Fast Facts
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
Next Race: UNOH 200 Presented by ZLOOP
The Place: Bristol Motor Speedway
The Date: Wednesday, August 20
The Time: 8:30 p.m. (ET)
TV: FOX Sports 1, 8 p.m. (ET)
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Ch. 90
Distance: 106.6 miles (200 laps)
ThorSport Packs 1-2 Punch
ThorSport
has not one, but two drivers at the top of NASCAR’s Camping World Truck
Series standings following a record-setting performance at Michigan
this weekend.
Team
drivers Johnny Sauter and Matt Crafton finished 1-2 in Saturday’s
Careers For Veterans 200, blazing away from the field in the fastest
race in series history with
an average speed of 161.110 mph. The new mark demolished the previous
record of 154.737 mph set at Texas Motor Speedway in 2012.
On top
of their display of speed, Sauter and Crafton ousted Ryan Blaney as the
standings leader, taking the top two spots, respectively. Going into
Wednesday’s UNOH
200 presented by ZLOOP at Bristol Motor Speedway (8:30 p.m. ET on Fox
Sports 1), Sauter leads Crafton in the standings by nine points.
The
Sandusky, Ohio-based outfit owned by Duke and Rhonda Thorson and
partnered with Mike Curb now has trucks ranked first and third in the
owner standings: Sauter’s
No. 98 and Crafton’s No. 88 Toyota Tundras. ThorSport also owns the
14th-ranked truck in the series, the No. 13 Toyota Tundra driven by Jeb
Burton.
“(I’m)
just proud of this effort from everybody at ThorSport,” said Sauter
following the race. “This is a great day for us. This puts us in the
points lead, just halfway
through the season — with some really good races coming up for us.”
His
first of the season, Sauter’s victory also marks his lone checkered flag
at Michigan. He has now won at least one series race in six consecutive
seasons, trailing
Dennis Setzer’s all-time record of eight. Sauter boasts 10 top-10
finishes and the highest average finish on the season (7.2).
ThorSport
will attempt to keep its momentum heading into Bristol. Sauter has two
top-five finishes in six starts there, while Crafton owns six top-10
finishes in 11
starts. Burton took 12th last season in his first-career start at
Bristol.
The Last Coliseum Hosts Next Generation
Bristol brings a young flavor to this week’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.
Eight
combined current and former NASCAR Next members will attempt to tackle
the .533-mile course. Present NASCAR Next members Cole Custer, 16, Gray
Gaulding, 16, and
Ben Rhodes, 17, make their first truck starts at the track while alumni
Ryan Blaney, 20, Darrell Wallace Jr., 20, Jeb Burton, 22, Corey LaJoie,
22, and Ben Kennedy, 22, are all also entered.
This
season, the program has produced three victories claimed by Wallace
(two) and current member Erik Jones (one). Kyle Busch will be racing in
place of Jones, 18,
who became the youngest driver to win a NASCAR national series event
last year at Phoenix (17 years, five months, nine days), in the No. 51
Toyota Tundra for the second consecutive race. In fact, Busch hopes to
keep his record as the youngest NCWTS Bristol
winner (21 years, 10 months, 23 days) by fending off his junior peers.
Contributing
to the youth in the field is NASCAR’s rule that drivers between
16-18-years-old can compete on tracks 1.1 miles or less.
This
week’s 2014-15 NASCAR Next entries have a combined 10 races of Truck
Series experience - all this year. Custer has two top-10 finishes in
four starts and won the
21 Means 21 Pole Award at Gateway, making him the youngest winner of a
NASCAR national series pole (16 years, four months and 22 days). Rhodes
has posted one top 10 in his two starts, while Gaulding is searching for
his first top-10 finish after coming up
short in four starts this season.
Blaney Focused on Championship
At the
ripe age of 20, Ryan Blaney took his latest leap in his quest to NASCAR
stardom when Wood Brothers Racing announced last Thursday that he will
drive the No. 21
Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Fusion for the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup
season.
Although excited about his jump to NASCAR’s premier series, he still has unfinished business.
“Most of my focus is on that truck and trying to win a championship,” declared Blaney at Michigan.
Blaney
lost his points lead at Michigan, where he finished 21st after winning
the pole. He now sits at third in the standings, trailing Johnny Sauter
by 16 points and
Matt Crafton by nine. The performance also snapped his seven-race
top-10 finish streak, the longest one on the series this season.
The No.
29 Ford F-150 driver will attempt to get back on track on Wednesday at
Bristol, where he boasts two top-10 finishes in as many starts,
including a third-place
result last year.
Bristol should be welcoming to Blaney, who excels on short tracks, claiming nine top-10 finishes in 12 starts (75%).
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Etc.
Bristol Bits:
Former motocross
competitor Justin Boston will make his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
debut with Venturini Motorsports at Bristol Motor Speedway driving the
No. 25 Toyota.
Boston was motivated to switch from motorcycles to stock cars after
attending a NCWTS race with his family at Dover, which, like Bristol, is
a concrete, high-banked track. … Corey LaJoie, son of two-time
Nationwide Series champion Randy LaJoie, will compete
in his second NCWTS race of the season, driving the No. 92 truck owned
by Ricky Benton. … Country music artist Dierks Bentley will close out
Wednesday night at Bristol, headlining a concert immediately following
the UNOH 200. CMT will record a portion of the
concert and feature one of Bentley's top hits during a “Hot 20
Countdown” episode next month.
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