Tag: kansas speedway

  • Gordon Takes Inaugural Night Race At Kansas

    Gordon Takes Inaugural Night Race At Kansas

    On the final set of pit stops, Jeff Gordon took the lead from Kevin Harvick during Saturday night’s 5-Hour Energy 400 at Kansas Speedway and was able to hold off Harvick by two car lengths at the finish line and capture his 89th NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career victory.

    This was Gordon’s first win of the 2014 season and he is now virtually locked into the 2014 Chase. Gordon also extended his series points lead to 15 over Matt Kenseth.

    “I knew we had a fast race car. We have been bringing fast race cars every single weekend. It’s just given me so much confidence in the race cars and the race team. I have got to thank Axalta Coating Systems they are an awesome sponsor. When the lights went out we could still see this thing out there. Of course AARP Drive To End Hunger, Pepsi Max, Valvoline and Chevrolet. You know Kevin (Harvick) was tough. He was so strong I did not know if I could hold him off. I almost didn’t there at the end. I caught traffic. The car just got extremely loose on me and he was just coming. Luckily that was the checkered flag.” Gordon said.

    Since the win was heading into Mother’s Day, it will be a day of celebration with family.

    “I’ve got to say Happy Mother’s Day. What an amazing Mother’s Day present this is going to be. I can’t wait to see my wife Ingrid and my mom tomorrow. It’s going to be an amazing celebration. What a huge weight lifted off this team’s shoulders. We have been leading the points but we needed to get to victory lane and they proved they were capable of it. Great job by them.” Gordon added.

    Harvick led 119 laps but had to settle for a second place finish after he ran out of gas getting onto pit road and Gordon was able to take advantage.

    “Well, the car was really fast. We just had to overcome a lot tonight, getting caught on pit road both times under green flag pit stops,” Harvick explained. “Then there at the end, we ran out of gas coming to pit road there, and I was looking at the fuel pressure gauge instead of the tach and lost a bunch of time down pit road and off of pit road, wound up getting stuck behind the 24. The car was really tight, and then I found a groove that worked for me way up the racetrack, and I caught him, and then I slipped and lost everything I had gained and then gained it all back and just ran out of laps at the end.”

    Although he was unable to capture another victory, Harvick was satisfied with their overall result.

    “I think we had a good night, he said.”You can’t win them all. For me, I made a mistake at the end and felt like that’s probably what cost us the chance to stay in front of the 24. But the 24 was good all night, and the 48 was good when he was out front, and we got in the back of the pack and couldn’t go anywhere.  It came down to track position, and those guys executed a little bit better than I did.”

    Kasey Kahne finished in third place followed by Joey Logano and Dale Earnhardt Jr. to round out the top five.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Kyle Busch Wins Caution Plagued SFP 250

    Kyle Busch Wins Caution Plagued SFP 250

    Kyle Busch threw the monkey off his back at Kansas Speedway by winning the SFP 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) race. The race saw a series high number of cautions, with nine. Busch added to his 130 career win tally with the victory.

    Busch led a race-best 104 laps winning Friday night’s SFP 250 NCWTS race. The victory was the second of the season in the truck series for Busch. It was his 37th win in the series. The margin of victory came by 3.021 seconds over second-place Matt Crafton.

    “Kansas? I’m a winner at Kansas?” Busch said in mock shock in Victory Lane. Yes, it’s true. Thanks, he said, to a terrific Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota Tundra and an Eric Phillips-led team that were in his words, “flawless.”

    “Just real proud of Eric and all my guys,” Busch said of Phillips, who by winning his 79th race as a truck series crew chief became the series’ winningest crew chief. “It was really good once we unloaded and we just made some slight changes to it, playing around with some things, trying to make it better in practice.”

    Matt Crafton finished second a year after winning at Kansas, and Joey Logano, Busch’s former Sprint Cup teammate at Joe Gibbs Racing, finished third.

    Crafton said despite his second-place finish, he had nothing for Busch. “He had a very, very fast truck,” Crafton said. “We were just a little bit scared – we wanted to make a maybe a track bar change – but we were tight center-off all night. We made one adjustment and made it quite a bit better. But then I got a little bit free and tight-off but I was afraid to make any more adjustments to help my off because I knew it was going to hurt my entry.”

    The race was halted nine times by cautions. The most serious being a multi-car incident that involved Johnny Sauter and Ryan Blaney. Blaney spun in turn two and Sauter was hit from behind shoving him straight into the wall and then into the truck of Blaney.

    “We were three wide.” Sauter said, “and I think another truck ran into me in the back and sent me from the bottom of the race track to the top. When I got there, Ryan was sideways and stopped and there just wasn’t enough room between him and the wall.”

    “We were racing hard with Joey and I took it to the fence and they got kind of bottled up there behind me and destroyed our truck,” Blaney, who started the race fourth in points, said.

    “Just hard racing. He (Logano) was just too (close) on my door and it just sent me around, that’s how we got on the apron. Just unfortunate, we had a good truck.”

    The race was slowed for one more caution when Bryan Silas spun. Austin Dillon would lead the charge out of the pits but Busch would take the lead with 21 laps to go and never looked back.

    1 51 Kyle Busch Toyota 1 167
    2 88 Matt Crafton Toyota 9 167
    3 19 Joey Logano Ford 5 167
    4 20 Austin Dillon Chevrolet 7 167
    5 32 Tayler Malsam Chevrolet 13 167
    6 13 Jeb Burton Toyota 6 167
    7 77 German Quiroga Jr Toyota 17 167
    8 30 Ron Hornaday Jr Chevrolet 14 167
    9 8 Joe Nemechek Toyota 16 167
    10 35 Mason Mingus Toyota 18 167
    11 5 John Wes Townley Toyota 11 167
    12 21 Joey Coulter Chevrolet 10 165
    13 10 Jennifer Jo Cobb Chevrolet 27 163
    14 17 Timothy Peters Toyota 8 158
    15 54 Darrell Wallace Jr Toyota 21 156
    16 63 Justin Jennings Chevrolet 26 154
    17 50 T.J. Bell Chevrolet 24 150
    18 57 Norm Benning Chevrolet 29 140
    19 99 Bryan Silas Chevrolet 22 125
    20 31 Ben Kennedy Chevrolet 30 115
    21 98 Johnny Sauter Toyota 3 85
    22 29 Ryan Blaney Ford 2 84
    23 02 Tyler Young Chevrolet 15 84
    24 9 Brennan Newberry Chevrolet 12 76
    25 07 Jimmy Weller III Chevrolet 20 49
    26 08 Todd Shafer Chevrolet 23 37
    27 7 Brian Ickler Toyota 4 9
    28 0 Ryan Ellis Chevrolet 28 8
    29 42 Charles Lewandoski Chevrolet 25 3
    30 23 Spencer Gallagher Chevrolet 19 0
    31 36 Scott Stenzel Chevrolet 31 0
  • Kevin Harvick Sets New Track Record In Sprint Cup Qualifying

    Kevin Harvick Sets New Track Record In Sprint Cup Qualifying

    Kevin Harvick took the Coors Light Pole Award for the 5-hour ENERGY 400 Benefiting Special Operations Warrior Foundation with a new track record of 27.799 seconds or 194.658 mph. This is Harvick’s eighth pole in 477 Sprint Cup Series races and his second in 17 races at Kansas Speedway. This is his second pole and sixth consecutive top 10 finish in 2014.

    “Just have to thank everybody on my Jimmy John’s Chevrolet for all that they do,” Harvick said. “It was ‘Freaky Fast’ today so just have to put it all together tomorrow night when it counts. The pole is great, these guys have done a great job for qualifying.  It makes life a lot easier when you can have pit stall one.  Hopefully we can have a good night tomorrow night, but the weekend has gone good we had a great test here a few weeks ago and everything has carried right over.”

    Qualifying was uneventful with the exception of Aric Almirola’s brush with the wall in the final seconds of the final round of qualifying. The Richard Petty Motorsports Team will make repairs to the Farmland Industry’s No. 43 for tomorrow evenings race.

    Standouts that did not advance to the final round of qualifying include Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Clint Bowyer, Kasey Kahne and Austin Dillion.

    The only driver that did not qualify was Dave Blaney who missed the final position by .317 seconds.

     

    5-Hour Energy 400 at Kansas Speedway Starting Lineup

    Pos Car Driver Team Lap Time Speed
    1 4 Kevin Harvick Jimmy John’s Chevrolet 27.799 194.252
    2 22 Joey Logano AAA Insurance Ford 27.848 193.910
    3 2 Brad Keselowski Wurth Ford 27.906 193.507
    4 99 Carl Edwards Aflac Ford 27.952 193.188
    5 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet 27.972 193.050
    6 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet 27.973 193.043
    7 31 Ryan Newman Kwikset Chevrolet 28.006 192.816
    8 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet 28.045 192.548
    9 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet 28.059 192.452
    10 16 Greg Biffle 3M Novec Ford 28.128 191.980
    11 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevrolet 28.157 191.782
    12 43 Aric Almirola Farmland Ford 28.372 190.328
    13 24 Jeff Gordon Axalta Coatings Chevrolet 27.950 193.202
    14 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet 27.973 193.043
    15 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota 27.976 193.023
    16 27 Paul Menard Shrock/Menards Chevrolet 27.995 192.892
    17 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance/Thankamillionteachers.com Chevrolet 28.005 192.823
    18 51 Justin Allgaier # Brandt Professional Agriculture Chevrolet 28.007 192.809
    19 3 Austin Dillon # Dow Chevrolet 28.024 192.692
    20 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Zest Ford 28.032 192.637
    21 12 Ryan Blaney(i) SKF Ford 28.033 192.630
    22 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Chevrolet 28.089 192.246
    23 15 Clint Bowyer Cherry 5-hour Energy for Special Ops Warrior Foundation Toyota 28.153 191.809
    24 18 Kyle Busch Snickers Toyota 28.463 189.720
    25 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford 28.128 191.980
    26 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet 28.160 191.761
    27 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet 28.172 191.680
    28 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota 28.197 191.510
    29 47 AJ Allmendinger Kingsford Charcoal Chevrolet 28.258 191.096
    30 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Freight Toyota 28.265 191.049
    31 83 Ryan Truex # Burger King Toyota 28.322 190.665
    32 98 Josh Wise Phil Parsons Racing Ford 28.399 190.148
    33 23 Alex Bowman # Dr.Pepper Toyota 28.440 189.873
    34 7 Michael Annett # Accell Construction Chevrolet 28.520 189.341
    35 44 JJ Yeley(i) Phoenix Warehouse Chevrolet 28.542 189.195
    36 26 Cole Whitt # Iowa Chop House Toyota 28.550 189.142
    37 36 Reed Sorenson  Chevrolet 28.567 189.029
    38 34 David Ragan Taco Bell Ford 28.580 188.943
    39 38 David Gilliland Long John Silver’s Ford 28.649 188.488
    40 40 Landon Cassill(i) Carsforsale.com Chevrolet 28.744 187.865
    41 32 Travis Kvapil Mechanical Protection Plan Ford 28.784 187.604
    42 33 Timmy Hill Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet 28.848 187.188
    43 66 Joe Nemechek(i) Kansas Farm Bureau Toyota 28.973 186.380
  • Busch Sets New Track Record At Kansas Speedway

    Busch Sets New Track Record At Kansas Speedway

    The pole for the SFP 250 went to Kyle Busch with a new track qualifying record of 178.921 mph. It is Busch’s 13th pole in 117 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) starts and his first in three races at Kansas Speedway.

    The final 12 waited until there were two minutes remaining in the session before taking the track. The field was led to the green by Brandon Newberry who ended up 12th in the final session.

    Knock out qualifying for the Camping World Truck Series went off with only a couple snags. The first occurred when Ben Kennedy got loose and slapped the wall with the rear of the truck and was relegated to a back up truck. The second happened when Darrell Wallace Jr lost a second motor on the weekend in the second round of knock out qualifying.

    Three drivers will be doing double duty this weekend, Kyle Busch, Joey Logano, and Ryan Blaney. All three qualified in the top-12 for tonight’s SFP 250.

    1 51 Kyle Busch Toyota ToyotaCare 178.921 30.181
    2 29 Ryan Blaney Ford Cooper Standard 178.873 30.189
    3 98 Johnny Sauter Toyota Nextant Aerospace-Curb Records 178.772 30.206
    4 7 Brian Ickler Toyota Bullet Liner 178.194 30.304
    5 19 Joey Logano Ford Reese Towpower 177.737 30.382
    6 13 Jeb Burton Toyota Carolina Nut Co. 177.556 30.413
    7 20 Austin Dillon Chevrolet NTS Motorsports 177.416 30.437
    8 17 Timothy Peters Toyota Red Horse Racing 177.363 30.446
    9 88 Matt Crafton Toyota Goof Off-Menards 177.032 30.503
    10 21 Joey Coulter Chevrolet VERTX 176.407 30.611
    11 5 John Wes Townley Toyota Zaxby’s Real Chicken 176.396 30.613
    12 9 Brennan Newberry Chevrolet Qore-24 175.673 30.739
    13 32 Tayler Malsam Chevrolet Outerwall 175.587 30.754
    14 30 Ron Hornaday Jr Chevrolet Rheem 174.972 30.862
    15 02 Tyler Young Chevrolet Randco/Young’s Building Systems 174.763 30.899
    16 8 Joe Nemechek Toyota MD Anderson Cancer Center/smokeandsear.com 174.746 30.902
    17 77 German Quiroga Jr Toyota Otter Box 174.678 30.914
    18 35 Mason Mingus Toyota Call 811 174.481 30.949
    19 23 Spencer Gallagher Chevrolet Allegiant Travel 173.656 31.096
    20 07 Jimmy Weller III Chevrolet Geneva-Liberty Steel-Polaris 173.505 31.123
    21 54 Darrell Wallace Jr Toyota Toyota Time Sales Event 173.366 31.148
    22 99 Bryan Silas Chevrolet Bell Trucks America Inc. 172.933 31.226
    23 08 Todd Shafer Chevrolet Thunder Exhaust 167.567 32.226
    24 50 T.J. Bell Chevrolet America’s Linemen 166.492 32.434
    25 42 Charles Lewandoski Chevrolet Randco/Young’s Building Systems 166.128 32.505
    26 63 Justin Jennings Chevrolet Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool 163.211 33.086
    27 10 Jennifer Jo Cobb Chevrolet Mark One Electric 162.891 33.151
    28 0 Ryan Ellis Chevrolet Grimes Irrigation & Construction 161.440 33.449
    29 57 Norm Benning Chevrolet Boedecker Construction-GPC-Whatt Truck Centers 157.779 34.225
    30 31 Ben Kennedy Chevrolet ALS Association 0.000 0.000
    31 36 Scott Stenzel Chevrolet Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool 0.000 0.000
  • Hot 20 – The [place sponsor name here] 400 in Kansas is where the stars will shine Saturday night

    Hot 20 – The [place sponsor name here] 400 in Kansas is where the stars will shine Saturday night

    Kansas is not as sexy as Talladega, I admit. It is not a Daytona, a Darlington, and it is no Indianapolis. I think having the race named after a series of sponsors instead of seeking a real identity might have something to do with that. Still, some big names have been among the 16 winners there since they first started up the engines back in 2001.

    Jeff Gordon won the first two there, Tony Stewart, Jimmie Johnson, and Matt Kenseth all have a pair. Three years ago, Brad Keselowski made it nine victories for past or future kings of the clutch at the venue. Tony Kanaan won there in 2005, a year after claiming the IndyCar crown. Sam Hornish Jr, who was IndyCar royalty before trying his luck in NASCAR, won there in an open wheel contest. Both Dan Wheldon and Scott Dixon have done it twice. Of ten IndyCar races run at Kansas between 2001 and 2010, the last six were claimed by one who was a champion.

    In short, this track is a haven for racing’s blue bloods. Despite its lack of an identity, Saturday night’s NASCAR contest will be claimed by a driver who matters. In fact, of the last 21 Cup and IndyCar races run there, the only non-champions went by such names as Kevin Harvick, Denny Hamlin, and Greg Biffle. That is a trio of pretty damned impressive names, if you ask me. Simply put, the winner this weekend is not going to be Danica Patrick. If she does, then I suggest we start watching her more closely and with an entirely different perspective.

    A win at Kansas would do wonders for Stewart, who is sitting winless at 21st in the official standings. Clint Bowyer, Kasey Kahne, and Martin Truex Jr could use the boost, as they are all mired well beyond the 16th and final Chase place.

    As for determining simply the best this season, we leave the points untouched other than to reward a race winner 22 additional points. Wins and consistency both have value as we eliminate the need for gimmicks, such as the Chase. Kyle Busch remains out hottest on the year, though Carl Edwards, Dale Earnhardt Jr, Joey Logano, and even the winless duo of Gordon and Kenseth are within 21 points of our leader after ten events. With the gap between first and second each week between 25 and 28 points, either of those latter two would vault to the front by just returning to Victory Lane this Saturday night.

     

    1.  Kyle Busch (1 win) 365 points
    2. Carl Edwards (1 win) 350
    3. Dale Earnhardt, Jr.  (1 win) 350
    4. Joey Logano  (2 wins) 349
    5. Jeff Gordon 347
    6. Matt Kenseth  344
    7. Brad Keselowski (1 win) 316
    8. Denny Hamlin (1 win) 314
    9. Jimmie Johnson  304
    10. Kevin Harvick  (2 wins) 300
    11. Greg Biffle  300
    12. Ryan Newman  299
    13. Brian Vickers  297
    14. Kyle Larson  286
    15. Austin Dillon  281
    16. A.J. Allmendinger  279
    17. Marcos Ambrose  268
    18. Paul Menard  265
    19. Clint Bowyer  261
    20. Kasey Kahne  252

     

  • Clint Bowyer Animated For 300th Start at Kansas Speedway

    Clint Bowyer Animated For 300th Start at Kansas Speedway

    Clint Bowyer’s tenure in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series reaches a milestone this weekend when he makes his 300th career-start at an ideal place, his home track of Kansas Speedway.

    “Yeah, every time you see one of these 300 starts or 400 starts, whatever it is with us, it really doesn’t register until you get back to thinking about how it all began and what it really means,” Bowyer expressed on Tuesday afternoon. “(I’m) very fortunate to be a part of this sport for 300 races.

    “Love this sport, love being a part of it, and hopefully we’re a part of it for a long time. All of that coming down to Kansas, my home track, is even that much more special to be able to celebrate my 300th (start) right here in my own backyard at Kansas Speedway.”

    Bowyer, on the heels of declaring his newly-wed wife, Lorra, is pregnant with a male, received a three-year extension on his current contract with Michael Waltrip Racing; a team he’s partnered with the past two seasons.

    “Yeah, really excited about a multi-year deal with them,” Bowyer further explained about the recently signed contract. “It means a lot that we were able to put it back together at MWR. I’ve had a tremendous amount of success there right off the bat. The key to success in this sport is people and being able to keep those people together, so really happy about keeping (Brian) Pattie and the whole group intact.”

    Bowyer, who began his career at Richard Childress Racing, is now alluding to how fortunate he’s become racing for Michael Waltrip’s organization.

    “I have a great team; I have a great sponsor; I have a great manufacturer; I’ve got a great organization that takes care of my sponsors that builds a great platform for all of them to be able to showcase a product and get their bang for the buck. That is so important,” Bowyer further commented during a media conference.

    The Emporia, Kansas competitor is also reliving his greatest moments during his first 299 appearances, and one sticks out – his first career-win in 2007 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

    “I’ll never forget it,” Bowyer noted about his first-victory. “Both of my parents were there, my brothers were there, and it was just like surreal because here all these people were to help me get to where I was at, you know, and it immediately made you think back to how it all started. You almost get giddy and start laughing like how in the hell is this happening right now.”

    Bowyer, 33, now rotates his attention towards the ultimate goal – winning and guaranteeing a Chase berth – however, he’s not pondering upon that thought, he’s hoping to seal the situation and grant the placement in the Chase this weekend at Kansas.

    “I’m pretty excited about the weekend,” Bowyer added. “I had a great week, and can’t wait for the race.  It’s our first night race.  Everybody’s excited about the night race at Kansas, and can’t wait to get on the track. Hopefully my 5-Hour Energy Toyota is going to be strong.”

  • Matty’s Picks 2013 – Race 31 Bank of America 500 – Charlotte Motor Speedway – October 12, 2013

    Matty’s Picks 2013 – Race 31 Bank of America 500 – Charlotte Motor Speedway – October 12, 2013

    The drivers of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series do not have to travel much further than their back yards to get to the track this week. A hometown race this week, and the only night race of the 2013 Chase for The Sprint Cup for the vast majority of teams this week. There have been 109 races at Charlotte Motor Speedway, everyone knows the history that has been made at the track, so I’ll spare the history for some statistics this week.

    Jimmie Johnson leads the series with the most Chase race wins at Charlotte Motor Speedway with three, but none since his last win at Charlotte in October of 2009. The deepest in the field any eventual NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion has finished at the Chase race at Charlotte Motor Speedway was 25th all the way back in 2005 when Tony Stewart won his second NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Championship, his first with the Chase setup. All but one of the nine Chase races at Charlotte have been won by Chase drivers, and the second starting position has produced more race winners than any other starting position with 17 eventual race winners starting outside the front row. So with these stats so far, we’ve not eliminated any potential race winners.

    The one statistic very important to this week’s picks comes in the form of a particular manufacturer’s recent struggles at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Just one Ford driver (who is driving a Toyota now) has won a race at Charlotte in the last 22 Charlotte races, and that was Matt Kenseth in the 2011 Bank of America 500. So one driver in 11 years has been able to put Ford in Victory Lane, which is something to look at this week if you’re making fantasy picks.

    The only night race of the 2013 Chase for the Sprint Cup, so enjoy not swapping back and forth between your NFL game and NASCAR this week…

    Kansas Recap

    Not a great week for me last week at Kansas Speedway as I went with the points leader, Matt Kenseth as my winner pick because he was undefeated on the low-banked intermediate tracks this season. He had won at Las Vegas in March, Kansas in April, Kentucky in June, and Chicago in September to open the 2013 Chase. Kenseth’s streak would end last week at Kansas has he was rather quiet for the majority of the race….but extended his streak of 5 straight races where he has led a lap. Kenseth finished 11th, his first finish outside the top 10 in over a month.

    My Dark Horse was exactly that, a shot in the dark especially this season. The dark horse aspect was erased when Brad Keselowski qualified fourth and got to the front for 52 laps last week in Kansas. Crew Chief Paul Wolfe’s gamble with fuel would not pan out as the Miller Lite Ford ran out of fuel on lap 224, the gamble cost Keselowski two laps to the leader which he was able to make up one, but would finish 17th when the checkered flag flew.

    Charlotte Picks

    Winner Pick
    There are many folks looking at the No.18 team this week, for one he has won two races on the high banked intermediate tracks this season, in dominating fashion at Texas in April and most recently at Atlanta on Labor Day weekend. The second reason why Rowdy Busch is circled on may fantasy rosters this week is the thought that he is due for a win at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the Cup Series. Rewind to Memorial Day weekend this season…Kyle Busch was leading the Coca-Cola 600, in the middle of lap traffic when Fox Sports’ SkyCam over the frontstretch at Charlotte Motor Speedway came crashing to the race surface immediately in front of the No.18 car. The impact of the SkyCam resulted in radiator issues and an engine failure for Kyle who was positioned for his first ever Charlotte career win.

    The loop statistics are great for a guy who has never won a race…he’s in the top three in all but one of the loop categories. The only one he is not inside the top three is Green Flag Passes, but Kyle has also qualified well over the years in North Carolina with a couple poles in the points races and an average start of 11.5. The practice sessions today and his win in the NASCAR Nationwide Series on Friday at Charlotte have added to my case for Kyle Busch on Saturday night. I am seeing a win out of this team on Saturday night and them jumping back into the Championship picture when we head to Talladega next week.

    Dark Horse Pick
    Martin Truex Jr. is going to be my longer play this week and here is why…Before Kansas last week and the race at Chicagoland to open the Chase, you had to go back all the way to Las Vegas back in March of 2012 for Truex’s last finish outside the top 15 on any of these intermediate track races. The stretch of 15-straight top 15 finishes is enhanced by the fact that he had two finishes outside the top 10 in the same stretch, both of which coming in the 2012 season.

    Keep in mind Truex led 142 laps and finished 2nd at Texas back in April, also a 1.5-mile night race. Truex qualified 17th on Thursday, but went out for his qualifying run relatively early to some of the other drivers with similar practice speeds. On Friday, Truex was 3rd fastest in the first practice session and 5th in Happy Hour Friday evening, adding to the consistency we’ve seen all season from Truex on these intermediate tracks. He would like nothing more than to win one of these Chase races, so I’m throwing out the couple poor finishes in a row at Chicago and Kansas and going with Truex as a solid longer play this week.

    That’s all for this week, so until we head to the biggest juggernaut of the 2013 Chase for the Sprint Cup….You Stay Classy NASCAR NATION!

  • Surprising and Not Surprising: Kansas Hollywood Casino 400

    Surprising and Not Surprising: Kansas Hollywood Casino 400

    From weather and tires to a fire off track that was smoky enough to cause a caution, here is what else was surprising and not surprising from the 13th annual Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway.

    Surprising:  Two ‘lame duck’ drivers who just happen to be future teammates scored the one-two victory punch in the land of Oz, with Kevin Harvick scoring the win from the pole and Kurt Busch coming all the way from the rear of the field to finish runner up.

    “To sit on the pole and win the race is obviously a great weekend, and controlling our own destiny by doing that, we are putting ourselves closer to where we need to be with the championship race,” the driver of the No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet said. “We’ll just keep having fun and keep doing what we’re doing.”

    This was Harvick’s first win at Kansas and his third victory of the season. And with the win, Harvick did indeed help himself in the point standings, climbing into the third position, 25 points behind the leader.

    Kurt Busch scored his fourth top-10 in 16 races at Kansas and his 15th top-10 finish in 2013. He moved up two positions to seventh in the Chase standings, 47 points behind the leader.

    “Wow, what an unbelievable drive,” the driver of the No. 78 Furniture Row/Denver Mattress Chevrolet said. “We battled hard to come from 41st and we did this in a backup car.”

    “Today is a small little victory in my own mind.”

    Not Surprising:  With every driver on edge given the track conditions, it was no surprise that tempers flared just a little bit with some of the close racing. Four-time champ Jeff Gordon was one driver who had an issue after some hard racing with Kurt Busch resulted in his third place finish.

    “It’s not a NASCAR race if you don’t have a discussion with another driver out there about an incident on the track,” the driver of the No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet said. “Everybody is just trying to get every position they could.”

    “I got in the outside lane there one time and he (Kurt Busch) just came up and the next lap I got to his bumper and got him loose,” Gordon continued. “I guess that kind of led to him wanting to run into me on the right side on my door.”

    Gordon’s third place finish did, however, move him up one position in the Chase standings to the fourth spot, 32 points back from the leader.

    Surprising:  In spite of a speeding penalty, loose race car and an 11th place finish, Matt Kenseth was feeling incredibly lucky in the Hollywood Casino 400, particularly since he described his No. 20 Dollar General Toyota as the ‘evilest’ car he had ever driven.

    Yet even with that ‘evilest’ car, Kenseth not only was the highest Toyota finisher but he also managed to maintain his points lead in the Chase, out front by three after Kansas.

    “It was a struggle all day,” Kenseth said. “I was so loose I was ready to crash pretty much at all times of the race.”

    “We drove back to 11th, which definitely isn’t what we wanted or what we need to contend for this thing, but it was a good save for as bad as we were.”

    Not Surprising:  While some drivers circle dates on the calendar for tracks where they cannot wait to race, others have tracks from which they cannot wait to leave.

    Such was the experience at Kansas for Kyle Busch, who yet again was bitten by the Kansas demons that led to his Chase race demise, from third to fifth place, after his 34th place finish. This was his third straight DNF at Kansas Speedway.

    “I have no idea what happened,” Busch said after his race ended in carnage. “All I know is we’re in Kansas, right?”

    “Every other track except Kansas seems to be able to bode well for us,” the driver of the No. 18 M&Ms Toyota said. “It wasn’t meant to be.”

    Surprising:  Five-time champ Jimmie Johnson had a self-proclaimed surprisingly crazy, weird and wacky day that still had him passing cars, finishing sixth in his No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet, and gaining points, now just three points back from leader Matt Kenseth.

    “All in all it was just a crazy day,” Johnson said. “Weird restarts. Wacky restarts. A lot of chaos there.”

    “These cautions kept coming out and they hurt us each time,” Johnson continued, “So we rebounded from all that and passed a ton of race cars, and then on the last lap with I guess two to go, coming down the back, the car started shaking real bad and I thought it was over.”

    “We had so many things happen to us and still salvaged a very strong sixth place finish.”

    Not Surprising:   Richard Petty Motorsports, a team that has seemed to be steadily gaining and moving forward had another good run at Kansas with both drivers finishing top ten.

    “It felt like a win because I thought our day was done,” Marcos Ambrose, driver of the No. 9 MAC Tools Ford said after finishing ninth. “It was a bizarre kind of a race.”

    “The tire was super edgy and unpredictable and you didn’t know if it was the wind or the tire or the car that was making the difference.”

    “I am just pleased that we finished and I fought hard all day.”

    “We got a top-10 and I would have never told you that was possible,” Aric Almirola, driver of the No. 43 Farmland Ford said after finishing tenth. “We got off in the middle part of the race but salvaged a good finish.”

    “I am proud of my guys.”

    Surprising:  Another team, however, that of Stewart Haas Racing, had a surprisingly ugly day at the race track.

    Danica Patrick, SHR driver, wrecked hard on the first lap and finished 43rd, while Ryan Newman, SHR teammate, got tangled up in a wreck, finishing 35th and dropping to 12th in the point standings.

    “I knew that going into the race that losing grip was going to be not that hard to do,” Patrick, driver of the No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet said. “I said that before the race started.”

    “Things just go wrong,” Patrick continued. “If I did something wrong, I apologize to everyone on my team but it’s just a shame.”

    “There’s not much to say other than we were in the wrong place at the wrong time and got caught up in an accident not of our making,” Newman said. “It’s definitely a disappointing day for all of us on the Code 3 Associates team.”

    Not Surprising:  With the challenging track conditions, it was not surprising that restarts were especially challenging for each and every driver, whether a Chaser or not, in the field. In fact, one Chase contender defined the restarts at Kansas as simply ‘insane.’

    “The restarts were insane,” Carl Edwards, driver of the No. 99 Fastenal Ford said. “Look up insane and that is the definition right there.”

    “It is tough to be racing for points when you have those kind of restarts.”

    “It was pretty crazy out there,” Joey Logano, driver of the No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford, said. “Every restart you had to be so aggressive to pass people because that was your best shot to pass them and everyone realized it.”

    Logano finished the race in fourth while Edwards salvaged a fifth place finish. The two drivers are now in the tenth and eleventh spots in the point standings respectively.

    Surprising:  The end of the race was most surprising, at least for Aric Almirola and Clint Bowyer, who got into each other coming to the checkered flag.

    Bowyer, driver of the No. 15 Raspberry 5-Hour Energy/Living Beyond Breast Cancer Toyota, described his day in a tweet after the race, “What a frustrating day! Started out sh**ty, got a little better, got WAY better, put on 2 tires and s**t the bed…Then lost my mind.”

    Almirola described the run-in with Bowyer in a slightly different way, “I beat him on that restart and I guess he was mad about it.”

    “That is fine, I am not worried about it,” Almirola continued. “I beat him.”

    Not Surprising:  With the confluence of weather, tires, track conditions and the Chase pressure, it was not surprising that the record for the number of cautions was broken at Kansas Speedway with a total of fifteen. In fact, there were 71 laps run under caution, a new record for the season.

    “We had a lot of gremlins this weekend,” Brad Keselowski, reigning champ and driver of the No. 2 Miller Lite Ford said. “There were so many wrecks and so many yellows that we could never really get going.”

    “Oh yeah, we couldn’t get in a rhythm out there.”

    The Cup Series next travels to Charlotte for the Bank of America 500 under the Saturday night lights.

     

  • Matty’s Picks 2013 Race 30 – Kansas Speedway – October 6, 2013

    Matty’s Picks 2013 Race 30 – Kansas Speedway – October 6, 2013

    Disclaimer: My column this week will be as exciting to read as I anticipate the race being on Sunday afternoon…scroll down for picks.

    Kansas Speedway is certainly one of the cookie-cutter races that the Chase schedule has to offer. The variable 17 to 20 degrees of banking in the corners plus the 10 degrees on the frontstretch leaves much to be desired for those looking for an exciting Sunday afternoon of racing. Even though the last two races at Kansas (since the mid-season repave in 2012) produced more cautions than the previous four races combined, they also produced the least amount of lead changes at Kansas speedway since the second ever race at the track back in 2002.

    One interesting statistic I was able to uncover this week has to do with Chase races being won by non-Chase drivers. There have been 14 Chase races won by non-Chase drivers in the history of the Chase for the Sprint Cup, that is now 93 total races. Three of those 14 races have been won at Kansas Speedway as Joe Nemechek became the first ever spoiler in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series winning the fall race of 2004 as a non-Chase driver. The other two races by non-Chase drivers were won by Tony Stewart in 2006 and Greg Biffle in 2007, so it has been a while, but with the parody we saw in the regular season, certainly anything can happen on Sunday. With 7 of the top 15 qualifiers for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 being non-Chase drivers, the possibility of a spoiler this week is certainly valid.

    Winner Pick

    It’s onto my picks already this week and no surprises here, I will be going with Matt Kenseth this week. I couldn’t find a single reason to not pick Kenseth this week, he’s won the last two races at Kansas, he also won at Chicagoland, Kentucky Speedway, and Las Vegas Motor Speedway this season, all which happen to be the tracks most similar to Kansas Speedway.
    On top of all the wins at similar tracks this season, Kenseth is second, third, or fourth in 4 of the loop stats, the most important – Driver Rating- he’s third on the list at 110.0. Kenseth also qualified very well on Friday, important because 9 of the 15 Kansas races have been won from starting spots inside the top-10. Kenseth will start seventh on Sunday, and was second in the second practice session on Friday, fourth in Happy Hour earlier today, too much to like here about Kenseth, he’s my Winner Pick for Sunday.

    Dark Horse Pick

    It’s not every day you can take a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion as a Dark Horse, but because Brad Keselowski is not a part of this year’s Chase for the Sprint Cup, I’m going with him as a Dark Horse this weekend. This team has been fairly non-existent since that solid stretch of runs to start the 2013 season, since the series visited Kansas Speedway in particular. Brad was 7th at Chicagoland, the most recent cookie-cutter of the season, his 5th top 10 finish in that 19 race stretch since the April Kansas race, so I’m going on a bit of a hunch here, but I like Brad’s chances this week.

    You can not look past the fact that he’s got an average finish of 9.2 in his 7 career races at Kansas Speedway. He’s qualified his Miller Lite Ford Fusion in the 4th starting position and has shown speed in all of the practice sessions at Kansas this week. He was a longer play to start the week, the odds have not shortened a bit, Brad is a solid longer play this week.

    That’s all for this week, so until we turn the lights on in Charlotte…You Stay Classy NASCAR NATION!

  • The Final Word – Dover is over, now off to Kansas where Kyle’s dreams go to die

    The Final Word – Dover is over, now off to Kansas where Kyle’s dreams go to die

    Dover in a nutshell? Well, Jimmie won, Matt did not, and Kyle had to settle for a mere Top Five. What has not changed is that the trio remain the only relevant drivers as they head to Kansas for Sunday’s fourth round of the Chase.

    Johnson made it a record eight wins at that track in just 24 starts in Delaware. By claiming his fifth of the season, and 65th of his career, the five-time former champ is just 8 points behind Kenseth, who finished 7th at Dover. Busch was fifth last Sunday and is a dozen points off the pace. Jeff Gordon and Kevin Harvick are next, 39 points away. So, until each and every one of the three leaders cough and sputter to somewhere beyond a Top Ten, at least, the rest of them remain just members of the supporting cast.

    Dale Earnhardt Jr started from the pole and finished just behind Johnson. A win would have meant more to him than a great points day, as he sits 57 back in the waiting room. Most of the Chasers did well, taking all Top Ten spots, while Kasey Kahne (13th), Kurt Busch (21st after a loose wheel green flag stop), and Carl Edwards (35th after a broken wheel hub) were the outsiders.

    As NASCAR no longer releases attendance figures, we are left guessing as to what those big bare patches in the grandstands meant in way of numbers. Considering Dover is a track situated within a hundred miles of Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, somebody does not give a damn. A bunch of somebodies. Maybe stellar television coverage might entice them out to take a look at the real deal.

    Rating Dover – 5.5/10 – Too bad, as the visuals of this track, with the dive down the hill into the corners before swooping up on the other side, can be rather breathtaking. I did enjoy watching Race Day, but unfortunately none of the SPEED announcers would later appear on the ESPN broadcast. Good reporting from the pits, but the main crew were, well, the pits. Same old, same old.

    After 31-years, ESPN fired Marty Reid for mistaking the white flag for the checkered flag, and for one second declaring Ryan Blaney the Nationwide winner at Kentucky a lap early. Considering it did not detract in the least from the broadcast, that Blaney was leading by a large margin, or considering the amateur hour that is ESPN’s Cup coverage, you would have figured he might have got a bit of slack from the clowns in the suits. Then again, they might have done him a favor. Reid’s replacement? That would be Allan Bestwick. Good grief.

    Kansas Speedway is next on the schedule. Matt Kenseth won the last two run there and has been in the Top Ten in each of his past six attempts.

    Kansas Speedway, where Jimmie Johnson has a pair, including the fall of 2011. Where he has six Top Fives in 14 attempts, along with 10 Top Tens, and leads all active drivers with an average finish of 7.6.

    Kansas Speedway, where Kyle Busch sucks. Sorry, but two Top Tens in a dozen starts does not cut it. Seven times he has failed to crack even the Top Twenty. This is where his Chase hopes go to die, unless this is the year he avoids his Chase jinx.

    Congratulations to my mother-in-law, who turns 80 years old today. She will not be part of the broadcast of this race. To be fair, Fran doesn’t know a damn thing about NASCAR, but she would be a hell of a lot more entertaining than what we will hear this Sunday. Maybe she could fill in for Marty. Enjoy the week!