Cool-Down Lap: It's time for drivers outside the top 10 to start thinking "wild card"
April 23, 2012: Commentary
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Is
it too early for drivers outside the top 10 in the NASCAR Sprint Cup
standings to take a more aggressive approach and gamble for victories?
The answer to that question is an emphatic "No."
For
drivers currently outside the top 10, qualifying as a wild card likely
is their only viable way to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup.
After
Sunday's STP 400 at Kansas Speedway, we're nearly a third of the way
through the 26-race regular season that will determine those who get to
race for the Cup championship and those who don't.
Look
at last year's standings after eight races. The top eight drivers all
went on to finish in the top 10 after 26 events and qualify for the
Chase. The only two drivers in the top 10 after eight races who failed
to make the Chase were Juan Pablo Montoya and Clint Bowyer. Ultimately,
they were supplanted by Jeff Gordon and eventual series champion Tony
Stewart.
Accordingly, the odds heavily favor those who have already established themselves as top-10 drivers.
So
does the distribution of points, as it stands now. A margin of 63
points separates 10th-place Ryan Newman from series leader Greg Biffle.
The spread from Newman to Bowyer in 11th is a whopping 22 points.
It's not too early for Bowyer and those behind him to start thinking about the other path to the Chase -- as a wild card.
Here's
a quick refresher. The top 10 drivers after 26 races qualify for the
Chase and receive three bonus points for every race won during the
regular season. A driver with three victories, for instance, would start
the Chase with 2,009 points -- a base of 2,000 plus nine bonus points
for the three wins.
The
final two wild card positions go to drivers in the top 20 in points
with the most victories. Wild card drivers, however, get no bonus points
for their wins in the first 26 races and start the Chase with 2,000
points.
Brad
Keselowski made the most of the wild card provision NASCAR introduced
last year with a late charge that included two victories and a dramatic
climb from 23rd to 11th in the standings in the final seven races of the
regular season.
Here
are five drivers -- four of whom made the Chase last year -- who should
start thinking "wild card," given that there likely won't be much room
in the top 10 when the Chase field is set in September.
-- Kyle Busch (13th, 31 points out of 10th):
What Busch does best is win races. So far this season, his No. 18 Joe
Gibbs hasn't had the consistent speed necessary to qualify for the Chase
on points. Saturday's race at Richmond, where Busch has won the last
three spring events, is a golden opportunity.
-- Brad Keselowski (15th, 32 points out of 10th):
Keselowski is the only driver in positions 11-20 with a victory so far
this year. Another would all but guarantee him a Chase spot. Fuel pickup
glitches have cost him dearly this year, and there's no guarantee those
gremlins won't reappear.
-- Jeff Gordon (18th, 49 points out of 10th):
An engine issue at Kansas cost Gordon a top-10 result. He also blew up
at Daytona. Gordon has had excellent speed on several occasions this
season and has but two top-10s to show for it. A victory would go a long
way toward overcoming Gordon's streak of bad luck.
-- Kurt Busch (25th, 75 points out of 10th):
Busch and his new team, Phoenix Racing, have experienced understandable
growing pains, but the No. 51 Chevy had excellent speed at Kansas.
Realistically, Busch must win a race to have any chance to make the
Chase. Doubtless the team has May 6 at Talladega circled on the
calendar.
-- Kasey Kahne (26th, 83 points out of 10th):
A disastrous, star-crossed start to his first season with Hendrick
Motorsports has left Kahne, the only driver in this group of five who
didn't make the Chase last year, in a different zip code from the series
leaders. Two straight top-10s have helped, but it's still doubtful
Kahne can race his way into the top 10 on points. As with Kurt Busch, it
would behoove Kahne to focus on racing his way into the top 20 and
winning a race or two.
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