011, Allgaier ranks among the top-10 in several of NASCAR’s Loop Data statistics: Closers (4th), Percentage of Laps Run on the Lead Lap (5th), Fastest on Restarts (6th), Laps in the Top-15 (6th), Average Running Position (7th), Quality Passes (7th), Fastest Speed in Traffic (8th), Fastest Early in the Run (9th), Fastest Late in the Run (10th) and Green Flag Speed (10th).

        * Turner Motorsports gaining momentum… In 16 Nationwide Series events in 2011, Turner Motorsports-prepared entries have notched three wins, 14 top-five and 35 top-10 finishes. All three of Turner Motorsports championship contending drivers are inside the top-five in the driver point standings with Reed Sorenson leading the way, Justin Allgaier in fourth and Jason Leffler in fifth. The No. 32 team is also leading the owner’s point standings.

    Justin Allgaier on Daytona International Speedway: “I’m excited to be heading back to Daytona this weekend.  We have a strong car that definitely works well in the two-car draft, as well as an American pride paint scheme to support our troops and celebrate the Fourth of July. The key to being successful is to stay out of trouble, be smart on pit road and be around for the end of the race to be in contention for the win.”

    Follow the No. 31 team on Twitter!Twitter.com/No31TurnerNNS Follow Justin Allgaier on Twitter! Twitter.com/J_Allgaier Follow Turner Motorsports on Facebook!Facebook.com/TurnerMotorsports

    Justin Allgaier Career Race by Race Stats at Daytona International Speedway Year/Event Start Finish Laps Status Led 2009 (Feb.) 32 40 82/120 Accident 0 2009 (July) 31 8 102/102 running 0 2010 (Feb.) 12 4 120/120 running 0 2010 (July) 4 17 102/102 running 11 2011 (Feb.) 5 27 116/120 running 0 Avg. Start Avg. Finish Total Laps  Total Led 16.8 19.2 522/564  11 Career Stats at Daytona International Speedway Starts Poles  Wins Top-fives Top-10’s DNFs 5 0 0 1 2 1

  • Reed Sorenson Daytona II Quick Facts

    Reed Sorenson Daytona II Quick Facts

    On the DG Chevy this week: Bounty, Ajax, Glad, Miracle Whip, Breyer’s, Eveready, Motrin IB, Resolve

    REED SORENSONQUICK FACTS No. 32 Dollar General Chevy Daytona International Speedway Subway Jalapeno 250 July 1, 2011

    No. 32 Dollar General Chevrolet News and Notes 

    ·         One-For-One at Road America- In only his first start at Road America, Reed Sorenson and the Dollar General team emerged as winners from the 4.048-mile road course.  After the race was extended over 28 miles from its original length, Sorenson had enough fuel to withstand the extra seven laps.  With the win, Sorenson returns to the top of the NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) driver point standings.  In 16 NNS starts, Sorenson has one win, six top-fives and 11 top-10s with an average start of 11.1 and an average finish of 8.9.

    ·         Dollar General Team Leading the Way -Saturday’s win at Road America also put the No. 32 Dollar General team and Turner Motorsports atop the owner point standings.  This is the second time this season for the No. 32 Dollar General group to lead the owner’s points, the first being after the team’s win at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.  So far in 2011, the Dollar General team has amassed two wins, seven top-five and 14 top-10s.

    ·         Sorenson at Daytona -In eight career NNS starts at the famed Daytona International Speedway (DIS), Sorenson has tallied one top-five and four top-10 finishes, with an average starting spot of 14.4 and an average finish of 18.8.  His NNS career-best finish of fifth came in the 2011 season opener. 

    ·         Turner Motorsports Showing Strength -The win at Road America gave Turner Motorsports their third NNS victory this season.  Mark Martin notched the team’s first at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Justin Allgaier took the checkered flag on June 4 at Chicagoland Speedway.  The win adds to the team’s solid stats in 2011 which include three wins, 14 top-five and 35 top-10 finishes. 

    ·         Show Me the Money -This weekend’s race at DIS marks the first of four in Nationwide Insurance’s Dash 4 Cash program.  As one of the drivers ranked in the top-four in points, Sorenson is eligible for the $100,000 bonus to be awarded for the top-finishing NNS-only driver in Friday night’s race.  Like his teammate Justin Allgaier, who is also participating, Sorenson will be carrying a blue Nationwide logo on his windshield to signify his eligibility.

    ·         This Week’s Impala – This weekend, Sorenson will pilot TMS-109 in the Subway Jalapeno 250 on Friday evening.  This is the same car Sorenson raced in the season-opener at DIS as well as at Talladega Superspeedway, earning fifth and ninth-place finishes respectively.

    Sorenson on heading to Daytona after his first win of 2011: “The win up at Road America was such an awesome thing for this whole team.  I can’t thank Trent (Owens) and my guys enough for all they did and continue to do every weekend.  We’ve had all the pieces week-in and week-out and were finally able to be in a position to go to victory lane.  This really gives us a lot of momentum going into Daytona, which is another wild-card race where anything can happen- especially in the closing laps.  I enjoy the racing there and am excited to look for my Turner Motorsports teammates again as I’m sure the two-car hook-ups are going to be a factor in the outcome.  You need to find a good partner early because the race is shorter in the summer and I’m sure it will go by quickly.  I’d love nothing more than to get another win for Dollar General this weekend and that Dash 4 Cash money that Nationwide is putting up for us regulars wouldn’t be bad either!”

    Follow the No. 32 team on Twitter!@No32TurnerNNS Follow Dollar General on Twitter!@DollarGeneral Follow Turner Motorsports on Facebook!Facebook.com/TurnerMotorsports

  • Subway Jalapeno 250 Packed With Intriguing Storylines

    Subway Jalapeno 250 Packed With Intriguing Storylines

    Danica Returns To Daytona; Four Drivers Set For Dash 4 Cash

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Last year’s Subway Jalapeno 250 Powered By Coca-Cola produced two unforgettable moments in the history of Daytona International Speedway – the debut of the new NASCAR Nationwide Series car and the victory of Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the legendary blue and yellow No. 3 Wrangler Chevrolet made famous by his father Dale Earnhardt.

    This Friday night’s 100-lap, 250-mile race for the NASCAR Nationwide Series at the “World Center of Racing” once again features plenty of intriguing story lines that will capture racing headlines as well as the attention of the thousands of race fans in attendance.

    The Subway Jalapeno 250 Powered By Coca-Cola will be the first race of the year for the four-race “Dash 4 Cash” bonus program. Introduced in 2009 by Nationwide Insurance and NASCAR, “Dash 4 Cash,” rewards the highest-finishing eligible driver a $100,000 bonus in addition to the race purse.

    The top four drivers in the series points standings heading into Daytona are eligible – points leader Reed Sorenson (Turner Motorsports), Elliott Sadler (Kevin Harvick Inc.), Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (Roush Fenway) and Justin Allgaier (Turner Motorsports).

    Danica Patrick, who for the second straight year is running a part-time NASCAR Nationwide Series schedule, will make her first summer visit to Daytona International Speedway. The open-wheel star will be behind the wheel of the No. 7 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet for JR Motorsports.

    Patrick has three previous stock car starts at Daytona. In the February NASCAR Nationwide Series season openers, Patrick finished 35th in 2010 and 14th in 2011, having led a lap in that exciting race.  In her stock car debut in the 2010 Lucas Oil Slick Mist 200 ARCA event, she finished sixth.

    Ricky Carmichael, the 15-time AMA Pro Racing Supercross champion and a winner of a record five Daytona Supercross By Honda events, will make his first NASCAR Nationwide Series start on the high banks driving for Turner Motorsports. In three NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts at Daytona, Carmichael, known in the motorcycle world as the G.O.A.T., or Greatest Of All-Time, has finished 24th, 29th and eighth earlier this year.

    A strong field of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series competitors will be in the Subway Jalapeno 250 Powered By Coca-Cola field including Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick, Carl Edwards, Brad Keselowski, Clint Bowyer, Kyle Busch and 2011 Daytona 500 champion Trevor Bayne.

    Friday night’s 100-lap, 250-mile race for the NASCAR Nationwide Series is the 10th running of the summer race at the “World Center of Racing.”  Prior to 2002, the NASCAR Nationwide Series only made one stop at Daytona International Speedway during Speedweeks in February

    Special youth pricing is also available for the Subway Jalapeno 250 Powered By Coca-Cola NASCAR Nationwide Series race.

    ·         Kids 12 and under are free in the general admission sections

    ·         Sprint/Petty/Earnhardt/Roberts and Weatherly Towers tickets are only $10 for 12 and under through June 30

    ·         Half-off junior prices for ages 13-17 through June 30 Throughout the Coke Zero 400 Weekend Powered By Coca-Cola, kids 12 and under are free in the Sprint FANZONE.

    To purchase tickets for the Coke Zero 400 Weekend Powered By Coca-Cola, call 1-800-PITSHOP or visit www.daytonainternationalspeedway.com

    Fans can stay connected with Daytona International Speedway on Twitter (www.twitter.com/disupdates) and Facebook (www.facebook.com/DaytonaInternationalSpeedway).

  • David Ragan – Daytona Advance

    David Ragan – Daytona Advance

    David Ragan – NSCS ADVANCE

    Team:          No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion

    Crew Chief:  Drew Blickensderfer

    Chassis:      Primary: RK-691   Last ran the Duel at Daytona – finished 20th                          

    Backup: RK-717    Brand new chassis  

    Ragan on racing at Daytona International Speedway: “I can’t wait to get back to Daytona.  Daytona is a track we’ve always run well at and we even had a chance to win the 500 earlier this year.  We need to get a good run to get our season back in gear.  We’ve struggled some the last few weeks, but I’m excited to race Saturday night in the Coke Zero 400.  We’ve got a fast UPS Ford and we’ve got good teammates to work with.” 

    Crew chief Drew Blickensderfer on racing at Daytona International Speedway: “David is a great plate racer and we had good runs going at both Daytona and Talladega this year that we deserved, so we are looking forward to going back.  I feel as if we’ve prepared ourselves for the two-by-two draft as good as everyone else and we almost got a win there last time.”

    FAST FACTS

    •        Jacksonville UPS employee, Russell Taylor, will serve as the green flag delivery driver for Saturday night’s race in Daytona. Taylor recently celebrated 40 years of safe driving and his name will be featured on the C-Post of David Ragan’s UPS Ford.

    •        Ragan has an average finishing position of 16.8 at Daytona.

    •        Ragan had three top-five finishes out of four restrictor-plate races in 2008.

    •        Ragan has six Nationwide Series starts at Daytona, four of which resulted in top-10 finishes.

  • Joey Logano / No. 20 Sport Clips Toyota Preview – Subway Jalapeno 250 at Daytona International Speedway

    Joey Logano / No. 20 Sport Clips Toyota Preview – Subway Jalapeno 250 at Daytona International Speedway

    No. 20 Sport Clips Toyota News & Notes:

    ·     TIME FOR THAT SUPERSPEEDWAY VICTORY:  While the victory column in Joey Logano’s career stats at superspeedways reads “zero,” the 21-year-old driver is anything but a “zero” at superspeedways. The restrictor-plate superspeedways of Daytona and Talladega have been strong for Logano, not only in the Nationwide Series, but in the Sprint Cup Series as well.  At Daytona, Logano has collected two top-fives and three top-10s in Nationwide Series competition, while at Talladega, Logano has never finished outside of the top-five in any of his three-career Nationwide Series starts.  And over the last couple of years, Logano has gotten even better.  His last four finishes at Daytona include a fourth, seventh, second and 12th, which came in the opening event of the 2011 season.  In that event, Logano was going for the lead on the final lap of the event with help from his JGR teammate Kyle Busch when Busch tapped Logano, sending him into the outside wall and limping back to the finish.  The last two years at Talladega, Logano has finished second each time.

    ·     SPORT CLIPS MAKING THE No. 20 LOOK GOOD & RUN FAST:  Sport Clips, a national sport-themed hair-care franchise for men and boys that can be found in 38 states,will return as sponsor of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota at Daytona International Speedway.  This will make the fourth event in 2011 that Sport Clips has sponsored the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing machine (Phoenix, Richmond, Iowa).  Earlier this year, Denny Hamlin took Sport Clips and the No. 20 to victory lane, earning crew chief Adam Stevens his first Nationwide Series win, at Richmond International Raceway.  Sport Clips will also be the primary sponsor on the No. 20 at Chicagoland Speedway in September (Logano) and at Dover International Speedway in October (Logano).  Founded in 1995, Sport Clips has over 750 stores nationwide. 

    ·     “I GOTTA THANK JOEY LOGANO FOR THE PUSH”:  Those are words Joey Logano is tired of hearing coming from race winners in Victory Lane.  Now, he’s ready to be the car being pushed and not the driver doing the pushing.  Half of Joey’s NASCAR Nationwide Series races on restrictor-plate tracks (four out of eight) have resulted in him pushing the eventual winner to the checkered flag and, in three of those cases, finishing second.  It started in 2009 at Talladega Superspeedway, where Logano pushed long-time friend David Ragan to his first career Nationwide Series win and finished third himself.  In 2010, Logano pushed Brad Keselowski to the win at Talladega Superspeedway and finished second while also pushing Dale Earnhardt Jr. to the win at Daytona and again coming home second.  Logano also pushed his teammate Kyle Busch to the win at Talladega earlier this season, earning yet another second-place finish.

    ·     RIDING THE BIG “MO” FROM CALIFORNIA:  One of the biggest advantages in racing is the thing they call the “big mo…” momentum.  And Logano is riding momentum from the last couple of weeks.  Logano earned the pole and finished sixth in the Sprint Cup Series event in Sonoma last weekend.  In addition, he started second and won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West event at Sonoma as well.  Adding to the momentum was that Joey’s Nationwide Series crew chief, Adam Stevens, and several of his No. 20 Nationwide Series crew members, were with Logano in California for the West Series victory.

    ·     CHASSIS:  The JGR team will take chassis #20129 to Daytona International Speedway.  This is the same chassis that Logano used when finishing second at Talladega Superspeedway.  The team will take chassis #20103 as a backup.

    ·     STAT OF THE WEEK:  100%.  Despite the frequency of the “big one” and other multi-car wrecks at restrictor-plate tracks like Daytona and Talladega, Logano has completed 100% of the laps in all eight career NASCAR Nationwide Series starts between the two tracks.

    ·     THE RACE:  The Subway Jalapeno 250 at Daytona International Speedway (Daytona, FL; 2.5-mile high-banked superspeedway) is set for Friday evening, July 1st, 2011.  The race will be broadcast on ESPN at 7:30 p.m. EST, with radio coverage on MRN starting at 7:30 p.m. EST.

    Logano’s Season-To-Date NASCAR Nationwide Series Stats: Starts Wins Top 5 Top 10 Poles Laps Led Earnings Avg. Start Avg. Finish 10 0 4 7 1 89 $235,635 6.9 7.0

    Logano’s Career NASCAR Nationwide Series Stats: Starts Wins Top 5 Top 10 Poles Laps Led Earnings Avg. Start Avg. Finish 76 8 37 61 16 1436 $2,769,839 7.2 7.1

    Logano’s Career NASCAR Nationwide Series Stats at Daytona International Speedway: Starts Wins Top 5 Top 10 Poles Laps Led Earnings Avg. Start Avg. Finish 5 0 2 3 0 23 $246,368 10.6 9.0

    Joey Logano Quotes: “I’m pretty excited to get back to the Nationwide car and back to a track like Daytona, especially riding the momentum that we’ve got going from last weekend in Sonoma.  When you run good in any series, it gives you a lot of confidence that then can transfer over into any of the other series that you run as well.  So running good in Cup can help you run better in Nationwide and running good in Nationwide can help you run better in Cup.  I feel we are on an upward swing right now and there isn’t much better place to go next than to Daytona, a track I feel like I’m pretty good at.

    “Daytona is a crapshoot really.  As long as you can keep your nose clean and keep out of trouble, you can have a shot at it.  We had a shot at it in February but just got hooked by our teammate there on the last lap.  It wasn’t intentional, it just happens in the kind of bump draft racing you have at Daytona and Talladega.  But our Sport Clips Toyota has been strong at the restrictor-plate tracks the last few years and I feel that I’m getting better at running them myself.

    “I saw the stat that I’ve pushed four different winners to victory lane between Daytona and Talladega over the last couple of years and that is crazy.  It is good, because that means we’ve always had a fast car and been able to stay out of trouble and be up at the front at the end of the race, but it sucks to always finish second.  I think it’s about time to get the No. 20 up front and let someone push me for the win.  It is all about putting yourself in the right position with just a handful of laps left in the race.  If you can do that, you can win these races.”

    Adam Stevens Quotes: “There are two really important aspects of Daytona… staying out of the big wrecks and making sure you can find someone to work with in the new two-car draft.  We’ve been fortunate enough this year to get hooked up with our teammate and we’ve worked well with him at both Daytona and Talladega.  In fact, we’ve been in position to win the race at both of the restrictor-plate tracks this year but haven’t been able to pull it off.  It’s all about being in the right position at the right time.

    “The two-car draft has made this kind of racing a lot different now.  So has the new track surface.  Before, getting your car to handle at Daytona was the most important thing.  Now, it’s making sure you can keep the car cool during the two-car breakaways.  You still have to make sure the car handles good in the draft, but getting it to keep cool is important.  It’s also important to be working with someone that can make the ‘switch’ right and do it without losing the most time.”

    No. 20 Sport Clips Toyota / Joe Gibbs Racing Team Driver – Joey Logano                                             Crew Chief – Adam Stevens                                   Car Chief – Mike Sibley Race Engineer – Curtis Ratzlaff                             Shock Specialist – Joel Weidman                         Front-end – Nick Fuller Rear-end – Dave Rudy                                           Tire Specialist – Chris “Yoshi” Jones                      Engine Tuner – Roger Purcell Truck Driver – Tim Clancy                                      Jackman – Jason Tate                                          Gasman – John Eicher                            Front Tire Changer – John Royer                         Front Tire Carrier – Brett Morrell                           Rear Tire Changer – Coleman Dollarhide              Rear Tire Carrier – Eric Groen

    ###

  • Robert Richardson returns to No. 23 Dodge revved to race Daytona

    Robert Richardson returns to No. 23 Dodge revved to race Daytona

    CHINA GROVE, N.C. (June 28, 2011) – Robert Richardson, Jr. has the perfect recipe for success lined up for him in Friday night’s NASCAR Nationwide Series race.

    First, he has the same car that was running great at Talladega Superspeedway until getting hit from behind under caution. Second, he loves racing the 2.5-mile track of Daytona International Speedway because of the high speeds. Third, the thrill of racing under the lights of DIS on a Friday night is the one ingredient Richardson likes the most.

    The No. 23 North Texas Pipe Dodge team is taking to the track looking to complete the entire event, unlike the season opener when they got caught up in someone else’s mess and hurt their radiator.  This time, the car and driver are ready to race like hell to the checkered flag.

    Fast Facts: This will be the 83rd-career start for the native of McKinney, Texas and 14th of the 2011 season. His best start, to date, this year is 26th place; which was achieved at Talladega Superspeedway. The best run to the checkers took place at Richmond when he placed 20th.

    Track Facts: Richardson is making his 10th -career start at DIS, and second of the season. The season opener was shaping up to be a good run for him and the No. 23 team as they were up in the top-15 early. When they got caught up in someone else’s wreck, it punched a hole in the radiator and caused the car to overheat and out of the race. His best start DIS was 27th and finish of 25th place. The 29-year old driver has completed 95.3% (963 of 1011) laps contested at Daytona.

    Car Facts: Walter Giles and team are taking chassis No. 55 with them to the World Center of Speed for this weekend. This car made its debut at the season opener at DIS and was used again at Talladega.

    Tune in for the Win: On-track action begins on Thursday with two practice sessions for the NNS. The first is from 2:30 to 3:50 p.m. ET and the final one is from 5:30 to 6:25 p.m. That one will be aired on ESPN2. Qualifying is on the same network at 2 p.m. on Saturday, with race action a few hours later on ESPN at 7 p.m. Radio coverage can be heard on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Ch. 90 for all 100 laps.

    Did you know: People often ask how Lake Lloyd came to be in the infield of the 2.5-mile oval. When Bill France, Sr. built the track on the relatively flat landscape of Florida in 1957, he had to come up with dirt to make the high banking for the turns. So, they dug it right out of the middle of the track leaving a large hole. That hole filled with water and was named Lake Lloyd; which is now used for fishing and water sports.

    Robert Richardson, Jr. Quotes: “This race is always one I look forward to at Daytona for a few reasons. First, it’s Daytona – what more needs to be said. Second, it’s under the lights on a Friday night and that makes it even more interesting and exciting for the drivers, teams and fans.

    “What I don’t like is the two-car draft deal that’s come about with these new cars. You either have to be a pusher or be pushed, and that doesn’t work out too well sometimes. You’ve seen in the previous races at Daytona and Talladega how that usually works out for the guy in front.

    “But, it is what it is and I know our No. 23 Dodge is a great car and the team did a great job getting it ready for this race. Now, it’s up to me – and whomever I work with – to get that car up front and get that great finish we all want.”

  • Hoorahs and Wazzups: The Long And Winding Road

    Hoorahs and Wazzups: The Long And Winding Road

    Over the previous weekend NASCAR temporarily changed its racing format and sent its Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series teams to road course venues. It was a long and winding road in each case. There were times when the road was bumpy, there were times when the cars spent more time moving dirt and gravel than actually driving on the road, and, oh yes, there was road rage. With those thoughts in mind, let’s begin this week with:

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”232″][/media-credit]Hoorah to Reed Sorenson for winning the Bycyrus 200 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at the mammoth Road America in Elkhart Lake-Wisconsin. The Turner Motorsports/Dollar General Chevrolet driver only led the final lap of the race, in a very wild finish, to claim his fourth series win, his first of 2011 and his first NASCAR win since 2007. He also left Wisconsin as the series’ new points leader.

    Wazzup with the bizarre, not to mention confusing, circumstances that placed Sorenson in the Road America victory lane?

    The confusion began on lap 50, the scheduled final lap of the race, following a yellow flag restart from a single car spin on lap 46. Wazzup with road course ringer Jacques Villeneuve pulling a questionable, bonzai, move from his fourth starting position? The result was contact with Brian Scott who went sailing into a gravel pit. Max Papis, another road course ringer, wasn’t so fortunate. He went slamming nose first into a retaining wall. Scott and Papis, two potential major players to win this race, wound up finishing 16th and 23d respectively. After the race Scott displayed his displeasure with a rear bumper tap on Villeneuve’s car as it came down pit road. Papis pulled up alongside the Villeneuve car to state what had to be a rather unpleasant oppinion.

    On the topic of opinions, Hoorah to Papis for a calm, but stern, radio comment after he was sent flying into the wall when he said: “sorry guys, I just knew the 22, (Villeneuve), was going to do something stupid.”

    Wazzup with Michael McDowell literally giving away this race following the first green-white-checker restart? Driving the Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, normally occupied by Kyle Busch, McDowell ripped off a beauty of a restart and appeared to be on the way to the win.only to spin out. Due to a very quick recovery, there was no caution flag following this spin.

    But there was a caution flag that stemmed from a bottle neck accident that followed the McDowell spin involving four cars. Following this incident it was announced that driver Steve Wallace and his crew chief were going to be summoned to the NASCAR trailer after the race.

    Wazzup with the lack of overall information, from the ESPN Network, following this incident? First off, the video replay was shot from a long distance away and it was virtually inconclusive regarding exactly what happened. The ESPN broadcast team did announce that Wallace and crew chief, Doug Randolph, had a post race appointment with NASCAR officials but never said exactly why. We later learned the meeting concerned aggressive driving by Wallace but by the time that was revealed, a full 24 hours had gone by.

    ESPN has an outstanding reputation for accurate and timely reporting in any form of sports you could name. Why wasn’t one of their highly professional pit reporters dispatched to gather information regarding the Wallace incident? Let’s see, could it possibly have anything to do with the fact that the driver’s father-team owner was also an ESPN broadcast analyst who was sitting in the live booth at the time? Is it possible that his broadcast colleagues didn’t want to step on the toes of Rusty Wallace during a live broadcast?

    By the way I swear that I heard a slight hissing sound in the audio background from the ESPN broadcast booth. I wondered if it was steam pouring out of Rusty Wallace’s ears. Well known for never holding back a candid comment and,in all fairness, it had to be difficult for a father-team owner-network analyst to have to sit there choosing his words very carefully.

    Wazzup with the fact that we haven’t quite made it to the bizarre and confusing part of this race yet?

    The green flag fell on lap 55 for the third, and final, green-white-checker attempt to finish this race. Justin Allgaier ripped off a perfect restart to take the lead. His team mate, Sorenson, passed road race ringer Ron Fellows for second and it appeared that Turner Motorsports was lining up a one-two finish.

    Unfortunately, lap 55 never got completed before Aric Almirola and Michael McDowell spun in turn five followed by another spin from Brian Scott. Almirola’s car went into the turn five gravel pit. Wazzup with race officials not immediately throwing a yellow flag when they realized Almirola was stuck in that pit? The car was up to its axles in gravel and wasn’t going anywhere without the assistance of a wrecker. Yet, a full green flag lap, on a four mile road course, went by before the caution finally came out.

    Under caution, Allgaier ran out of gas. The great debate from the NASCAR Nation was now on and it was centered around that extra lap of high speed, green flag, racing before a needed yellow flag appeared. If they caution flag would have come out, right after the lap 55 spin outs, would Allgaier have had enough fuel in the tank to slowly complete that final green-white-checker finish and win this race? Considering that many of the top ten contenders had to come to pit road for fuel under caution, the answer to that question is: “probably not.”

    However, Allgaier deserves a Hoorah for a very gracious and articulate post race television interview despite the bitter disappointment he felt. Keep a sharp eye on this young driver race fans. In the years to come he’s going to be showing us a lot both on and off the track.

    Meanwhile back on the long and winding road, Fellows, realizing that Allgaier was out of gas, roared around Sorenson’s car to seemingly take the lead. Wazzup with Fellows continuing to move at full speed despite the presence of a caution flag? He never slowed until the pace car picked him up to take command of the field.

    At the time NASCAR officials stated that Fellows was the race leader due to Sorenson’s failure to maintain the minimum speed under the caution flag. By now the entire NASCAR Nation was sitting in front of their televisions sets screaming “Wazzup.”

    Hoorah to NASCAR for deciding to err on the side of caution by double checking the elaborate video replay system located in their Race Control Center. That replay clearly showed a Road America official waving a yellow flag when Fellows passed Sorenson for the lead.

    Sorenson was sent to victory lane and Fellows was credited for finishing second. It was a good move, and a good call, by NASCAR.

    ******************

    Now let’s move on to the long and winding road part two: that would be the Toyota/Save Mart 350 NASCAR Sprint Cup race at the Infineon Raceway in California’s wine country.

    Hoorah to Kurt Busch for an outstanding winning performance that led to his first win of the 2011 season and his first ever win on a road course. Busch’s Roger Penske/Shell-Pennzoil Dodge was dominant all day long and easily led a race high 76 laps.

    It wasn’t that long ago that this winning driver was on a major tirade. He was frustrated by overall team performance and pulled no punches in delivering his thoughts on the matter that were often very loud, very angry and, in the case of in car radio transmissions, very foul mouthed.

    Despite the often irritating, and embarrassing, impact of these tirades, team owner Roger Penske was listening carefully and made some personnel changes and job position changes. The result has been a complete turn around in performance that has generated some very impressive on track numbers in many major categories. These changes has also benefited their second team driven by Brad Keselowski. Hoorah for Roger Penske for looking past the tirades and realizing what needed to be done. Another Hoorah goes to Busch for admitting that it’s time for him to “shut up and drive.”

    Wazzup with the road rage between Tony Stewart and Brian Vickers? It turned out to be a double dose of road rage that may not be resolved just yet. It started on lap 38 when Vickers locked up his brakes while making contact with cars in a tight pack. Meanwhile Kyle Busch slid off of turn 11, trying to pass Juan Pablo Montoya, and his efforts to get back on the asphalt kicked up a lot of dirt that obscured Vicker’s vision. Vickers checked up to avoid Busch and Stewart, believing that he was intentionally being blocked, got angry and dumped him.

    Wazzup with “Road Rage 2: The Sequel” that occurred between these two drivers on lap 88? At virtually the same turn 11 location, Vickers found Stewart and dumped him. Stewart’s self owned Chevrolet spun backwards with the rear of the car landing on on a tire barrier located adjacent to the crash wall. That prompted a radio comment that said “I don’t think I can drive away from this one.”

    Wazzup with the collateral damage that came from this double dose of road rage? Both of these drivers were looking at the strong possibility of top five finishes at a point in their season where a good finish was absolutely needed.

    Wazzup with the innocent victims who found themselves becoming unwilling participants in this collateral damage? This is especially true of Dale Earnhardt Jr who found himself getting collected during the first Stewart-Vickers incident. A damaged radiator from that incident led to a major engine failure, which led to a 41st place finish and that led to a fall from third to seventh in the championship points standings.

    Wazzup goes to the other acts of road rage during the Infineon race that may or may not resurface at a later date? This list includes Joey Logano vs Robby Gordon and Logano vs Matt Kenseth. Also making this list are Juan Pablo Montoya vs Kasey Kahne and Montoya vs Brad Keselowski. Each of these incidents were performed in the midst of race traffic which could have easily increased the collateral damage factor.

    The final Wazzup goes to Roush Fenway Racing driver David Ragan for being penalized for having too many men over the wall during a pit stop. How does that happen during this modern day and age?

    The final Hoorahs goes to Jeff Gordon and Carl Edwards for the where did they come from finishes. A heavy pre race favorite, because of his impressive Infineon stats, Gordon was a non factor in this race much of the day until the closing moments. Good pit adjustments allowed him to charge his way to a second place finish. It also moved him to ninth in the points standings.

    Edwards was also a non factor much of the day. His team also found the right adjustments and he finished third while increasing his championship points lead to 25 over Kevin Harvick.

    Edwards deserves another Hoorah for a Friday night decision not to perform double driving duty as originally planned. He was scheduled to compete in the Nationwide Series race in Wisconsin and then fly to California for the Sprint Cup event. But there were performance issues with the Cup car and Edwards felt the priority should be focused on California so he could take advantage of the two scheduled practice sessions on Saturday.

    The decision turned to be a very smart move for two reasons: first, he had a strong finish and a good points day in California. Secondly, the Nationwide Series car departed the race early with oil pressure problems.

  • Surprising and Not Surprising: Infineon Toyota Save Mart 350

    Surprising and Not Surprising: Infineon Toyota Save Mart 350

    In a weekend filled with Merlot, Chardonnay and Pinot Noir in the California wine country, here is what was surprising and not surprising from the 23rd annual Toyota/Save Mart 350 Sprint Cup Series race at Infineon Raceway.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”249″][/media-credit]Surprising: Not known for his road racing prowess, the driver of the No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge finally notched a road course victory. Kurt Busch did so in dominating fashion, taking the checkered flag and quickly resorting to his backwards victory lap around Infineon Raceway.

    This was Busch’s 23rd Cup win, tying Ricky Rudd for 23rd on the all-time victory list. This was also Busch’s first win since his Coca Cola 600 victory in 2010, breaking a 38 race winless streak.

    “It was an unbelievable set up,” Busch said. “Once we got into the groove with this car, it seemed to get better and better. My cars have never done that before.”

    “That was an awesome handling Dodge,” Busch continued. “After what we’ve been through, we’ve been on a high these last few weeks.”

    Not Surprising:  Road courses often lead to road rages and Sonoma did not fail to deliver. Most drivers were mad at somebody, from Denny Hamlin being ticked at AJ Allmendinger , Joey Logano plowing through Robby Gordon, and Juan Pablo Montoya punting Kasey Kahne, as well as getting into it with Brad Keselowski.

    But the ‘most mad in wine country’ award goes to Brian Vickers, driving the No. 83 Red Bull Toyota, and Tony Stewart, behind the wheel of the No. 14 Office Depot/Mobil 1 Chevrolet. The trouble between the two started early in the race when Smoke leaned on Vickers so hard that he got turned, setting off a major melee.

    Vickers, however, bided his time until late in the race and paid back Stewart in a major way. In fact, Vickers paid Stewart back so dramatically that the latter came to rest with his rear end elevated on one of the tire barriers, causing Stewart’s first ever DNF on a road course.

    “I probably had it coming because I dumped him earlier,” Stewart said of his altercation with Vickers. “It was payback but I dumped him first because he was blocking.”

    “I like Brian but I was complaining about how he’s been racing all year,” Smoke continued. “I don’t care if he was Ryan Newman, I would have dumped him too.”

    “I’m not going to tolerate it,” Stewart said. “They block, they get dumped.”

    “I don’t know why he did it,” Vickers said, explaining his side of the altercation. “I was trying to avoid the 18 (Kyle Busch) and Tony was the least of my concern.”

    “He sowed his oats and he reaped them,” Vickers continued. “Stuff happens.”

    Surprising:  Instead of flitting hither and yon, Carl Edwards surprisingly proved his total focus on the championship by not only forgoing running in the Nationwide race this weekend but by also slugging his way to a third place finish.

    “We were lucky,” Edwards said. “Everything went our way today.”

    “I stayed here for practice,” Edwards continued. “And it all came together for a third place finish, which is great for our points.”

    Edwards, this week piloting the No. 99 Scotts Ortho Ford, posted his third top-10 finish in seven races at Infineon. He also maintained his lead in the Chase standings, now 25 points over second place Kevin Harvick.

    Not Surprising:  In a weekend marked by coming home, celebrating his daughter’s birthday and premiering his appearance as ‘Jeff Gorvette’ in the Cars 2 movie, it was not surprising to see four-time champion Jeff Gordon finish in the runner up position at one of his most loved race tracks.

    The driver of the No. 24 Dupont Chevrolet notched his 15th top-10 finish in 19 races at Infineon. It is also Gordon’s sixth top-10 finish in 2011, putting him solidly in Chase contention in the ninth spot in points.

    “It was a struggle,” Gordon admitted. “We really missed the set up at the beginning of this race.”

    “Our car was fast at the end and that felt awesome,” Gordon continued. “To work our way up to second, man, that was amazing.”

    Surprising: For one driver who absolutely abhors road course races, deeming Sonoma “one of my worst tracks,” the race actually did not turn out so badly. Matt Kenseth, behind the wheel of the No. 17 Crown Royal Ford, finished in the top-15.

    Kenseth and his crew chief Jimmy Fennig brought a brand new car to Sonoma, having shaken it down last month at Road America. Kenseth definitely bettered his average finishing position of 22.2 at Sonoma in the past.

    Not Surprising: Unfortunately for Junior nation, their favorite but self-admitted road course hater, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., had reason to continue his bad attitude. The driver of the No. 88 scored his second DNF since October 2009, officially finishing 41st.

    “We was just out there running around and we got part of it,” Junior said, referencing the altercation between Tony Stewart and Brian Vickers on Lap 38. “It banged up the nose and knocked a hole in the radiator.”

    Junior’s engine did indeed expire from the hole in the radiator, which drained the water and caused the engine to blow. Junior also fell from third to seventh in points as a result of his Sonoma woes.

    “I’m not a big fan of the place,” Junior said. “Maybe one of these days.”

    Surprising: One of the Cup drivers not often mentioned in the front of the pack was surprisingly a factor in the latter stages of the Toyota/Save Mart 350. David Gilliland, driver of the No. 34 Taco Bell Ford finished 12th.

    “I am really proud of our team today,” Gilliland said. “We had an issue with second gear toward the end of the race there, so we lost a few spots, but I had a lot of fun running up front all day.”

    “I asked the guys on the radio during the race if there was an award for passing the most cars ‘cause, man, it sure seemed like I was passing cars all day,” Gilliland continued. “It was a great day for our team.”

    Not Surprising: After the gaffe heard round the racing world last year at Infineon when Marcos Ambrose shut off his engine and lost the lead, the driver of the No. 9 Stanley Ford Fusion redeemed himself, finishing fifth.

    “I am so proud of my Stanley car and my Stanley team to get a top five out of what could have been a very tough day for me,” Ambrose said. “I want to thank Stanley for putting me in the car and believing in me.”

  • The Final Word – Kurt Busch and other boys who have spent time in the dog house

    The Final Word – Kurt Busch and other boys who have spent time in the dog house

    We fans are funny folks. We like who we like, we don’t who we don’t, and once we don’t, it could take years, if ever, for us to change our minds. In a sport where popularity and merchandise sales mean almost as much as the racing, it is a big deal.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”247″][/media-credit]Take Kurt Busch, for example. He dominated things at Sonoma this past Sunday from start to finish to claim his first road course victory. Busch has won 23 Cup races, at least one in each of the past ten seasons, and claimed the season crown in 2004. Still, he is on no one’s list as being among the top ten most popular or highest paid drivers. Why? Well, you would have to go back to August, 2003 for the answer to that.

    The then 25 year old was mouthy and cocky back in the day, but that doesn’t really hurt one in the popularity game. Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick, and the late Dale Earnhardt all came out of the same mold, and have been embraced by those who shell out the dollars on trinkets. No, what Busch did was push Jimmy Spencer’s buttons, got punched in the head for his trouble, then became what some might refer to as a “whiney tit”, claiming his innocence while keeping a few of the facts under wraps. Spencer got suspended for the next race at Bristol, a race Busch won, and immediately he got the reaction he has been trying to live down ever since. The rule is, if you are a jerk, you also better be a man.

    Kurt has been doing his best to change his image ever since. Sadly, being a jerk was good, as being a nice guy has cost him tons of charisma. All he needed to do was quit being a weasel, which it appears he has also done. Now, if only his brother Kyle can learn that same lesson, and quick.

    Kyle is good, damn good. He wins, he struts, he pushes the envelop out on the track. However, when it came time to start paying the piper, like when Kevin Harvick laid down the gauntlet or when 65-year old Richard Childress decided to play the role of Kyle’s Jimmy Spencer, the younger Busch seemed at a loss as to why, oh why, people would treat him so unfairly. Maybe Childress did, and I don’t think his reaction to these incidents has hurt him much yet, but it could. The lads needs to begin reacting to these challenges with a lot more panache than he has to date.

    Danny Hamlin is one of NASCAR’s most popular drivers. For the life of me, I can’t figure out why. The boy is moody, a bit of a whiner, and makes the mistake of complaining about fellow drivers more popular than he is. Then again, maybe it is just me. Others seem to like him, and with 17 wins in less than 5-1/2 seasons, well, winning helps. Just ask Kyle.

    Then there is Brian Vickers. I liked Vickers as a Nationwide driver, but his fall from grace probably stems from the fall race at Talladega in 2006. He made a pass, clipped Jimmie Johnson who in turn took out Dale Earnhardt Jr. Then the boy celebrated in Victory Lane as though he truly had accomplished something. Not good. Then last Sunday, he gets taken out by Tony Stewart, who he in turn purposely punts into oblivion in the late stages of that race in revenge. They put a microphone in front of his face and…well, he gave a mature, reasoned response. No whining, no protests of innocence, but rather a reasoned explanation of what took place, from his point of view. He came across as, dare I say it, manly.

    So, after nearly five years, is Vickers back in my good books? I will have a better idea this weekend when the action resumes in Daytona to see how I feel. I probably won’t be buying any Red Bull merchandise at the moment, then again, from what I hear that stuff could be bound for the closet soon anyway. Enjoy the week.

  • Marco Andretti Puts Andretti Autosport Back on Track with Win at Iowa

    Marco Andretti Puts Andretti Autosport Back on Track with Win at Iowa

    [media-credit id=2 align=”aligncenter” width=”500″][/media-credit]
    Marco Andretti (26) and Tony Kanaan (82) battle for the lead late in the race at Iowa Speedway.
    Since 2003, Andretti Autosport has been competing in the IZOD IndyCar Series and since, they have three championships, two Indianapolis 500 victories and 36 wins. The problem was none of that success came recently – till last Saturday.

    Last Saturday, Marco Andretti won the Corn Indy 250 presented by Pioneer at Iowa Speedway on June 25th, 0.7932 seconds over Tony Kanaan.

    “It was a big win for us for sure,” team owner Michael Andretti said. “I think a lot of people were really pounding on us and thought we were down and out, but I can tell you this team has got tons of fight in it and we are never out.”

    [media-credit id=2 align=”alignright” width=”275″][/media-credit]
    Marco Andretti holds the Iowa Indy Corn 250 trophy after winning Saturday's race in Newton, Iowa.
    Back in 2007 with Dario Franchitti, the team won the Indianapolis 500 and the championship and in their first four season, had a total of four victories. Though since then, they had yet to find that type of success.

    This year has been a different story as they won earlier this season with Mike Conway and now with Andretti.

    “I’m happy for all the Venom guys; they did a great job,” Michael Andretti continued. “The last pit stop they brought him out P1. They did it when we needed it. It was just really truly a team effort, and Marco drove a hell of a race there in the end. He was beating the best. He had Tony out there, he had Dario, (Scott) Dixon and he drove very well there in the end.

    “I’m just so happy and relieved for (Marco). There’s been a huge monkey on his back, and it was on mine, as well. There was just a lot of pressure on us, him as a driver, me as an owner, because of some of the past things that happened at Indy and stuff. So to come back and win like this, it was just a great, great day.”

    Nine races into the year, Andretti Autosports’ four drivers Danica Patrick, Ryan Hunter-Reay, Conway and Andretti have scored four top-fives and 12 top-10 finishes. While Andretti won the Iowa race, Patrick posted her third consecutive top 10 after starting on the front row while Hunter-Reay finished eighth.

    Meanwhile, for Andretti, the win marked Andretti’s first win since Infineon Raceway in 2006 (stretching 78-races).

    “We’ve been in a position to win a lot of races and we’ve come up short,” Andretti said. “I never doubted the team, never doubted myself. I always said as soon as the stars were aligned and a little bit of luck goes my way that we’d be sitting here.

    “I think it’s just the drought, so to speak, just made me appreciate what we have here in IndyCar racing. From the drivers to the teams, it just makes us appreciate being here that much more because we know we beat those guys. The competition is unbelievable.”