Watkins Glen Weekend Preview
Aug. 6, 2015
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Allmendinger ready to repeat at Watkins Glen, make Chase playoffs
AJ
Allmendinger celebrated like a rock star following the perfect encore
after going toe-to-toe with fellow road course ace Marcos Ambrose on the
final two-lap restart and beating him to the finish line to win last
year’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Watkins Glen International.
The
then-32-year-old first-time Cup winner screamed “I love you guys, thank
you,” slowly rose out of his seat to stand on the door of his car and
belly flopped off of it to crowd surf on his jubilant crew members.
“Winning
a race, no one can take that away from you,” said Allmendinger a year
later. “You feel like you are king of the world for one day. At that
moment, you are the best there is.”
Allmendinger
will try to recreate that moment when he returns to the Central New
York track for Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen (2 p.m. ET on NBCSN).
He will need to if he wants to compete in the Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup again. Currently 23rd in the standings, Allmendinger is 99
points away from the Chase cutoff line and needs a win in the next five
races to get in.
“I
still believe it every day that we have a great shot to win a race and
make The Chase and if I didn’t believe it, then I shouldn’t be in a race
car,” Allmendinger said. “From there, it’s all about being better. Are
we a championship winning team right now? Probably not, but all you have
got to do is look at what Ryan Newman showed last year. All you got to
do is get into The Chase and you’ve got a shot.”
For
the race, the No. 47 team will bust out the same car Allmendinger drove
to Victory Lane at Watkins Glen last year and earned the pole with at
Sonoma in June. According to crew chief Brian Burns, the team has a twin
brand new car, but it decided to use the old one.
Allmendinger has no doubt he can repeat.
“I
know I believe in myself and that’s what I have always loved about road
course racing, is that the driver can make a difference,” Allmendinger
said. “You still need a great car, but a driver can make more of a
difference by braking a little later, driving it in just a little bit
more, getting a little bit more out of the car and I pride myself on
that. When it comes time to do it, if we go do our job, we know we have a
shot to win.”
Buescher pulls double-duty to start road course stretch
Chris Buescher will be extra busy this weekend.
The
No. 60 Roush Fenway Racing driver gets to pull double-duty, running in
Saturday’s NASCAR XFINITY Series Zippo 200 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN) at
Watkins Glen International before making his sixth career NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series start for Front Motorsports in Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The
Glen.
“I
really enjoy road racing and I am excited to get back to Watkins Glen,”
Buescher said. “It is a very fast course and we had a really good car
last year. I think we have some great notes to build on from last
season. It will be a good weekend for us to get a top five and gain some
more points.”
Buescher’s
XFINITY Series standings lead over Chase Elliott has dwindled from 36
points to 20 over the last four races. He has failed to record a top-10
finish in the last five events.
Luckily
for the 22-year-old Texan, three of the next four series races take
place at road courses – Watkins Glen, Mid-Ohio and Road America. It’s
rare for young drivers to succeed at road courses, but last year,
Buescher won at Mid-Ohio and ran in the top 10 at Watkins Glen before a
mechanical issue and contact with a competitor relegated him to a
29th-place finish. In five road course starts in the ARCA Racing Series,
Buescher earned one win (Road America, 2013) and three top-five
finishes.
“I’m
not a road course specialist by any means, but I really enjoy it,”
Buescher said. “And each time we go out, we learn a lot, have a lot of
fun and seem to do pretty decent at the same time.”
Buescher hasn’t piloted a Sprint Cup car since May 3, but believes he’s ready for Sunday.
“I’m
really excited to go racing again in the Cup car,” he said. “I had some
success on road courses last year, and I think Watkins Glen was a good
track for us. I didn’t get to do Sonoma earlier this year, but I feel
like we can get back into it at Watkins Glen and have a good day.”
NASCAR Race Weekend Guide
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Race: Cheez-It 355 at The Glen
Track: Watkins Glen International
Date and Time: Sunday, Aug. 9 at 2 p.m. ET
Distance: 220.5 miles (90 laps)
Tune-In: NBCSN, 1:30 p.m. ET, MRN, SiriusXM Ch. 90
What to Watch For:
AJ Allmendinger attempts to defend his 2014 Watkins Glen victory and
make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. … Kyle Busch goes for his
fifth win in the last seven races after coming up just short of four
straight victories at Pocono last weekend. … Watkins Glen wins leader
Tony Stewart (5) and Jeff Gordon (4) try to get back into Victory Lane
at the Central New York road course and lock up spots in NASCAR’s
playoffs. … Chevrolet needs one more NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win to
reach 750. … Toyota has won 12 of the last 16 NASCAR national series
races, including nine of the past 11.
NASCAR XFINITY Series
Race: Zippo 200 at The Glen
Track: Watkins Glen International
Date and Time: Saturday, Aug. 8 at 3 p.m. ET
Distance: 200.9 miles (82 laps)
Tune-In: NBCSN, 2:30 p.m. (ET), MRN, SiriusXM Ch. 90
What to Watch For:
Chase Elliott continues to cut into Chris Buescher’s XFINITY Series
points lead. The 19-year-old defending champion has cut Buescher’s
advantage from 36 to 20 over the last four races. … Watkins Glen begins a
stretch of three road courses in the next four races. … NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series regulars Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski, Paul Menard and Kyle
Larson will compete in Saturday’s Zippo 200. … Road Course specialists
Boris Said and Kenny Habul will pilot the No. 54 and No. 20 Toyotas,
respectively, for Joe Gibbs Racing. ... New York natives Regan Smith
(Cato) and Todd Bodine (Chemung) return to their home state to compete
at Watkins Glen.
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