Brad Keselowski aims to dent Martinsville dominance of Johnson, Hamlin
Oct. 25, 2012: Weekend preview
NASCAR Wire Service
If
history holds true to form at the most historic of NASCAR tracks,
Martinsville Speedway could be Brad Keselowski's Waterloo. Conversely,
the .526-mile paper-clip circuit could also be the best opportunity for
Jimmie Johnson and Denny Hamlin to loosen Keselowski's grasp on the
NASCAR Sprint Cup series lead.
So
far this season, Keselowski has answered all challenges and turned back
all comers with the look of a champion. But for a coronation
to occur four races from now at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Keselowski
will have to beat the Martinsville masters at their own game in Sunday's
TUMS Fast Relief 500 (1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN), round 7 in the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason.
Keselowski's
sample size at the lone short track in the Chase is relatively small,
having only been a full-timer in the Cup series for
three years. To place it in perspective, Johnson has more victories
(six) at Martinsville than Keselowski has starts (five) there. Hamlin
isn't far behind, with four wins at the Virginia short track.
Keselowski
hasn't been awful at Martinsville, but his average finish of 13.4 is a
few steps behind the stellar series-best 5.8 of Johnson
and the admirable 6.4 of Hamlin. But despite what the numbers say,
Keselowski -- who leads Johnson by seven points and third-place Hamlin
by 20 -- has frequently defied conventional wisdom in 2012. Sunday's
500-lapper may be the next exhibit in building his
case for his first Sprint Cup title.
"Martinsville
is just one of those tracks where it seems like there's numerous
variables that we've struggled with," said Keselowski,
who notched a career-best ninth-place finish at Martinsville earlier
this season. ". . . Those things happen, but we've had speed at
Martinsville and I'm encouraged by that. And you know eventually if you
have enough speed at a track over and over again that
you will get the results out of it, and I'm confident of that."
Keselowski's
confidence, however, is matched by that of his rivals. Hamlin, who
famously called his shot before his New Hampshire victory
via Twitter, turned to social media earlier in the week to tweet that
it was "time for MAX points." Johnson's attitude is similarly buoyant
heading to one of his most favorable tracks.
"It's
pressure time, it's go time, it's all that stuff with four (races) to
go," Johnson said Tuesday. "The points as tight as they
are, we expect to be one of the cars racing for the win."
TRUCKS READY FOR HOME STRETCH
The
last time the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series raced at Martinsville
Speedway, Ty Dillon was making his first start in a NASCAR
national series on a short track. Through the power of hindsight 16
races later, it's easy to point to that second-place run in late March
as the start of something big.
After
a two-week layoff, the tailgate tour gets back to business with
Saturday's Kroger 200 (2 p.m. ET, SPEED) at Martinsville with
the 20-year-old Dillon as the points leader in his rookie truck season.
But with four races left, plenty can change.
Fittingly,
Dillon's runner-up finish that day came just ahead of third-place James
Buescher, now his closest rival in the standings.
Buescher trails by just one point, with Red Horse Racing teammates
Timothy Peters (26 points back) and Parker Kligerman (34 points down) in
third and fourth, respectively.
The
last time out at Martinsville, Dillon played second fiddle to Sprint
Cup regular and Richard Childress Racing teammate Kevin Harvick,
who dominated in March by leading 248 of 250 laps. Dillon led the other
two laps, impressing along the way as one of the few drivers who could
keep pace with Harvick's stalwart truck.
"The No. 3 Bass Pro Shops team has grown a lot since the last race at Martinsville," Dillon said. "I know we have
what it takes to contend for the win."
Buescher
has impatiently idled just a single point -- the equivalent of one
position on the track -- behind Dillon since the truck teams
left Talladega Superspeedway on Oct. 6. Starting Saturday, the truck
series will compete for four straight weekends, meaning the title
contender will be forced to wait no more.
"I'm
happy that the off weeks are over and we can get back to racing,"
Buescher said. "Martinsville is a tough track to get a hold of;
it's a totally different animal. Coming off a top-three the last time
we were there, I feel good about going back. I'm just looking to keep
track position and keep it up front."
Harvick
returns to the entry list, looking for a truck season sweep at
Martinsville. The only other Sprint Cup driver entered is Denny
Hamlin, the 200-lap event's defending champion.
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