NASCAR

NASCAR
Your heart will pound. Your seat will shake. Your vision will blur. And every second of every lap will stay with you forever. Nothing compares to the NASCAR Experience live

NASCAR

NASCAR
CLICKON PICTURE

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Phoenix Notes And News

Phoenix Is Harvick’s Race To Win
If Kevin Harvick had to hand-pick a track to race in a “win-or-go-home” situation, he would likely choose Phoenix International Raceway.
Harvick boasts a series-best five wins at the one-mile tri-oval and has taken the checkered flag in three of the last four races there, including the past two.
Currently eighth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings, Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race For Heroes 500 cutoff race at Phoenix (3 p.m. ET on ESPN) could not have come at a better time for the No. 4 Chevrolet driver. Harvick trails Jeff Gordon by just six points for the coveted fourth – and final – spot needed for advancement to the Championship Round race at Homestead.
But, he can make can punch his ticket to Miami without having to rely on the misfortune of others by winning for a third consecutive time at the one-mile track.
Coming off a runner-up finish at Texas, Harvick travels to the Sonoran Desert with some needed momentum after opening the Eliminator Round with a 33rd-place finish at Martinsville. Equipped with a fast Stewart-Haas racing Chevrolet, the 38-year-old has led the most laps in the series this season (1,819) and has captured the most Coors Light Pole Awards (8). Harvick boasts three wins this year, the most-recent coming at Charlotte on Oct. 11.
To put Harvick’s Phoenix success into context, the track was repaved for the 2011 fall race, making it completely different with changes that included concrete pit stalls, progressive banking and degree alterations to the dogleg and turns. Since then, he has won three of the six events there and also posted a runner-up finish. In his 18 Phoenix races prior to the repave, Harvick averaged a finish of 13.8. In the six races since, he has an average of just 6.2.
With a victory on Sunday, Harvick can sweep the track for the second time in his career (2006).

Keselowski Back In Hunt, With Similar Challenges
Following a 31st-place finish in the Eliminator Round opener at Martinsville, it looked like series wins leader Brad Keselowski had to visit Victory Lane at Texas or Phoenix to advance to the series championship.
After a bounce-back third-place Fort Worth finish, Keselowski now ranks seventh in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings, just five points behind Jeff Gordon for the final spot to be among the Championship 4.
The 2012 NSCS title winner has one more shot to either close the points gap or win to make the Championship 4 at Homestead – this Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race For Heroes 500 at Phoenix International Raceway (3 p.m. ET on ESPN).
In 10 starts at Phoenix, Keselowski boasts three top fives and a sixth-place finish, all since the track was repaved in 2011. He won the pole and took third at the one-mile tri-oval in March.
The 30-year-old Michigan native only controls his Chase destiny by winning, a feat he already has accomplished during this Chase. Just three weeks ago, Keselowski saw his 2014 championship window close following a 16th-place Charlotte finish, followed by a post-race antics fracas involving him, Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin. The following week? He won at Talladega to advance to this Eliminator Round.
Now, another driver has a target on Keselowski’s back – Jeff Gordon.
On a late restart at Texas, Keselowski attempted to shoot the gap between Gordon and Jimmie Johnson for the victory – similar to his move that won him the Chase opener at Chicagoland. He failed to make it through, popping Gordon’s left-rear tire on contact and plummeting the No. 24 driver from second to 29th.
After the race, Gordon took exception to Keselowski’s move and the two drivers brawled along with their pit crews.
"That's just uncalled for,” Gordon said. “You're racing for a win and a championship. You don't go slam someone and cut their left-rear tire. If that's what it takes, then no problem. We can do the same thing to him."
Keselowski maintained he was trying to win, the same task he will attempt in Phoenix.
“I am doing everything I can to win this championship racing at 100 percent and that is something I am not going to be ashamed for,” he said. “If I was out there wrecking guys to do it, that would be one thing, but a little bit of rubbing is how this sport was created and probably how it should move forward. I don’t mind getting raced that way and I don’t mind racing that way.”

Gordon Looks To Rebound From Hard-Luck Texas Finish
Jeff Gordon’s Championship 4 status went from near-lock to questionable in an instant on Sunday at Texas after contact from Brad Keselowski cut his rear-left tire, dropping him from first all the way to 29th.
The No. 24 driver now ranks fourth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings – just one point ahead of Matt Kenseth and Carl Edwards. If not for the cut tire, he likely would be in first with a hefty lead.
To advance to the Championship race at Homestead, Gordon must either win Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race For Heroes 500 at Phoenix International Raceway (3 p.m. ET on ESPN), finish in the top-three in points at the conclusion of the race, or finish fourth in points and have no Chase-contending driver currently behind him in the standings visit Victory Lane in Arizona.
Gordon can rebound from his hard-luck Fort Worth finish at Phoenix where he has claimed two victories. Both came before the track was repaved and modified, but he does hold three top-10 finishes in the six races since then, including a fifth-place showing in March.
The 43-year-old Gordon is attempting to win his fifth NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship. If he is successful in his “drive for five,” Gordon will set the record – 13 years – for most time between titles. He won his fourth NSCS crown in 2001 and ranks fourth on NASCAR’s all-time premier series championship list.

No comments: