NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race Weekend
May 13, 2013
No points. No problem. Just follow the money.
That’s the easiest way to describe Saturday night’s 29th
NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Twenty-two
drivers will battle for a winner’s payout of more than $1 million
without worrying that failure might damage their Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup™ chances.
The
strategy is simple enough: Checkers or wreckers. Just bring back the
steering wheel – as long as you’re carrying it to Victory Lane.
The
odds favor defending All-Star Race winner Jimmie Johnson, a three-time
event winner. He shares the all-time victory record Hendrick teammate
Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt.
Parity,
however, has been the watchword in recent All-Star races: 12 different
winners in the most recent 14 events, six of them NASCAR Sprint Cup
champions.
A
surprise is who hasn’t won the event, starting with Joe Gibbs Racing.
That may change this year as JGR’s lineup contains two of the season’s
hottest competitors. Matt Kenseth, the 2004 All-Star winner, counts
three victories. Kyle Busch has won twice. The pair has led a combined
1,521 laps during the season’s first 11 races.
Three
All-Star berths remain up for grabs. The top-two finishers of the
Sprint Showdown will transfer. The winner of the Sprint Fan Vote gets
the final starting slot. Among those on the outside looking in are
Sunoco Rookie of the Year rivals Danica Patrick and Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
The
NASCAR Nationwide Series takes a one-week breather in advance of the
May 25 History 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Kyle Busch won his fifth
race of the season at Darlington Raceway, adding to the lustrous resume
of crew chief Adam Stevens. The former JGR NASCAR Sprint Cup engineer
has won 14 times with Busch and Joey Logano during the past two seasons.
The Stevens-led No. 54 JGR Toyota team holds a 20-point NNS owner
championship lead.
Matt
Crafton, a former North Carolina Education Lottery 200 winner, attempts
to add to his championship lead as the NASCAR Camping World Truck
Series heads to Charlotte Motor Speedway Friday night. Kyle Busch chases
Charlotte truck win No. 5 while reigning NASCAR Sprint Cup champion
Brad Keselowski – second a year ago – wants to join his father, Bob
Keselowski, as the only father-son winners in the series record book.
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