Notebook: At Talladega, Dale Earnhardt Jr. will throw caution to the wind
Oct. 6, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
TALLADEGA,
Ala. -- As far as Dale Earnhardt Jr. is concerned, Sunday's Good Sam
Roadside Assistance 500 at Talladega Superspeedway won't be a race for
the faint of heart.
Seventh
in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings, 39 points behind leader Brad
Keselowski, Earnhardt has an aggressive mind-set toward Sunday's race,
even though there are seven
races left in the Chase.
"I
feel pretty good, I guess because I have nothing to lose," Earnhardt
told reporters Friday at Talladega. "And that fits right into how you
race this racetrack. It's kind of
a no-holds-barred, lay-it-out-there kind of thing.
"Anytime
you're cautious, you tend to get yourself in trouble, and the guys that
are a lot more aggressive seem to find themselves toward the front of
the mess when it all goes
down and end up being the ones that, for some reason, will finish. But
we're just going to throw it all out there, man."
Accordingly, a conservative run, trying to maintain contact with the series leaders, isn't part of the No. 88 team's plan.
"We're
in a position where it really doesn't matter," Earnhardt said. "We
can't be conservative at all. We've really got to take a lot of risks.
With just a few races left, and
as good as everybody is running, like Brad and second-place Jimmie
(Johnson) and the No. 11 (third-place Denny Hamlin), we really have to
get pretty aggressive, and that should play right into this race track's
hands.
"It's
a place that really kind of asks for that, and you've got to really
take some risks and be pretty daring out there to make some things
happen."
NO FRIENDS FOR THE POINTS LEADER?
Even
though recent rules changes have minimized tandem drafting, it's still
important to have allies on the track in a restrictor-plate race.
Chase leader Keselowski knows he'll have one friend on Sunday -- and perhaps only one.
Keselowski
and Penske Racing teammate Sam Hornish Jr. are the only two Dodge
drivers in the field. If Keselowski needs a push or room to change lanes
during the race, Hornish
will provide it.
"I'll
be glad to have Sam's help, that's for sure, and I know that he's been a
good teammate," Keselowski said. "I'm looking forward to working with
him. I think we've worked
pretty well together this year, whether it's Nationwide or Cup.
"But as far as the other drivers, I go into the race not expecting to have any help from anyone and playing it from there."
STREAKS ON THE LINE
The Busch brothers, Kurt and Kyle, both have significant streaks in danger of ending this year.
From
2002 through 2011, Kurt won at least one race per year in the Sprint
Cup Series. So far this year, in the No. 51 Chevrolet owned by James
Finch, Busch has a best finish of
third at Sonoma. He'll race for Finch Sunday at Talladega before
starting his tenure at Furniture Row Racing Oct. 13 at Charlotte.
Kyle's
eight-year winning streak in the Nationwide Series likewise is in
jeopardy. Driving for his own team for the first time this year, and
sharing Nationwide duties with Kurt,
Kyle is winless in 17 starts. Kurt has the only Nationwide victory for
Kyle Busch Motorsports, having triumphed at Richmond in April.
In
four years of Nationwide competition for Joe Gibbs Racing from 2008
through 2011, Kyle accumulated 40 of his series-record 51 wins, with a
high-water mark of 13 in 2010. The
Nationwide Series has this week off but will run companion events with
the final five Chase races, starting Oct. 12 at Charlotte.
In
JGR's No. 18 Cup car, Kyle extended his Cup consecutive-season winning
streak to eight with a victory at Richmond the day after Kurt won the
Nationwide race there.
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