The First Reid: If only I could have a spotter
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
After Sunday’s
MyAFibStory.com 400 at Chicagoland Speedway, the first race in the Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, I have come to one inescapable conclusion: I
need to hire a spotter.
My wife, Lee Spencer,
and I work at close quarters. I write for the NASCAR Wire Service. She
writes for Motorsport.com. We live together, travel together, and work
together. On rare occasions,
we have differences of opinion, as all couples do.
Similarly, Sprint Cup
drivers Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Danica Patrick live together, travel
together and work together—on the race track. And on rare occasions,
they have differences of opinion
on the asphalt. In fact, they had one such “spat” on Sunday, when their
cars collided and hit the wall. The difference? Both Patrick and
Stenhouse have spotters who can shoulder the blame. On Sunday, Patrick’s
spotter, Brandon Benesch, took the fall.
“I heard my spotter say
that the 14 (Tony Stewart) was below me on track and I didn’t know the
17 (Stenhouse) was there on the high side of the track,” Patrick said
after the race. “My spotter
took the blame on that one.”
How nice. And
convenient. Having a spotter willing to fall on his sword certainly
takes the stress and tension out of the motor coach. And it melts the
icy stares that otherwise could make for
an uncomfortable ride home.
I wonder if Brandon Benesch would consider moonlighting…
NASCAR NUMBERS
By Reid Spencer
109:
The number of green-flag passes made by NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
drivers Kurt Busch and Denny Hamlin in Sunday’s MyAFibStory.com
400 at Chicagoland Speedway, tied for most in the first Chase race.
Busch rallied from a lap down to finish eighth after a pit road spin and
commitment violation. Hamlin started 24th and finished sixth after a
late-race charge.
5:
The number of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories recorded this season
by Brad Keselowski, the top seed in the Chase. Keselowski
won the final regular-season race at Richmond and doubled up on Sunday
at Chicagoland. No other driver in the series has more than three
victories thus far.
138:
The number of laps led by Brad Keselowski in a dominating NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series victory at New Hampshire Motor Speedway
in July. The Magic Mile is host to next Sunday’s second race in the
Chase, and Keselowski goes there as a favorite to extend his current
winning streak to three races.
17:
The finishing position of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series race at Chicagoland Speedway. Even though
Stenhouse and girlfriend Danica Patrick collided with 10 laps left,
Stenhouse finished ahead of Roush Fenway Racing’s Chase drivers, Carl
Edwards (20th) and Greg Biffle (23rd).
3:
The number of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories at New Hampshire Motor
Speedway
recorded by Kurt Busch, Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Ryan Newman and
Tony Stewart, tied for most among full-time active drivers. Jeff Burton
has a track-record four wins at the Magic Mile.
NASCAR NOTES
Brad
Keselowski lived up to his No. 1 seed by registering a win in the first
race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup at Chicagoland Speedway on
Sunday, automatically advancing to the Contender
Round. The No. 2 Miller Lite Ford Fusion driver hopes the win is a good
omen. He last won at Chicagoland in the 2012 Chase-opener, the same
year he clinched the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship. Keselowski,
who also won at Richmond, won consecutive races
for the first time in his career. ... Thirteen different drivers have
taken the checkered flag in the last 13 races at New Hampshire Motor
Speedway and no one has swept the track since Kurt Busch in 2004 – the
same year he won the championship in inaugural
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Brad Keselowski won at the Loudon
track in July and will attempt to break out the brooms in Sunday’s
Sylvania 300. But some major names are missing from the 13-in-13 streak,
notably Jeff Gordon, Kevin Harvick and Dale Earnhardt
Jr. … After narrowly missing out on a spot in the Chase, Kyle Larson
almost played the role of spoiler in the opening race of NASCAR’s
postseason at Chicagoland Speedway, finishing third after battling for
the lead as late as Lap 252. The 22-year-old Sunoco
Rookie of the Year frontrunner will attempt to notch the first NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series victory of his career at New Hampshire Motor Speedway
this Sunday where he finished third back in July.
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