Cool-Down Lap
If you want to know who's going to make the Chase, spin the wheel
May 12, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DARLINGTON, S.C.—Want to know who's a lock to make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup this year?
I'll give you six names: Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards, Matt Kenseth, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Clint Bowyer and Kyle Busch.
Typically,
by the time the Cup series leaves Darlington, it's relatively easy to
predict most of the Chase field. Last year, 10 of the drivers in the top
12 in the standings
after the Mother's Day eve visit to the Lady in Black went on to
qualify for the Chase.
That won't happen this year. Trust me.
The six
drivers listed above are locks for two basic reasons. Number one is the
point spread between Bowyer in fifth and Kasey Kahne and Brad
Keselowski, who are tied for sixth.
Bowyer has scored 349 points through 11 races, 23 more than the two
drivers immediately behind him.
Second,
five of the top six drivers (the first five listed above) have shown
the sort of consistency necessary to make the Chase with relative ease.
Johnson and Edwards have
no DNFs this year. Kenseth has two but has run well in every race save
Fontana, and his two DNFs are offset by three victories.
Earnhardt
has been remarkably consistent, with seven top 10s and no DNFs in 11
races, but he and crew chief Steve Letarte have yet to find the speed
they'll certainly need
to contend for a championship. Bowyer likewise has been solid, if not
spectacular.
Kyle
Busch, eighth in the standings, has two DNFs but he also has five top
fives (tied for second most in the series), two of which are victories.
If Busch should fall out
of the top 10 in points, he'll make the Chase as a wild card. You can
take that to the bank.
Beyond
those six, however, assumptions are impossible and predictions nothing
short of precarious. For one thing, five of the 12 drivers who made the
Chase last year—Jeff Gordon,
Greg Biffle, Martin Truex Jr., Tony Stewart and Denny Hamlin—are
currently outside the top 10.
Common
sense tells you that most, if not all of the drivers in that elite group
will make a move in the 15 races before the Chase field is set.
To add
to the intrigue, no driver in positions 11-20 in the standings has a
victory so far this year. Should that remain the case, Paul Menard and
Gordon (currently 11th and
12th) would win the two Wild Card Chase spots by default.
Far
more likely, however, is the prospect of such drivers as Hamlin
(currently tied for 26th) or Stewart (21st) winning a race or two,
cracking the top 20 and grabbing a wild
card spot. And if you want a good long-shot bet, try road course ace
Marcos Ambrose (23rd), who could use victories at Sonoma and Watkins
Glen as a springboard into his first Chase.
Aric
Almirola and Paul Menard, neither of whom has ever made a Chase, are
currently ninth and tied for 10th in points, respectively. The next 15
races will tell us whether
they have the staying power to go with their early-season success.
Of
those currently outside the Chase-eligible positions, Hamlin has the
most compelling story. After missing four races with a compression
fracture of his first lumbar vertebra
and giving way to a relief driver in a fifth, Hamlin celebrated his
return to full-time Cup racing with a second-place finish in Saturday
night's Bojangles' Southern 500 at Darlington.
Hamlin
moved from 31st in the standings into a tie with David Ragan for 26th.
Hamlin is 61 points behind Jeff Burton in 20th, the position he must
reach to be eligible for
a Wild Card, but he has 15 races to make the move.
Moreover,
Hamlin must win at least one race, probably two. As dominant as Joe
Gibbs Racing has been this season—winning five of the 11 races so
far—that's a reasonable prospect,
too.
That
Hamlin is even a consideration for the Chase after sitting out four
events, however, tells you just how wide open and unpredictable this
year's competition will be.
The opinions expressed are solely those of the author.
No comments:
Post a Comment