NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
Short-Track Standouts Go For First Win Of 2016
As
NASCAR continues its third “win and you’re in” season for the Chase for
the NASCAR Sprint Cup, six currently winless short-track
standouts will attempt to make their first visit to Victory Lane this
year in Sunday’s STP 500 at Martinsville Speedway (1 p.m. ET on FS1) –
Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch, Matt Kenseth, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Carl Edwards
and Joey Logano.
Kyle
Busch has logged a top-four finish in four of five races this season.
He boasts nine career wins on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series’
three short tracks (Martinsville, Bristol and Richmond), but has never
won at Martinsville.
Like
his younger brother, Kurt claims nine short-track wins as well. He has
two wins at Martinsville, most recently in spring of 2014.
However, his 2014 victory is his only top-10 finish at the .526-mile
track in his last 20 starts there.
Kenseth
has produced six short-track victories in his career, but has never won
at Martinsville. The No. 20 Chevrolet driver could
be due for his first grandfather clock though. He has placed sixth or
better in his last four Martinsville starts.
A
five-time winner at short tracks, Dale Earnhardt Jr. notched his first,
and only, Martinsville victory in fall of 2014. Although
he has just one win at “NASCAR’s Wrigley Field,” he claims the
third-best average finish (11.9) and driver rating (99.4) among active
drivers there.
Edwards
has been strong this year with three top fives and four top 10s in the
first five races. He has captured four career checkered
flags at short tracks, but has never won at Martinsville. The No. 19
Joe Gibbs Racing driver has always struggled at the home of NASCAR’s
most famous hot dog with just one top-five finish in 23 starts there.
A
winner of three career short-track races, Logano looked like he would
clinch his first Martinsville victory last fall, but was wrecked
out of the contest after leading his race-high 207th lap. The
25-year-old Connecticut native finished in the top five in his three
Martinsville starts going into last fall’s race.
Martinsville Maven: Johnson Attempts To Reclaim Winning Ways At Southern Virginia Short Track
Fresh
off his 77th career victory (Auto Club), which vaulted him past Dale
Earnhardt for sole possession of seventh on the all-time
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series wins list, Jimmie Johnson heads to
Martinsville Speedway where history suggests he’s one of the favorites
to notch his 78th career win.
The
No. 48 Chevrolet driver ranks first among active drivers at
Martinsville in wins (8), top fives (18), top 10s (22), average finish
(6.9), average running position (8.0), driver rating (118.4), average
green flag speed (91.629 mph) and laps led (2,746). His last win at the
Virginia short track came in spring of 2013 – five races ago.
Johnson
can continue to climb the all-time wins list at a quick pace. The
six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion trails sixth-place
Cale Yarbrough (83 wins) by a mere six wins, and fourth-place Bobby
Allison (84) and Darrell Waltrip (84) by only seven wins.
“Denny’sville” – Hamlin Sets Sights On Second Straight Martinsville Spring Win
Denny
Hamlin overcame an early pit road penalty by rallying from the 22nd
position to pass teammate Matt Kenseth for the lead with
28 laps to go to win last year’s Martinsville spring race.
The
victory marked the 25th of Hamlin’s career, allowing the Virginia
native to tie NASCAR Hall of Famer Joe Weatherly as the all-time
winningest driver from The Cavalier State.
Hamlin
will go for his second straight spring Martinsville checkered flag in
Sunday’s STP 500. In 20 starts at the Virginia short
track, he claims five wins (second-most among active drivers), 11 top
fives and 16 top 10s. Additionally, he ranks second-best among active
drivers at Martinsville in average finish (8.0), average running
position (8.9) and driver rating (110.6).
The 2016 Daytona 500 champion placed third in the last two races (Phoenix and Fontana).
Passing, Close Finishes The Norm For 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
A
number of interesting numbers highlight the first five races of the
2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, capped by the 51 green
flag passes for the lead at Auto Club Speedway, a high at the two-mile
track 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 implementation of
electronic timing and scoring 1993 (.010 seconds)
has been recorded twice in the first five races – at Daytona and
Phoenix.
Through
the first five races, the average margin of victory is 0.367 seconds –
the closest through five races 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
NSCS has also showcased parity through the first five races. Four
different drivers, four separate organizations and all three
manufacturers have won a race.
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 Sunoco Rookie of
the Year standings. Not far behind are Brian Scott (-14) and Chris
Buescher (-16).
Right
around this time last year, Elliott was readying for his first NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series start, at Martinsville. He finished
38th in that one, but has since avoided any rookie jitters. 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.
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Etc.
Bayne Readies For 100th Career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Start
Trevor
Bayne is scheduled to make his 100th career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
start in Sunday’s STP 500 at Martinsville. Bayne has improved
his points position after every race this season, from 27th after
Daytona to his current standing of 21st.
Criminal Minds’ Cook To Serve As Martinsville Grand Marshal
A.J.
Cook, an actress on the hit TV show “Criminal Minds” will say the most
famous words in motorsports as the Grand Marshal of Sunday’s
STP 500 at Martinsville Speedway.
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