Category: Featured Stories

Featured stories from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • The Final Word – Watkins Glen was all about rain, walls, and a man from down under

    The Final Word – Watkins Glen was all about rain, walls, and a man from down under

    Maybe the greatest legacy Dale Earnhardt left behind for those who followed him were the safety measures taken following the icon’s death a decade ago. After watching the rain delayed action at Watkins Glen on Monday morning, maybe two or three drivers remain with us because of the features since found in those cars. It sure in heck wasn’t about safety barriers this time.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”218″][/media-credit]Kurt Busch went sailing into the corner when a tire let go, and he found himself plowing into the tire cushioned wall. His day, at least his car’s day, was done but Busch wasn’t. A short time later, Denny Hamlin suffered the same problem and the same fate. If anything, Hamlin’s experience hit even harder as the fender met the fence at a spot where it had a concrete support behind it.

    On the final lap, David Ragan got a nudge from Boris Said and he met the wall, 100% unprotected concrete, and glanced off it on the driver’s side to smack into the barrier on the other side of the track. In doing so, he clipped David Reutimann who took it hard on his driver’s side before flipping into the air and across the track to nail the wall on the outside. Four cars, nothing but junk, but four drivers who will be ready to roll next week at Michigan.

    Marcos Ambrose has been rolling on NASCAR tracks since 2006 when he arrived as a champion driver from New Zealand. He won three times in Nationwide events, but Monday’s Cup win on the road course marks a high water mark. It was his first win in the series, and a fourth Top Five this season to go with those at Las Vegas, Dover, and the road adventure at Sonoma. Ambrose remains a point out of the Top Twenty but, regardless, still would need another victory to have any chance at a Chase place.

    With just Michigan, Bristol, Atlanta, and Richmond left before the twelve Chase positions are finalized, Brad Keselowski finished second. Those two wins still has him laying claim to the first wild card berth. Kyle Busch led most of the way until the final few laps and wound up third, tied with Carl Edwards for the points lead. Clint Bowyer was 11th at the Glen, remains 11th in the standings, winless and outside the Chase, with 25 points separating him and the man in tenth, Tony Stewart.

    Denny Hamlin’s wreck left him 36th on Monday, 33 points out of the over-all Top Ten, with a 27 point lead over Paul Menard for the final wild card entry. That is good, as long as Bowyer does not win on Sunday at Michigan, or Menard or Ambrose, something none of them has yet done. Hamlin, on the other hand, has claimed the June race both this year and last. Things could be looking up for the Pied Piper. Enjoy the week!

  • After the Ashes – Victory!

    After the Ashes – Victory!

    It has been a long time. Yes, we can count that Kasey Kahne victory so long ago (really only a few seasons ago), but how long has it really been since a Petty car won a NASCAR Sprint Cup race? I don’t have the time to look, but it’s been awhile. Bravo!

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”228″][/media-credit]The Petty name has gone through a long history of problems. Petty Enterprises partnered with an investment group to try to save the organization. That didn’t work and they finally merged with George Gillette’s team to survive. That didn’t work either. After signing an agreement with Roush-Fenway, there were times that the money to continue wasn’t there and it appeared the biggest name in NASCAR would go away. Credit Richard Petty, the King, for having the good sense to find a way to continue in the sport he almost created with his big smile and personality. Today was the start of that new era.

    Petty assembled two talented drivers with a hope and a prayer. A. J. Allmendinger is enormously talented. He’s rough around the edges, but shows signs of being a force in the series eventually. Marcos Ambrose is likewise talented, and a master on road courses. Today, the stars aligned right and Ambrose won the race at Watkins Glen. He deserved it. And the car owner did too, even though he was home caring for his ailing wife. It’s a shame the King wasn’t there. Seeing his smiling face and cowboy hat would have been priceless, but the result is the same. The first win for the new Richard Petty Motorsports is significant. I didn’t look it up, but Petty’s victory total is now huge

    In these days where younger fans don’t remember guys like Petty and his organization were so dominant, this is a flashback for those of us who have followed the sport for 40 years or more. It’s so good to see good people—people who made this sport what it is (the Wood Brothers also come to mind) be successful. It’s been a magical season for those two teams and now Marcos Ambrose has given the legendary team a chance to run for a championship. What could be better? Nothing is the answer.

    Congratulations to the Tasmanian devil! May he finally win one on an oval and he and his teammate continue the tradition of wins for the Petty family.

  • Biffle the chump?  Said says so!

    Biffle the chump? Said says so!

    [media-credit name=”Photo by Jason Smith/Getty Images” align=”alignright” width=”217″][/media-credit]Greg Biffle confronted Boris Said in the pits after the race at Watkins Glen on Monday.  Biffle gave him some quick punches while Said was still in the car.

    “He wouldn’t even let me get out of the car. He comes over and throws a few little baby punches and then when I get out, he runs away and hides behind some big guys.” Said said.

    According to Said, Biffle was already at least a lap down and Biffle was racing him dirty. Said relayed a message to Biffle’s spotter that he wanted to meet him after the race.

    “I won’t settle it on the track but he’ll show up at a race with a black eye one of these days.” Said added.  “[Biffle] is a chump”

    “I think Biffle has had a problem with Boris from a previous race, so leading into this race they already had some aggression toward each other. Early in the race, Biffle had run out of gas and was multiple laps down and was racing Boris.” said Nick Harrison, crew chief for Said.

  • Marcos Ambrose Claims First Sprint Cup Series Win at Postponed Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen

    Marcos Ambrose Claims First Sprint Cup Series Win at Postponed Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen

    The rain held off and 85,000 race fans were treated to an exciting race today at Watkins Glen International. At the start, it looked as if NASCAR was trying to fit a square die in a round hole, but the showers held and all of the scheduled 90 laps (92 actually) were completed today at The Glen. All this action coming today after yesterday’s weather forced a Monday race for the second time in three years.

    [media-credit name=”Ed Coombs” align=”alignright” width=”239″][/media-credit]The Tasmanian native surged to his first NASCAR Sprint Cup series victory in dramatic fashion, surviving a wild Green-White-Checkered finish that will go down as one of the most epic two laps in The Glen’s storied history. For a second race in a row (the other coming in Saturday’s Zippo 200) the driver who led the most laps at The Glen would not come home with the race win.

    Crew Chief Todd Parrott proved his strategy for today’s race would be relatively conservative in comparison to other teams when he called Marcos Ambrose in for his first of three pit stops on the day coming at lap 17. Others like the No. 18 team of Kyle Busch, the No. 24 of Jeff Gordon, and the No. 2 of Brad Keselowski tried to stretch their fuel mileage in exchange for improved track position.

    There were really two ‘groups’ of cars today, those going conservatively and those trying to squeeze every drop of fuel from their cars in an effort to come to pit road just twice rather than three times.

    The caution flag waived just 5 times today at Watkins Glen International, four of which were created by rather violent crashes across various points on the 2.45 mile road course.

    The first caution caused by contact came past the half-way point in the race involving the No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge Charger on lap 50 when Kurt Busch’s car blew a left front tire sending him into the outside tire barrier in turn number 5.

    Kurt Busch explained the incident after climbing from his wrecked car “I had a big problem getting into the braking zones today, the rear brakes locking up. I had to crank eight rounds of front brake in our Shell/Pennzoil Dodge just to survive. All that does is generate brake heat and I blew out the left-front tire. It was just a bummer of a day and not anything that we expected. It must have been something with the brake package.” This marked Kurt Busch’s first DNF dating back to Michigan in August of 2010.

    Kyle Busch was shown as the race leader following the caution lasting for three laps, but would lose the point to limping Brad Keselowski just 5 laps after the restart.

    The second bad accident came on lap 67 when Denny Hamlin went for a ride off of the 90 degree turn number 1 at Watkins Glen International. The replay showed Hamlin’s car with the front brakes completely locked up with the rear wheels still going forward, and eventually plowing the wall in the first turn causing the wall to buckle upwards of 15 inches. The Toyota driver would later explain that something felt like it had broke in the front end causing him to drive straight through the hard right hander.

    Eventual race winner, Marcos Ambrose along with Juan Montoya had pitted just one lap prior to the caution moving them into 4th and 5th respectively behind leader Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski, and Martin Truex Jr. when the green flag came back out on lap 69.

    Marcos Ambrose wasted no time after the third restart in his effort to drive to the front, zipping past Truex on lap 72 for third, and past Keselowski for second on lap 76. Ambrose whittled away at Kyle Busch’s 2.5-second lead throughout the next few laps, forcing Busch to burn more fuel to stay at the point.

    Crew Chief for the No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Dave Rogers, was asked on lap 83 if the No. 18 had enough fuel to make the 30 laps he needed to take the checkered and responded “Oh, that’s going to be close, I’m more worried about the No. 9 (Ambrose) right now.”

    Dave Rogers’ prayers for a caution were answered when the second tire issue of the day caused the No. 27 of Paul Menard to smash the wall exiting the top of the esses. Menard’s car leaked fluid all the way around, almost to the entrance of turn number 10, forcing an imminent Green-White-Checkered finish.

    Under caution, the leader Kyle Busch putted around the track, shutting down his engine several times in an effort to conserve fuel for the two lap dash that would make up the finish of the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen. Ambrose had 4 laps more fuel than Busch, so the No. 18 knew Ambrose would be charging hard on the final restart to overtake him.

    The stage was set for the final restart with Kyle Busch in the lead, Ambrose starting to his left in second, Brad Keselowski starting inside row 2, Martin Truex Jr. in fourth, and Juan Montoya in fifth.

    The race would go green for the final time on lap 91, with Kyle Busch hammering down towards the hard right hand turn number 1. Marcos Ambrose faltered on the restart, spinning his tires just before the start/finish line, giving room for Brad Keselowski and Truex to become a threat in the race. Busch drove his Toyota Camry too hard into turn 1, going sideways at the exit, giving way for Keselowski to sneak by on the inside.

    Kyle Busch had this to say about his slip up in turn 1 “Just knew exactly what not to do and did it anyway. Just got in there and didn’t think I got in there too fast, but the car just didn’t slow down the way I needed it to and then it didn’t turn the way I needed it to. Saw sprinkles on the windshield, but everybody else made it fine through there. I just screwed up.”

    Keselowski maintained the lead all the way up the esses, down the backstretch, and through the bus stop chicane. Ambrose would make his move on the Blue Deuce in the carousel turn, sneaking past Keselowski on his right. Once Ambrose got to the point halfway through lap 91, there was no turning back. He was absolutely flawless for the next lap through the 11 turns that make up the short course at WGI.

    The final caution would come on lap 92, ending the race and putting Marcos Ambrose in Victory Lane for the first time as a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver. Heavy contact between the No. 6 of David Ragan and No. 00 of David Reutimann caused the caution to fly just as the field made their way through the first part of the esses in turn number 2. The crash was the most vicious one of the day, leaving Reutimann on his roof and Ragan with safety concerns about the track at Watkins Glen.

    That was a hard hit. I looked down at my feet and my pedals and my leg rests were all pushed over. It’s a shame that a race track we go to in 2011 doesn’t have a better wall design all the way around the race track, so hopefully they’ll look at that. I’ve been to some dirt tracks that have better walls than that. It was a hard hit, but our cars are safe.”
    Said David Ragan, following his trip to the Infield Care Center.

    Race winner Marcos Ambrose has no concerns with the safety at Watkins Glen “The track itself is a first-class facility. It’s a great race track. I think they’ve done an awesome job in some of the safety features they’ve already implemented around this place. I don’t drive around this place looking at any one spot saying, ‘Ooooh, that looks nasty to me.’ I think they’ve done great with what they’ve got. If you don’t have a guard rail off of turn two, you end up going down a bank, so that’s not good either. I think the track itself is fine, I think we just have to keep working on safety…But I think the track is a classic road racing circuit. You don’t want to make it too sterile. You’ve got to have bumps and lumps and change of camber and roughness and all that kind of stuff that makes it what it is.”

    Ambrose’s win today marks the 5th different First-Time Winner in the Sprint Cup Series this year, and it’s the first win for Ford at Watkins Glen since Geoff Bodine’s win at The Glen in 1996.

    Marcos elaborated on his win in Victory Lane just before 1PM today “I’ve sacrificed so much to get here and to finally win and be here in Victory Lane in the Cup Series is a dream come true. I flew the kids home yesterday. It was the little one’s first day at school. I was desperate to be there for her and this kind of makes up for it. I’ve just got to thank the Richard Petty Motorsports team, Stanley, DeWalt, everybody involved. Mrs. Petty is not doing so well at home. We wish her the best. This win is for her and the whole Petty family. Richard and everyone else who gave me the chance, thank you very much. Winning in the Cup Series for Stanley is just an incredible feeling and I’m very, very proud.

    The rest of the top 5:

    battered Brad Kesolowski – 2nd

    3rd-Kyle Busch

    4th-Martin Truex Jr.

    5th-Joey Logano

    Kyle Busch leaves Watkins Glen tied for the points lead after a 12th place finish from Carl Edwards. Jimmie Johnson dropped one spot to 3rd following his 10th place finish at The Glen.

     

  • Ambrose wins at Watkins Glen

    Ambrose wins at Watkins Glen

    Marcos Ambrose held off Brad Keselowski and won Monday’s rain delayed Sprint Cup Series Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen at Watkins Glen International.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Photo Inc” align=”alignright” width=”219″][/media-credit]“I’ve sacrificed so much to get here and to finally win and be here in Victory Lane in the Cup Series is a dream come true. I flew the kids home yesterday. It was the little one’s first day at school. I was desperate to be there for her and this kind of makes up for it. I’ve just got to thank the Richard Petty Motorsports team, Stanley, DeWalt, everybody involved.” Ambrose said.

    Kyle Busch was leading on the final green-white-checkers restart, but teammate dove under Busch entering the first turn for the lead. Ambrose bumped Keselowski in the chicane and took the lead.

    This was his first victory in 105 starts in NASCAR’s top series and Ford’s first victory on a road course since Geoff Bodine in 1996.

    “It was just a really good Dodge Charger today. I’m really proud of my guys for giving me a fast Miller Lite Dodge Charger. I wanted to win, but if I’m going to lose on a road course to someone, Marcos Ambrose is the man.” Keselowski said.

    Busch finished third, Martin Truex Jr. fourth and Joey Logano finished fifth.

    The race ended under caution when David Reutimann and David Ragan crashed entering the second turn. Reutimann’s bounced hard off of the guardrail and slid upside down across the track.

    Polesitter and Sonoma winner, Kurt Busch went for a spin in the inner loop on lap four. He finished 38th.

    “I had a big problem getting into the braking zones today, the rear brakes locking up. I had to crank eight rounds of front brake in our Shell/Pennzoil Dodge just to survive. All that does is generate brake heat and I blew out the left-front tire. It was just a bummer of a day and not anything that we expected. It must have been something with the brake package. Whatever (Brad) Keselowski found at Road Atlanta, I had a problem with today.” Busch said.

    On lap 67, Denny Hamlin brought out the third caution flag of the race when he slammed head-on into the tire barrier after loosing his brakes.

    “I had no brakes,” Hamlin said. “I was trying to do everything I could. Just nothing you can do.”

     

    Unofficial Race Results
    Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen, Watkins Glen International
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/race.php?race=22
    =========================================
    Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
    =========================================
    1 3 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 47
    2 12 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 43
    3 1 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 43
    4 9 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 40
    5 13 20 Joey Logano Toyota 39
    6 23 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 38
    7 5 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 38
    8 2 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 37
    9 40 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 35
    10 4 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 35
    11 17 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 34
    12 19 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 33
    13 8 99 Carl Edwards Ford 31
    14 25 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 30
    15 20 83 Brian Vickers Toyota 29
    16 6 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 28
    17 24 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 27
    18 14 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 26
    19 11 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 25
    20 15 51 Boris Said Chevrolet 24
    21 31 7 Robby Gordon Dodge 23
    22 26 13 Casey Mears Toyota 22
    23 10 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 21
    24 36 71 Andy Lally * Ford 20
    25 22 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 19
    26 18 4 Kasey Kahne Toyota 18
    27 7 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 17
    28 16 6 David Ragan Ford 16
    29 39 0 David Reutimann Toyota 15
    30 38 36 Ron Fellows Chevrolet 14
    31 28 16 Greg Biffle Ford 13
    32 32 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 12
    33 41 34 David Gilliland Ford 11
    34 43 38 Terry Labonte Ford 10
    35 35 32 Andrew Ranger Ford 0
    36 42 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 8
    37 34 150 T.J. Bell * Chevrolet 0
    38 27 22 Kurt Busch Dodge 6
    39 29 37 Scott Speed Ford 0
    40 21 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 0
    41 33 66 Michael McDowell Toyota 3
    42 30 55 J.J. Yeley Ford 2
    43 37 60 Mike Skinner Toyota 0
  • Jamie McMurray – From cuteness to one of NASCAR’s good guys

    I remember seeing this cute blonde blue eyed driver being interviewed during a Busch Series race. My first recollection of Jamie McMurray was not on the track, but before a race. “Who is that kid?” I said.  “Williams Travel agency, who is that?”

    [media-credit id=43 align=”alignright” width=”229″][/media-credit]McMurray began his career in 1999 debuting in the truck series. The following year he went on to drive the #27 Williams Travel Agency Monte Carlo for Brewco Motorsports. Who? In the following weeks and months fans began to notice this driver and his humble, very kind hearted demeanor. He was a nice guy, very gracious in interviews and for us girls very easy on the eyes to boot.

    I continued to stay tuned in and followed this new driver. I continued to hear his name as owners were talking about a possible Winston Cup ride as well. After 2 years driving full time in the Busch Series, Chip Ganassi announced at the end of 2002 that McMurray would be driving the #42 Texaco Havoline Dodge in the upcoming 2003 season. At that point, more people began paying more attention to McMurray as a driver and as a person.  But no one knew how quickly or how much this driver would be in the limelight and become a household name in NASCAR’s top series of racing.

    Sterlin Marlin, a veteran Winston Cup driver and also the seasoned driver of the #41 Coors Light Dodge for owner Chip Ganassi, quickly became the mentor for the new kid on the block.  McMurray was eager to work with Marlin to learn the ropes of driving in this series. How it played out at the end of the 2002 season was no doubt a fairytale beginning for the Joplin Missouri driver.

    In the fall of 2002 McMurray took the wheel behind the #41 Coors Light for the injured Sterlin Marlin who broke a vertebra in his neck at Kansas Speedway.  McMurray’s first race was at Talladega Superspeedway.

    McMurray also substituted the following week at Lowes Motor Speedway in Charlotte NC, which is home the home track for Nascar and the home to many drivers and race teams. In only his second start of his career, he won at Lowes Motor Speedway!

    I remember watching the race on TV. I remember the last few laps of that race, the media was already talking about if McMurray could pull off this win.  The fans were on their feet as McMurray was neck and neck with veteran driver Bobby Labonte.  McMurray led 96 of the 100 laps and won that race for Marlin and Chip Ganassi Racing.

    What an emotional win!  McMurray fought back the tears during the Victory Lane interview and also was seen getting a phone call from Marlin who was back home in Tennessee.  Marlin was as thrilled for McMurray as McMurray was for himself.  McMurray’s emotions continued to flow as cameras caught him shedding tears of joy. This was indeed the Nascar upset of the year, even beating out the emotional win that Kevin Harvick captured after taking over the #29 Chevy Monte Carlo for the late Dale Earnhardt Sr. in 2001.

    McMurray drove six races in 2002 in the #40 car and went on to win Rookie of the Year in 2003 driving the Texaco Havoline Dodge.

    McMurray went on to drive for Ganassi racing, Rouch Fenway racing in the #26 Ford Crown Royal and Irwin tools.  He also drove for Michael Waltrip Racing.  In 2010, he replaced Martin Truex Jr. in the #1 Bass Pro Shop Monte Carlo and found himself back with Ganassi which is where his storybook career began seven years earlier.

    In 2010, McMurray won the Daytona 500 in February and the Brickyard 400 in August, two of the most prestige’s races on the Nascar circuit.

    Today he is still much of the same person and driver; he is a humble low keyed driver who races clean and expects the same in return. He has become a husband and a father, he also established a foundation to help the Missouri folks who’s world was turned upside down by a Tornado’s this year.

    In an interview after his wins in 2010 this is how McMurray summed up his feelings about his life, career and power of prayer, “As those laps were winding down I was thinking about Daytona and why I cry and the power of prayer. I had a tough year last year. I found out the power of prayer and what that can do for you. When you get to victory lane, and you get to experience this, it just makes you a believer.”

  • The ‘smaller the better’ believes Kurt Busch about the Chase and Penske success

    The ‘smaller the better’ believes Kurt Busch about the Chase and Penske success

    There are five races left before the Chase for the Sprint Cup gets underway in Chicago but Penske Racing wouldn’t mind if it started this weekend.

    Their two drivers, Kurt Busch and Brad Keselowski, are climbing through the point standings and charging for the win every weekend. Keselowski scored his second win last Sunday in Pocono and Busch has also been in victory lane this season.

    [media-credit id=24 align=”alignright” width=”224″][/media-credit]Just a few weeks ago it appeared Busch would be the only Penske driver in the Chase but Keselowski has come on strong and now has a chance at the wildcard. Saturday morning in Watkins Glen Busch had kind words about his teammates turnaround.

    “I felt like Brad’s intensity for that Nationwide car really kept him back a little bit last year,” said Busch. “But that was the focus, to bring that championship home and continue to build on the Cup side. So to see him settle in with Paul [Wolfe] and where they are as a team is great.”

    Keselowski and Wolfe won the NNS championship last season for Penske Racing, but on the Cup Series side Keselowski struggled. He finished 25th in points with crew chief Jay Guy and the No. 12 team. Team owner Roger Penske made changes, cutting down his organization to just to two teams from three.

    Sam Hornish Jr. was the odd man out due to lack of sponsorship. Keselowski moved into the No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge that had been driven by Busch and Wolfe was promoted to the Cup Series. Busch moved into the No. 22 Shell / Pennzoil Dodge and wit that the company set out for Daytona.

    Busch won two of the three races during Speedweeks, missing out on the points-paying Daytona 500. Keselowski won a fuel mileage race in Kansas followed by a Busch victory in Sonoma. Keselowski’s triumph in Pocono moved him to 18th in points while Busch moved to fourth after finishing third.

    Lately, it’s been all about Busch and Keselowski as Penske has both teams running and succeeding equally. Except for one area where Keselowski’s team has the advantage.

    “Their pit crew on the No. 2 car is hands down faster than the No. 22 this year,” said Busch. “Those guys have that desire, youthful exuberance, to go out and to try different things and find it. Right now they’re putting it together. My team needs to feed off of that and find the groove the next few weeks to be that championship leader within the Penske team.”

    This weekend at the Glen Busch will be attempting to sweep the road course events. Keselowski, while trying to win his third race of the year, will be working to remain in the top 20 in points in order to be eligible for the wildcard. Keselowski won’t be racing in Saturday’s NNS race as he still heals his broken ankle.

    Busch though is already looking forward to the Chase and the likelihood that Keselowski will be apart of it. With the newly reformed Penske Racing it would mean the organization put both their cars in the Chase and best part is that they are both competitive.

    Something that’s hard to do as Hendrick Motorsports found in 2009 when their cars finished 1-3 in points and the other finished 25th. The same has happened to Roush Fenway and Richard Childress Racing. Every NASCAR organization has fought the battle of trying to make sure every driver and team is running to par.

    “It’s just more hard work from those fabricators in the shop,” Busch said about multiple cars in the Chase. “Last year we made the Chase, Brad didn’t. If there was a car that was built off of new specs and went to the wind tunnel and showed brand new numbers, obviously it would go to the championship running team.”

    Or another example, “If you have a new car that is built and it spits out these great numbers and you have to have it this next week at Charlotte, we need to have two now,” said Busch. “Maybe if I was going to run my car at Charlotte, then he would get that car and I would get the new one based off of where we are in points.”

    In 2004-2005 when Busch was still driving for Roush Fenway there was a year where they had all five cars in the Chase. Busch revealed it became almost chaotic about which drivers were getting which cars as everyone tired to get their team the best parts.

    “We had cars going everywhere,” Busch said. “We had people pulling ropes like it was tug-o-war trying to get the best pieces for them. I remember winning the Loudon race the year that I won the championship and Mark Martin wanted that car for Phoenix. Where do we stand?”

    Busch was torn because while he was running higher in the point standings, he felt Martin as the veteran was supposed to be running at championship level. “It gets very difficult when you have a lot of cars in the Chase,” he said.

    Penske Racing shouldn’t have the same problem. First though, Busch and Keselowski must make it to the Chase before the company has to start worrying about news cars and parts, which Busch doesn’t see happening.

    “Luckily at Penske Racing we have the facility and the people to crank out good new equipment if something comes up,” he said.

  • Straight From The Glen: Saturday Wrap-Up

    Straight From The Glen: Saturday Wrap-Up

    [media-credit name=”Matt LaFlair” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]It was a day for the Busch brothers today here at Watkins Glen International. Two track records were broke today here at The Glen, both by drivers with the last name Busch.

    Kurt Busch had no intentions of running the NASCAR Nationwide Series Zippo 200 today, but when the doctor told Brad Keselowski to take a rest, he listened. Kurt got the call up from his team owner Roger Penske Wednesday Morning, and after he was called upon he delivered.

    Nationwide Qualifying

    Starting with NASCAR Nationwide Series qualifying this morning, the Busch brothers dominated all on-track activities here at Watkins Glen International today. Kurt’s speed of 123.241 was good enough to take the top starting spot for this afternoon’s and paved the foundations of his win in the Zippo 200 here at The Glen. His lap also shattered the NASCAR Nationwide Series track record held by Marcos Ambrose. One-upped by Kurt by just one spot, Kyle laid down a lap good enough for him to also start on the front row in second.

    Sprint Cup Qualifying

    Making the quick switch over to their Cup cars, the Busch brothers continued their domination of today’s racing. Kyle, (not to be outdone by older bother Kurt) would etch his name in the history books by breaking the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying record.

    Kyle Busch’s lap of 1:09.767, the fastest qualifying time ever here at The Glen, was good enough to take pole position for the 220-mile race slated to go tomorrow at 1PM. His pole here at Watkins Glen marks his 8th of his career, and the first for him this season. The weather is not looking very cooperative at this point, but should the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen go green tomorrow; Kyle Busch will bring the field to the green flag.

    Zippo 200 – NASCAR Nationwide Series Race

    Sweeping the front row for the 17th Annual Zippo 200 at The Glen, the Busch brothers were less than willing to share the spotlight on Saturday afternoon.

    Kurt wasted no time in flexing his muscles, jumping out to a two-second lead over his bother by lap 6. Kyle grabbed the lead for one lap after Todd Gordon made the call to bring in the #22 Ruby Tuesday/Discount Tire Dodge Challenger into the pits on lap 9. Kyle, in turn would have to pit, returning the lead to his big bother Kurt on lap 10.

    The Busch brothers swapped the lead a total of seven times throughout the course of the 85 laps Saturday afternoon, but fuel mileage ended up determining who took home the trophy today here at The Glen.

    Kyle Busch gained the lead on lap 56, and if the last quarter of the race played out the way the first three quarters did, he would have surely been short on fuel to make it the rest of the way. Kurt stalked his brother for about 20 laps, but never really had enough to pass him in the later part of the race. The Penske team knew the No. 18 car was running short on fuel down the stretch, and the word came through that Kyle was trying to conserve for the end. The No. 22 team in-turn put the heat on the leader Kyle Busch, forcing him to burn more fuel to keep the lead.

    Kyle Busch would eventually bring his car down pit road around lap 76, relinquishing the lead to brother Kurt. Had Crew Chief Jason Ratcliff known that the caution flag would fly just 5 laps later, there’s little to no doubt that Kyle Busch would have remained on the track as the race leader.

    The caution flag did fly on lap 81, forcing a Green-White-Checkered finish. Kurt Busch got away clean on the second and final restart, with his brother Kyle, Jimmie Johnson, and Carl Edwards all trying to gain position enough to dive-bomb the eventual race-winner in Turn 1.

    Kurt Busch had this to say about the Green-White-Checkered finish: “I knew that it was going to be a good finish. On the restart at the end, all heck could have broken loose. I actually drove it in a little too deep; that right-front tire was cold. I just have to thank this crew for allowing me to step in, they were starting to call me “Buschlowski” because I was wearing Brad’s fire suit. Todd Gordon (crew chief) did an excellent job. This was a fast Dodge Challenger. I’m proud to drive it. Thanks to Ruby Tuesday, Discount Tire and Shell and Pennzoil for allowing me to come over here and have fun. It’s really neat to come over here and sit on the pole and win.”

    Teammate and regular driver of the No. 22 Ruby Tuesday/Discount Tire Dodge Challenger, Brad Keselowski was enthusiastic for his replacement in Gatorade Victory Lane “We left our driver debrief and talked about the Cup weekend at Pocono, I walked up to Kurt and said, ‘Hey Kurt, I think it would be cool if you drove my car this weekend. I just don’t think that I can pull it off.’ He was like a kid in a candy store. His face lit up and I knew that he wanted to drive this car. I knew how bad he wanted to win and I’m glad to see his hard work and passion for the team pay off with a victory.”

    Jimmie Johnson, driving for JR Motorsports brought his Jimmie Johnson’s Anything With an Engine Chevrolet home second, Joey Logano edged Kyle Busch out for third, and Carl Edwards rounded out the Top 5.

    The No. 18 Z-Line Designs Toyota lead more than half the laps here today at The Glen, but driver Kyle Busch declined to comment following the pit strategy that did not play out in his favor. Brother Kurt’s win marked his third title in just twelve starts in the NASCAR Nationwide Series at The Glen. It is also the 19th Sprint Cup driver in the 23 Nationwide Races with a ‘Sprint Cup Regular’ winner.

    It was a fantastic day here at The Glen and everyone here is praying to the rain gods to hold off so we can get the race in tomorrow. Stay tuned for more from Watkins Glen International…

  • Keselowski Leads Dodge in Cup Qualifying at The Glen

    Keselowski Leads Dodge in Cup Qualifying at The Glen

    Final Qualifying Results

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

    Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen Watkins Glen International

    Saturday, Aug. 13, 2011

    www.media.chrysler.com

    www.twitter.com/teamdodge

    BRAD KESELOWSKI (No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge Charger R/T) Qualified 12th “I thought that is was a really good lap for our Miller Lite Dodge Charger. I probably under-drove the lap just a little bit. It was a really good effort by this No. 2 Miller Lite crew for giving me a fast race car. I’m still new to these road courses and to start 12th is a good effort by our team.

    “You have to put yourself in position tomorrow to keep your race car clean and stay out of trouble. We know that fuel mileage will be important. I’ve got a great team with Paul (Wolfe, crew chief) leading the charge. I think that we have a consistent race car in every corner. I need just a little bit more speed in the center of the corner and then I think we’ll be really fast. A great effort.”

    KURT BUSCH (No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge Charger R/T) Qualified 27th “I guess we just got a little too aggressive in the run with our Shell/Pennzoil Dodge Charger. I felt like I was getting behind and had to push the car too hard. I just missed it through the bus stop and then wild and not very smooth at all through the esses. It looks like we’ll be playing catch-up for the first portion of the race here tomorrow.”

    ROBBY GORDON (No. 7 SPEED Energy Dodge Charger R/T) Qualified 31st “I think that we have a good race car. When PJ’s (Jones) car had a problem, it kind of took the wind out of my sails. I knew that I had to get our SPEED Energy Dodge in the show. I just ran a conservative lap to make sure we’d race tomorrow. If you’re in the show, you have a shot at winning the race.”

  • Day of Records: Kyle Busch Takes Sprint Cup Pole at The Glen

    Day of Records: Kyle Busch Takes Sprint Cup Pole at The Glen

    [media-credit name=”Matt LaFlair” align=”alignright” width=”166″][/media-credit]Kyle Busch took pole position for tomorrow’s (or Tuesday’s) 26th Annual Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen in commanding style. After the two Richard Petty Motorsports drivers, Marcos Ambrose and A.J. Allmendinger decided to lay down laps fast enough to take the pole (for the time) Kyle Busch, who qualified last because of his first practice speed, decided to add to the drama that was Sprint Cup qualifying here at The Glen.

    The #43 car of A.J. Allmendinger became the first Sprint Cup car to break the 70-second mark in qualifying around the 2.45-mile short course here at Watkins Glen International with his lap time of 1:09.997.

    Not to be outdone, Kyle Busch’s lap of 1:09.767, the fastest qualifying speed ever here at The Glen, was good enough to take pole position for the 220-mile race slated to go tomorrow at 1PM. His pole here at Watkins Glen marks his 8th of his career, and the first for him this season. Also with the pole today, Joe Gibbs Racing drivers have taken both pole positions this season at the two road courses after Joey Logano took the pole earlier this season at Infineon Raceway.

    Busch’s lap time was just a hair off of where Marcos Ambrose’s fast lap was yesterday in Final Practice. Ambrose ran a lap just one-tenth quicker than Busch’s qualifying lap today. Ambrose will start just behind Busch in third tomorrow, and it will be interesting to see how fast he will make a charge to the front following the green-flag around 1PM.

    Stay tuned for more here from The Glen…

     

    Starting Lineup
    Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen, Watkins Glen International
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/qual.php?race=22
    ===========================================
    Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time
    ===========================================
    1 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 126.421 69.767
    2 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 126.041 69.977
    3 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 125.984 70.009
    4 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 125.662 70.188
    5 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 125.654 70.193
    6 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 125.314 70.383
    7 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 125.238 70.426
    8 99 Carl Edwards Ford 125.202 70.446
    9 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 124.968 70.578
    10 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 124.94 70.594
    11 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 124.915 70.608
    12 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 124.908 70.612
    13 20 Joey Logano Toyota 124.904 70.614
    14 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 124.791 70.678
    15 51 Boris Said Chevrolet 124.701 70.729
    16 6 David Ragan Ford 124.55 70.815
    17 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 124.451 70.871
    18 4 Kasey Kahne Toyota 123.998 71.13
    19 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 123.854 71.213
    20 83 Brian Vickers Toyota 123.682 71.312
    21 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 123.663 71.323
    22 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 123.635 71.339
    23 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 123.517 71.407
    24 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 123.507 71.413
    25 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 123.476 71.431
    26 13 Casey Mears Toyota 123.455 71.443
    27 22 Kurt Busch Dodge 123.436 71.454
    28 16 Greg Biffle Ford 123.433 71.456
    29 37 Scott Speed Ford 123.379 71.487
    30 55 J.J. Yeley Ford 123.283 71.543
    31 7 Robby Gordon Dodge 123.176 71.605
    32 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 122.956 71.733
    33 66 Michael McDowell Toyota 122.956 71.733
    34 150 T.J. Bell* Chevrolet 122.928 71.749
    35 32 Andrew Ranger Ford 122.372 72.075
    36 71 Andy Lally* Ford 122.196 72.179
    37 60 Mike Skinner Toyota 122.13 72.218
    38 36 Ron Fellows Chevrolet 121.993 72.299
    39 0 David Reutimann Toyota 121.66 72.497
    40 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 121.419 72.641
    41 34 David Gilliland Ford 120.339 73.293
    42 11 Denny Hamlin+ Toyota
    43 38 Terry Labonte Ford Champion’s Provisional 0