Kentucky Weekend Preview
July 8, 2015
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Kyle Busch continues course toward Chase at Kentucky
When
Kyle Busch sits back at the end of the year and reminisces over his
season, there’s a chance he might look at the dates July 5-6 as the days
he saved it.
With
a win in tow from Sonoma – arguably the hardest task in his quest to
make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup – Busch scraped the wall on Lap
17 at Daytona and had to pit for repairs, falling two laps behind into
38th. A finish that low could have doomed him, but Busch battled back in
the wee hours Monday morning to an 17th-place showing.
“I’m
just really proud of how hard all the guys worked to get us back to
where we were,” said Busch, who roughly needs to average a 13th-place
finish in the remaining nine races of the regular season to reach the
top 30. “Our night could have been much worse than it was as far as the
points are concerned.”
Busch
will continue his march toward the top 30 – and the subsequent Chase
berth – in Saturday’s Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts
at Kentucky Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN).
A
Kentucky visit will surely help Busch’s Chase chances, as he boasts
more top-five finishes at the 1.5-mile track than any other driver
(three). He won the inaugural race there in 2011.
“I
love Kentucky,” Busch said. “It was special there in 2011, when we were
able to win the first Cup race there. I look forward to going back
there every year. It’s a pretty challenging racetrack. It’s a place that
lends itself to different kinds of setups because it’s so rough.”
Adding
to the challenge at Kentucky this weekend is a new track-specific
aerodynamic rules package implemented by NASCAR designed to lower
downforce and increase passing. It is the first of five track-specific
rules packages drivers will run under this season. The other rules
package updates will occur at Indianapolis Motor Speedway (July 26),
Michigan International Speedway (Aug. 16), Darlington Raceway (Sept. 6)
and Richmond International Raceway (Sept. 12).
“I
think all of this shows that we remain committed to putting the best
racing on in the world,” said Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice
president and chief racing development officer. “And each of these,
including Kentucky this weekend, I think shows everybody that we've got
several components that make up a rules package each week, and they can
certainly be adjusted, and we will do that if we can do something that
we believe will improve the racing for the fans at each track.”
Busch
proved he could quickly adjust to Kentucky by winning at the 1.5-mile
track in the first NSCS race held there, so he should be up to the
challenge of adapting to the new aerodynamic package.
He described the feeling of knowing he’ll always be the inaugural Kentucky winner as “cool.”
“There
aren’t many opportunities these days to go to a new venue, so for us,
being able to win the first race there was extra special.”
Elliott excited for Kentucky after restrictor-plate reversal of fortune
Before last Saturday, Chase Elliott had never finished higher than 15th at a restrictor-plate track.
Restrictor-plate
tracks were the kryptonite to the 19-year-old heir apparent to Jeff
Gordon, who performed like Superman everywhere else.
In
his 47 career starts before Daytona last weekend, Elliott had only
finished outside the top 10 a mere 10 times. Four of those results came
at restrictor-plate tracks.
On Saturday at the 2.5-mile superspeedway, Elliott finished third.
“Daytona
and Talladega haven’t been too good for us this year or last,” Elliott
said. “Happy to have a decent finish and to bring the NAPA Chevrolet
home in one piece. I didn’t do anything special when those wrecks took
place, I just happened to be in a fortunate spot and avoided them.
Definitely haven’t been on that end much, especially at Daytona, so it
was nice to get a top-five, because we certainly needed it.”
On
Friday night, Elliott will attempt to build on his strong showing with
his first win of the season in the NASCAR XFINITY Series race at
Kentucky Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN).
He
finished 12th in his Kentucky debut last June and followed up the
performance with a fourth-place showing at the 1.5-mile track in
September.
Elliott
will try to add to his XFINITY Series-leading 12 top 10s and further
close the 34-point gap in the standings between him and frontrunner
Chris Buescher. The JR Motorsports driver leapfrogged Ty Dillon in the
standings following Daytona to grab ahold of the second spot.
Elliott maintains he needs to start visiting Victory Lane to successfully defend his XFINITY Series crown.
“The
best way to gain points is to win races,” he said. “I think we need to
do that to get it done this year. We were able to do that last year and I
think we can do that this season. We just have to get after it and
really do our jobs the second half of the season. If there’s any part
that counts, this is it, so we need to go get it done, try to capitalize
and hopefully get some good strong finishes to try to put ourselves in
contention to win races.”
Talented trio: Kyle Busch Motorsports’ gifted youngsters ready to capture Kentucky win
When
the Kyle Busch Motorsports haulers rolls up to Kentucky Speedway on
Thursday, it will arrive with trucks that will be driven by a trio of
talented young drivers.
Erik
Jones, 19, Christopher Bell, 20, and Daniel Suarez, 23, will try to
capture the second consecutive KBM win in the Bluegrass State in
Thursday’s UNOH 225 (7:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1). Team owner Kyle
Busch took the checkered flag in last season’s event, leading a
race-high 91 laps on his way to Victory Lane.
Jones
enters the race coming off his first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
win of the season at Iowa. He has never competed in a NASCAR event at
Kentucky, but finished sixth at an ARCA race there in 2013.
“Should
be fun, Kentucky is a cool place with a lot of character,” Jones said.
“It’s getting rougher and I haven’t been there in a few years so it
should be pretty good and rough now.”
Jones’
crew chief Randy Fugle added, “We finally put it all together and
collected our first win. Now, we need to go out and get five or six
more.”
Fresh
off his NCWTS debut at Iowa where he finished fifth, Bell will make his
first start at an intermediate track. The dirt standout is
transitioning to stock cars and has already won four races in KBM's
Super Late Model.
"Obviously
the top-five run at Iowa was awesome, so anything less is going to be a
letdown, but we need to go there with realistic expectations of me
never running at a track that size,” Bell said. “First I need to finish
the race, but also continue to be competitive as I gain more experience
in these Tundras."
Suarez
seems closer and closer to getting his first NASCAR national series win
every time he straps into the No. 51 truck. He finished second in his
last two NCWTS races, at Texas and Dover.
“Kentucky
Speedway is a fun, interesting track that is really fast,” Suarez said.
“I’m excited about it, especially since I’m also competing in the
NASCAR XFINITY Series race there. Running both events will help me
figure the track out quicker and will hopefully lead to two positive
results.”
NASCAR Race Weekend Guide
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Race: Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts
Track: Kentucky Speedway
Date and Time: Saturday, July 11, 7:30 p.m. (ET)
Tune-In: NBC Sports Network, 7 p.m. (ET), PRN, SiriusXM Ch. 90
Distance: 400.5 miles (267 laps)
What to Watch For:
Brad Keselowski attempts defend his 2014 Kentucky Speedway win and add
to his track-record two victories. … Danica Patrick makes her 100th
career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start … Inaugural Kentucky race-winner
Kyle Busch continues quest for a Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup berth. …
Nine races remain with six spots in NASCAR’s playoffs still up for
grabs.
NASCAR XFINITY Series
Race: NASCAR XFINITY July Kentucky Race
Track: Kentucky Speedway
Date and Time: Friday, July 10, 7:30 p.m. (ET)
Tune-In: NBC Sports Network, 7 p.m. (ET), PRN, SiriusXM Ch. 90
Distance: 300 miles (200 laps)
What to Watch For:
Chris Buescher can increase his 34-point lead over Chase Elliott in the
XFINITY Series driver standings. … Chase Elliott tries to add to his
series-leading 12 top 10s. Elliott also paces the series in driver
rating (100.5). … Brendan Gaughan attempts to follow up his fall
Kentucky victory with a win on Friday night. … Darrell Wallace Jr. holds
a mere four-point lead over Daniel Suarez in the Sunoco Rookie of the
Year race.
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Race: UNOH 225
Place: Kentucky Speedway
Date and Time: Thursday, July 9, 7:30 p.m. (ET)
Tune-in: FOX Sports 1, 7:30 p.m. (ET), MRN, SiriusXM Ch. 90
Distance: 225 miles (150 laps)
What to Watch For:
No driver entered in the field has ever won at Kentucky. … Matt Crafton
can continue his dominance at intermediate tracks. The No. 88 Toyota
driver finished in the top 10 in his last 12 races at 1.5-mile tracks.
Included in his streak are four victories. … Erik Jones attempts to win
his second consecutive race. … Dirt standout Christopher Bell will make
his second career series start after finishing fifth in his debut at
Iowa.
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