Weekend Preview
Gordon’s 'Great American' goodbye
Feb. 19, 2015
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Jeff
Gordon kicked off his final full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season
the best way he possibly could – by winning the Daytona 500 Coors Light
Pole.
The
43-year-old will attempt to launch his farewell full-schedule campaign
in even grander fashion in Sunday’s 57th running of “The Great American
Race” (1 p.m. ET on FOX)
by becoming the 10th Daytona 500 winner to visit Victory Lane from the
pole.
“I
can't think of anything cooler than to start this season, the Daytona
500, my final Daytona 500, final full season, on the pole,” he said.
Gordon
won his second of three Daytona 500s from the pole in 1999. The other
drivers to accomplish the feat are NASCAR Hall of Famers: Fireball
Roberts (1962), Richard Petty
(1966), Cale Yarborough (1968, ‘84), Bill Elliott (1985, ‘87) and Dale
Jarrett (2000), as well as 19-time race-winner Buddy Baker (198).
Despite
competing for the championship for the final time this season, Gordon
claims to have tunnel-vision as he tries to tackle the 2.5-mile
behemoth.
“I want
to win the championship, I want points, but right now it's the Daytona
500,” he said. “All I want to focus on is winning the Daytona 500. I'm
just enjoying the ride,
enjoying the moment.”
Fellow
Chevrolet drivers Dale Earnhardt Jr. and 2014 NSCS champion Kevin
Harvick are set to spoil Gordon’s Daytona 500 swan song.
Earnhardt,
last year’s Daytona 500 victor boasts two wins in “The Great American
Race” and will attempt to become just the fourth driver to repeat at the
event (Petty, 1973-74;
Yarborough, 1983-84; Sterling Martin, 1994-95). A skilled
restrictor-plate driver, Earnhardt owns eight career checkered flags at
superspeedways.
“If
that 500 car is still in one piece when we put that thing on the
starting grid, I got a good feeling about it,” Earnhardt said. “We got
some qualifying races, got to get
through some practices, and if we can knock that car on the grid, I
think it’s going to be a fast one. I don’t think anyone here has a car
as fast as ours from what I just saw today.”
Harvick,
who won the final two races last season to capture his first NSCS crown
can join Gordon (1999), Lee Petty (1959), Richard Petty (1973),
Yarborough (1977) and Jarrett
(2000) as the sixth defending premier series champion to win the
Daytona 500.
The
pilot of Stewart-Hass Racing’s No. 4 Budweiser Chevrolet is primed to
become the 11th driver in NSCS history to secure consecutive titles.
“As you
come into this year, knowing we can do the things that we accomplished
last year is very rewarding,” Harvick said. “And it is a great
confidence builder for our guys
and team.
“We
know we can thrive in those situations, be successful in those
situations and win races if we put all the pieces together correctly.”
Elliott aiming for another title in sophomore season
Arguably
the surprise of the NASCAR world last season, 19-year-old Chase Elliott
seized the points lead after his July 19 win at Chicagoland and never
looked back, taming a
barrage of unfamiliar tracks to run away with the NASCAR XFINITY Series
championship.
Elliott
became the youngest title-winner in NASCAR national series history and
the first driver to clinch both a Sunoco Rookie of the Year Award and
series crown.
Through
his efforts, Elliott earned a full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series spot
in Jeff Gordon’s No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for 2016, but
will take one more full-time
go-around to compete for a second XFINITY Series championship in his
No. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS Chevrolet .
“2016
is a ways a way and there’s a lot of racing between now and then,”
Elliott said. “I’m staying focused on this season and hopefully going
and trying to compete for an
XFINITY Series championship.”
The
first stop in his title defense tour – Saturday’s Alert Today Florida
300 at Daytona International Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).
DIS was one of the only tracks
where Elliott “struggled” last season, finishing 15th and 20th in both
events last year. He will attempt to conquer the behemoth where his
father, Bill Elliott, won four NSCS races.
Trying
to pull off Elliott's rookie of the year/championship combination in
2015 are Daniel Suarez of Joe Gibbs Racing and Darrell “Bubba” Wallace
Jr. of Roush Fenway Racing.
Suarez
ran two XFINITY Series events last year while competing full time in the
NASCAR Mexico Toyota Series -- where logging series bests of five wins,
seven top fives and
three poles. The 23-year-old added two wins and seven top 10s in 13
NASCAR K&N Pro Series East starts. He will pilot the No. 18 Arris
Toyota for JGR.
“The
first goal is going to be to learn. I pretty much believe that this is
the most important thing,” Suarez said. “After that, I really think
we’re going to be competitive.
If we’re competitive, and we’re still running in the top 10 and top
five, with some luck we’re going to be getting a chance to get a win.”
Wallace
joined RFR in December shortly after JGR, where he was a developmental
driver, granted him his release. He finished third in the NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series last
season, leading all regulars in wins (4), driver rating (109.5) and
laps led (623). In six NXS races for JGR over the past three years, he
boasts four top-10 finishes.
“Chase
Elliott set the bar high,” Wallace said. “Before coming into a new
series (a goal) would be like, ‘finish top five in the points, get a
win.’ (Now it’s) a championship.
That’s the only thing on the agenda is get a championship. I have full
confidence that we can get that done.”
Can Crafton Clinch Truck Series Three-peat?
In
2014, Matt Crafton became the first driver in the 20-year history of the
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series to win consecutive championships.
Now,
the No. 88 Menards Toyota driver will try to become one of the few
“three-peaters” in sports, joining Jimmie Johnson (2006-10), New York
Yankees (1998-00), Chicago Bulls
(1991-93, 1996-98) and UCLA Bruins Men’s Basketball (1967-73) among
others.
“Three,
I’m going to go in with the same mindset as two, just go out here and
race, and have fun,” Crafton said. “I get paid for doing what I love to
do, so not put any pressure
on yourself, and just go out there, try to lead laps and win races.”
Crafton
will embark on his championship quest in Friday’s NextEra Energy
Resources 250 at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 on FOX Sports 1)
where he will take a shot at
winning the first superspeedway race of his career.
Likely
battling Crafton for his series crown are truck veterans Johnny Sauter
and Timothy Peters. But he might face his stiffest competition from
youngsters Erik Jones, Ben
Kennedy and Tyler Reddick.
Jones,
18, entering his first full-time NCWTS season, has won four races in a
mere 17 Truck Series starts the last two years. With experience under
his belt, a Truck Series
championship is his stated goal.
“Matt
(Crafton) has won the championship the last two years by being very
consistent and we know that if we are going to beat him, we need to make
sure on the days where we
don't have a winning truck we don't try to make something happen and
have it bite us,” Jones said.
Kennedy,
23, took home NCWTS Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors after finishing
ninth in the final point standings last season. Now driving the No. 11
Toyota Tundra for Red Horse
Racing, he hopes to find Victory Lane in 2015.
Reddick
joins Jones as another teenage driver with Truck Series title
aspirations. The Corning, California resident, racked up two poles, four
top-six and one top-10 finish
in his final five starts last season and placed runner-up for the
Sunoco Rookie of the Year award despite only running 16 races.
“The
big goal this year is obviously a championship,” Reddick said. “We’d
love to win every race we can, but a championship is what matters most
to us.”
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