Category: Featured Stories

Featured stories from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • Danica Is Not NASCAR’s Savior

    Danica Is Not NASCAR’s Savior

    All you have to say is her name and most fans have an opinion. In fact, at this point, she’s pretty much beloved by all. A lot of that has a lot to do with her performance which so far has been mid-pack at best. She qualified 15th and finished 15th on Saturday at Kansas Speedway, which is acceptable, She didn’t challenge for the win, but finished in front of 28 other drivers. I imagine she felt like it was a successful day and it probably was.

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”218″][/media-credit]Of course I’m talking about Danica Patrick. Patrick, with first class Hendrick Motorsports equipment, has not been awesome in her first year on the Nationwide Series circuit, but making the move from the lightweight Indy Series cars to the heavy NASCAR cars has to be challenging. That said the theory behind why NASCAR so desperately wants her in their camp is flawed. Danica Patrick is not NASCAR’s savior.

    When NASCAR’s popularity began to wane a few years ago, it was widely hinted that the death of the sport’s icon, Dale Earnhardt, had pushed many fans away. I don’t doubt that. You can still go to tracks and see the No. 3 flags and listen to fans fondly talk about the man they called “The Intimidator.” But it’s been a decade since Dale left us, and I see his fans everywhere at tracks. Maybe some gave up on the sport, but that wasn’t the reason for the decline.

    Later on, the story was that the elder Earnhardt’s son, Dale, Jr., wasn’t winning and only if he could get to victory lane, things would fall into place. Earnhardt, Jr. left his father’s team and headed to the greener pastures of Hendrick Motorsports where success was bound to happen. After all, this was the team that had the fastest cars in the sport. Earnhardt has one victory since joining HMS and usually finishes well out of the running. He has shown improvement lately, but that isn’t the reason for the decline, either.

    Finally, the Great Recession hit in the fall of 2007. That was blamed for the lack of butts in the seats, but no one to this day will ever blame the product that is put on the track week after week. That’s the problem. The fact that everyone is in denial means that other methods are examined to boost the sport, and that starts with one Danica Patrick.

    The decline of NASCAR started with the development of the Car of Tomorrow. Yes, the old “twisted sister” that was used for years didn’t look like the showroom car, and the new car was much safer to NASCAR’s credit, but it took most teams, with the notable exception of Hendrick Motorsports, a couple of years to figure it out because it was so different. In the meantime, it was the same thing every week. Which Hendrick car would win or which Joe Gibbs Racing car would win (after they switched to Toyota). Richard Childress Racing, the home of Dale Earnhardt, and Roush-Fenway Racing were out to lunch. It also started the reign of five-time champion Jimmie Johnson. Over and over, Johnson won and won again. He will probably win again this year. The suspense is gone. It’s just a matter of time until Johnson wins again. Today, he sits four points out of the points lead with six races to go. Why? The creation of the NFL playoff clone called The Chase. The barrage of intermediate tracks in the “championship run” is tailor made for Johnson and the COT, but that’s not the problem according to many. It has to be something else, like new faces in the series. Enter Danica Patrick.

    The theory is that Danica will bring in men. Lord knows she is a nice looking lady. Women want someone to root for and Danica is perfect. But will she get people to come out to see her race? Will TV ratings go up when she participates?

    Ignoring the obvious problems with the product cannot be cured with the entrance of an attractive woman who is a media expert and a good driver. Until the day that the powers that be can figure out that flaws exist in the product they have given fans, nothing will turn around. NASCAR needs more Darlington’s and Bristol’s that offered slam-bang racing. That was what made the sport so exciting to the fans. Instead, NASCAR became, and has become, a sport where the usual happens on cookie-cutter tracks that all look the same. So don’t expect that little lovely lady to save us. It will be nice to have her around, but it isn’t the answer.

  • HOORAHS AND WAZZUPS: FUEL MILEAGE??? IT WAS ALL ABOUT OIL TEMPERATURE AT KANSAS

    HOORAHS AND WAZZUPS: FUEL MILEAGE??? IT WAS ALL ABOUT OIL TEMPERATURE AT KANSAS

    During the NASCAR Sprint Cup weekend at the Kansas Speedway we watched a driver who understands the pressure of winning a championship once again rise to the occasion. The anticipated fuel mileage outcome of the race was actually determined by extremely hot oil and the Nationwide Series event also turned up a dominant winner while presenting a new driver feud based on an old issue. With those thoughts in mind, let’s begin with:

    [media-credit id=2 align=”alignright” width=”273″][/media-credit]HOORAH to Jimmie Johnson for scoring max points after winning the Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas. Johnson led 197 of the race’s 272 laps in a dominant performance that was based on good driving, a good car and flawless service on pit road.

    HOORAH to the numbers associated with Johnson’s win. It marked his second win of the season and his 55th career win which ties him at eighth with Rusty Wallace on NASCAR’s all time win list. Johnson now has a series high 20 Chase wins and he gave team owner Rick Hendrick his 199th victory. He also helped Chevrolet wrap up the 2011 manufacturer’s championship. The bowtie brigade now has 35 championships including the last nine years in a row.

    WAZZUP with speculation that said Johnson’s five consecutive championship dynasty was over. That was three weeks ago. Since that time he’s moved from tenth to third in the standings only four points from the top of the rankings. The prospect of “Jimmie Five Time” becoming “Jimmie Six Pack” is alive and well.

    HOORAH to Kasey Kahne’s strong second place showing, for Red Bull Racing, following an exciting green-white-checker finish. Kahne’s efforts could become a factor in the team’s ongoing effort to locate financial investors to keep this two car operation alive.

    WAZZUP with the ironic circumstances behind that green-white-checker finish? It came from the race winner’s team mate: Jeff Gordon. It was anticipated that the finish of the Kansas would be about fuel mileage. Instead it was about the extreme heat of the oil in Gordon’s engine. Gordon came over the radio and announced that his oil temperature was pegged. In the waning laps of the race there was smoke emitting from his car. With three laps to go, the engine blew and set up the double file restart final shootout. Gordon’s bad luck resulted in a 34th place finish and he’s now tenth in the Chase standings, 47 points away. The math says he’s not officially eliminated as a Chase contender but the reality of it all says otherwise.

    The HOORAH for making chicken salad out of chicken do do goes to Carl Edwards who turned a very long and frustrating day into a fifth place finish. Despite starting the race from the front row, the handling on Edwards’ Ford was terrible and he started going backwards the moment the race started. However, this Bob Osbourne led team didn’t lay down and that top five comeback now has them on top of the Chase standings. “This feels like a win, we should be posing for pictures and drinking champagne,” Edwards said.

    WAZZUP with Tony Stewart’s late race slide through his pit stall while coming perilously close to hitting the pit wall? After the rolling the car back into the pit box, the result was a lengthy stop, a huge loss in track position and It turned an apparent top five into a 15th place finish. It also caused Stewart to drop from third to seventh in the Chase standings. Stewart came over the radio and apologized for the incident and said his foot accidentally hit the brake and the gas pedal at the same time.

    WAZZUP with the dual broken axles on both of the Toyotas fielded by Michael Waltrip Racing? Drivers David Reutimann and Martin Truex Jr found themselves stuck on pit road for axle replacements during the course of pit stops. It was rather bizarre.

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

    On the topic of dominant performances at the Kansas Speedway, HOORAH to Brad Keselowski for winning the Kansas Lottery 300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race. Keselowski’s Penske Racing Dodge led 173 of the 200 laps. He scored his fourth win of the season and his 16th series win.

    WAZZUP with that mystery odor than found its way inside of Elliott Sadler’s Chevrolet? It was crew chief Ernie Cope who eventually figured out that the strong stench was caused by brake fluid that oozed out of the master cylinder and spilled onto the headers which were generating an estimated 1,300 degrees of heat. Once the mystery was solved, the crew chief complemented the driver and told him “you have a very good nose.”

    The Nationwide Series HOORAH for making chicken salad out of chicken do do belongs to Kevin Harvick’s crew. Driving his self owned car, and making his final series appearance of the season, Harvick sustained a broken front splitter in the race. He had to come to pit road six times, including two trips behind the pit wall, before the repairs were finished. Despite the frustrating circumstances Harvick and company came back to a lead lap sixth place finish.

    WAZZUP with that heated exchange on pit road between drivers Brian Scott and Aric Almirola? Scott claimed that Almirola kept running into him on restarts and it’s been going on all season long. He also claimed that he was blocked on pit road. “He races you like a jack you know what . He obviously has an issue with me and now I have one with him,” Scott said.

    On the other side of the spat Almirola said he felt like the problem started when their two cars got together during the September 9th race at Richmond which he tried to apologize for and Scott needed to get over it. “He races over his head, he’s fortunate that his dad has a lot of money and finances his racing,” Almirola said.

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

    In some final thoughts, WAZZUP with Sprint Cup drivers A J Allmendinger, David Reutimann and Reed Sorenson being sent to the rear of the starting grid prior to the race for missing driver introductions? This situation surfaces from time to time and it makes me wonder why that is. These teams have public relations reps and you would think that at least one member of the entourage would be in charge of getting their driver to his next scheduled appointment such as the driver introduction stage.

    HOORAH to the Kansas Department of Transportation who, in a spirit of cooperation, decided to postpone highway construction for a week in an area that would have greatly impacted the commute to the Kansas Speedway. I’m sure the 82,000 plus fans who attended the Sprint Cup race really appreciated that gesture. For a moment there we had the making of another Kentucky Speedway traffic nightmare.

  • Johnson wins at Kansas

    Johnson wins at Kansas

    Jimmie Johnson won one of the longest races of the year. The excitement level of this race was very similar to waiting in the waiting room at the dentist office. This race was a long drawn out ordeal. It was painful to watch. The most important thing to remember and the biggest area of concern is the fact that this is the 4th race of the Chase and not a single one of them has been a good race.

    [media-credit name=”Kyle Ocker” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]We need to remember that people paid for tickets to see these races. We are concerned about our ticket sales in the sport and races like this are very illustrative as to why. The long drawn out follow the leader racing does not make for good racing. It does not make for good entertainment. It’s simply in a word boring. The entire broadcast for TV centers much like a vulture circling the 12 chase contenders. Who will have a problem? Will they rebound? Are they out?

    The points changes are broadcast on every 30 minutes, even though the points do not change until the checkered flag waves. Three of the four races have had an exciting ending. But an exciting final 25 to 30 laps doesn’t make a good race it makes a good ending.

    A good race is constant racing throughout the distance. Nascar has yet to manage to produce that with the current car used in competition. Now we are looking at a new COT for 2013. As fans we have to be concerned about our dollars spent on tickets. As members of the media we have to be concerned about our futures in trying to paint a plain white wall with a decorative brush and make it exciting. Simply it’s going to be very difficult to continue to draw fans to the track or the TV with this kind of competition. But ratings are up. They are up because the new points system paints the chase as exciting and close competition. While the points are close the competition simply isn’t there.  Drivers struggle to give entertaining comments and gently avoid talking about the fact that is painfully obvious to even them, the event was boring.

    Jimmie Johnson lead the most laps and he lead the last lap. His domination was slowed only six times. Only three times  for other car incidents. The longer they ran the stronger he got and the further his lead became. At one point he led by 14 seconds. He showed without a shadow of a doubt why they have dominated the Chase for the last five years.

    With his victory Johnson moved to within four points of leader Carl Edwards. By history the points leader leaving Kansas has won the Championship since the Chase’s inception.

    Edwards who struggled all day to stay on the lead lap found himself finishing in the 5th position and taking over the points lead from Kevin Harvick. “What a fun race that was. There was certainly a lot of luck involved there. Man I wanted to win for these home fans at Kansas but this is like getting a win considering how it looked like it could have been. I have to thank my AFLAC team. They did a great job today, they never stopped and we were able to work out way back up there. We were just way off in the beginning but they worked hard all day and it paid off at the end.” Edwards said of his day.

    Second Place Kasey Kahne was a steady occupant in the top ten all day. Staying within striking distance and making the Red Bull Toyota better with ever stop.

    Brad Keselowski finished his Kansas weekend with a third place finish to follow up his win in the Nationwide Series on Saturday. “The Miller Dodge was good. I am proud of the effort. Kind of an up and down day. We got up to be a second or third place car mid part of the race, then kind of fell off a little bit, but came back. Third place day, that’s good. That’s what you’ve got to do. Really we want to win races like Jimmie, but we;re making the est we can out of it. If he stumbles, we’ll be there.”

    This win was the 199th victory for Hendrick Motorsports and clinched the manufacturers Championship for Chevrolet.

    “You know, when I look through all the pictures, since the beginning of Hendrick Motorsports, and I look at the wins, and I remember the celebrations, I can remember vividly that I didn’t know if I’d ever win one race. I know there were some years where I thought, ‘Are we going to win a race this year?’ When you say you’ve won a race in the Cup Series, you’ve accomplished something; but when you think about 200 wins – it’s unbelievable.” Hendrick said.

    “This sport is so tough, look at all the second places we have this year, we have been close but just have not got the job done. We were glad to get the win done today. Big win for Mr. Hendrick, 199 and also Chevrolet winning the Manufacturing Championship, couldn’t do without all them and all the great people at Lowes’, they have been behind us since day one. We did our job today and hopefully we can do it six or seven more times.” Johnson said.

     

    Unofficial Race Results
    Hollywood Casino 400, Kansas Speedway
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/race.php?race=30
    =========================================
    Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
    =========================================
    1 19 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 48
    2 5 4 Kasey Kahne Toyota 42
    3 12 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 42
    4 4 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 41
    5 2 99 Carl Edwards Ford 39
    6 14 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 38
    7 24 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 37
    8 1 16 Greg Biffle Ford 37
    9 21 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 35
    10 9 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 34
    11 3 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 34
    12 6 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 32
    13 17 22 Kurt Busch Dodge 32
    14 18 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 30
    15 23 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 29
    16 7 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 28
    17 41 51 Landon Cassill Chevrolet 0
    18 11 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 26
    19 15 83 Brian Vickers Toyota 25
    20 13 6 David Ragan Ford 24
    21 31 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 23
    22 29 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 22
    23 34 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 21
    24 16 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 20
    25 22 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 19
    26 26 198 Austin Dillon Chevrolet 0
    27 36 38 Travis Kvapil Ford 0
    28 42 32 Mike Bliss Ford 0
    29 20 20 Joey Logano Toyota 15
    30 33 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 14
    31 38 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 13
    32 30 34 David Gilliland Ford 12
    33 25 46 Scott Speed Ford 0
    34 10 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 11
    35 27 0 David Reutimann Toyota 9
    36 8 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 8
    37 35 71 Andy Lally * Ford 7
    38 39 7 Reed Sorenson Dodge 0
    39 40 66 Michael McDowell Toyota 5
    40 32 30 David Stremme Chevrolet 4
    41 43 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 0
    42 37 13 Casey Mears Toyota 2
    43 28 55 J.J. Yeley Ford 1
  • Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award Finalists Announced

    Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award Finalists Announced

    The NASCAR foundation announced it’s four finalists for its humanitarian award today. The Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award honors the passionate commitment that NASCAR Foundation Chairwoman Betty Jane France has demonstrated on behalf of charities and community works throughout her life.

    [media-credit name=”Kyle Ocker” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]The four finalists were Patty Aber of Bridge of Books Foundation, Jake Bernstein of Autism Speaks, Brenda Doner of PBJ Connections, and Robert Weaver of Alabama Institute for the Deaf and Blind Foundation.

    The age of the finalists ranges from 17 year old Jake to 83 year old Robert. “I love the age range in this finalist foursome. To see several generations of NASCAR fans represented here really honors our past while also boosting our optimism for the future. Their god, meaningful work has benefited their respective communities greatly. And the fact that they also are NASCAR fans is something our entire industry can look to with pride.”

    Finalists’ volunteered resumes that were showcased on a national scale and fellow Nascar fans across the country will vote to determine who should receive a 2012 Ford Explorer from Ford and $100,000 for the children’s charity of their choice from the NASCAR Foundation. Voting begins today and will run through midnight on Dec. 1st on NASCAR.COM. Betty Jane France will announce the winner during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards Ceremony at Wynn Las Vegas on Friday, Dec 2nd. and culminating the Nascar sprint cup series Champions week ceremonies in Las Vegas. (Broadcast live on Speed)

    The finalists were introduced to their favorite drivers and were given a commemorative jacket. They presented a video piece that detailed and illustrated their work within the community that brought them to Kansas Speedway. This was the first trip to Kansas for all four finalists.

    It was refreshing to see people that have given so much to others get a special gift back from NASCAR and to be given recognition for their efforts. Nascar foundation spokesperson said this was a hard fought competition and that there was not a single charity presented that was not worthy and deserving.

  • Opinion: Elliott Sadler’s Solid Season Has Impressed but Not Enough

    Opinion: Elliott Sadler’s Solid Season Has Impressed but Not Enough

    When Elliott Sadler and Kevin Harvick announced their partnership for the 2011 Nationwide Series it was supposed to be the beginning of the Emporia, Virginia native’s rebirth. Instead almost a year later it has been nothing but underwhelming.

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignright” width=”238″][/media-credit]Sadler left behind 12 years of racing in the big leagues for a new home and hopefully a new legacy. A NASCAR rule change before the start of the season helped Sadler become a preseason championship favorite and while he’s in the middle of the fight, he hasn’t won a race yet. Instead the No. 2 OneMain Financial team is relying on his four poles and 21 top 10s to guide them to the finish line.

    Those statistics are nothing to sneeze at, being among the best of the NNS regular drivers and those competing for the championship. Those drivers though, aren’t trying to prove to everyone that he deserves a second chance. Those drivers don’t already have years of experience under their belt. And so, when it comes to Sadler, more is constantly expected, especially this year.

    Of course Sadler might consider winning a race to be icing on the cake because even while losing, he’s winning. It’s unlike his career in Sprint Cup where he was known as the lovable loser. His personality attracted others, not his statistics. Running the M&M’s car Sadler was the perfect driver, fun and happy, great with the fans and the media, but on the track there wasn’t much.

    There were a few exciting moments though, but none that Sadler and his fans would have preferred. Like flipping more often than he finished at Talladega. Then came the 2004 season where he finally rose to his potential and won two races, qualified for the Chase and finished ninth in points. On the other spectrum though, was the scary incident at Pocono last season. Sadler was collected in Jimmie Johnson and Kurt Busch’s mess and hit the guardrail and dirt mound behind it head on.

    He jumped from team to team – Wood Brothers, Yates, Evernham and Petty – but it didn’t change much. Sadler was just unfortunately became one of the back runners, seeing the leaders only when they lapped him. Over time the feeling of just being happy to be a Cup Series driver wore off, on Sadler and everyone else.

    Earlier this season he revealed that he never found himself in a position where he had a team that believed in each other and wanted to succeed. Or did he have a team owner who would so anything to win. Now though, he’s found one with Kevin and Delana Harvick.

    So, while we may be expecting more from Sadler, he’s just enjoying the ride. No longer living on the edge of a cliff waiting for the last straw to push him over. Now getting TV time for all the right reasons by running well and winning fans over again not because he’s an underdog.

    Maybe that’s why the expectations where so high entering the season. Pundits wrote about his eventual rise to the top, contending for victories and finally being a leader. The team, the attitude and the opportunities were at the level they should be and in place for Sadler to become a star again. It’s why after 30 races Sadler should have wins under his belt and more than a best finish of third on three occasions. Or led more than 146 total laps.

    These aren’t just our expectations though; Sadler knows that he needs to win races. Not just for the championship effort with five races remaining but to validate his move from the Cup Series down to the Nationwide Series. Having already removed the “also ran” category that had haunted him for years, as well as proving he can be a championship driver, winning, oh how winning would make everything better.

    Winning is what Sadler came to the NNS to do. Not run around and earn a paycheck, Sadler wanted to have fun while doing what he loves and that’s easy to respect. Except, this is a business where it’s about winning and we’re still waiting for the team to pull through the gates and spray the champagne.

    And as the season continues to drive closer to its conclusion, eyes will continue to be on Sadler. He would like to one-day return to the Cup Series but under what he calls the right circumstances. The right circumstances for all of us with expectations, hopefully it comes after Sadler has risen to the top of the NNS series with some wins and even a championship.

  • Keselowski Rules the Kansas Lottery 300

    Keselowski Rules the Kansas Lottery 300

    It was a near perfect day for Brad Keselowski, a front row starting spot, a car with an excellent feel from the beginning. When the green flag dropped it became evident that it was a perfect car too.

    [media-credit id=2 align=”alignright” width=”241″][/media-credit]As a matter of fact if it hadn’t been for a miscue that caused him to stall the car on pit road and come out of the pits in 14th position; it would have been a perfect day. But  the miscue didn’t slow him down for long, as he made an incredible run from 14th to 1st in 6 laps. He came out of the pits for the last time in 4th spot.

    If Carl Edwards thought on lap 180 on the restart in front of Keselowski that he had the advantage, he didn’t think it for long because before lap 190, Keselowski’s Discount Tower Dodge would again be leading the way.

    When the checker flag waved, Keselowski would claim his first Nationwide Series (NNS) win at Kansas Speedway.

    Keselowski had the dominant car and lead four times for 173 of the 200 laps run. It was his fourth win and 17th top-10 finish in the season.

    Keselowski who compares his commitment to the NNS to helping family keep jobs and be successful, showed why it is he is the current reigning champion of the series and why he as won the last 2 races at Kansas. “Once you win at a track and figure out what you need it makes it easier to go back with a better car everytime. But this was a perfect car. And I was doing everything I could to not screw it up. ” said Keselowski. “It’s just an unbelievable car and unbelievable day and to Nationwide and all the fans, thank you so much. It’s a privilege to get to do this.”

    Edwards, also knew that Keselowski had the perfect car. “I just think he didn’t realize how fast his car was and I think he was maybe trying to just try every little trick he could to make sure he won. It is my opinion he didn’t have to do that.” stated Edwards who posted his fourth top 10 finish in seven races at Kansas, and his 23rd top 10 finish in 2011.

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr finished 5th and maintained the series points lead. “It was and up and down day. We didn’t start out very good, not like we wanted to or normally do. We were on the loose side, on the tight side and couldn’t hit it in the middle like we needed to. To battle back from three pit road issues that we had, I stalled it once, got a penalty for speeding and had a slow stop. To still come back and run top five is not too bad. ” stated Stenhouse Jr. after the race.

    All in all the race had it’s moments. There was the side by side race between Edwards and Keselowski that could easily have ended in disaster. Instead the talent of both drivers brought them through to the end. There was the dust up between Aric Almirola and Brian Scott that ended with Scott confronting Almirola on pit road after the race. But for the most part the race was a snoozer.

    From the drop of green flag it was obvious that the Penske Dodge was the dominate car. At one point Keselowski had a four second lead over second place Edwards. Though there was some hard core racing going on in the back of the pack for the most part it was a race of conservation. Conservation of car. Conservation of points. And maybe even conservation of sanity.

     

    Unofficial Race Results
    Kansas Lottery 300, Kansas Speedway
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/race.php?race=30
    =========================================
    Pos. No. Driver Make Points
    =========================================
    1 2 22 Brad Keselowski Dodge 0
    2 1 60 Carl Edwards Ford 0
    3 12 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 41
    4 4 33 Paul Menard Chevrolet 0
    5 9 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 39
    6 19 4 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 0
    7 8 18 Joey Logano Toyota 0
    8 14 32 Brian Vickers Chevrolet 0
    9 17 16 Trevor Bayne Ford 35
    10 3 20 Ryan Truex * Toyota 34
    11 21 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 33
    12 7 88 Aric Almirola Chevrolet 33
    13 10 38 Jason Leffler Chevrolet 32
    14 6 70 David Stremme Chevrolet 0
    15 15 7 Danica Patrick Chevrolet 29
    16 25 62 Michael Annett Toyota 28
    17 5 11 Brian Scott Toyota 27
    18 28 30 James Buescher Chevrolet 0
    19 11 9 Kenny Wallace Toyota 25
    20 16 66 Steve Wallace Toyota 24
    21 13 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 23
    22 23 19 Mike Bliss Chevrolet 22
    23 27 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 22
    24 32 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 20
    25 18 81 Blake Koch * Dodge 19
    26 24 182 Reed Sorenson Dodge 18
    27 33 89 Morgan Shepherd Chevrolet 17
    28 37 52 Kevin Lepage Chevrolet 16
    29 41 39 Joey Gase Ford 0
    30 39 28 Derrike Cope Dodge 14
    31 36 14 Eric McClure Chevrolet 13
    32 42 23 Angela Cope Chevrolet 0
    33 40 40 Josh Wise Chevrolet 11
    34 31 15 Timmy Hill * Ford 10
    35 35 171 Matthew Carter Ford 9
    36 22 103 Scott Riggs Chevrolet 8
    37 38 175 Carl Long Ford 7
    38 34 141 Johnny Chapman Chevrolet 6
    39 26 146 Chase Miller Chevrolet 5
    40 30 147 Charles Lewandoski * Chevrolet 4
    41 20 44 Jeff Green Chevrolet 3
    42 29 150 T.J. Bell Chevrolet 0
    43 43 127 J.J. Yeley Ford 0
  • Edwards grabs the NNS Kansas Lottery 300 pole

    Edwards grabs the NNS Kansas Lottery 300 pole

    Carl Edwards took the pole position for Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Kansas Lottery 300. This was Edwards’ 27th pole award in 240 starts in the series. He is third on the all-time pole list and just one away from second, held by the legendary Tommy Ellis.

    This is Edwards 6th pole and 27th top-10 start in 2011. Previous to today his best start had been 3rd at Kansas.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”246″][/media-credit]Pulling the outside front row was the 22 of Brad Keselowski. This will be Brad’s 19th top ten start of 2011 and his second in six races at Kansas. Keselowski’s lap was 31.527 (171.262 mph).

    Starting third is Ryan Truex in the Joe Gibbs #20. This is Ryan’s first top 10 start at Kansas and his sixth in his 15 races this season. Truex’s lap was a quick 31.566 trip around the mile and half track.

    The NNS field is separated by 1.254 (6.57 mph).

    Dennis Setzer, Tim Andrews, Danny O’Quinn, Jennifer Jo Cobb, and Mark Green failed to make the field.

     

    Starting Lineup
    Kansas Lottery 300, Kansas Speedway
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/qual.php?race=30
    ===========================================
    Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time
    ===========================================
    1 60 Carl Edwards Ford 171.521 31.483
    2 22 Brad Keselowski Dodge 171.282 31.527
    3 20 Ryan Truex* Toyota 171.07 31.566
    4 33 Paul Menard Chevrolet 170.697 31.635
    5 11 Brian Scott Toyota 170.342 31.701
    6 70 David Stremme Chevrolet 170.175 31.732
    7 88 Aric Almirola Chevrolet 170.132 31.74
    8 18 Joey Logano Toyota 169.593 31.841
    9 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 169.396 31.878
    10 38 Jason Leffler Chevrolet 169.231 31.909
    11 9 Kenny Wallace Toyota 169.141 31.926
    12 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 169.019 31.949
    13 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 168.45 32.057
    14 32 Brian Vickers Chevrolet 168.361 32.074
    15 7 Danica Patrick Chevrolet 168.34 32.078
    16 66 Steve Wallace Toyota 168.104 32.123
    17 16 Trevor Bayne Ford 167.89 32.164
    18 81 Blake Koch* Dodge 167.884 32.165
    19 4 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 167.874 32.167
    20 44 Jeff Green Chevrolet 167.79 32.183
    21 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 167.619 32.216
    22 103 Scott Riggs Chevrolet 167.048 32.326
    23 19 Mike Bliss Chevrolet 167.022 32.331
    24 182 Reed Sorenson Dodge 166.945 32.346
    25 62 Michael Annett Toyota 166.697 32.394
    26 146 Chase Miller Chevrolet 166.589 32.415
    27 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 166.559 32.421
    28 30 James Buescher Chevrolet 166.246 32.482
    29 150 T.J. Bell Chevrolet 166.072 32.516
    30 147 Charles Lewandoski* Chevrolet 165.975 32.535
    31 15 Timmy Hill* Ford 165.904 32.549
    32 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 165.883 32.553
    33 89 Morgan Shepherd Chevrolet 165.827 32.564
    34 141 Johnny Chapman Chevrolet 165.558 32.617
    35 171 Matthew Carter Ford 165.492 32.63
    36 14 Eric McClure Chevrolet 165.365 32.655
    37 52 Kevin Lepage Chevrolet 165.36 32.656
    38 175 Carl Long Ford 165.355 32.657
    39 28 Derrike Cope Dodge 165.239 32.68
    40 40 Josh Wise Chevrolet 164.634 32.8
    41 39 Joey Gase+ Ford 164.288 32.869
    42 23 Angela Cope+ Chevrolet 162.323 33.267
    43 127 J.J. Yeley Ford 164.951 32.737
  • Talladega Sweetens The Pot

    Talladega Sweetens The Pot

    In the world of the tandem draft, Talladega just sweetened the pot with $100,000 bonus, to be paid to the driver who takes the lead the most number of times throughout the race at the 100th lead change at the the Good Sam Club 500. In case of a tie they will go to laps led to break it. If there is still a tie the money will be split between the two drivers that are tied.

    [media-credit name=”talladegasuperspeedway.com” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]The rule change with the larger restrictor plate and the pop off value, won’t make a big difference in the way they race at Talladega according to Brad Keselowski. But Kurt Busch does think it will change the way that mid pack runners race. He stated that he felt that it would intensify the race and the intensity with which everyone approaches the race.

    It is interesting to note that the bonus is not covered by a sponsor and is being paid by Talladega Speedway itself and is not covered by an insurance policy. It is an actual cash bonus from Talladega Speedway.

    The past three races at Talladega saw 87 and 88 lead changes, which is the NASCAR record.Talladego also holds the NASCAR records for leaders with 29, and fastest average race speed of 188.354 mph and the fastest Qualifying speed of 212.809.

    “We believe that this will add to the excitement of the race at Talladega. We already have the most exciting racing in Nascar.” stated the Chairman of Talladega Speedway, Grant Lynch,. “This is is just going to add to it. Our fans look forward to seeing a lot of lead changes. It makes sense to put an extra incentive on giving our fans what they want. The new rules package, that includes a larger restrictor plate opening, should give drivers the opportunity to really mix it up and pass even more in traffic.This is going to be an exciting race on Oct. 23rd and we look forward to potentially setting another NASCAR record.”

  • Matty’s Picks  Vol. 21 – Kansas – Hollywood Casino 400 – October 9, 2011

    Matty’s Picks Vol. 21 – Kansas – Hollywood Casino 400 – October 9, 2011

    We’re not in Kansas anymore Toto

    I figured I would add some kind of excitement to this week’s race by using a famous movie quote to break the ice in this week’s column.

    There were 17, uneventful lead changes among 9 drivers during the STP 400 earlier this year at Kansas Speedway, a race that I chose to watch the back of my eyelids rather than the on-track activities. According to this week’s media advance from NASCAR, Kansas Speedway was Brad Keselowski’s coming out party, winning there in June during the series’ first trip to the 1.5-mile track.

    [media-credit name=”Kansasspeedway.com” align=”alignright” width=”250″][/media-credit]Apparently, I missed Keselowski’s run to the front in June, as he was only shown in the top spot for the last 9 laps, the only laps he lead all day. Keselowski’s run to the front started around lap 165, after the 5th and final caution flag flew during the STP 400. The final 102 laps would be run under green-flag conditions and Keselowski would go on to win by a margin of 2.813 seconds over second-place finisher Dale Earnhardt Jr.

    My picks for June’s race at Kansas Speedway were Jeff Gordon as my Winner Pick and A.J. Allmendinger for my Dark Horse. Gordon finished 4th, and Allmendinger flirted with a Top-15 for the majority of the race, but failed in the fuel-mileage game and ended up finishing 26th.

    I can’t say that I’m overly-excited for the race on Sunday, partly due to the fact that it’s almost guaranteed that that race will come down to fuel-mileage in the end. I AM excited for the second-half of The Chase to start, and to finally visit some tracks that will keep me awake on Sunday Afternoon.

    Dover Recap

    There was no place to go for me but up after my performance two weeks ago at New Hampshire. I had my worst combined total finishes two weeks ago with a 25th and 26th-place finish for my picks. I half-rebounded last week at Dover, scoring a top-5 for my winner pick.

    Let’s start with the bad news this week.

    Greg Biffle was my Dark Horse pick last week at the Monster Mile after an intense look at his statistics prior to last week’s AAA 400. In the prior 5 races at the Monster Mile, Biffle’s finishes were: 19th, 6th, 19th, 3rd, and 16th. In the 5 races prior to the start of the 2009 season, Biffle’s finishes were: 1st, 3rd, 6th, 2nd, and 8th.

    After getting off to a solid start it appeared that Greg Biffle was headed for a top-10 finish in Dover today. He was running seventh when the field restarted on lap 358 following a caution but lost control of his 3M Cubitron II Ford three laps later and made contact with the inside wall. Biffle brought the car to pit road for repairs but went two laps down in the process. When the checkered flag dropped Biffle was in the 27th position. He dropped one spot in the points to 15th.

    We had a fast car from the start,” said Biffle. “The guys worked hard in the pits all day and we should have had a top-10 finish at the least. We had a pit road penalty early on and were able to bounce back from that but we were just too loose on that last run.”

    My winner pick faired a lot better than Biffle last week, finishing in the runner-up spot. Spinning his tires on the final restart might have cost Jimmie Johnson his seventh victory at Dover International Speedway, but it didn’t hurt his run for a sixth straight NASCAR Sprint Cup championship.

    Johnson had led a race-high 157 laps coming into the final restart at Dover’s one-mile concrete oval. He lined up on the front row with Kurt Busch and spun the tires slightly, giving Busch the edge. Johnson crossed the finish line second, improving five spots in the championship standings to fifth.

    Johnson spoke of his troubles on the final restart following the AAA 400 last Sunday “I just got a poor restart when I was the leader, and for the last restart, I didn’t get a good one again,” Johnson said. “I couldn’t race (Busch) through Turns 1 and 2. The cars were very equal. We saw that.

    I look to parlay my half-rebound last week at Dover into full-on success this weekend at Kansas.

    Kansas Picks

    Chevrolet has claimed 6 victories in the 10 Hollywood Casino 400’s, the most of any other manufacturer, but Chevy hasn’t seen Victory Lane at Kansas since October of 2009. Chevy’s recent lack of success has me looking at a Dodge and a Ford on Sunday.

    Winner Pick

    Due to his success at Kansas in June, and his lack of success in The Chase thus far, Brad Keselowski is receiving my Winner Pick this week. Even though he led just 9 laps en route to his victory at Kansas in June, his teammate Kurt Busch led a race-high 4 times for 152 laps.

    Busch’s soaked up Penske Racing’s pool of luck last week at Dover, and I think its Brad’s turn to hit the spotlight this weekend. He raced his way into the 2011 Chase for the Sprint Cup in dramatic fashion, but has failed to reach Victory Lane since his win at Bristol in late-August.

    Keselowski is ready to put his name back in the discussion for the Driver’s Championship this year and I say he is the favorite to win on Sunday. “We do want to send a message this weekend that we are going to fight to the finish,” Keselowski said.

    At this point in the season, Keselowski is looking to rebound from a disappointing power-steering issue and 20th place finish last week, and put his name back in the mix to take home the Sprint Cup.

    Dark Horse Pick

    David Ragan will be making his 175th Career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start this weekend at Kansas Speedway. Sticking with my trend of not picking a Chase driver for my Dark Horse pick, I think Ragan stands the best shot of bringing home a Top-5 out of all non-chasers this weekend.

    His past finishes at Kansas are less than impressive but Ragan and his Crew Chief, Drew Blickensderfer seem to have the fuel mileage game down to a science. In the prior two races decided by gas (Geico 400 at Chicagoland and Sylvania 300 at Loudon), Ragan finished 11th and 7th respectively.

    Ragan has five prior Sprint Cup starts at Kansas Speedway. With those five starts, Ragan has an average starting position of 16.8 and finishing position of 17.6.

    Ragan said earlier this week “We always look to improve at tracks from the first event there and Kansas is a track that really fits our program. Our engines run well there and our cars are fast. Drew and I are going to work hard to try and grab another win for our UPS team.”

    He will be piloting the car that finished 13th at Kansas Speedway earlier this year, and I think Ragan is a driver ready to pounce on the chances of playing spoiler on Sunday.

    That’s all for this week, stay tuned next week as I make my first trip to Charlotte Motor Speedway with SpeedwayMedia.com editor, Ed Coombs and Photo Journalist, Brad Keppel. I look forward to an exciting week next week, so be sure to stay tuned for live updates on my trip on Twitter @ML_B_Lo.

    Until Next Week…You Stay Classy NASCAR NATION!

  • Biffle takes the Hollywood Casino 400 pole at Kansas

    Biffle takes the Hollywood Casino 400 pole at Kansas

    Qualifying at Kansas took place under cool and cloudy conditions with wind gusts that reached up to 25 mph. At the end of qualifying, Greg Biffle’s Sherwin Williams Ford from Roush Fenway Racing was sitting on the pole with a lap of 174.887 MPH. His teammate Carl Edwards will start outside the front row in the Aflac Ford.

    [media-credit id=2 align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]“Well, it was a really good lap. I think what I really would rather talk about is how slow we were when we unloaded off the truck. It was quite amazing. We were 35th or 37th when we unloaded off the truck today.” Biffle said. “We made about six qualifying runs and the last one was pretty dang good and they changed a bunch more stuff on it for the real one. The car was really good.”

    The pole for the Hollywood Casino 400 was the 8th of Biffle’s career and his best start in 11 tries at the mile and a half track.

    Edwards commented he had never started this far up at Kansas so he was excited. Edwards said “How you qualify is not indicative of how you are going to run in the race.” But he stated that he was excited to be starting so far up in the field.

    It is Roush Fenway’s eighth Sprint Cup pole in 2011, with all four of the team’s Cup drivers having won multiple poles this season. It also marked Roush Fenway’s second Sprint Cup pole at Kansas and its first since 2005.

    Kyle Busch who starts 3rd tomorrow stated that he hoped to have a much better race than he had last time here at Kansas. He also stated that he was happy to see Clint Bowyer added to the Toyota family.

    “We were looking for a little bit more than that, but certainly the pace is a little bit slower than we expected qualifying to be. So far so good. We’ve dodged a couple bullets. The M&M’s Camry unloaded good.” Busch said.

    Austin Dillon qualified 26th to make his first start in the Sprint Cup Series.

    “Thinking about it going up there, I wasn’t nervous all the way up until it was time to go. And then it’s just like you think of every little thing that could go wrong. We were fast enough in practice to get in really fast. That time we actually picked up some more speed, but I think if I would have calmed down a little bit it would have helped my lap.” Dillon said.

    The field is separated by only 0.86 of a second.

     

    Starting Lineup
    Hollywood Casino 400, Kansas Speedway
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/qual.php?race=30
    ===========================================
    Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time
    ===========================================
    1 16 Greg Biffle Ford 174.887 30.877
    2 99 Carl Edwards Ford 174.571 30.933
    3 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 174.447 30.955
    4 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 174.436 30.957
    5 4 Kasey Kahne Toyota 174.413 30.961
    6 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 174.317 30.978
    7 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 174.222 30.995
    8 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 174.126 31.012
    9 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 174.092 31.018
    10 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 174.048 31.026
    11 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 174.031 31.029
    12 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 174.02 31.031
    13 6 David Ragan Ford 173.863 31.059
    14 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 173.617 31.103
    15 83 Brian Vickers Toyota 173.605 31.105
    16 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 173.527 31.119
    17 22 Kurt Busch Dodge 173.327 31.155
    18 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 173.238 31.171
    19 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 173.182 31.181
    20 20 Joey Logano Toyota 173.171 31.183
    21 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 173.066 31.202
    22 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 172.944 31.224
    23 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 172.933 31.226
    24 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 172.889 31.234
    25 46 Scott Speed Ford 172.866 31.238
    26 198 Austin Dillon Chevrolet 172.723 31.264
    27 0 David Reutimann Toyota 172.607 31.285
    28 55 J.J. Yeley Ford 172.568 31.292
    29 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 172.535 31.298
    30 34 David Gilliland Ford 172.43 31.317
    31 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 172.397 31.323
    32 30 David Stremme Chevrolet 172.177 31.363
    33 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 172.161 31.366
    34 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 171.936 31.407
    35 71 Andy Lally* Ford 171.86 31.421
    36 38 Travis Kvapil Ford 171.521 31.483
    37 13 Casey Mears Toyota 171.429 31.5
    38 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 170.989 31.581
    39 7 Reed Sorenson Dodge 170.837 31.609
    40 66 Michael McDowell Toyota 170.53 31.666
    41 51 Landon Cassill Chevrolet 170.482 31.675
    42 32 Mike Bliss+ Ford 170.132 31.74
    43 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 170.148 31.737