Weekend preview: Gibbs teams on a roll heading to Las Vegas
March 8, 2012
NASCAR Wire Service
While
it's early to draw conclusions about the course of the NASCAR Sprint
Cup season two races in, Joe Gibbs Racing has made an initial statement
that its 2011 doldrums may be over.
The
three-car Toyota outfit aims to cash in on the modest momentum in
Sunday's Kobalt Tools 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, a track where JGR
has only won once in 35 efforts. But based on the early dividends that
the team's offseason changes have paid so far, Vegas odds may be tipping
toward Gibbs.
Phoenix
race winner Denny Hamlin sits atop the series standings after opening
the year with consecutive top-five finishes. Joey Logano has parlayed
two straight top-10 finishes into eighth place in the standings, and
Kyle Busch -- who won at his hometown track in 2009 -- ranks ninth.
For
Hamlin and Logano, new crew chiefs have helped steady the ship after
subpar finishes last season. Hamlin, who made the Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup field but tailed off dramatically in the 10-race playoff, now
has title-winning crew chief Darian Grubb on his pit box.
The
fast start has done wonders for Hamlin's morale, which took a beating
as the No. 11 team limped to the end of last season. But he's tempering
his optimism heading to Vegas, where he hasn't led a lap in six Sprint
Cup races.
"You
never know what can happen next week," Hamlin said after winning at
Phoenix. "We're at a totally different racetrack again, and it looks
like really the first five racetracks that we go to are all dramatically
different in a lot of different ways. So now our next step is to be
competitive on a mile and a half racetrack.
"It's
going to kind of give us the make-up and see where we need to work
within our program the first five races, see where our strong suits are,
see where we are weak and need to improve."
Logano,
who had his worst finish in 24th place in the standings last year, now
has guidance from crew chief Jason Ratcliff, who has two NASCAR
Nationwide Series crowns in his portfolio. Logano has already felt the
impact.
"Everybody
has picked up their game a lot. I'm excited about that," Logano
said. "And it comes along with a lot of new things. Obviously with a new
crew chief with Jason, (it) ended up bringing some new life. Changes
things up a lot. It's kind of like a restart button.
"It's
hard to put it in words. But you can just kind of feel the
difference. My attitude's different. I feel like I walk around with a
lot more confidence in myself. That carries through the whole team. As
soon as the driver is real confident . . . It goes vice versa, too. When
someone loses confidence, it's contagious."
MARTIN TO DRIVE FOR NEW NATIONWIDE COACH
Mark
Martin has spent the majority of his 30-year NASCAR career driving for
two of the sport's most successful car owners -- Jack Roush and Rick
Hendrick. In Saturday's Sam's Town 300 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway,
he'll add a third to his resume.
Martin
will pilot the No. 18 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing in an intriguing
subplot that could shake up the NASCAR Nationwide Series all-time win
list. Martin's 49 wins rank second, two behind all-time leader Kyle
Busch, who drove Gibbs' cars to 40 of his 51 Nationwide victories.
In
the offseason, Busch announced that he would pair with his brother,
Kurt, to campaign Nationwide Series entries out of his own shop, Kyle
Busch Motorsports. Brian Scott filled the void for Gibbs in the first
two races of the season, but the door was open for Martin in a one-race
deal at Las Vegas.
The
team indicated in a January news release that it would seek more
opportunities to put the veteran driver in the No. 18 seat this season.
If that comes to pass, the battle atop the all-time Nationwide win list
could become a lively, active fight.
"This
is exciting. No organization has been better in the Nationwide Series
over the past three or four seasons . . .," Martin said. "Maybe I can
pick up a few more races and try to catch Kyle and get my record back
again."
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