Posts Tagged ‘Chase’

The NASCAR Week That Was: Feb. 28-March 6

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

Three weeks into the season and our reigning champ has shown once again he’s the man to beat. After a dismal run at Daytona, Jimmie Johnson has now captured two of three races – he’s fifth in the points. In other news, TNT announced this week veteran NASCAR broadcaster Adam Alexander would take the reigns as their play-by-play announcer for 2010. Alexander replaces Bill Weber, who was released in the middle of TNT’s TV run last season. This is the NASCAR week that was February 28 to March 6, 2010.

Business Owner Finds Deals and Thrills in NASCAR

Hunter back on the beat

Bruton Smith outlines how he’d fix the sports

Bodine finds biggest win at a different kind of track

Being in the top 12 this early is no guarantee of making the Chase

Will NASCAR learn from US Fidelis collapse

Vintage Insiders

Fan Camping Areas: Enter If You Dare

The Most Powerful Men In NASCAR

**Remember if you have a NASCAR blog or website and would like a recent article you wrote featured in this section email me and you could be part of next week’s NASCAR Week That Was. Please only send stuff you have written.**

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Too early to get bent out of shape

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Relax, Ryan. You don’t have to push that red button just yet. (Photo: Getty Images)

HAMPTON, Ga. - Remain calm. All is well.

That’s the gospel being preached by those for whom the first three Sprint Cup races have not gone so well. Their words are strung together by lots of "ifs," "ands" and "buts."

They’re right, of course. The Kobalt Tools 500, at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday, is only the season’s four Sprint Cup race. A year ago at this point, Bobby Labonte was 10th in points.

Here’s what gets lost by those who prematurely panic. From now through the season’s 26th race, the point system governing the strategy in Cup isn’t one designed to be in first place. First place doesn’t matter until the Chase. The regular season is about being 12th because the top 12 make the Chase.

So, in other words, the standings list Ryan Newman as being in 32nd place, 281 points behind leader Kevin Harvick. That’s a lot, even now. Kyle Busch is in 12th place. Newman’s only 150 points behind him.

"I think it’s real early to be talking about a comeback," said Newman.

Jeff Gordon is two points out of 12th. Jamie McMurray trails Busch by 13. Dale Earnhardt Jr. is 18 shy of the top 12.

Oh, my gosh. That means that, over the next 23 races, Jeff Gordon won’t make the Chase unless he can keep up a pace of gaining .087 of a point in each and every race. OK, that’s a joke, but for 32nd place Ryan Newman, the math says he can make the Chase if he gains an average of 6.6 points on 12th place, whomever happens to occupy it at any given time.

They hand out five points for leading one lap under caution.

Drivers don’t like to get off to a slow start. Their fans don’t like to see it.

However … a year ago at this point, Newman, who is now 32nd, was 33rd. He made the Chase.

"We rebounded pretty quickly last year," he recalled. "I don’t know when we were first in the top 12 after being 33rd three races in. (He reached the top 12 after the 10th race). I know there’s plenty of potential, and there’s a lot of the season left.

"The law of averages works out for everybody except Jimmie Johnson."

The winner of four straight championships is apparently above the law.

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The Great Intermediate Desert

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

A tempest in a D-cup-shaped track: Succes on the intermediate tracks determine who makes the Chase.

 

Any driver who develops a superiority on intermediate tracks …

Oops, some explanation is in order. We’re talking about tracks from 1.5 to 2.0 miles, moderately banked (14-24 degrees) and mostly D-shaped.

They are the steel girders that support the Sprint Cup championship: Fontana, Vegas, Atlanta, Texas, Charlotte, Michigan, Chicagoland, Kansas and Homestead.

It’s too early in the season to get bent out of shape about anything, but for those hoping someone other than Jimmie Johnson wins this year’s championship, his victory in the first intermediate race is, well, disconcerting.

Johnson’s Chevrolet didn’t dominate - a lucky break helped him win - but it was fast.

The next two races, Las Vegas on Sunday and Atlanta on March 7, could provide a pattern. Every driver who finishes in the top 10 in all three races, beginning with the Auto Club 500 already completed, is probably going to make the Chase. He definitely will if he maintains the pattern.

Winning the championship may be greatly aided by proficiency at unique tracks like Talladega and Martinsville, but the contenders are going to come mainly from those who produce consistent finishes in the Great Intermediate Desert of NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series.

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Kevin Harvick and Richard Childress Racing Are on the Way Back

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

by Holly Cain

Filed under: , ,

When informed on California Speedway’s pit road Sunday that two races into the 2010 season he was officially NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series championship leader, Kevin Harvick broke into a broad grin and smirked.

“Now only 34 more to go,” he shot back after the day’s runner-up effort.

Of course, two races hardly make a season and don’t typically even begin to foreshadow the championship outcome. Matt Kenseth won the season’s first two races last year and didn’t qualify for the Chase for the Championship. Jimmie Johnson was ranked 19th after California and still landed his fourth consecutive trophy.

But. …

After a what-else-could-go-wrong 2009, Harvick, like the entire Richard Childress Racing (RCR) three-team operation, will take what he can get. Harvick is hoping to parlay this encouraging beginning to a proper ending — a return to the ranks of those in the Chase for the Championship, which is where he spent the 2006-08 seasons.

What’s most promising for Harvick is that it’s not just him leading this charge back. Both of his RCR teammates,Clint Bowyer (ranked second in points after two races) and veteran Jeff Burton (fifth) are also off to a good start, suggesting the once mighty RCR may be returning to form.

 

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The Kenseth Crew Chief Change And California Speedway

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

It was announced Wednesday that effective immediately, Todd Parrott would be replacing Drew Blickensderfer as crew chief for Matt Kenseth.  The Crown Royal team finished eighth at Daytona, and I think the move has surprised some fans and maybe even some media folks.  But with what happened last season, and what it took the 17 team to finish eighth at Daytona, the move might not be so shocking.

It’s been well documented that Kenseth and Blickensderfer got off to one hell of a start in 2009.  In their first two races together, the duo scored two wins; Daytona and California.  After those first two though, the team struggled for most of the rest of the season and failed to make the Chase.  It was the first time in the Chase era that Kenseth wasn’t a part of NASCAR’s playoffs.

Fast forward to the 2010 season and this weekend’s Daytona 500.  In the race he’d won just one year earlier, Kenseth struggled mightily with the handling of his car.  He did however manage to bring home a top ten finish with the aid of a few green-white-checkered restarts and some good pit crew work.  But, as they say, it was no picnic.

Over the course of the race, the 17 team made a number of changes to the car to help the handling including wedge adjustments, air pressure, track bar, a shim change, spring rubbers, and finally, a shock change!  Not exactly how you hope one of these races goes.

In the Cup Series, especially for a team that expects to contend for the Championship every year, the setup of the car has got to be pretty close when the green flag drops.  To make that many changes during the race, including two new front shocks is not good.  By the time Sunday rolls around, the setup should only require small tweaks to keep up with the changing conditions during the race.  Wholesale changes, like those that it took to get the Crown Royal Ford competitive, make Blickensderfer look incompetent.

I believe last year’s performances, together with how the Daytona 500 played out for Kenseth & Co. spelled the end for Blickensderfer.  It was the proverbial “straw that broke the camel’s back.”  Something tells me the meeting with Mr. Roush this week was not so pleasant.  And crew chief changes after a situation like this are not necessarily something new for “The Cat in the Hat.”

The whole thing really is a shame too, because as bad as it looks for Blickensderfer, he is not an incompetent crew chief.  You don’t win in the Nationwide Series and the Cup Series for Jack Roush if you don’t know what you’re doing.  But obviously something just wasn’t clicking between driver and crew chief and it was time to make a change.

This weekend at California Speedway
While this weekend’s stop in Fontana, CA is usually not an anticipated one for fans and the teams (see California Doesn’t Deserve A Cup Date), I think this Sunday’s Cup race will be an intriguing one to watch.

The Daytona 500 is always a bit of a crap shoot, and often, teams that might not be contenders can find a way to run well.  You can thank the restrictor plates for that.

But this race should be a fairly good litmus test for who might really be strong this year.  Plenty of teams think they’ve made the necessary changes to compete again (see RCR, RFR) and this weekend will be their first opportunity show it.

California will be the first of many speedway races that will be run this season, and it’s tracks like this that will make or break a driver’s season.  If you can’t run well at places like this, you can’t expect to finish well in the points.

Is Dale Jr. actually on the rise?  Will the down teams from last year come back?  Will Jimmie run away with a fifth straight Cup?  Sunday’s Auto Club 500 will be our first opportunity to start piecing together the puzzle that is the 2010 season.

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