Kenseth's taking it one week at a time
September 26, 2013: Weekend Preview
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Matt Kenseth is having a career year.
With
eight races left in the season, he leads the standings by 14 points
over teammate Kyle Busch and already has a personal-high seven wins,
including
victories in the first two races of this year's Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup.
A
victory Sunday in the AAA 400 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Dover International
Speedway would make him the first driver in the history of the Chase
format
to win the first three races of NASCAR's postseason. Greg Biffle (2008)
and Tony Stewart (2011) were the only drivers previously to win the
first two races of the Chase.
Although
it's easy to get caught up with the points standings and the
championship hunt, Kenseth's currently only focused on Sunday's race at
Dover.
"I
know it's kind of cliché, but it really is one week at a time,
especially right now," said Kenseth, who moved over to the No. 20 Joe
Gibbs Racing
Toyota during the most recent offseason after piloting the No. 17 Roush
Fenway Racing Ford for 13 full seasons. "If you get down toward the end
and you're lucky enough to have a lead or something, maybe you start
looking at that more or thinking about it more,
but man, two whole months and eight weeks of racing is a lot of
racing."
In
2003 -- the year prior to the Chase -- Kenseth captured his only title
in NASCAR's premier series on the strength of one win and a lot of
consistent
top-10 finishes. Needless to say, he's attacking the battle for the
title a little differently this year.
When
asked whether winning a championship, if he does win the title in 2013,
after winning seven or more races is vindication for only winning once
during his other championship season, Kenseth responded: "If you're
fortunate enough to win a championship or another championship or
whatever, I don't think there's a bad way to win it."
Unlike
New Hampshire, where Kenseth felt like had always struggled, the
41-year-old Wisconsin driver has done well at Dover. In 29 races at the
Monster Mile, he's visited Victory Lane twice and compiled 13 top
fives, 18 top 10s and one pole. During a nine-race stretch -- spring
2008 through spring 2012 -- he racked up eight top-five finishes. He's
led four of the past five races and has more laps
(775) at the one-mile oval than at any other track not named
"Bristol."
His
two victories came in June 2006 and May 2011. He's struggled in his
last two visits to the track. In last September's race, Kenseth was
involved
in a one-car accident with 82 laps to go. He managed to finish the
race, albeit a disappointing 35th. When the series returned in early
June, engine issues relegated him to a 40th-place finish, although he
feels they had a good car prior to their bad luck.
"Anything
can happen anywhere. You can be at your best track and have whatever
happen and get a bad finish," Kenseth said. "But certainly have a
lot of confidence in the next three tracks coming up for sure. In the
past they've been good tracks for us. I felt like we were real strong at
Dover in the spring and I know I had a mechanical problem, but I
thought we were pretty strong when we ran there."
FOURTH AND 11 FOR LOGANO
No, Joey Logano has not traded in his fire suit and steering wheel for a football helmet and cleats.
When
the NASCAR Nationwide Series drivers line up for the start of the
5-Hour Energy 200 Benefiting Living Beyond Breast Cancer (3:30 p.m. ET,
ESPN)
at Dover International Speedway, Logano will be looking to make
history.
If
the driver of the No. 22 Penske Racing Ford for Saturday's race
captures the checkered flag it will be the fourth consecutive time he's
celebrated
in Victory Lane in the series at Dover.
"That's
the goal for the weekend," Logano replied when asked about how great it
would be to win a fourth-straight NASCAR Nationwide race at Dover.
"Every weekend, we want to go out there and win the race. And I think
we have a great shot to do it at Dover."
No
other driver has ever won three consecutive NASCAR Nationwide events at
the one-mile oval. Only eight drivers have won back-to-back races in
the series at Dover, which has been on the schedule since the series'
inaugural season in 1982: Darrell Waltrip (May 1985, May 1986); Robert
Pressley (1992 sweep); Todd Bodine (1993 sweep); Randy LaJoie (1996
sweep); Martin Truex Jr. (September 2004, June
2005); Denny Hamlin (September 2007, May 2008); Kyle Busch (2010 sweep)
and Carl Edwards (2011 sweep).
In
nine starts at Dover, Logano has three wins, five top fives, six top
10s, two poles and an average finishing position of 5.9. He's led more
laps
(531) at the concrete track than at any other track on the schedule.
"To
think that you can win three-straight and even four-straight races at a
track is pretty freaking cool," Logano said. "I really want to go out
there and make it happen this weekend."
If
Logano does end the day celebrating in Victory Lane, it will be the
11th time this season the No. 22 has found pay dirt. Logano and three
other
drivers -- Brad Keselowski, AJ Allmendinger and Ryan Blaney -- have all
wheeled the Ford past the start-finish line first a combined 10 times.
Penske Racing and the No. 22 hold a 23-point advantage over Joe Gibbs
Racing and the No. 54 Toyota in the owners'
points battle.
"I've
heard a lot of people trying to downplay (the owners' championship) and
say it isn't that important. But, there are 100-plus guys back at
the Penske Racing shop that feel it's pretty important," Logano said
when asked about the importance of the owners' title.
CRAFTON LOOKING FOR ELUSIVE VEGAS WIN
Matt
Crafton has rolled the dice before at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, but
he's never been the driver left holding the winning hand.
He's
quietly put together a stretch of five top-five finishes at the
1.5-mile track, which includes three runner-up finishes and an average
finish
of 2.8 over that span. This Saturday during the Smith's 350 (8:30 p.m.
ET, FOX Sports 1), however, he'll be looking to capture his first
checkered flag in Vegas.
Last
season, in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series' most recent trip to
the track, Crafton was leading with one lap to go when Nelson Piquet
Jr. passed him to steal away the victory. That missed opportunity was
difficult for Crafton.
"We
had a really, really good truck last year and I led the last 14 laps,
but I got passed on the last lap by Nelson," Crafton said. "That's been
one of the hardest losses to swallow of my entire career -- our truck
was that good."
In
12 career starts at Vegas in the series, Crafton has compiled five top
fives and six top 10s. In the past eight races, he leads the series with
371 green-flag passes and 304 quality passes, and is second in laps
running in the top 15. His driver rating at the 1.5-mile is a
respectable 95.5.
With
16 races already in the books in 2013 Crafton has finished in the top
10 in all of the races. If he finishes in the top 10 Saturday and in
the next two races (at Talladega and Martinsville), he'll tie Ron
Hornaday Jr.'s 2006 record streak of top-10 finishes to start a season.
"Hopefully
we can keep doing what we're doing and carry it through to the end of
the year," said Crafton, who leads the standings by 41 points over
reigning champion James Buescher. "That would really be special to
finish this thing out."
No comments:
Post a Comment