NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
Pattern Of Parity At Sonoma
You don’t have to be Albert Einstein or Stephen Hawking to notice the pattern of parity at Sonoma Raceway.
The
last 10 races at the road course have produced 10 different winners.
Two of those drivers – Tony Stewart in 2005 and Jimmie Johnson in 2010 –
went on to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship.
All
10 previous winners will compete for the checkered flag in Sunday’s
Toyota / Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway (3 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1):
Carl Edwards (2014), Martin Truex Jr. (2013), Clint Bowyer (2012), Kurt
Busch (2011), Jimmie Johnson (2010), Kasey Kahne (2009), Kyle Busch
(2008), Juan Pablo Montoya (2007), Jeff Gordon (2006) and Tony Stewart
(2005).
The only track with a longer active streak of different winners is New Hampshire Motor Speedway with 11.
Homecoming King: Jeff Gordon Returns To Hometown Track For Final Time
Northern California is about to witness the end of an era.
Native
son Jeff Gordon, born in Vallejo, California, will make his final start
at Sonoma Raceway – a track he has dominated during his career – in
Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350. In all, Gordon has finished third or
better in 13 of his 22 starts at Sonoma.
Still,
Gordon has not visited Victory Lane at the 12-turn loop since 2006, but
boasts the track record for wins (5), Coors Light Pole Awards (5),
average finish (7.9), top fives (14), top 10s (18) and laps led (457).
Here
is a list of drivers second in each category for comparison: wins (four
drivers, 2), Coors Light Pole Awards (Ricky Rudd, 4), average finish
(Dale Earnhardt, 8.4), top fives (Ricky Rudd, 10), tops 10s (Mark
Martin, 13), laps led (Rusty Wallace, 171).
Gordon stands as NASCAR’s all-time leader in road course wins with nine.
Ring It Up: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Engages In Some Road Course Racing
For
12 consecutive years, Dale Earnhardt Jr. has held the title of
“NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver.” As of a week ago, he now has a new one:
‘fiancé.’
Earnhardt
proposed to his girlfriend Amy while on a vacation in Germany (spoiler
alert: she said yes), and sealed the deal with a shiny engagement ring.
The circular ring is meant to be a symbol of eternity. So it’s odd
timing that Earnhardt now heads to one of the few NASCAR tracks that isn’t a circle – Sonoma Raceway.
It
took a while, but Earnhardt might finally love Sonoma as much as Amy.
After 15 starts, he got his first top-10 finish at Sonoma last year, a
third-place result. Still, his average Sonoma finish of 20.3 makes the
track tied with Homestead for his second worst, behind only Watkins Glen
(22.4), the other road course track in the series.
Earnhardt
has all but locked up a spot in this year’s Chase thanks to a win at
Talladega, and now aims to grow his Chase bonus points total. All 16
Chase drivers will have their points reset to 2,000 to start the Chase,
with three additional bonus points added for each win in the regular
season.
Tappin’ The Rockies In Wine Country: McMurray Goes For Another Sonoma Coors Light Pole
Most people visit Sonoma for the wine.
Jamie McMurray prefers its Coors Light (Pole Award, anyway).
The
No. 1 Chevrolet driver has won the last two Coors Light Pole Awards at
Sonoma Raceway. His 2007 Sonoma pole gives him three for his career at
the West Coast road course.
McMurray
turned last year’s pole into a fourth-place finish. Otherwise, he
hasn’t done well at Sonoma. His only other top-10 finish there was a
runner-up showing in 2004.
NoCal Products Hoping For Home Cooking
Though
Jeff Gordon wears the crown as ‘Homecoming King,’ two other local
drivers can upend him in Sonoma – Kyle Larson, from Elk Grove, and AJ
Allmendinger from Los Gatos. Larson, the 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Sunoco Rookie of the Year, finished 28th in his lone Sonoma start, last
season. Allmendinger has two top 10s at Sonoma, and won last year’s
Watkins Glen race – the second of two NSCS road-course races.
Follow Him If You Want To Win! Schwarzenneger Saddles Up As Sonoma Pace Car Driver
Arnold Schwarzenneger is a man with many talents, and faces.
He’s been a Terminator, Mr. Freeze, a governor, even a kindergarten cop.
On
Sunday, he will lead the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series field to green as the
Official Pace Car Driver for the Toyota / Save Mart 350.
Schwarzenneger
will pilot a 2016 Toyota Mirai, a hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicle
that emits only water from its exhaust. It will be the first hydrogen
fuel cell vehicle used as a pace car in Sonoma. As Governor,
Schwarzenegger championed and established California's Hydrogen Highway,
the nation's first network of hydrogen fueling stations.
The
long-time actor/bodybuilder/politician joins a star-studded list of
celebrities who have participated in NASCAR festivities this year,
including: Vince Vaughn, Guy Fieri, Bill Goldberg, SpongeBob SquarePants
and Rob Gronkowski.
Hopefully, he’ll be back.
Stewart A Mobil(e) One At Sonoma
Tony Stewart – a multi-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion and sure-fire NASCAR Hall of Famer – has struggled so far in 2015.
He claims only one top-10 finish–a sixth-place showing in a wild rainy race at Bristol in April.
Still, Stewart can make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup with a win and top-30 points finish.
Sonoma Raceway could be where he clinches that win.
The No. 14 Chevrolet driver is a Mobil(e) one at the Northern California Race track. (Get it? Mobil 1 is his sponsor. #punny)
Stewart
owns two wins (12.5%), five top fives (31.2%), nine top 10s (56.2%) and
a Coors Light Pole Award in 16 starts at Sonoma. Among active drivers
at the 1.99-mile road course, he boasts the most fastest laps run (79),
the second-best average running position (12.0), the second-most quality
passes (274) and the third-best driver rating (98.8).
Bowyer Aims For First Win At Strongest Track
Clint
Bowyer has a reputation as a short-track ace. But in actuality, his
best track is the Sonoma Raceway road course. He has an average finish
there of 9.2, which make the Northern California track his best. He
comes into this race with four consecutive top 10s at Sonoma, including a
win in 2012.
In
that 2012 win, Bowyer had an incredible average running position of
1.8, along with 71 laps led and a driver rating of 142.8 (a perfect
rating is 150.0).
History Lesson: All Gordon All The Time (Except for the First Couple of Years)
Jeff
Gordon will retire as the winningest driver in Sonoma Raceway history.
Despite more than 20 years of dominance at the track, winning did not
always come easy for the California native.
Gordon
has five wins at the Northern California track, including three in a
row from 1998-2000. But as the old adage goes, Gordon had to first
experience the agony of losing at his “home track” before achieving the
ecstasy of victory.
In
1996, Gordon started sixth and worked his way into the lead on Lap 57
of 74. A late caution set up a restart with six laps remaining with
NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace lining up second, behind Gordon.
Wallace was able to pass Gordon for the win shortly after the restart,
with Gordon eventually finishing sixth.
The
following season, Gordon started third and was on race leader Mark
Martin’s bumper throughout the final lap. Gordon gave one last attempt
to get around Martin in the hairpin turn but came up short once again.
In
1998, everything clicked for Gordon, who started the weekend by winning
his first Sonoma pole. Gordon led 48 laps, including the final 11, to
win his first road course race and move into first place in the
standings. It also kicked off a remarkable stretch of seven wins in
nine races that propelled Gordon to his third career championship.
No comments:
Post a Comment