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Keselowski-Busch tempers cool down… for now

Photo Credit: Don Dunn

One week after tempers flared at Martinsville between Brad Keselowski and Kurt Busch, tensions eased at Texas, where neither driver showed signs of hunting down the other on-track or elsewhere.

A wide gap in car performance between the two drivers during Monday’s race allowed the rolling boil of anger to slow to a simmer, even if only temporarily. They saw very little of each other, as Kurt Busch experienced plenty of trouble throughout the race while Keselowski maintained a competitive effort and led 85 laps.

Keselowski, who at Martinsville appeared more ticked off than his adversary and eventual race winner Busch, showed signs of calming in the week between races.

Keselowski stated on his blog BradRacing.com:

“Moving ahead, as far as Kurt is concerned, my feeling is this: I got my message out. What’s done is done. I’m ready to move on. Kurt controls what goes on from here. If he feels like he needs to do something else, that’s up to him.”

Brad also stated on his Twitter that there would be no repercussions at Texas.

The truth is, driver statements on official web sites should always be taken with at least a bit of skepticism. When drivers are on the verge of throwing punches, subsequently claiming on Twitter that the situation is behind them will not prevent that rage from returning the next time they meet on track.

As Mike Joy put it during Monday’s live broadcast, “Race drivers have longer memories than elephants.”

Regardless of this week’s race leaving fans wondering about the future of the situation, one thing has become clear; fighting season has arrived again in NASCAR Nation, and only two weeks later than last year. In place of the infamous Logano-Hamlin confrontation at Bristol last spring, fans of driver drama only had to wait for the following short track race this year for a Penske driver to lose his cool.

Next week the Cup moves to Darlington, a fast, tight track that invites drivers to some of the hardest racing on the circuit. If there were to be any retaliation on the track, drivers are more likely to initiate it at Darlington than Texas, where speeds reach an excess of 200 mph and safety becomes a serious concern.

If an on-track incident does escalate, there always stands the possibility of a garage area melee.

This would prove to be a truly unique bout, with Keselowski weighing in at roughly 155 pounds and Kurt Busch coming in with a 0-1 fight record after his legendary off-camera fist-blow to the face delivered by Jimmy Spencer over a decade ago.

Chances are, we won’t see a throwdown, or at least that’s what the trends suggest. The 2012 Bowyer-Gordon garage area rundown never resulted in a fight, and last year’s Logano-Hamlin wreck never resulted in blows, though it did result in an awkward post race lunge by Tony Stewart followed by a devastating Joey Logano water bottle toss. Neither seemed intent on actually reaching the other.

The question remains whether Busch and Keselowski, who in interviews at Martinsville threatened physical punishment, are willing to actually do the job. Another factor to consider is the possibility of dire repercussions from the NASCAR governing body, which could be enough to keep the would-be tough guys out of the proverbial ring.

There was a time when good ol’ boys swung fists to settle those unavoidable differences that arise on the track (see: Cale Yarborough-Donnie Allison, Daytona 1979). This may stamp a rougher image on the sport, but one thing is certain of any driver-on-driver fight; it creates a buzz.

Viewership remains a serious concern regarding the future of NASCAR. New marketing schemes and rule changes pop up so often that it would be difficult not to notice NASCAR’s desire for a new image. Maybe letting drivers settle their scores on their own terms would help NASCAR grab a few more viewers.

It’s a contact sport. Drivers risk their personal safety every weekend on the track. A fat lip pales in comparison to any injury a non-SAFER barrier wall can deliver. Why not take a page out of the NHL’s book and let them settle their differences with punches without the threat of suspension?

The Final Word – That was no pass in the grass at Texas

Sometimes when you mess with the bull, you get the horns. This past weekend, there was one ornery Texas Longhorn who made his displeasure known.

First to be gored were those fans who mosied on down to Dallas for a Sunday race. If they had no Plan B, the race was run on Monday while they were on the return trip home to Poughkeepsie. Rain took care of business on the scheduled day, and I wonder how many were like me and did not plan on a “what if” strategy. Fortunately, I did not need it, but some sure did this past Sunday.

When a roper misses, it often is forgotten in a week. Dale Earnhardt Jr. wrecked riding a bull instead, and when he poked his nose down to the inside in the opening laps, he went where no car should ever go.  It was his version of “the Crash in the Grass”, as his front end dug in to shatter his car before it even got thrown for a hard hit along the outside fence. The fact it then burst into flames was just a final touch of the torch, so to speak. Ten laps of caution to open, two laps of green, then a trip to the garage and an early flight home for Junior, dead last in 43rd.

Jimmie Johnson was like a rodeo barrel man. You know, that nice guy with the painted up smiley face who keeps the kids entertained while poking his head out of the barrel to tease the bull. Then the bull decides to hook the barrel and flip it high into the air, or just toss a piece of a deteriorating tire from Junior’s dying beast into Johnson’s windshield. It bent the bar meant to support the glass and even tore Jimmie a new one in the front end where not even the old one would have been located. His crew fixed him up, but he never got back to the lead lap, having to settle for 25th.

It is good that Kevin Harvick won at Phoenix, as four of the seven rodeos have seen him shoved face deep in the dirt. A broken hub left him 41st in Las Vegas, a lost oil line meant 39th at Bristol, then a blown tire left him 36th in California. Once again, his bronco came snorting out of the gate in Texas, twisted, turned, and then suddenly dropped dead.  Harvick lasted more than twice as long as Earnhardt, which is saying nothing, when his engine quit. He was 42nd, and the only race he was part of was to see which of the two got back to North Carolina the quickest.

Joey Logano thought he was also bound for heart break. With the white flag on the horizon, he was heading to the line when the left rear on Kurt Busch’s car let go to shred the quarter-panel to pieces. Out came the caution, four Goodyears went on Joey’s ride, but Jeff Gordon took two to start in front for the green-white-checker. That drama did not last long, as the Connecticut Yankee stormed back in front to win for the fourth time of his career and picked himself up a Chase place.

While things went well for Logano, team mate Brad Keselowski was out near the front almost the entire day. However, while Logano got his four feel goods in the pits, Keselowski was earning himself a speeding penalty to vacate his spot beside Joey at the re-start to finish 15th. Sometimes the bull just sits back and lets you kick your own butt.

In tallying up the standings, the first to be considered are the seven race winners before we worry about points. Too bad, as Jeff Gordon has no wins but more points than anyone else. He was consistently up front on Monday, to finish second, just ahead of Kyle Busch, Brian Vickers, and Kyle Larson.

Texas was tough on some, mild on others. Matt Kenseth remains winless yet his seventh place result on Monday leaves him just four points back of Gordon.  Danica Patrick was a barrel racer in the midst of the bull riding, finishing 27th to sit 29th in the standings. Nobody sits behind her other than those you would have bet on to be back there.

Austin Dillon is 12th, four spots ahead of Larson in the rookie race. Despite all the talk about the good crop of first year drivers this season, only those two will matter. Frankly, none of the others are in equipment worthy of challenging, with only Justin Allgaier (28th) joining the other two ahead of the “Danica line.” It should be interesting to see how they, and their teams, will fare the rest of the season. One point of measure might indeed be the Danica line.

As for Harvick and Kurt Busch, they need to stay within the Top 30 over-all to make their wins work for them. With more than a 30 point bulge over the 31st place David Gilliland, they both still look safe for the next few weeks. That Texas bull was bad, but nothing those two cowboys cannot recover from.

They replace the critter with the lady this Saturday night, as Darlington and the Southern 500 is next on the dance card.  Seven different drivers have won this season. Seven different drivers have won at Darlington since Greg Biffle won back to back in 2005-06. Jeff Gordon has won seven times there, the last in 2007. If he drove the No. 7, picking the winner for Saturday night would have been a no brainer.  Still, if he brings flowers maybe the Lady in Black will be kind to him one more time.

One more thing. When rain washed away Sunday’s date, fans wondered if they would get a chance to see the Monday attempt. Thanks to TSN2, I could and did. Thanks! Here is a look at the standings, with the priority given to our seven winners…

 

Driver

Races

Win

Points

1

  Carl Edwards

7

1

247

2

  Joey Logano

7

1

235

3

  Kyle Busch

7

1

231

4

  Dale Earnhardt, Jr.

7

1

228

5

  Brad Keselowski

7

1

218

6

  Kurt Busch

7

1

151

7

  Kevin Harvick

7

1

138

8

  Jeff Gordon

7

0

259

9

  Matt Kenseth

7

0

255

10

  Jimmie Johnson

7

0

228

11

  Brian Vickers

7

0

205

12

  Paul Menard

7

0

203

13

  Ryan Newman

7

0

202

14

  Austin Dillon

7

0

202

15

  Denny Hamlin

6

0

197

16

  Tony Stewart

7

0

189

31

 

 

 

107

A Different Winner Each Week and the Health of the Sport

Photo Credit: Mike Holloway

We now have seven different winners in seven races. I’m sure no one at the sanctioning body dreamed this would happen, but it did, and I’m sure we will see repeat winners as the season goes along. The trouble is Jimmie Johnson, Matt Kenseth, Denny Hamlin, Tony Stewart, Greg Biffle, Kasey Khane, Clint Bowyer, and a couple of surprises haven’t won. If they do, that puts the number at 16, and that’s going to mean the win and in scenario will be all or nothing for the Chase. Of course, I’m sure some in the group of winners will win more than once, so winning might not get someone in the final playoff. It should be interesting from here on out.

Rain continues to plague the circuit. So far we’ve had rain at Daytona, and a threat of rain at Phoenix, Bristol Texas, and Martinsville. Daytona and Bristol became night races, Martinsville had to have a double header on Sunday, and Texas had to go on Monday afternoon. Surely, the weather will turn around for the rest of the season.

Joey Logano’s win at Texas was exemplary for a couple of reasons. His car has been fast all season. In fact, the Team Penske Fords have been up front all year, but today, Logano dominated the last part of the race. So much so, even a last lap caution putting him back in the field didn’t stop him from passing the two cars in front of him and moving away to a win. Maybe Sliced Bread is finally reaching his potential

On a sad note, I worked today and couldn’t be in Texas. About the halfway point, a client came in to pay a bill. I was shocked because he was always talking to me about the races, and it was unusual to see him at my office when the race was in progress, so I asked him why. He answered that Dale Jr. had gone out early so he had no interest in watching the race. All of a sudden it occurred to me that maybe that was what was wrong with NASCAR’s declining television ratings and attendance problems. The question has to be asked. If the retirement of one driver decreases the numbers that many, including the media and even the sanctioning body think it does, is it healthy for the sport? If the success of only one driver is all that a majority of the fan base is concerned with, do we have a healthy sport? Is the reason everyone is praising the racing this year only a product of Dale Earnhardt, Jr. running at the front? I think those are valid questions, and if so what is going to happen when that driver retires from the sport? That’s really food for thought.

The racing has been good this year. So far, it has been dominated by the Fords and Chevrolets with each brand winning three races each. Toyota has only won one race, but the cars have been competitive, and that’s totally different than the last few years when Chevrolets dominated and Fords were less than competitive. We’ve also seen the emergence of Kyle Larson and seen signs of life at Richard Petty Motorsports. This is all good news in the competition department.

Back in prehistoric times when this writer was following the sport from Hank Schoolfield’s Southern Motor Racing newspaper, I can’t remember any fan leaving in the late stages of the race if The King, Fearless Freddie, The Silver Fox, or Cale didn’t have a chance to win, and yet last Sunday I saw the sea of green below the press box head for the exits when Kurt Busch passed for the win and drove away. NASCAR needs to cultivate more winners so that new fan relationships can be made. This season and the competitive racing may just do that. At least it looks hopeful. The health of the sport demands it