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Featured stories from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • ‘Wild Thing’ Kyle Busch end wild night in Daytona victory lane

    ‘Wild Thing’ Kyle Busch end wild night in Daytona victory lane

    [media-credit id=22 align=”alignright” width=”241″][/media-credit]Kyle Busch wouldn’t say that he impressed himself in the way that he won Saturday night’s Budweiser Shootout but he thought it was pretty cool.

    After what sure were going to be hard wrecks on two different occasions Busch was able to save his No. 18 M&M’s Camry from trouble and win the season opening race for the first time in his career. Whereas he should have been on a hook in the garage Busch beat defending champion Tony Stewart coming off turn four in a photo finish, 0.013 seconds.

    “Man, it was exciting from where I was at a few times certainly,” Busch said afterwards. “Can’t say enough about all these guys, bringing out a backup car like that making another fast M&M Camry out of Joe Gibbs Racing, come out here and winning the thing. First time might have been luck. I’m going to say the second time was all skill.

    “It was interesting from my seat. I was steering, stabbing, braking, gassing, everything in between, trying to keep the thing straight, get it back under control.”

    The first of Busch’s trouble came on lap 48 when Hendrick Motorsports driver Jimmie Johnson got into him in turn two. Busch’s car slid down the apron and Busch was able to regain control twice as it tried to get sideways. In doing so he and the drivers who slowed behind him lost ground to the leaders who sped away. The caution never flew and Busch was left playing catch up.

    “Hard to say whether you impressed yourself,” said Busch. “Never thought about that. It was certainly cool. I enjoyed it. I wouldn’t recommend everybody do it everyday. But certainly it got my attention. I was just glad that I was able to pull through it, to be honest with you, to be able to straighten it back out, keep going. Check my mirror. Everybody was stabbing the brakes, trying to slow down, thinking I’m going to wreck. We got it back going, they’re like, huh, all right.”

    That included Stewart who had a front row seat. The three-time champion said it was one of the coolest things that he’s ever seen and that it was also cool to see a driver come back from big moments such as those during the race and win. Even though it would be at his expense in the end.

    Said Stewart, “He had to catch it three times before he saved it. You get 3400 pounds moving like that, to catch it once was pretty big, to get away from it and catch it again was big and the third time was big. That’s three big moments in one corner and he never quit driving. There’s a lot of guys that wouldn’t have caught that. He did a fantastic job with that save.”

    Busch chuckled when hearing about Stewart’s praise and said that it was probably because of the shower of sparks that flew. To Busch though he had gotten lucky and it was hard to explain.

    Then it happened again with two laps remaining. This time it was Jeff Gordon who got into Busch and as Busch again went into a long slid and save Gordon went back up the track and collected others. He ended up flipping and barrel rolling towards the entrance of pit road.

    “Three and four with Jeff Gordon behind me, I got him pushing on me through one and two making me really loose,” described Busch. “I’m glad the straightaway came when it did because otherwise I was going to spin out. He got back on me a few more times on the straightaway moving me around, I think trying to move me out of the way. Getting into three, hit me again, hit me on the left rear corner, spun me out. I don’t know what the deal was there.”

    The lengthy caution gave Busch plenty of time to head to pit road for more repairs before lining back up for the restart. NASCAR had deemed the race not yet to be over and there would be a green-white-checkered finish.

    “It was a lot going on,” he said. “It’s so hard to explain everything you do, but you’re doing it all at the same time. That’s just the way it is. Certainly I was like, ‘Man, that was pretty lucky the first time.’ It happened the second I’m like, ‘Well, I guess I’m lucky again. We’ll see where we end up when the checkered flag flies.’”

    On the restart Busch was eighth but coming to the white flag was already on the back bumper of Stewart who he pushed to the lead and away from the field. Using the two-car tango Busch and Stewart were able to separate from the field and decide the race themselves as Busch pulled off the pass coming off turn four and to the finish line.

    The victory was the first for both Busch and Toyota in the event but fifth for Joe Gibbs Racing. It was also the closest finish in Budweiser Shootout history and it gave Busch a nice shot in the arm after how his 2011 season ended.

    “It is great that we were able to come out first race back in the M&M’s car and get back to victory lane,” he said. “It means a lot to myself and this team, Joe Gibbs Racing. Can’t say enough about all the support around, M&M’s being back, us being able to get to victory lane like we did, carry that Toyota right through victory lane like we did.

    “Certainly there’s situations and stuff like that that got really tense out there and really hectic. You’re not sure how you’re going to come out of it sometimes. You just do the best you can with what you got going on at that particular moment, try to come through it. Sometimes we were pushing three rows deep, I was in the middle, I thought I could spin out on the straightaway.”

    Busch though, as many others enjoyed Saturday’s racing, which was back to the big pack instead of two-by-two for the entire event. While he says that it may have looked crazy it was because of how short the race was and that next weekend’s Daytona 500 will either be as crazy or boring as the drivers make it. At the end though when it comes to deciding the winner, things will be just as interesting.

    “There’s going to be moments like that in the 500,” he said. “There’s going to be more cars. It’s going to be 50 times more pressure packed at the end of the race like that and more intense because it is the Daytona 500. There’s going to be guys going for everything that it’s worth.”

  • Sam Hornish ready for ‘great opportunity’ that he sees ahead

    Sam Hornish ready for ‘great opportunity’ that he sees ahead

    [media-credit id=13 align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Sam Hornish Jr. knows what winning can do for a career but when it ended up sealing the deal for him to run a full Nationwide Series schedule in 2012 he understood and appreciated it that much more.

    “It sure made everything a lot better, but at the end of the day it helped us in a lot of things,” said Hornish about his Phoenix win last November. “We were really close to being able to sign our deal to be able to run full-time. We were trying to figure out which sponsors were going to do how many races and then, when we won, we had more races sold than we had races.”

    Hornish went to victory lane in Phoenix while competing in a limited schedule for Penske Racing while hoping to put together plans for 2012. At the time the whole season hadn’t been sold to sponsors and he was in jeopardy of again not running a full season, something he hasn’t been accustomed to during his career.

    Then came Phoenix where Hornish has found magic before. Following the win sponsorship from Alliance Truck Parts and new partner WURTH has the Chad Walter led team ready to chase a championship.

    Hornish said the win also helped solidify everything the team had worked hard for. Also setting up a great opportunity ahead for them even though they would rather had just started the season the day after Homestead. It was hard sitting home for three months and not put to good use the momentum that had been built.

    In only 13 starts in 2011 Hornish compiled six top 10s, two top fives and his one win. It was Hornish’s 32nd career start, he started fifth and then led 62 laps and held off teammate and Sprint Cup stars Brad Keselowski and Carl Edwards. And while Hornish wants to keep his expectations for the upcoming season in check, there’s no denying the excitement for it.

    “I’m really excited about it,” he said last week in Daytona. “I feel like we’ve got a great opportunity with our Alliance Truck Parts and WURTH Group Dodge Challenger. I just feel like we’ve got a lot of things that we are capable of doing if we are smart and get some good finishes to start off the year, build up our point base. We want to run for the championship and we need to continue to work well with our teammates and try to learn as much as we can to have both of the Penske Dodge Challengers running up front.”

    Cautiously optimistic says Hornish. Starting off the season on the right foot will be key toward heading in the right direction. Be smart, work hard and most importantly work together as a team. Drivers and teams always mark the first five races as a starting point and baseline of their program.

    Where do we stand after leaving California and how do we stack up against the competition? Evaluations will be made of what the team is doing right and wrong as they move toward trying to put themselves in championship contention. But Hornish knows it will be a tall task.

    “Well, I sure hope it’s easier for us than some other people,” he said. “I look at Ricky [Stenhouse Jr.] who returns as the champion and Austin Dillon coming in as the truck series champion. There’s a lot of guys who are going to be strong, a lot of well-funded cars, because it’s one thing to have the drivers and the car counts there, but to have the driver and a well-funded car running every weekend for the championship, there’s some good teams out there.”

  • Busch wins the Bud Shootout

    Busch wins the Bud Shootout

    [media-credit id=22 align=”alignright” width=”238″][/media-credit]Kyle Busch pushed Tony Stewart to the lead in the final laps of Saturday night’s exhibition Budweiser Shootout at Daytona International Speedway. Then Busch ducked to the outside of Stewart as they headed to the finish line.  Busch edged Stewart by .013 seconds to win the 2012 Budweiser Shootout.

    Busch drove and incredible race with two spectacular saves to stay in contention to win the race.  “I don’t know how many times I spun out, but I didn’t spin out, you know?” Busch said in victory lane.

    The final save from Busch came after contact from Jeff Gordon.  Busch spun on the inside while Gordon went high and into 3-wide traffic.  Gordon slid on his side for approximately 1,000 feet before barrel-rolling to a stop on his roof.  While upside down, Gordon climbed out the window and said this was the first time in his career he’d been on his roof.  Jimmie Johnson, Kurt Busch and Jamie McMurray are also involved.

    The 75-lap race was marred by two big accidents after it appears the big pack racing is back and NASCAR has successfully split up the two-car tandem racing.

    The first big one came out on lap 9 in turns 1 and 2.  Michael Waltrip, Paul Menard, Mark Martin, David Ragan, Matt Kenseth, Juan Montoya and several others were involved.

    UNOFFICIAL RESULTS
    Budweiser Shootout, February 18, 2012  – Exhibition

    Pos. No. Driver Make Laps Status
    1 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 82 Running
    2 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 82 Running
    3 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 82 Running
    4 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 82 Running
    5 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 82 Running
    6 16 Greg Biffle Ford 82 Running
    7 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 82 Running
    8 15 Clint Bowyer Toyota 82 Running
    9 99 Carl Edwards Ford 82 Running
    10 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 82 Running
    11 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 82 Running
    12 22 A.J. Allmendinger Dodge 80 Running
    13 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 79 Running
    14 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 75 Running
    15 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 73 Running
    16 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 73 In Pit
    17 51 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 73 Running
    18 20 Joey Logano Toyota 54 In Pit
    19 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 54 Running
    20 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 54 Running
    21 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 54 Running
    22 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 54 In Pit
    23 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 8 In Pit
    24 34 David Ragan Ford 8 Running
    25 140 Michael Waltrip Toyota 8 Running
  • Matty’s Picks – Vol. 1 – Bud Shootout – Daytona International Speedway

    Matty’s Picks – Vol. 1 – Bud Shootout – Daytona International Speedway

    [media-credit name=”daytonainternationalspeedway.com” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]Race No. 1 – Bud Shootout
    Daytona International Speedway, February 18, 2012

    Following my two months of moderate depression, its time to get the ball rolling in 2012! Between the major letdown of the Buffalo Bills’ 2011-12 season and the ever slumping Buffalo Sabres’ season in-progress, I am anxious for the engines to fire and for the sweet smell of race fuel to hit my nostrils. It has been a long off-season for race fans here in Western New York, despite having one of the mildest winters in recent history.

    2011 Season Review

    Since everyone knows the historical significance of Daytona and the Bud Shootout, I thought I would post some stats as far as how my picks fared throughout the 2011 season. Now, if you’re wondering why the numbers might not add up…I did not start my ‘Matty’s Picks’ column until the Dover race in May of last year.

    We’ll take a look at my winner picks first…

    My 28 winner picks last season averaged a finish just outside the Top 10, with an average finish of 10.8. 3 races (2011 All-Star Race, Kentucky, and Watkins Glen) I picked the eventual race winner, 10 races I had Winner Picks finish in the Top 5, and 3 more of my Winner Picks finished with Top 10’s. To sum that up, 16 of 28 winner picks last year finished with imaginary points in my Pick Um’ Challenge.

    Here is the breakdown of the 14 drivers I picked last year, and the number of races I picked them as Winner Picks:

    Driver Picks
    Jimmie Johnson 5
    Kyle Busch 4
    Carl Edwards 3
    Kevin Harvick 3
    Denny Hamlin 2
    Jeff Gordon 2
    Marcos Ambrose 2
    Matt Kenseth 1
    Ryan Newman 1
    Brad Keselowski 1
    Clint Bowyer 1
    Tony Stewart 1
    Martin Truex Jr 1
    Kurt Busch 1

    These Winner Picks are slightly less than impressive, but if I were to take anything out of these 28 picks last season, it was that only once did one of my Winner Picks fail to finish the race. (Jimmie Johnson –October 15th, Charlotte)

    Onto the Dark Horses…
    I guess all-in-all it was an ok season in the world of Matty’s Dark Horse Picks. My Dark Horses averaged a finish in the top half of the field each week (15.6), and again just one DNF for all 28 Dark Horse picks last season. I didn’t manage to end up with a Dark Horse in Victory Lane last season, but did manage a silver medal in David Ragan’s runner up finish in the Coca-Cola 600. Beyond that pick last May, I managed 5 more Top 5’s for a total of 6 and 4 more Top 10’s.

    Here’s the breakdown of the 15 drivers I picked last year as Dark Horses:

    Driver Picks
    A.J. Allmendinger 3
    Juan Pablo Montoya 3
    Clint Bowyer 3
    Kasey Kahne 3
    Marcos Ambrose 2
    David Ragan 2
    Mark Martin 2
    Paul Menard 2
    Greg Biffle 2
    Brad Keselowski 1
    Martin Truex. Jr 1
    Brian Vickers 1
    Reagan Smith 1
    Jeff Burton 1
    Joey Logano 1

    So what did I take out of last season?

    1. I earned a lot of brownie points with my girlfriend by picking Jimmie Johnson 5 times.
    2. I lost a lot of brownie points with my mother by picking Kyle Busch 4 times.
    3. Most race-winners come from drivers that are not considered “Dark Horses”.
    4. If you’ve got a driver you’d like to see finish the race, send them to me (mattl@speedwaymedia.com) because of my 96.4% completion percentage.
    5. Of my 3 Winner Picks, two of them happened while I was in attendance. (Follow me on Twitter @ML_B_Lo to find out if I am at the track on a given weekend)

    Bud Shootout Picks
    In case you are wondering how the race is going to go Saturday Night at Daytona, or how drivers qualify to race in the Bud Shootout, here’s the skinny:

    The Bud Shootout field is comprised of drivers finishing among the top 25 in final NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points standings as well as active past winners of the Daytona 500, Coke Zero 400 and Shootout at Daytona. The 75-lap Shootout will consisit of two segments – 25 and 50 laps, with a 10-minute pit stop allowing teams the opportunity to change tires and FOX their chance to cash in on some commercial time. The Green Flag will fly at 8:29PM Eastern on Saturday Night on FOX.

    Dark Horse Pick
    Its tough to call any of the drivers in Saturday’s Bud Shootout a Dark Horse, because you have to have done something to even be on the entry list for the 187.5-mile dash. I’d like to think that my Dark Horse pick flies under the radar when most people talk about who they think will win Saturday night, and that is why I am considering him a Dark Horse this week.
    Jamie McMurray won the 2010 Daytona 500, a year before NASCAR decided to break up the pack racing at superspeedways. From the brief practices earlier today, it looks like we could be heading back to the pack this year.

    McMurray’s win in the 2010 was actually the second time he visited Victory Lane at Daytona, as he was the winner of the then Pepsi 400, the July race at the 2.5-mile superspeedway. McMurray was then in the No. 26 Crown Royal Ford for Roush Fenway Racing in 07′, but is back in the No. 1 Bass Pro Shops/Tracker Chevy for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing for this year’s Bud Shootout at Daytona.

    Winner Pick
    My birthday happens to fall on the same day as this year’s Daytona 500, and in an effort to earn an extra gift from my mother next week, I’m going with her guy this week in the Bud Shootout.

    Since it seems like the pack is back in style, I have to go with the guy that can “see the air” in the draft. Simply based off his finishes last year (24th & 19th) at Daytona with the two-car-tango, Dale Jr is ready for the draft, and the pack racing that NASCAR is trying to get back to.

    With the two-car racing that was seen last year, drivers were forced to pick a dancing partner and stick with them for the duration of the race. Rather than making “friends” out on the track, drivers were simply looking for “a friend”. There are 25 cars entered for Saturday’s Bud Shootout, and I would bet that the other 24 drivers are more than willing to hook up with Jr for a run to the front. So instead of having one friend like last year, Jr will have 24 friends looking for his rear bumper on Saturday night.

    That’s it for this week, but stay tuned throughout Speed Weeks for more picks and insightful thoughts on the 2012 racing action.

    Until next time….You stay classy NASCAR NATION!

  • Leilani Munter Combines Racing and Dolphin Passions

    Leilani Munter Combines Racing and Dolphin Passions

    [media-credit name=”Photo courtesy of Phil Cavali ” align=”alignright” width=”260″][/media-credit]While passions run high as the ARCA racers take to the track for their season opener at Daytona, Leilani Munter is not only looking forward to her time behind the wheel but cannot wait to share the cause on the hood of her race car.

    The driver of the No. 12 Tony Marks Racing Dodge Charger is combining her passion for speed, as well as her commitment to calling attention to the plight of dolphins by featuring the documentary ‘The Cove’ on her race car.

    “I’m just passionate about a lot of things, like the environment and clean energy,” Munter said. “The way that I found ‘The Cove’ is that I saw the movie a couple of years ago.”

    “As soon as I saw it, I was so moved by it,” Munter continued. “As soon as it ended, I looked at my husband and said “We’re going to Japan to help to end this.”

    “That was my call to action,” Munter said. “My husband and I traveled over there in 2010. I made two trips in 2010 and then another trip over there for three weeks this past September.”

    What Munter saw in her travels to Japan and the cove shook her to her core and became the reason for her desire to combine her racing passion with her call to save the dolphins. Munter’s passion for the issue was most evident as she recalled the story of ‘The Cove.’

    “There is a small cove and the dolphins are migrating past the area,” Munter said. “Thirteen boats go out and bang on poles in the water, which scares the dolphins into the cove.”

    “The dolphins are trapped overnight in the cove,” Munter continued. “Then dolphin trainers from all over the world come and pick out the dolphins they want to go train at dolphin parks.”

    “But what happens to the remaining dolphins is that they end up slaughtering all of them for food.”

    During her trips, Munter is ‘on the ground’ volunteering. She has even risked her own safety to share her concerns for the plight of the dolphins in the cove.

    “I filmed the first slaughter of the year this year,” Munter said. “And I got caught in the typhoon and was without water for five days in Japan.”

    “It was pretty interesting having no drinking water and no showers,” Munter continued. “So, I’ve had some pretty intense experiences over there.”

    “I just became passionate about it and the more that I got to know Ric O’Barry (dolphin activist, former trainer of Flipper, and star of the movie), the more I wanted to help and to get everyone to see the movie.”

    Prior to the Daytona race, Munter has devoted a great deal of time to continuing to try to keep the academy award winning film, as well as the plight of the dolphins, in the public eye.

    “This summer, we did a screening of the movie in San Francisco, who donated the theatre to us,” Munter said. “My brother-in-law, who is a musician with the ‘Grateful Dead’, played a few sets so a lot of their fans came out.”

    “This past December, we went up the Empire State building, as the owner saw the film and was moved to help,” Munter continued. “So, on December 9th, we lit up the Empire State building in red in honor of the dolphins who had died at ‘The Cove.’

    “It was there that I began to think about how cool it would be to have a race car and really get this message in front of the race fans,” Munter said. “One of the key things we want people to understand and take away from the film is the tie to dolphin captivity and the slaughter.”

    “The take away message, besides watching the movie which is my number one call to action, is to not support dolphin captivity and dolphin parks,” Munter continued. “By doing that, you are indirectly supporting the dolphin slaughter.”

    “We want to help fans making the connection between going to see dolphins jump through hoops and the slaughter that occurs for all the other dolphins in the cove,” Munter said. “It is a complicated issue but we hope that we can help fans understand.”

    Munter is not only educating her fans but also her own race team to the dolphin slaughter issue.

    “We held a screening at Tony Marks Racing to help the team and crew know the message,” Munter said. “It was fantastic. One of the guys came to talk to me afterwards and shared that he had no idea that was going on until he saw the film.”

    “That’s something that we want to accomplish and to get people to see the film because that’s how we’ll end the slaughter.”

    Munter knows that the strength of stock car racing, combined with being at Daytona, is one of the best ways to get her message out. In addition, she is thrilled to drive at the storied track and fully intends to take her ‘Cove’ car to Victory Lane.

    “What better way than NASCAR to get a movie out in front of a large group of people all at once,” Munter said. “And Daytona is the best venue ever.”

    “I’m so excited to drive this car,” Munter continued. “I have a good, fast race car and this means more than anything to me. It’s a very special race to me.”

    Munter and Tony Marks Racing currently have a one race deal for the Daytona ARCA race. But they are focused on gaining not only sponsorship but calling attention to other causes in upcoming races as well.

    “We’re definitely focused on ‘The Cove’ car, which is a one race deal,” Munter said. “But Tony Marks and I are hoping to go to at least the nine televised ARCA races that are left. I’m actively talking to sponsors to be involved in that program.”

    “We want to continue to use the race car to send messages,” Munter continued. “We want it to be a vehicle to call people to action and get them to think about things.”

    Munter has one more reason to look forward to her Daytona race. In addition to her passion for racing and dolphins, she will also be celebrating her birthday.

    “I’m looking forward to having a chance to run up front and finish the race in first place,” Munter said. “I don’t think I’d ever be able to top winning the Daytona race in ‘The Cove’ car on my birthday.”

    “But for this weekend, it’s all about the dolphins,” Munter said. “We want to make the world a better place.”

     

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: WHO’S GOING TO DRINK THE FREE BEER AT THE SHOOTOUT?

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: WHO’S GOING TO DRINK THE FREE BEER AT THE SHOOTOUT?

    [media-credit id=26 align=”alignright” width=”203″][/media-credit]You know the annual Speedweeks at Daytona has arrived when you see Budweiser being sprayed all over victory lane. The 34th annual Budweiser Shootout, the traditional start of Speedweeks, will see the green flag this Saturday night, February 18th. In the past this 75 lap shootout has created some very exciting finishes and, based on speed charts from the January test sessions at Daytona, it appears that the 2012 edition of the Shootout will be more of the same.

    THE STORY BREAKDOWN

    For many of the NASCAR Sprint Cup teams, the Budweiser Shootout will be an opportunity to add to their Daytona racing notebooks. There are two pre race practice sessions scheduled for Friday plus the 75 lap race on Saturday. The teams entered in the Shootout can possibly pick up some important information that can be applied to the February 26th running of the Daytona 500.

    It’s also highly likely that the race teams, and the fans, will gets an up close look at the 2012 version of two car tandems or, as Dale Earnhardt Jr called it, “love bug racing.” With recently instituted changes by NASCAR, regarding the car’s cooling systems, Saturday night’s Budweiser Shootout will clearly point out how the new version of tandem racing will work under bonafide racing conditions.

    The Budweiser Shootout will also mark the debut of new driver and team combinations that will be on the track for the first time under racing conditions. That new ride list includes: Kasey Kahne-#5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Kurt Busch-#51 Phoenix Racing Chevrolet, Clint Bowyer-#15 Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota, A J Allmendinger #22 Penske Racing Dodge and David Ragan #34 Front Row Motorsports Ford.

    THE VEGAS BREAKDOWN.

    To get an accurate idea regarding who might be spraying Budweiser in Daytona’s victory lane Saturday night, we turn to the professionals from “Las Vegas Insider.Com”, (LVI), who have prepared some rather interesting numbers for us.

    Topping the LVI list, at 8 to 1 odds, is Kevin Harvick and his Budweiser Chevrolet from Richard Childress Racing. Harvick is a previous two time winner of the Shootout and a rock solid bet to score a third win on Saturday.

    The LVI’s 10 to 1 listing features an impressive trio of potential race winners including two time Shootout winners Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr along with Kyle Busch who is always considered to be a pre-race favorite.

    Also very impressive is the 12 to 1 group featuring Kasey Kahne, Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards and Tony Stewart who has won three Budweiser Shootouts in his last ten starts.

    All by himself, at 15 to 1, is Brad Keselowski who is an excellent long shot bet to win the Budweiser Shootout. The Penske Dodge teams were very strong during the January test sessions at Daytona.

    At 18 to 1 odds you will find the trio of Matt Kenseth, Denny Hamlin and Jamie McMurray. Right behind them, at 20 to 1, is the duo of Greg Biffle and Jeff Burton. Both of these drivers could turn out to be interesting long shot wagers.

    At 25 to 1 is a large group of drivers that features Kurt Busch, Clint Bowyer, Ryan Newman, Martin Truex Jr, Michael Waltrip, Joey Logano, Juan Pablo Montoya and A J Allmendinger. From this group there are two standouts worthy of your long shot consideration. The first is Kurt Busch who will making his debut with Phoenix Racing. This team topped the speed charts, during the January test sessions, in both the drafting and solo runs. Busch is also regarded as being very strong in any restrictor plate race he enters. The other long shot is A J Allmendinger who’s making his debut with Roger Penske Racing. “The Dinger” was also very strong during testing and he’s coming off of the momentum of being part of the team that won the recent Grand American Rolex Series 24 Hours of Daytona.

    Concluding the LVI rankings is Paul Menard at 30 to 1 odds. If you don’t see your favorite driver on the list it means they are automatically ranked at 30 to 1.

    Now for the disclaimer: NASCAR wants us to remind you that these numbers are posted for the purposes of information and entertainment. They neither encourage nor condone the placing of wagers on their races.

    That disclaimer actually makes a lot of sense. You really do need the information, from the LVI, to make an intelligent wager and collecting your winnings from a Las Vegas bookie is indeed a major source of entertainment.

    THE RACE BREAKDOWN

    The 34th annual Budweiser Shootout is 75 laps/187.5 miles around the Daytona International Raceway. The race will be ran in two segments, 25 and 50 laps, with yellow caution flag laps counting. There will be a ten minute break between the two segments to allow the cars to come down on pit road for tires, fuel and adjustments.

    The race has 25 entries vying for a one million dollar plus purse that pays approximately $200,000 plus to the winner. The race is open to all drivers who finished within the top 25 of the 2011 points, past Budweiser Shootout champions and past Daytona Raceway race winners both in February and July. The criteria also requires for an entrant to have been active during the 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup racing season.

    The defending race champion is Kurt Busch who, last year, finished a mere .058 seconds over runner up Jamie McMurray. Last year’s event set a record for the closest finish in Budweiser Shootout history. Last year’s race also set a new record for lead changes at 28.

    When it comes to individual stats for this race, the legendary Dale Earnhardt Sr owns the Budweiser Shootout. The Intimidator has the record for the most wins-6, most laps led-98 and the best average finish ratio-2.75. Keeping things all in the family, Dale Earnhardt Jr holds the Shootout record for most laps led-47 when he won the event in 2008.

    In the manufacturer’s standings, Chevrolet has the most Budweiser Shootout wins at 19 followed by Ford’s seven trips to victory lane. Buick, Oldsmobile and Pontiac have two wins each while Dodge has a single win.

    The SPEED channel will cover all Friday activities pertaining to the Budweiser Shootout including coverage of the first practice session at 5 pm eastern time and the final happy hour practice session at 630 pm et. SPEED will also cover the qualifying draw party, one of the more entertaining events of Speedweeks, beginning 830 pm et. On Saturday race day the Budweiser Shootout will be carried live by Fox Sports beginning at 8 pm et. SPEED will present the re broadcast on Sunday at 5 pm et.

  • Tony Stewart heads to Daytona looking to become champion of a different kind

    Tony Stewart heads to Daytona looking to become champion of a different kind

    [media-credit id=22 align=”alignright” width=”189″][/media-credit]Three months ago Tony Stewart climbed out of his stock car in Florida and hoisted the Sprint Cup Series championship for the third time in his career.

    It wasn’t the last time Stewart sat in a racecar though because since then he hasn’t stopped racing or winning, spending his off-season traveling around the county tearing up tracks. In fact, he looked through his calendar and made sure that he could be at every race possible, saying he’s happier at the track than at home.

    Of course because he doesn’t have a fitness plan go to the gym, Stewart uses racing as his workout plan. Then if he wasn’t racing Stewart spent some time during the winter at Stewart-Haas Racing preparing for the 2012 season, hiring new people and making sure others were hard at work.

    And while it might sound like all that took away from celebrating his championship, Stewart says the buzz still hasn’t worn off. The No. 14 Office Depot / Mobil 1 Chevrolet team soaked up every minute while at the awards banquet in Las Vegas but then got back to work, working towards even bigger accomplishments this season.

    “We were immediately back on the job of trying to figure out how to do the same thing this year,” said Stewart Thursday in Daytona. “It was easy to do that having Zippy {Greg Zipadelli} and Steve Addington come on board, guys that weren’t really with us when we won the championship at the end of the year. Their focus was on what we were going to do this year. So it kind of got the whole mindset of the shop to not get lazy and think about what we accomplished last year and get working on what we can do to try to repeat this year.”

    Time will tell if that hard work had paid off, teams will measure themselves against the competition once the season is a few weeks old. What Stewart accomplished last season though is hard not to talk about: winning five races in the Chase after struggling in the first 26.

    His hot streak in the Chase is something that Stewart, even months later, doesn’t have an explanation for.

    “I can’t, I still can’t,” said Stewart when asked. “I wish I could explain it. The way our year went, it was like the first 26 weeks anything that could go wrong went wrong, something went wrong every week. The days that we didn’t have a problem, we just missed it on the set up. The days that we were good, something would happen, we would have pit strategy go wrong or something would happen. Those last 10 weeks, with the exception of Dover, everything kind of went right.”

    It put Stewart back at the top of the NASCAR mountain while giving him his first championship as an owner as well. But now that the 2012 season has begun and with the Daytona 500 just a little over a week away Stewart’s looking for another first.

    With everything that he’s accomplished in NASCAR since 1999 he still has yet to win the Great American Race. When he takes the green flag on February 26 it will be his 14th attempt and it’s the only thing on his mind and bucket list right now.

    “Very high on it,” he said. “Especially these next two weeks, it is the highest thing on it.”

    Stewart has won at Daytona before, he’s won everything else there is to win, just not its biggest event. After leading the most laps in 2004 and holding the lead with 20 laps to go, it was Dale Earnhardt Jr. who ended up in victory lane. In 2007 he and Kurt Busch dominated the event, only for the two of them to end up in the fence while racing for the lead with less than 50 laps to.

    A year later he was blown by on the last lap by Busch and now teammate Ryan Newman. Stewart’s been upside down and end over end in the big race too even though he’s been nearly untouchable in the July events. In 2005 and 2006 he won back-to-back Coke Zero 400s before adding a third in 2009.

    “I think it is just the Daytona 500,” Stewart said on why it’s so hard to win in February. “You look at some of the greatest finishes of our sport they have come from the Daytona 500 and some of the wildest craziest finishes, fights on the backstretch, you name it we have had it here.”

    One day Stewart will have his moment there too, he and his fans hope it’ll be next weekend. But if it’s not and they have to wait another year to try add it onto his resume, he’ll do so gladly.

    “I wouldn’t trade three championships to win Daytona,” he said. “It’s not a good feeling to not have that tally in the win column. Realistically, two tracks we haven’t won at and the Daytona 500 we haven’t won at, everything else we have pretty much accomplished in this sport that we want to accomplish. It’s the biggest race of the year; everyone wants to win that race. I won’t say that it is not a complete career if you don’t win it but there is a lot of priority on this. Darrell Waltrip and Dale {Earnhardt} Sr. both had to go a long time before they got it.”

    And if anyone’s wondering if Stewart pictures himself winning the event anytime he comes to Florida, don’t count on it.

    “No, I don’t know how you could,” he said. “I don’t know how you could honestly sit there and imagine what that moment would be like. You just hope you get to live it.”

  • Johnny Sauter: From Runner Up to Running for the Championship

    Johnny Sauter: From Runner Up to Running for the Championship

    [media-credit name=”Photo Credit: Todd Warshaw/Getty Images North America” align=”alignright” width=”100″][/media-credit]Although not as close as Carl Edwards’ loss of the Cup championship in a tie breaker, Camping World Truck Series driver Johnny Sauter had an eerily similar experience. The driver of the No. 13 ThorSport Toyota Tundra came up short by just six points in his bid to win the Truck title last season.

    Yet Johnny Sauter’s runner-up status has served as nothing short of a motivator, enhancing his desire even more to run all out for that most coveted honor in the upcoming 2012 season.

    “I guess the competitor in you will look back on last season as a really good year, winning a couple of races, leading close to 500 laps, getting a couple of poles,” Sauter said. “But ultimately finishing in second place by six points is tough.”

    “Do I feel like Carl Edwards?” Sauter continued. “Look, if you’re second in points it’s great, as long as it’s by fifty points or so.”

    “When it’s one point like with Carl, it’s really tough,” Sauter said. “But six points is also tough to swallow.”

    “You go through the whole season and put your best effort out there,” Sauter continued. “And if you come up six points short, you come up six points short.”

    “I’m just thankful that I have the opportunity to go try it again.”

    Sauter is definitely keeping himself focused on what is really important, including not dwelling on the the past. Plus, Sauter is just plain practical in his approach to racing.

    “I’ve spent a lot of times focusing on the positives,” Sauter said. “There are instances where I could have done things better but I’ve learned from my mistakes.”

    “So, hopefully we can pick up where we left off and make a run of it in 2012.”

    “It’s easy for me,” Sauter said. “I’ve got kids and they like to eat. So, I don’t have an option but to dig hard and race hard week in and week out.”

    “I feel like I’m with the team and the organization where it’s not just about the driver,” Sauter continued. “The team can carry me and it’s a mutual relationship that works really well.”

    “I have all the faith in the world in my crew chief and in my guys,” Sauter said. “So, I see us picking off where we left off and contending for the championship and winning races.”

    “At the end of the day, it’s something that you want to do, so you do it.”

    Sauter credits his confidence in going into the 2012 season with his consistency with his team and crew chief. But he acknowledged that his team is indeed facing a challenge this season in the move from a Chevrolet race truck to a Toyota.

    “It’s actually a perfect time to switch manufacturers in the off season when you have a bit of down time and when you’re re-bodying your trucks anyway,” Sauter said. “We were essentially switched over to a Toyota a week or two after Homestead.”

    “And we were in the wind tunnel and already learning what we needed to do,” Sauter continued. “We were pleasantly surprised that we were good right out of the gate.”

    Sauter is also pleased that his long-time friend and teammate Matt Crafton will be at his side at the track. Additionally, he is looking forward to working with 18 year old Dakoda Armstrong, who will be running for Rookie of the Year honors for ThorSport Racing.

    “I’ve always had a great relationship with Crafton,” Sauter said. “Dakoda is a really good kid. He’s one of those guys that has proved himself already and he seems to be really open to learning.”

    “I see it working well, really well,” Sauter continued. “You throw Kimmel in there with the ARCA team and that’s even better.”

    “We have a lot of changes but a lot of good things working this season and I couldn’t be more pleased with my fellow drivers, crew chiefs and team members. The whole deal is pretty solid.”

    While much in Sauter’s racing life is staying the same, including long-time sponsor Curb Records, the driver is also looking forward to welcoming new sponsor, Hot Honeys Honey-Roasted Chipotle-flavored peanuts, to the fold.

    “Well the Hot Honey Chipotle Peanuts sponsorship is good,” Sauter said. “Let’s face it, this is a sport that’s sponsor driven and takes a lot of money for us to do what we do.”

    “A new relationship with The Peanut Roaster Company is great and I look forward to working with them this upcoming season,” Sauter continued. “It’s fun to see some fresh paint schemes in the garage.”

    “They are very excited to be in the sport and hopefully we can do a good job in representing them.”

    In addition to preparing for his championship run in the upcoming season, Sauter has been busy at home with his family, as well as with his ‘other’ hobby.

    “My hobby is racing,” Sauter said. “I’ve got a late model car that I spend most of my time working on when I have any free time.”

    “I went and raced a couple weeks ago in Georgia,” Sauter continued. “I finished dead last due to mechanical issues.”

    “But it was fun,” Sauter said. “That’s what I do. Anytime I get an opportunity to race, that’s what I do other than spend time with my family.”

    Yet even with his ‘other’ racing hobby to keep him occupied, Sauter admitted to being not only surprised at how fast the off season has gone, but also at how ready he is to get back to the Truck Series track. He is especially excited realizing that his date with Daytona is right around the corner.

    “It’s an exciting feeling for me,” Sauter said. “Everybody that is fortunate to get to drive in one of the top three divisions in NASCAR and make their living doing it, that’s exciting in and of itself.”

    “But to pull into Daytona, with the history of that race track and knowing that at a restrictor plate race that anyone can win that race, it’s an exciting feeling.”

    “But you kind of have to manage your expectations,” Sauter continued. “I’ve been down there and taken out before I’ve even completed a full lap of the race.”

    “So, you take the good with the bad. Daytona is one of those places that can grab you but it’s still an exciting feeling.”

    “My program is solid,” Sauter said. “I love having the opportunity to race with the same group of guys.”

    “Being so close to winning the championship, I feel so fortunate to race another year and ultimately, hopefully, to be the champion.”

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: THE CARTOON NETWORK TEAMS WITH NASCAR FOR A VERY SPECIAL EVENING

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: THE CARTOON NETWORK TEAMS WITH NASCAR FOR A VERY SPECIAL EVENING

    [media-credit name=”Credit: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]The “Dance Machine?” The “Gnarliest Newb?” That could easily become the new nicknames for NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers Carl Edwards and Trevor Bayne if everything goes according to plan next Monday night on “The Cartoon Network.” The pair of drivers are nominees for  the television network’s second annual “Hall Of Game Awards.”

    The “Hall Of Game Awards” has been described as a high energy, off the wall, multi-platform experience that allows the network’s viewers to vote for, and honor, their favorite sports stars, and sports moments, of the year. The show, hosted by NBA basketball legend Shaquille O’Neal, will air on Monday, February 20th, at 7 pm eastern time.

    Carl Edwards’ “Dance Machine” nomination is based on his famous ability to perform a back flip from the driver’s window of his car after winning a race. Edwards knows the drill of this awards show very well. He won the “In It To Win It” award last year.

    Trevor Bayne’s first “Hall Of Game” nomination is based on his surprise win at last year’s Daytona 500. The award name, “Gnarliest Newb,” is essentially the rookie of the year category for this year’s awards show.

    NASCAR’s stars were also well represented in the 2011 inaugural awards show. In addition to Edwards’ win last year, Danica Patrick was the recipient of the “She’s Got Game” award. Kurt and Kyle Busch were nominees in last year’s “Super Siblings” category. NASCAR newcomer Travis Pastrana was a 2011 nominee for the appropriately titled “Alti-Tude” award.

    Five time NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson will be making a special cameo appearance, on this year’s awards show, to present the “World’s Fastest” award. Johnson, by the way, was a 2011 nominee in the “Dance Machine” category. Seriously? Jimmie the Dance Machine?

    But the driver who probably deserves the “Dance Machine” award should be Johnson’s team mate: four time Sprint Cup champion Jeff Gordon. If you saw his break dancing exhibition, during last December’s fan fest in Las Vegas, then you’ve got to believe that Gordon is going to sweep this category in 2013.

    NASCAR racing fans can help Carl Edwards and Trevor Bayne win their category by voting for them online at www.hallofgame.com. The voting is open between now and Friday, February 17th.

  • Matt Crafton Leader of the Pack at ThorSport Racing

    [media-credit id=62 align=”alignright” width=”221″][/media-credit]Celebrating his twelfth season at ThorSport Racing, 35 year old Matt Crafton may well be known as the ‘leader of the pack’ among his fellow drivers, including championship runner-up Johnny Sauter and Rookie of the Year contender Dakoda Armstrong.

    And although the driver of the No. 88 Menards Toyota Tundra is fine with that ‘leader of the pack’ moniker, as well as being the ‘wily veteran’, he does take exception to anyone who pins the ‘old’ label on him.

    “That’s what they’ve named me,” Crafton said of his ‘leader of the pack’ status. “I didn’t so much come up with that but I guess that’s what they’re calling me.”

    Whether leader or wily veteran, Crafton admits that he definitely has had an unusual amount of time with the same team, especially in the ever-changing sport of NASCAR racing.

    “It says so much for Duke and Rhonda Thorson (ThorSport owners) and Menards (sponsor) who have been behind me for these past years,” Crafton said. “Duke has run this like a business and has grown each year but has not overspent, like so many race teams do.”

    “Duke said if I’d stick with him as he was growing, we would be just fine,” Crafton continued. “And he has been a man of his words.”

    Will this long-term relationship with ThorSport Racing lead to a championship run for the ‘wily veteran’ this upcoming race season?

    “I sure hope so,” Crafton said simply. “That would be a dream come true for the Thorsons and for me.”

    In addition to his teammate Johnny Sauter, who has been with ThorSport Racing for several years, Crafton is also looking forward to his newer teammate Dakoda Armstrong. With the trio racing together for ThorSport, Crafton is convinced that they may just be that team to beat for the Truck Series championship.

    “It’s definitely going to help us,” Crafton said of his teammates. “It will give us some more people to bounce ideas off.”

    “There’s going to be some weekends that me and Johnny will struggle and Dakoda and his team might be on a different path and able to help us,” Crafton continued. “That’s one of the great things about having a multi-truck deal.”

    “Dakoda’s going to do a good job,” Crafton said. “He’s got a lot of learning to do and he’s definitely green.”

    “But if he keeps calling me ‘old guy’, we’re going to have a problem,” Crafton said with a chuckle. “He’s going to have to learn to respect his elders.”

    In addition to his young teammate, Crafton also has another major change facing him for the 2012 season. For the first time in his Truck career, he will be driving a Toyota instead of a Chevrolet.

    “It’s been great,” Crafton said of the change. “Toyota has been a great company to work with so far.”

    “I’ve been with Chevy since I started in the Truck Series and that’s all I’ve ever known,” Crafton continued. “So, I had no idea how this was going to go.”

    “But they give you so many tools and their door is always open to ideas and questions you might have,” Crafton said. “They have 40 engineers on staff and you can go to them and they thrive on figuring out the answer.”

    “That’s one of the cool things that Toyota has given us.”

    “Chevy was great to us but we were racing against Cup-associated and affiliated race teams,” Crafton said. “To get to the next level, we felt we could get that Cup technology by going with Toyota.”

    Not only does Crafton have a new manufacturer, but he also has a new crew chief, Carl Joiner. And while Joiner may be new to the top of the pit box, he has been a long time team member and friend of the veteran driver.

    “He’s actually been our shock guy for, oh my God, seven years if not more,” Crafton said of Joiner. “I just got married this year and he was my best man.”

    “The year I won the championship on the southwest tour, he and my dad were my crew chiefs,” Crafton continued. “He was doing it back then and we’ve always had a great relationship.”

    “I’m really, really super-stoked about working with him this year.”

    While he may be looking forward to the 2012 Camping World Truck Series season, Crafton has been busy off the track as well.  In fact, he has been on the road during his time off just about as much as during his race season, even taking time to tie the knot.

    “I have been traveling,” Crafton said. “From the time I left Homestead to two days ago, I’ve only been home eight days.”

    “Everybody always says we should be resting but I love to travel so I’m not complaining,” Crafton continued. “Right after Homestead, we went to southern California and played in the sand.”

    “Then we came home and flew off to go get married just south of Cancun, Mexico and then we went to honeymoon in Costa Rica,” Crafton said. “When we got home from our honeymoon, we were home for two days and went to play in the sand again in California and then drove our motor home back.”

    “We actually take our motor home and leave it out there all winter and before the season we drive it back,” Crafton continued. “And that is not very much fun.”

    “But if we made it through that long drive stuck in the motor home for three days, I guess we can be married.”

    As hectic as his off-season has been, Crafton can barely contain his excitement for the beginning of the Truck season at Daytona this weekend.

    “I am just super-excited,” Crafton said. “I’m so looking forward to this season.”