Tag: NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race

  • The White Zone: Let’s add some other events to the All-Star weekend

    The White Zone: Let’s add some other events to the All-Star weekend

    “The white zone is for immediate loading and unloading…” and I want to know why we don’t do other activities on All-Star weekend.

    Every year on the weekend before the Coca-Cola 600, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series gathers at Charlotte Motor Speedway to run the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race. It’s composed of winners from the previous season and the races preceding it in the current season, past winners of the event, past Sprint Cup Series champions, the winners of the two Sprint Showdown races and the recipient of the fan vote. It’s your old school Saturday night shootout where the winner gets a million dollars.

    But that’s not what I’m here to talk. I’m here to talk about the lack of miscellaneous events that you find at All-Star events of the stick and ball sports.

    Now you could argue that the city of Charlotte and the NASCAR shops are in and of themselves miscellaneous events. However, when I look at the All-Star weekends in other sports, they tend to have a common denominator. They all have skills events that precede the main event. These events include the home run derby in Major League Baseball, the SuperSkills competition in the NHL and the shooting stars competition, the skills challenge, the three-point contest and the slam dunk contest in the NBA.

    Now not all of them have miscellaneous events with their All-Star game. The NFL Pro Bowl doesn’t have any skills competitions preceding it. Although you could argue that the Pro Bowl itself is a miscellaneous event that leads up to the Super Bowl.

    Photo: Streeter Lecka/Getty Images
    Photo: Streeter Lecka/Getty Images

    Some of you might remember that we used to have skills events leading up to the All-Star Race. The first one was always the pit crew challenge which gave the winning team of the event the first pit stall choice on race night. They did away with it in 2013 due to a lack of sponsorship.

    Another, for a few years, was the burnout contest where the track brought in some celebrities to score the burnouts. For some reason, that too went away.

    So I’ve been giving this some thought and I’d like to throw out some suggestions for skills events. One would be a celebrity race event. The basic premise is that you put some famous people in cars – probably something from the Richard Petty Racing Experience or the Dale Jarrett Racing Adventure – and let them run a mini race. Before you say, “they don’t know how to drive a race car,” they’ll let anyone drive a car if they let me drive 10 laps around Talladega. The presence of these celebrities might bring some added exposure to the All-Star Race itself.

    Personally, I’d rather see something like having drivers from other forms of racing do this event instead of pop culture stars, but this time of May is when the big boys are preparing for Memorial Day Sunday. Which is what I, and others in the racing world, consider the single biggest day of racing on the planet.

    Another thing I’d like to see is an obstacle course race where you put down cones and the drivers have to navigate the makeshift road course in the fastest time.

    This next one is not so much a car-related challenge, but it still requires skill nonetheless. We take the four drivers with the most Twitter followers, give them a minute and see who can sign the most memorabilia.

    And, since this is a fantasy, let’s bring back the Pit Crew Challenge.

    If you guys have ideas for other skills events, I’d love to hear from you in the comment section.

    My plane is about to take off, so I must wrap this up. Until next time, I’ll leave you with this fact. Nylon is made from coal and petroleum.

  • The All-Star Hot 20 is led by its hottest driver; Mr. Johnson, I presume

    The All-Star Hot 20 is led by its hottest driver; Mr. Johnson, I presume

    When it comes to driving for a championship, nobody has done it better this past decade than Jimmie Johnson. Collecting six of the past eight season titles gives a fellow a certain reputation. Add to that four All-Star race victories, and eight Top Fives in just a dozen events, and I think we have discovered our favorite for Saturday night.

    Before they just hand over the million bucks, there will be challengers. The 42-year old Jeff Gordon has been in this thing for half of his life. He will be in his 21st event, a competition he has won three times to tie him with Dale Earnhardt for the second most decisions. Eight others taking the auto out for a spin know what it is like to win this Charlotte exhibition once. Carl Edwards has a win in eight attempts, while Matt Kenseth has a single win but has been in the Top Ten in ten of his 13 attempts. Dale Earnhardt Jr won it his first time out in 2000, with his dad by his side in Victory Lane. Since then, he has rang up an additional ten Top Tens himself, to go with the 2012 Showdown to get into the Saturday night feature.

    As for the Friday night Showdown this year, Clint Bowyer could well get in to Saturday’s fun by finishing amongst the top two. The fan vote selection could go to Danica Patrick, though rookies Austin Dillon and Kyle Larson should get some well deserved consideration. I would expect one of them to make it by finishing alongside Bowyer at the finish line, if both do not actually find themselves ahead of the veteran at the end.

    If you like what you see each and every week, you are in luck. Those very same faces will be under the helmets this weekend, but points matter not and winning means a million reasons to celebrate. History tells us the winner will be a name we might already know, and destined to be one we shall always remember. Let the fun begin.

     

    1. Jimmie Johnson 12 races, 4 wins, 8 top fives, 8 top tens
    2. Jeff Gordon 20 races, 3 wins, 6 top fives, 9 top tens
    3. Tony Stewart 15 races, 1 win, 8 top fives, 9 top tens
    4. Kurt Busch 12 races, 1 win, 5 top fives, 7 top tens
    5. Matt Kenseth 13 races, 1 win, 5 top fives, 10 top tens
    6. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. 14 races, 1 win, 4 top fives, 11 top tens
    7. Carl Edwards 8 races, 1 win, 3 top fives, 5 top tens
    8. Ryan Newman 12 races, 1 win, 3 top fives, 7 top tens
    9. Kasey Kahne 10 races, 1 win, 2 top fives, 4 top tens
    10. Kevin Harvick 13 races, 1 win, 2 top fives, 7 top tens
    11. Kyle Busch 8 races, 3 top fives, 4 top tens
    12. Joey Logano 3 races, 2 top fives, 3 top tens
    13. Denny Hamlin 7 races, 2 top fives, 4 top tens
    14. Greg Biffle 10 races, 2 top fives, 3 top tens
    15. Brian Vickers 3 races, 1 top five, 1 top ten
    16. Martin Truex, Jr. 4 races, 1 top five, 2 top tens
    17. Brad Keselowski 5 races, 1 top five, 2 top tens
    18. David Ragan 3 races 1 top ten
    19. Jamie McMurray 7 races, 2 top tens
    20. Danica Patrick 1 race

     

  • Matty’s Picks 2013 – Vol. 9 Sprint All-Star Race – Charlotte Motor Speedway – May 18, 2013

    Matty’s Picks 2013 – Vol. 9 Sprint All-Star Race – Charlotte Motor Speedway – May 18, 2013

    We’re 1/3 of the way through the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, and it’s onto Speedweeks at Charlotte. A million bucks is up for grabs this week (actually 2 million), and unlike the NHL, the NBA, and the MLB, we’re already on to the All-Star weekend.

    There have been 28 previous All-Star races, all but one being held at Charlotte Motor Speedway, the 1986 event was held at Atlanta Motor Speedway and won by Bill Elliott. The first All-Star race was won by Darrell Waltrip back in 1985 amongst a field of 12. This year, 22 cars will take the green flag of the 2013 All-Star race, 19 of those divers have already locked up a spot in the field.

    Here’s how the starting field for the drivers that will be making the start in the main event tonight:
    – NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points race winners in 2012 and 2013
    – NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race winners in the last 10 years
    – Drivers who are past NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champions in the previous 10 years
    – The top-two finishers in the Sprint Showdown, the 40-lap race that precedes the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race
    – The top Sprint Fan Vote driver who finishes the Showdown and whose car is in “raceable” condition.

    Like last year, the All-Star race will consist of five segments – four 20-lap segments and a 10-lap shootout. Unlike last year, the running the running order at the completion of the fourth segment (Lap 80) will be repositioned behind the Pace Car, based on the drivers’ average finish for the first four segments – putting a premium on strong finishes throughout the entire event.

    The new lineup will be placed directly behind the caution car prior to the opening of pit road for a mandatory four-tire pit stop, yielding the spotlight from the drivers to the pit crews.
    The order of the cars returning to the track will determine the starting order of the final 10-lap shootout. Running order ties will be broken by the finish of the fourth segment.
    I am a fan of the new setup as NASCAR has done a nice job of eliminating the sandbagging factor we’ve seen in previous events, by emphasizing strong finishes in each of the first four 20-lap segments.

    Darlington Recap

    I will keep this brief this week as the intro section is rather long, and I have little to brag about from last week. I chose Kasey Kahne as the winner last week, a pick that looked like a jackpot throughout the middle to late stages, but with 33 laps to go, my chances went south. Whether Kyle Busch got into Kahne, or if he only got close enough to take the air off the No.5 car, this little rivalry heating up between the two drivers is going to be something to watch over the next few weeks. The incident left Kahne settling with a 17th place finish.
    As for my Dark Horse, Ryan Newman, it was the fourth time I picked him this season and he did ok for me for the first time this year. Newman ran a strong race, avoiding trouble throughout and finished 10th.

    All-Star Picks

    Winner Pick
    On Thursday in my preview of tonight’s All-Star race with Greg Depalma on The Prime Sports Network, I picked a guy who is one of the favorites tonight, despite never winning a race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

    This is a Kyle Busch style race, with nothing to lose and two million bucks at stake, you can bet that the floorboards of the No.18 car are going to be worn out at the end of the race on Saturday Night.

    He has never won an all-star event in 7 tries despite starting on the pole three times and never won at Charlotte in 26 tries. In spite of never winning at Charlotte, Kyle has been very strong throughout the course of his career and since 2008, he has finished outside the top 8 just twice in 14 races. Kyle’s Driver Rating has never been less than 100, besides the two accidents in 2010 and 2011 since the spring of 2007.

    He has lead laps in 20 of 26 starts at Charlotte, and in the fourth starting spot tonight, Kyle has put himself in position for an early lead. He was close in 2011 to the cool million when he started on the pole for his third time, but Carl Edwards was the guy to beat that night. I still like my pick today.

    Dark Horse Pick

    He might not be a Dark Horse now, but on Thursday he was a 30 to 1 longshot to win the All-Star race tonight. An important stat to mention with this Dark Horse pick is that Eight of the 28 (28.5%) NASCAR Sprint All-Star Races have been won from the front row: four from the pole and four from second-place.

    The guy I picked on Thursday as a “quiet pick” to win the million bucks was Kyle’s brother, Kurt. Kurt Busch’s overall All-Star Race record is: 11 starts, one win, four top-fives, six top-10s, one pole and 30 laps led. His average start is 8.1 and average finish 10.8.

    He followed his 2010 All-Star Race win with a victory the following week in the Coca-Cola 600 and is one of four active drivers to have won the Charlotte double. The others are Jeff Gordon (1997), Jimmie Johnson (2003) and Kasey Kahne (2008). Busch qualified for this year’s Sprint All-Star Race as both a former winner of the event and as a former NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion (2004).

    Kurt will be starting outside of Carl Edwards on the front row tonight, and is my quiet sleeper pick this week.

    That’s all for this week, so until the longest race of the season next week, You Stay Classy NASCAR NATION!

  • Previewing the 29th Running of the NASCAR All-Star Race

    Previewing the 29th Running of the NASCAR All-Star Race

    NASCAR comes home this weekend to kick off what in my opinion is the best two weeks on the motorsport schedule. $2,000,000 is on the line this weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway and the best stock car drivers in the world will lay it all out on the line hoping to hoist that check when the dust settles. The exhibition event has been around since 1985 and has undergone 11 format changes always keeping the teams and drivers on their toes. The titans of our sport will fight tooth and nail for $2,000,000 Saturday night; the biggest All Star Race payout ever offered. There are no points and no implications on their seasons from this race, just checkers or wreckers.

    We’ve seen what these drivers are willing to do to win this season and I’m sure they will take it to the next level in the All-Star Race as they race for a lot money, a trophy and of course bragging rights. If you aren’t one of the lucky 19 to be locked into the race, there is still a way to make it in. The Fans get to vote one driver of their choice into the event and the top vote getters as of May 15th in no particular order are Danica Patrick, Bobby Labonte, Martin Truex Jr., Jeff Burton and Michael Waltrip. The other way is to race your way in via the 40 lap Sprint Showdown that will precede the All-Star Race (ASR). The 1st and 2nd place finishers get to advance to the “main event” and there are 23 racers bidding for those two spots.

    My Picks

    Fan Vote: Danica Patrick: The Cup rookie is the obvious choice to win the fan vote considering her popularity and all she has to do is bring the car home one piece during the Showdown. That race can get pretty wild though so just in case she does crash out, who will be the fan vote recipient? I say it would go to Bobby Labonte who won it last year and is one of the most respected drivers out there among the fans.

    Sprint Showdown: Martin Truex Jr. and Aric Almirola. Truex is always fast when we go to 1.5 mile tracks and he came within a few laps of victory at Charlotte’s sister track (Texas) just a few weeks ago. In the three 1.5 mile tracks we’ve raced on in 2013 so far, he’s finished 8th, 2nd and 4th leading 188 laps making him the obvious favorite in my opinion. Aric Almirola is my pick to take 2nd in the Showdown because of how fast he’s been as of late. In the past five races, he has four top 10 finishes and is sitting comfortably 9th in the standings through 11 races; easily the best season he’s ever had. Other drivers to watch include Stenhouse, Montoya, McMurray, Menard and Burton. As for a possible upset, keep an eye on Casey Mears and Germain Racing. They have been fast all year but have been the victim of crashes not of their doing. It wouldn’t surprise me at all to see that GEICO Ford Fusion transfer from the Showdown to the ASR tomorrow night.

    All-Star Race: It’s hard to bet against Jimmie Johnson and Matt Kenseth but I’m going to take a chance and and pick the Busch brothers. This is their kind of race – it’s short and fast paced so you have to be aggressive, willing to take risks and put your car in places most wouldn’t dare. If that’s not the definition of Kurt and Kyle Busch then I don’t know what is. Neither Busch has ever won the All-Star Race but they’ve certainly made the highlight reel on more than one occasion. In fact, they took each other out back in 2007 and they refused to talk to each other for months. Kyle is back to being Kyle this year after a dismal 2012. He’s already won two races, he is dominating the Nationwide races again and this is a weekend of redemption for the No.18 after the disappointing end to the Southern 500.

    Kurt Busch is sort of an underdog here driving for a one car team that has just one victory in their existence but they have one of the most versatile drivers out there behind the wheel. In the past month, Kurt’s broke the track record at Darlington for the Cup race, nearly won the Nationwide event at Talladega, drove an Indycar at 220mph at Indianapolis and took a Holden V8 Supercar around the Circuit of the Americas. The No.78 has been very competitive this year but has had pit stop issues or mechanical failures late in races a few times hurting their performances. Those two things shouldn’t be much of a problem this weekend considering that it’s a 90 lap sprint race instead of a 500 mile marathon. If they want to win though, they will most likely have to fight their way past Kenseth and Johnson who I think will be in control of the race. Don’t count out Kasey Kahne either who won the All-Star Race back in 2008 and is always solid when we go to the 1.5 mile tracks.

    This is the race where teams will bring experimental equipment and setups as they lay it all out on the line for the money and the trophy. We’ve seen people wreck for the win and even crash their brothers or teammates in pursuit of the victory. We’ve seen the unthinkable happen in these races where tempers are high and pedals are through the floor. In the final 10 laps, these guys will go balls to the wall trying to take the win and would rather bring home the steering wheel than a 5th or 6th place finish. What do you think is going to happen when you take 22 of the best stock car racing has to offer, put $2,000,000 in front of them and give them 90 laps to get it done? I think it’s going to be off the wall excitement that will make the finish to the Auto Club 400 look clean compared to what’s going to go down Saturday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway!

  • Crunching The Numbers: Charlotte All Star Weekend

    Crunching The Numbers: Charlotte All Star Weekend

    After tackling “The Lady in Black” at Darlington last weekend, NASCAR heads home for a two week home stand at Charlotte Motor Speedway, with the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series taking center stage during All Star Weekend.

    Sprint Cup Series

    With 11 points paying races behind them, the Sprint Cup Series heads into one of the wildest races of the year as the Sprint All Star Race is upon us once again. The non-points race that is all for the trophy, bragging rights, and a nice payday of a possible two million dollars for the winner, leads to some brash moves by drivers to get to the front and take the checkers. Since the drivers don’t have to worry about points, the phrase “Bring me the trophy or bring me the steering wheel” perfectly explains a driver’s mindset heading into this race. To add to the drama, the race will have a new format that makes running up front an even more important factor and this race should be a great one not to be missed when these drivers strap in and go for the win on Saturday night.

    Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Avg. Start Avg. Finish
    Joey Logano 2 0 1 2 0 11.5 5.5
    Matt Kenseth 12 1 5 9 2 9.3 6.3
    Jimmie Johnson 11 3 7 7 1 9.1 6.6
    Marcos Ambrose 1 0 0 1 0 18.0 7.0
    Tony Stewart 14 1 8 9 0 11.1 7.7
    Dale Earnhardt Jr 13 1 4 10 0 14.2 8.3
    Ryan Newman 11 1 3 7 1 8.8 9.3
    Jeff Gordon 19 3 6 9 0 8.6 9.5
    Kevin Harvick 12 1 2 3 0 8.6 10.5
    Kurt Busch 11 1 4 6 0 8.1 10.8

    Who To Watch: While any of the drivers who run the Sprint All Star Race have a chance to win, a few stick out above the rest and the driver with the highest average finish among All Star Race participants may surprise you. That driver is Joey Logano, who has an average finish of 5.5 in two starts. Following close in Logano’s steps are last weekend’s winner at Darlington, Matt Kenseth, and five time Sprint Cup champion, Jimmie Johnson. Kenseth has one win, five top fives, nine top tens, one pole, and an average finish of 6.3 in 12 starts. Johnson is close behind with three wins, seven top fives, seven top tens, one pole, and an average finish of 6.6 in 11 starts.

    Although not in the top ten of drivers with the best average finish in the Sprint All Star Race, Kyle Busch is another driver to keep an eye on this weekend. Busch has two top fives, three top tens, three poles, and an average finish of 12.4 in seven starts. However, Busch does have four DNF’s in those seven starts. As long as Busch can keep his car in one piece, he could capture his first win in the Sprint All Star Race this weekend.

    Camping World Truck Series

    The Camping World Truck Series heads into Charlotte this weekend for Friday night’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200, ending a nearly month long hiatus in the schedule. Several Sprint Cup Series regulars will be running the race along with the Truck Series regulars, which driver will come out on top? After 200 miles, we’ll have our answer.

    Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
    Kyle Busch 7 4 5 6 2 335 5.4 3.6
    Ron Hornaday, Jr. 8 2 6 6 0 170 7.6 6.8
    Jeb Burton 1 0 0 1 0 0 21.0 8.0
    Justin Lofton 3 1 1 1 0 44 17.3 9.7
    Matt Crafton 10 1 2 7 0 29 12.6 9.8
    Ty Dillon 1 0 1 1 1 25 1.0 10.0
    James Buescher 4 0 2 2 0 26 7.8 10.5
    Joey Coulter 2 0 0 1 0 0 13.0 11.5
    Dakoda Armstrong 1 0 0 0 0 0 24.0 13.0
    Todd Bodine 9 0 4 4 0 18 14.4 14.0

    Who To Watch: Sprint Cup regular Kyle Busch could have another one of his weekend sweeps if the statistics are to be believed on his career in the Truck Series at Charlotte. In seven starts, Busch has four wins, five top fives, six top tens, two poles, 335 laps led, and an average finish of 3.6. Multi-time Truck Series champion, Ron Hornaday, falls in behind Busch with two wins, six top fives, six top tens, 170 laps led, and an average finish of 6.8 in eight starts. Others to keep an eye on include: Jeb Burton, making his second Charlotte start after finishing in the top ten in his first start last year; Justin Lofton, who has one win, one top five, one top ten, 44 laps led, and an average finish of 9.7 in three starts; and Matt Crafton, who won the last race in the Truck Series before this weekend and has an average finish of 9.8 and one win in 10 starts.

  • Matty’s Picks 2012 – Vol. 12 Charlotte Motor Speedway – NASCAR Sprint All Star Race – May 19, 2012

    Matty’s Picks 2012 – Vol. 12 Charlotte Motor Speedway – NASCAR Sprint All Star Race – May 19, 2012

    [media-credit name=”charlottemotorspeedway.com” align=”alignright” width=”199″][/media-credit]The stars have come home to Charlotte for this weekend’s NASCAR Sprint All Star Race, and this year brings new drivers, a new format, but the same old distinction. A million dollars rides on the driver able to cross the finish line first following 90 or so laps at The Beast of the Southeast. Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint All Star Race will be run in 4-20 lap segments, with the four segment-winners staging at the front of the field for the final 10-lap shootout to the wire for the cool million. 90 or more laps will make up the All Star race this year, as only green flag laps count in the final 10-lap shootout.

    Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers in NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race wins, with three under his belt already. Carl Edwards made his mark on Charlotte Motor Speedway last season when he practically ripped the front end of his Ford Fusion off from the rest of the car, following his turn through the front-stretch grass in celebration of his first NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race win.

    Some big names still need to race (or be voted) into the big dance on Saturday Night, namely Dale Earnhardt Jr., Martin Truex Jr., Jeff Burton, and Jamie McMurray. The way to earn a ticket to the big dance – finish in the top two of the Sprint Showdown is a surefire way, the other – be at the top of the Sprint Fan Vote. Much like Friday and Saturday night home-track races, there’s an A-main and a B-main tonight in Concord. The Sprint Showdown will be ran in two segments of 20 laps each, with the top two finishers moving onto tonight’s A-main.
    With the absence of NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship points comes an extreme level of action and daring driving. Settling for second is never a thought in the NASCAR Sprint All-Star race, making it one of my favorite race weekends of the entire Sprint Cup season.

    Darlington Recap

    The Lady in Black tamed my recent hot streak of winner picks last week, a result of the toughness Darlington Raceway brings to the sport.

    I picked last week’s pole-sitter, Greg Biffle to win the Bojangles’ Southern 500, a move that looked fairly promising for 74 or so laps last Saturday Night. Biffle’s car seemed to go away as the laps ticked away, battling loose conditions through the latter of the laps at Darlington. He ran in the top-10 for the majority of the race, but the late-race caution set the field up for a green-white-checkered finsh. Biffle restarted 10th, but his 3M Ford Fusion was too much of a handful to muscle into the top-10, ultimately crossing the finish line in 12th.

    My Dark Horse last week qualified for the Bojangles’ Southern 500 in the sixth spot, and ended the race one spot better in fifth. Martin Truex Jr. also battled a loose condition throughout the duration of the race and ran as high as first, but only faltered back to 11th last week. He lead a season high 25 laps and managed to hold his 5th place spot in the championship points standings.

    All-Star Picks

    There is so much to pick for tonight’s All-Star festivities, so I will try to keep my picks short and sweet this week…

    Sprint Showdown

    Kicking off tonight’s on-track activities is the B-main or LCQ (if you’re used to motorcycle racing), otherwise known as the Sprint Showdown. The Showdown is packed with guys eager to have a shot at racing for the cool million, but its Martin Truex Jr. and Jeff Burton that will punch their tickets to the big dance by racing their way into the A-main. Both will start in the top-5 for the Showdown and practiced well on Friday.

    Fan Vote

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. will not race his way into the Sprint All-Star race, but will have a shot at the million via JR Nation. The will vote in droves following his third-place effort in the Sprint Showdown, but JR will start last on the grid for the NASCAR All-Star Race by receiving the 2012 fan vote for the second straight year.

    NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race
    Here’s the segment winners first:
    1- Kyle Busch
    2- Jimmie Johnson
    3- Jeff Gordon
    4 – Tony Stewart

    Starting in the top-4 spots of the 10-lap shootout for tonight’s million-dollar purse will be one Toyota and three Chevrolets. In the end, it will be Stewart claiming victory in the All-Star race. He was at Thursday night’s Pit Crew Challenge, and was disappointed when his Stewart-Haas Racing crew was knocked out of the competition in the semi-finals. The defending NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion is out for revenge tonight and will go home a million dollars richer when the checkered falls.

    That’s all for this week, so until next week’s Monaco Grand Prix, Indy 500, and Coke 600…You Stay Classy NASCAR NATION!