NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES 3/25/15
Ho-Hum: Another Top-Two For Harvick
Does the lead for NASCAR’s News & Notes ever change?
Kevin
Harvick has been THE story for weeks now, posting his eighth
consecutive top-two finish with a runner-up showing at Auto Club.
The
No. 4 Chevrolet driver now has two wins and three second-place
performances this season and leads Joey Logano by 27 points in the
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings.
This
Sunday, Harvick returns to the venue at which he last finished outside
the top two – Martinsville Speedway – for the STP 500 (1 p.m. ET on FOX
Sports 1). (Kevin, if you’re reading, don’t watch this.)
Harvick finished 33rd at “The Paperclip” in last year’s opener of the
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup’s Eliminator 8 Round. His lone top-two
finish at Martinsville was a victory in spring of 2011.
“Happy” continues to chase Richard Petty’s record of 11 consecutive top-two finishes set in 1975.
“Bradical” Dude: Late Race Gamble Leads Keselowski To Victory
Running
fifth with two laps left in the Auto Club 400 on Sunday, Brad
Keselowski’s No. 2 Ford team made the gutsy decision to take four fresh
tires, moving Keselowski all the way back to 14th on the Lap 202
restart.
The decision paid off with a ticket to the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Keselowski
engulfed the field like a wave, moving up to fifth for the next restart
on Lap 207 and tracking down Kurt Busch on the 209th and final lap of
the race – the only go-around Keselowski led all day – to take the
victory.
Keselowski,
who paced the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series with six wins last season, will
attempt to continue his momentum by taking the checkered flag at
Martinsville Speedway for the first time in his career. The 31-year-old
claims one top five and five top-10 finishes in 10 starts at the
.526-mile track.
Last
weekend’s Auto Club race marked the second of Keselowski’s 17 career
victories where he led just one lap. Ironically, the first came on
Keselowski’s first career win, at Talladega Superspeedway (4/26/09).
(Keselowski’s Talladega triumph entered NASCAR.com’s March Madness
tribute in the “Biggest NASCAR Upset” bracket as the sixth seed. Fans
can vote on NASCAR’s biggest upset here.)
The points leader entering the 2014 Chase, Keselowski ranks fifth in the standings, trailing Kevin Harvick by 62 points.
Might As Well Call Martinsville “Hendrickville”
Hendrick
Motorsports’ 22 wins at Martinsville Speedway not only rank first in
track history, they mark the most victories by an owner at a specific
track in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series annals.
The
organization goes for its 23rd triumph of “The Paperclip” this weekend
with five race entries: Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
Kasey Kahne and Chase Elliott.
Martinsville
mavens Johnson and Gordon will lead the way. Both rank first among
active drivers with eight wins at the storied short track. The pair also
claims the most runner-ups at Martinsville among active drivers –
Gordon with five and Johnson with four.
Unsurprisingly,
Johnson boasts the top driver rating in the series at Martinsville
(122.5), while Gordon’s is second-best (119.8).
There’s No Place Like Home For Hamlin
Chesterfield,
Virginia native Denny Hamlin heads to his home track at Martinsville,
which may be just what the doctor ordered after his tough-luck outing at
Auto Club.
The
No. 11 FedEx Toyota driver owns four wins at Martinsville, his most at
any track (he also has four at Pocono). In addition, he boasts nine top
fives and 14 top 10s at the southern Virginia track. His driver rating
(110.1), fastest laps run (612) and average running position (8.8) at
Martinsville are all the third-best among active drivers.
Hamlin
finished 28th at Auto Club, a showing not indicative of his performance
that showed off serious speed. The Joe Gibbs Racing wheelman led a
season-high 56 laps, looking like he could contend for the win before he
was sent to the back after Lap 185 when his team drew a pit road
penalty for an uncontrolled tire.
If
Hamlin can park his car in Victory Lane, he will tie NASCAR Hall of
Famer Joe Weatherly for the most wins by a driver from Virginia with 25.
High Ratings: Dale Jr. Excels At NASCAR’s Oldest Track
Four
drivers average a driver rating of more than 100 at Martinsville. The
top three aren’t that big a surprise, considering they also reside atop
the active Martinsville wins list – Jimmie Johnson (122.5), Jeff Gordon
(119.8) and Denny Hamlin (110.1). The other highly rated driver: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., who won his first Martinsville race last October in the
series’ most recent visit to the Virginia short track. Earnhardt’s
driver rating of 101.2 makes Martinsville his best track in terms of the
loop data statistic, and the only track at which he eclipses the 100
driver rating barrier. For the record: No. 2 on his list is Michigan at
98.0. Last on his list is Sonoma, at 72.1.
Tough Task: Chase Elliott Hopes To Buck “Debut Downer” Trend
Reigning
NASCAR XFINITY Series champion Chase Elliott starts his ‘Jeff Gordon
Replacement’ march this Sunday at Martinsville, driving the No. 25
Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports. It’ll be the first of five races in
2015 before hopping in the No. 24 Chevrolet fulltime in 2016 (his other
races this season are Richmond, Charlotte, Indianapolis and Darlington).
And, if history is any indication, it’ll be a tough task. The last
driver to score a top-10 finish in his first career start was Carl
Edwards’ 10th-place finish at Michigan in 2004. Only three drivers have
scored a top 10 in their debut since 1990: Edwards, Matt Kenseth (6th at
Dover in 1998) and Kenny Irwin Jr. (8th at Richmond in 1997). The last
driver to score a top five in his premier series debut: NASCAR Hall of
Famer Rusty Wallace, who finished second at Atlanta in 1980. And one
last note…to best his father – NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott – Chase
will have to finish 32nd or better. Bill Elliott finished 33rd in his
NASCAR Sprint Cup debut, at Rockingham in 1976.
Who’s The Boss: Jersey Native Martin Truex Jr. Looks To Continue Glory Days At Martinsville
Second generation NASCAR driver Martin Truex Jr. is proving he was born to run in 2015.
The
South Jersey native who began his racing career not far from the
streets of Philadelphia, is on fire after notching five straight top-10
finishes to start the season – tying his career-best streak set in 2012.
He keeps on rising in the standings where he ranks third, five points
behind Joey Logano and 33 behind defending NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
champion Kevin Harvick.
Despite
starting outside the top 10 in three of the first five races, Truex has
shown no surrender. At Auto Club Sunday, he proved if he should fall
behind that he can make up his position by finishing eighth after
descending to the back of the field multiple times.
Truex
has high hopes for Martinsville where he can prove he’s tougher than
the rest. He will attempt to pilot his No. 78 Furniture Row Chevrolet to
the promised land at the .526-mile track where he claims two top-five
and four top-10 finishes.
Kurt Busch Attempts Martinsville Repeat
After
being suspended for the first three races of the season, Kurt Busch has
collected a fifth and a third-place finish in his first two starts,
respectively.
Busch
looked like he was going to pull off the ‘perfect weekend’, leading
qualifying, all practices and the race at Auto Club on Sunday, but was
tracked down by Brad Keselowski on the final lap and finished third.
This
weekend, Busch will attempt to defend his win in last year’s
Martinsville spring race in the STP 500. Busch claims two victories at
Martinsville and his victory from the 36th position there in 2002 is the
deepest in the field a race winner has ever started.
Busch’s
recent success coincides with his crew chief switch to Tony Gibson for
the November race at Texas Motor Speedway last season. In five races
with Gibson, Busch claims two top fives, four top 10s, a 6.5 average
finish and an average driver rating of 111.5. His driver rating ranks
second over that span, and his average running position of 6.8 ranks
third.
Super Subs: Buescher, Moffitt Making Most Of Fill-In Role
Unfortunately, Brian Vickers cannot race for the foreseeable future as he recovers from health issues related to blood clots.
Brett
Moffitt, who piloted Vickers’ No. 55 Toyota to an eighth-place showing
at Atlanta, subbed for him at Auto Club and placed 22nd. Since Moffitt
moved into the No. 55 for Michael Waltrip Racing, Chris Buescher took
over for him in the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford at Auto Club,
finishing 20th in his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut.
Moffitt
and Buescher, both 22 years old, will pilot the same cars again in this
weekend’s STP 500 at Martinsville Speedway. Neither driver has ever
competed at Martinsville in any of NASCAR’s national series.
No. 11 Boasts Storied History at Martinsville
Denny
Hamlin is a perennial contender at Martinsville, having earned four
grandfather clocks in his young career. However, he is not the first
driver to experience success in the No. 11 car at the 0.526-mile track.
NASCAR
Hall of Famer Cale Yarborough set the tone in the No. 11 at
Martinsville, with four wins in 16 starts from 1973-80. He finished in
the top five an astounding 11 times during that eight-year stretch,
including three runner-up finishes. And when fellow Hall of Famer
Darrell Waltrip took over the Junior Johnson owned ride in 1980, the
success continued. Waltrip won four Martinsville races for Johnson,
including a stretch of seven consecutive top-five finishes from 1981-84.
It’s
not hard to imagine Johnson’s success as a driver helped contribute to
his ownership triumphs. Johnson won twice at the paperclip-shaped track
and had eight finishes of third or better in 19 attempts.
Overall,
the No. 11 has 15 Martinsville wins, including a sweep by Geoff Bodine
in 1990. Only the No. 43 car has visited Martinsville Victory Lane
more. Richard Petty, the all-time Martinsville wins leader, had 15
victories at the track. John Andretti earned a Martinsville win for
Petty Enterprises in 1999.
No comments:
Post a Comment