NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
Thrilling Competition Continues At ACS With Track-Record 51 Passes For The Lead
The
high quality of racing produced in the first four races of the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series season continued at Auto Club Speedway on Sunday,
where drivers tallied a total of 51
green flag passes for the lead, a high at ACS since the inception of
loop data in 2005.
It
marked the second time in the first five races this season a track
record for green flag passes for the lead was set (Atlanta, 44 green
flag passes for the lead).
“It’s
great,” Dale Earnhardt Jr. said about the lower-downforce aero package
implemented in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. “Every week has been fun,
fun, fun. The cars are fun to
drive, slipping and sliding. It’s a good challenge and I’m enjoying
it.”
Additionally,
the seventh-closest margin of victory since the Sprint Cup began
tracking the stat in 1993 (.010 seconds) has been recorded twice in the
first five races – at Daytona
(not with the lower-downforce package) and at Phoenix (with the
lower-downforce package).
Through
the first five races, the average margin of victory is 0.367 seconds –
the closest since the inception of electronic timing and scoring in
1993.
“The
new rules package today I thought was tremendous,” Brad Keselowski said
after the Las Vegas race. “I think you saw, because of the rules
package, where the cars fell off a
lot at the end of the run and you really had to drive them sideways.
Took a lot of balance as a driver, a lot of precise footwork and
accuracy with where you put your car, how you place it, which is exactly
what we want.”
The
Sprint Cup has also showcased parity through the first five races. Four
different drivers, four separate organizations and all three
manufacturers have won a race.
Man Of Steel: Johnson Surpasses Earnhardt With Super Performance at Auto Club
Moving
faster than a speeding bullet off the restart beginning NASCAR
overtime, Jimmie Johnson cleared Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick from the
third position and rocketed his Superman-emblazoned
Chevrolet to the finish line to win Sunday’s Auto Club 400 at Auto Club
Speedway in Fontana, California.
With
the victory – number 77 of his career – Johnson surpassed Dale
Earnhardt for sole possession of seventh on the all-time NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series wins list.
The
six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver now trails sixth-place Cale
Yarbrough (83 wins) by six wins, and fourth-place Bobby Allison (84) and
Darrell Waltrip (84) by seven
wins.
Golden State Warrior: Harvick Posts Another Top-Two Finish
Bakersfield,
California native Kevin Harvick led a race-high 142 laps in the Auto
Club 400, but could not pull of his best Steph Curry imitation in NASCAR
overtime.
The No. 4 Chevrolet driver failed to hold off Jimmie Johnson on the penultimate lap of the race and finished second.
Harvick
did have one thing in common with Curry after the race though. He
finished it leading his league in points. Harvick, who qualified for the
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup
with his win at Phoenix, currently holds an 11-point lead over Johnson
in the standings. Johnson is followed by Carl Edwards (-24), fellow
Chase-lock Denny Hamlin (-25) and Kyle Busch (-25).
Harvick
is the only driver who has recorded a top-10 finish in each of the
first five races. He has carried his loop data dominance from the last
two seasons into the 2016 campaign,
pacing the Sprint Cup Series in average running position (5.8), fastest
laps (193), laps led (413) and driver rating (124.4). Harvick’s laps
led total more than doubles the next-highest mark (Jimmie Johnson, 171).
Stenhouse, Almendinger Produce Season-High Finishes In SoCal
Ricky
Stenhouse Jr. placed fifth at Auto Club last Sunday – his best career
finish in a non-short track or restrictor-plate race.
The
fourth-year full-time driver is showing vast improvements in speed.
Through the first five races he owns an average start of 13.6, 10
positions higher than his average from
all 36 contests last year. Currently 14th in the series standings,
Stenhouse would qualify for his first Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup if
the season ended today. He has never posted more than one top-five
finish in a season.
Similarly, AJ Allmendinger placed eighth – his first top-10 showing since finishing seventh at Pocono last August.
Allmendinger
has produced consecutive top-10 finishes three times in his career,
while Stenhouse has completed the task just once. Both drivers will try
to achieve the feat again
in the STP 500 at Martinsville Speedway on Sunday, April 3 (1 p.m. ET
on FS1).
Guess Who’s Back: Wood Brothers returning to Martinsville
Tell your friends.
The
Wood Brothers are returning to Martinsville for the first time since
2011 when Trevor Bayne finished 35th in the famed No. 21 Ford.
Sunoco
Rookie of the Year contender Ryan Blaney takes the track this time for
the Woods, who have a storied history at the Virginia short track.
Glen
Wood made the first Martinsville start for the Wood Brothers on May 17,
1953. In 109 starts there, the Wood Brothers claim two wins (Cale
Yarborough, 1968; David Pearson,
1973 from the pole), 28 top fives and 1,891 laps led. Wood Brothers
drivers have completed 44,978 of 52,746 laps (85.3%) while competing at
Martinsville.
Elliott Leapfrogs Blaney For Sunoco Rookie Lead
The seesaw atop the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year standings continues to teeter.
Following
his career-high sixth-place performance at Auto Club, Chase Elliott
took back the lead from Ryan Blaney for the second time this year.
Elliott leads Blaney by five points
in the rookie standings. Not far behind are Brian Scott (-14) and Chris
Buescher (-16).
On the season, Elliott boasts three top 10s, while Blaney owns two top 10s. They both have high finishes of sixth.
Both
Elliott and Blaney are alumni of the NASCAR Next initiative. Blaney
claims eight combined NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series
wins, while Elliott has six.
Penske Posts Quality Auto Club Showings
Team
Penske shopmates Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski finished fourth and
ninth, respectively, in last Sunday’s Auto Club 400 – the second time
the duo has placed in the top 10
together this season. Keselowski and Logano finished 1-2 at Las Vegas.
Logano,
who led the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series with six wins last year, is still
looking for his first visit to Victory Lane. He has three top-six
showings this season.
Keselowski
has posted three top-10 finishes this season and clinched a Chase berth
with his victory at Las Vegas. He led the series with six wins in 2014.
Spring Break: The Sprint Cup Drivers Who Completed First Five Weeks With Passing Grades
The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series has this weekend off before heading to Martinsville for the STP 500 on Sunday, April 3.
Through
the first five races, four NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers have all
but captured Chase berths with wins: Denny Hamlin (Daytona), Jimmie
Johnson (Atlanta and Auto Club),
Brad Keselowski (Las Vegas) and Kevin Harvick (Phoenix).
Each
win in the regular season gives a driver three bonus points for the
Round of 16 in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Johnson has earned
the most bonus points so far (6).
Kyle Busch leads the series with four top fives, while Harvick ranks first in top 10s (5).
The
drivers on the Chase Grid, in order, include: Johnson, Harvick, Hamlin,
Keselowski, Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch, Joey Logano, Kurt Busch, Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Austin Dillon, Martin
Truex Jr., Jamie McMurray, Aric Almirola, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Matt
Kenseth and Chase Elliott.
The
next break on the schedule comes 11 races from now (including the
Sprint All-Star Race), between the races at Michigan International
Speedway (June 12) and Sonoma Raceway (June
26).
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