Weekend Preview
Is Kahne Able: Kasey goes for repeat at Atlanta
Feb. 25, 2015
By Staff Reports
NASCAR Wire Service
Kasey Kahne was in desperation mode at Atlanta Motor Speedway last August.
Sitting
in 18th on the Chase Grid – 33 points below the 16th-place cut off line
– the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports driver needed a win to make NASCAR’s
playoffs.
Kahne came through.
He
seized the lead with two laps remaining, cruising to Victory Lane, and
more importantly, a berth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
“There
won't be as much pressure on us for a while now, I guess,” Kahne said
after the race. “Just to make it, I mean, that's just such a – it was
winding down, we were – I don't know. I feel like making The Chase,
there's a lot of pressure and you don't really see that again until
probably late in The Chase.”
Kahne
faces less stress heading into Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 (1
p.m. ET on FOX) at Atlanta Motor Speedway – the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series’ first March visit to the Georgia track since 2010.
He still has 25 races left before the Chase opener on Sept. 20 at Chicagoland.
Atlanta
Motor Speedway has been kind to Kahne during his NSCS career. The
12-year veteran owns three wins at the 1.5-mile track with seven top
fives, nine top 10s and two Coors Light Pole Awards.
Not
the only driver with Peach State success, Kahne will face stout
competition from Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Jimmie
Johnson. Gordon leads all active full-time drivers with five AMS wins,
while Johnson’s three victories tie Kahne and three other drivers for
third.
“I
love racing at Atlanta. I won my first ever [XFINITY] Series race there
and it was also the site of my very first Sprint Cup Series start more
than 22 years ago,” Gordon said. “We’ve won races and clinched
championships there. Atlanta Motor Speedway holds a special place in my
heart.”
‘Reedy’ to go: Daytona winner Ryan Reed leads Roush Fenway Racing to Atlanta
In
February of 2011, Ryan Reed was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes and was
told by doctors he’d never be able to drive a race car again.
Four years later he’s a NASCAR national series race winner.
Reed
pulled a crafty move to the inside to pass 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series champion Brad Keselowski on the final lap of the season-opening
race at Daytona International Speedway and received a timely push from
Roush Fenway Racing teammate Chris Buescher to capture his first NASCAR
XFINITY Series victory.
“I
can’t describe the emotions and the feelings that go into the first
win,” Reed said. “So much hard work and sacrifice from all my guys –
(crew chief) Seth (Barbour) and (owner) Jack (Roush) and everyone who
stood behind me, including Lilly Diabetes and the American Diabetes
Association.”
Reed
will attempt to win his second race when he leads a quartet of RFR
drivers – which includes young guns Buescher, Darrell “Bubba” Wallace
Jr. and two-time NASCAR XFINITY Series runner-up Elliott Sadler – to
Atlanta Motor Speedway for Saturday’s Hisense 250 (2 p.m. ET on FOX
Sports 1). The 21-year-old finished 18th in his only start at Atlanta
last season.
“This
past week has been a whirlwind after earning my first win at Daytona –
just overwhelming. Seth (Barbour), the team and I have a tremendous
amount of confidence and momentum from the win that will carry us into
this weekend’s race at Atlanta,” Reed said. “Our communication has
improved so much since the last time we were there and I really think we
have a chance to continue our hot streak and bring home another win.”
Robust rookie of the year race heats up at Atlanta
The
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series has long been a proving ground for
young drivers to test their talents against grizzled veterans.
The 2015 season is no exception.
Eleven drivers are in contention for Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors in the series.
In
the first race of the season, three of the top five drivers at Daytona
were Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidates: Erik Jones (second), Austin
Theriault (fourth) and Ray Black Jr. (fifth).
Fellow
rookies Korbin Forrister (12th at Daytona), Spencer Gallagher (21st),
Daniel Hemric (26) and Justin Boston (29th) will attempt to catch up to
the pack in Saturday’s Hyundai Construction 250 at Atlanta Motor
Speedway (5:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).
“I'm
really looking forward to Atlanta this weekend,” Boston said. “KBM has a
lot of success at intermediate tracks. It will be nice to race at a
place where truck handling, race strategy and skill play a bigger part
than just luck."
Many of the rookies lack experience on 1.5-mile tracks like Atlanta, putting them at a disadvantage to their older counterparts.
"With
the speeds you reach at Atlanta being a mile-and-half, it is definitely
a lot harder on the tires than at the short tracks we race in late
models,” Jones said. “But I guess the concept of managing your equipment
is the same, so hopefully I can apply some of it.”
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