Talladega: The Chase's Wild Card
October 17, 2013: Weekend Preview
Staff Report
NASCAR Wire Service
Last
Saturday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway Brad Keselowski crossed the
finish line first to become the first non-Chase contender to win a race
during NASCAR's postseason since Kasey Kahne won the penultimate race
of 2011 at Phoenix International Raceway.
Because
of the simple fact that anything can happen at Talladega Superspeedway
it would not be too far outside the realm of possibility to see another
non-Chase contender snatch the victory from the claws of one of the 13
Chase drivers in Sunday's Camping World RV Sales 500 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN).
However,
going based off past history the 13 drivers competing for the
championship can't be counted out either. Collectively, they have 18
wins
at the 2.66-mile track. The top-five drivers in the standings all have
visited Victory Lane there, with Jeff Gordon the leader among active
drivers with six victories.
In
last year's Chase race, it looked like Tony Stewart would reach the
finish line first, but a 25-car accident coming out of Turn 4 on the
last
lap changed the outcome with Matt Kenseth sneaking through the melee to
claim his first win at Talladega. It was a wild finish that no one
could've predicted. Except that it was Talladega and drivers have
learned to expect the unexpected.
The
same is true about the spring race earlier this year. Prior to the
race, no one was even considering the possibility of a one-two finish by
Front Row Motorsports drivers David Ragan and David Gilliland. But, a
one-two finish with Gilliland providing an extra push for Ragan's No. 34
Ford to cross the finish line first is exactly what fans got.
If
Ragan pulls off the sweep this weekend, he'd be the seventh driver to
sweep both races at Talladega during a season since the track opened in
1969 -- Pete Hamilton (1970), Buddy Baker (1975), Darrell Waltrip
(1982), Dale Earnhardt (1990 and 1999), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (2002) and
Gordon (2007) are the other six.
If
Kenseth, who currently leads the standings by four points over Jimmie
Johnson, finds Victory Lane this Sunday he'd be the fourth driver to win
the fall Talladega race in back-to-back seasons. Dale Earnhardt did it
three times (1983-84, 1990-91, 1999-2000), while Dale Earnhardt Jr.
(2001-02) and Clint Bowyer (2010-11) accomplished the feat once.
The
younger Earnhardt doesn't take his success at Talladega lightly, and
understands the unpredictability that comes with racing there.
"That
track can be a bit of a lottery on how you finish and how that affects
your points," said Earnhardt Jr., who has won five times at the
superspeedway
including four straight from the fall 2001 race to the spring 2003
event. "I really like racing at Talladega, but how you finish there in
the Chase, that track being a part of the Chase it's really a guessing
game on what's going to happen to you there."
The
racing at Talladega makes great theater and keeps fans and drivers both
on the edge of their seats, but one wrong move could end a driver's
or a couple of drivers' shot at a championship in a matter of seconds.
"I'm
sure from a fan standpoint it's great to have that Wild Card race in
there to shake things up, but just so much is out of your control
there,"
said Jimmie Johnson, who has won twice at Talladega, most recently in
the spring 2008 race. "And that race you'd hate to see someone's bad
decision take out two or three Chase contenders and ruin their
opportunity to win a championship."
"You
have to approach (Talladega) with the mindset that it's like any other
race," added Greg Biffle, who is still searching for his first victory
at the track. We're going to race the race as best we can, make the
right moves, be smart, you know, do everything we normally do and, you
know, whatever comes out of it comes out of it. And that's kind of all
you can really do."
Other
Chase drivers who have won at Talladega include Kevin Harvick (one
win), Kyle Busch (one) and Clint Bowyer (two), leaving Biffle, Kurt
Busch,
Carl Edwards, Joey Logano, Ryan Newman and Kasey Kahne all searching
for their first trip to the Alabama track's Victory Lane.
Although
the 13 Chase drivers are all hoping to leave Talladega without
suffering any major setbacks in the standings with decent finishes they
will still be gunning for the win at the end of the race. They must,
however, never forget the spoilers, especially with the unpredictability
of a place like Talladega.
"Talladega
and Martinsville they keep me up at night," Edwards said. "You don't
know what's going to happen at those places. Those are the Wild
Cards in the Chase."
CAN SAUTER GET HOTTER?
With
five races remaining in the 2013 season and 103 points behind leader
Matt Crafton, Johnny Sauter's chances at a championship this year are
slim. That, however, shouldn't slow him down from trying to finish the
season in the same fashion he started it and carry his late-season
success over into 2014.
The
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will be in Talladega this weekend for
Saturday's fred's 250 Powered by Coca-Cola (4 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1),
the second restrictor-plate race of the year. Sauter, who currently
ranks eighth in the standings, started the 2013 season off with a bang
by winning the season-opening restrictor-plate race at Daytona and then
following that up with a win at Martinsville
in the second race of the year. At Daytona, he held off a hard-charging
Kyle Busch. He followed those victories up with fourth- and fifth-place
finishes at Rockingham and Kansas. Since then, he's cooled down a bit.
After
the fourth race he gave up his spot atop the standings to Crafton, who
has held it since. Sauter finished outside the top 10 in seven of the
next 10 events dropping him from second to 10th in points twice (after
Michigan and once again after Canadian Tire Motorsport Park) before
rebounding with three consecutive top-10 finishes in the last three
races.
This
weekend, he will be looking for another strong finish at the 2.66-mile
Alabama track. In four series starts, he's never finished lower than
15th. His best finish came in this event last season where he finished
second to first-time series winner Parker Kligerman. Sauter's first
three trips there resulted in finishes of 14th, third and 15th.
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