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Surprising and Not Surprising: Talladega Camping World RV Sales 500

Photo Credit: Kala Perkins/Speedway Media

In a race where the spotters sound like auctioneers as they guide their drivers around the track and where anything from chess-like strategy to last lap mayhem can happen, here is what was surprising and not surprising from the 45th annual Camping World RV Sales 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.

Surprising:  While many drivers and crew chiefs alike assessed the race as ‘uneventful’, with only three cautions, no major multi-car wrecks and primarily single-file racing in the last laps, a few drivers at least might take exception to that viewpoint.

In one international incident, Marcos Ambrose lost control of his vehicle on lap 78 and took out Juan Pablo Montoya in the process.

“The Target Chevrolet was pretty good to be honest,” Montoya said. “We were running two-wide so it was comfortable.”

“We started running three-wide and the spotter told me ‘get out’ and I backed up going into the tri-oval and the next thing I know, I just saw out the corner of my eye somebody coming towards me and that was it.”

Even more dramatic, however, was the white flag lap crash where Ricky Stenhouse Jr. made contact with Austin Dillon, driver the No. 14 Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet for Stewart Haas Racing, sending the latter airborne.

“The No. 17 had a little bit of a run and I tried to go with him and came back across and hooked me,” Dillon said. “What a wild ride.”

“Who needs skydiving?”

Not Surprising:  There are times at a race track when even the trophy is not the most important thing in Victory Lane and not surprisingly, this was the case for the lucky winner who wound up in Victory Lane.

Jamie McMurray, driver of the No. 1 Cessna Auburn University Chevrolet, not only ended his 108-race winless streak but, as he had always dreamed, he celebrated in Victory Lane with his family, including wife Christy and his two children Carter and Hazel.

“Well, that was — I mean, that’s top two or three moments of my life, to get to experience that with them,” McMurray said. “I don’t know if you guys heard, but I rent a space from Matt Kenseth to keep my go-karts and stuff in at his shop.”

“So I was out in the front where they have some office space, and he’s got pictures hanging inside and there was a picture of Matt and Katie and Grace and Kaylin, and I think it was Dover Victory Lane, and I remember seeing how excited Kaylin was,” McMurray continued. “I went home and told Christy, I hope that we get to have that moment.”

“That’s really special — especially having a little boy who is into Lightning McQueen and racing in general,” McMurray said. “Yeah, to get to have that with my family is really cool.”

This was McMurray’s first win of the season, his second victory at Talladega, and his seventh victory in 398 Cup races.

Surprising:  Dale Earnhardt Jr. was surprisingly upbeat in spite of not having his dream of snagging that elusive first win of the season come true. The driver of the No. 88 Mountain Dew/Xbox One Chevrolet was a bridesmaid in the runner up position yet again.

“It wasn’t the best run in the world,” Dale Junior said. “It wasn’t what I dreamed it would be, all those last few laps.”

“But it was a good enough run I think to get up to his (McMurray’s) quarter panel and get beside him.”

“Really happy with the way the car ran and it was good to run up front, good to lead,” Earnhardt Jr. continued. “We’ve really struggled this season with being competitive, and to drive up through there and do that like we did today, and it felt great.”

Dale Earnhardt Jr. scored his 14th top-10 finish in 28 races at ‘Dega and posted his 18th top-10 finish of the 2013 season.

Not Surprising:  In spite of a punishing Truck race the night before, Kyle Busch not surprisingly proved again that he was the redemption story of the race weekend. The driver of the No. 18 M&M’s Halloween Toyota bounced back after missing his pit box to get his lap back and finish fifth.

And although he had some harsh words on his radio after getting blocked out of his pit box by none other than race winner Jamie McMurray, Busch was giving all the glory to God at the end of the race.

“Our M&M’s Halloween Camry ran great all day,” said Busch, who earned his fourth top-five finish in 18 starts at Talladega, including his April 2008 win at the 2.66-mile oval. “It was fun to finish one of these things.”

“It’s God’s grace that allows us to finish one of these, and we appreciate it today, especially coming home with another top-five.”

Busch also redeemed himself in the point standings, moving up two positions to reclaim the third spot, just 26 points behind the leader.

Surprising:  Talladega proved a surprising dichotomy for the two primary Rookie of the Year contenders. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. finished third while his primary ROTY competitor Danica Patrick finished 33rd after having a pit road calamity.

“I thought the racing was great all day,” Stenhouse, driver of the No. 17 Nationwide Insurance Ford, said. “We were two, three, and four wide for a long time.”

“For our Nationwide Insurance team we were solid all day, in the top-10 a lot of the day and led a few laps, which was good for us.”

On the other hand, while Danica Patrick had been also running toward the front of the pack, her good day was ruined by an error on pit road during a green flag stop where she missed her pit stall and then incurred a speeding penalty to boot.

“We just didn’t communicate well on that final pit stop,” the driver of the No. 10 GoDaddy Breast Cancer Awareness Chevrolet said. “We were on the high side and couldn’t get down to where we needed to be to pit.”

“It’s disappointing and none of us feel good about it.”

Not Surprising:  David Ragan and David Gilliland, both of whom have proven that they can drive at the superspeedways as evidenced by their one, two finish in the spring race at ‘Dega, not surprisingly fared well again in the fall affair.

Ragan, behind the wheel of the No. 34 SaferCar.gov Ford, finished sixth, with his teammate Gilliland, driving the No. 38 Long John Silver’s Ford, right behind him in the seventh spot.

“We had a chance to win the race, took the white flag in seventh or eighth and kind of had a good plan,” Ragan said. “But the caution came out so we got a top-10 finish and that’s a good thing for our Front Row Motorsports team.”

“David and I worked together for a good part of the race and we were in position,” Gilliland said. “And then the caution came out on the last lap.”

“Thankfully, we weren’t part of it and we were able to get a top-10 finish and a clean car to take home.”

Surprising:  Paul Menard, driver of the No. 27 Menards Duracell Chevrolet, surprisingly bettered his Talladega statistics by finishing fourth. This was Menard’s only finish inside the top-10 at Talladega in fifteen starts there other than a runner-up finish in 2008.

“At the start of the race, we took off and the car drove really good,” Menard said. “We drove to the front and kind of hung out in the top-10 all day long.”

“We could make the middle groove work to gain spots and then get to the outside,” Menard continued. “Ultimately the outside lane kind of won out over the long run.”

Not Surprising:  Channeling his best Ricky Bobby from the movie ‘Talladega Nights”, Kurt Busch exemplified the notion that ‘if you’re not first, you’re last’ or at least 18th, which is where he finished in his No. 78 Wonder Bread car.

“Restrictor plate racing is all about being in the right place at the right time,” Busch said. “We were in the right place for the majority of the race, but when it counted at the end, we weren’t there.”

“It’s disappointing because our Wonder Bread Chevy was fast and to finish 18th didn’t do us justice,” Busch continued. “I tried to make something happen, but couldn’t get there.”

Busch fell two spots in the Chase standings, from seventh to ninth, now 61 points behind the leader.

Surprising:  At a track where handling usually does not matter, Matt Kenseth surprisingly struggled with an ill handling race car that set him back tremendously during the midsection of the race. Kenseth never quite fully recovered, finishing 20th and losing the championship points lead to Jimmie Johnson.

“It was really bizarre — typically, handling is a non-issue here and we just got so loose I couldn’t even hang on to it,” the driver of the No. 20 Let’s Do This Home Depot Toyota said. “I pretty much had to run in the back for two runs which was disappointing.”

“We finally got it fixed that last run, but we only had 20 laps to get back up there,” Kenseth continued. “I really needed to be up there like we were early and feel like I was controlling the race more — the lanes and the runs and all that and I could never get back to there.”

Not Surprising:  While Jimmie Johnson may also have not had the race that he envisioned, his 13th place finish was better than Kenseth’s run. And after surviving Talladega, which was his goal, the five-time champ now has Martinsville, one of his best tracks, in his sights.

“You know I feel that the races forward now are up to where the competitors go earn it,” the driver of the No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet said. “You don’t have this luck issue that can take place at plate tracks.”

“So I am happy to have the points lead and we went through a lot of work to get there,” Johnson continued. “We just go racing from here.”

“Martinsville has been good to us in the past, but we’ve got to go there and race,” Johnson said. “We will make sure that we get buttoned up and ready to go to that paperclip and see what we can do.”

“It’s just going to be a dogfight to the end.”

The Final Word – Talladega may have been smokin’, but expect Johnson to smoke the field at Martinsville

Photo Credit: Kala Perkins

We waited with anticipation for the action, and Talladega once again delivered. Once again, we watched the cars (and trucks for those watching on Saturday) go flying around inches apart in aircraft formation, in wonder that they could pull this off lap after lap without it all going up in smoke and torn sheet metal. In the end, they could not avoid the unavoidable.

Dale Earnhardt Jr was pondering his final lap move to get by leader Jamie McMurray when the third running Austin Dillon got spun, then rear ended into the sky in what he described as “a cool roller coaster ride.” That allowed Ole Dimples to keep Junior behind him when the caution came out to claim his first win in more than three years.

If that was not wild enough for you, Saturday saw Matt Crafton solidify his strangle hold in the Camping World series while pushing team mate Johnny Sauter to victory. Sauter crossed the line all by his lonesome as our top eight became a top five which became Mr. Sauter doing a solo by the time they all quit wrecking coming to the line. What was left of Crafton’s truck backed across the line in ninth, leaving him an entire race and a bit ahead of Ty Dillon in their standings.

As for the Cup boys, neither Jimmie Johnson or Matt Kenseth finished in the Top Ten. Yet, by finishing seven spots ahead of his rival (13th vs 20th) and by leading the most laps, Johnson earned enough to vault ahead to take over by four points going into Martinsville. Their company got slightly closer, but by finishing fifth the best Kyle Busch could do is tie Kevin Harvick for third in the standings, both still 26 points away. They remain close should disaster hit the leaders, but until such time disaster strikes both will remain simply interested observers.

Rating Talladega – 9/10 – The action kept you on the edge of your seats, drivers could move from the back to the front, and you even had your dose of carnage. What else could you ask for?

So, the track on steroids is now behind us as we return to “normal” racing. With his seven career wins at Martinsville, Jeff Gordon might look good but for two small facts. One, he trails Johnson by 34 points. Second, Jimmie has won eight times himself at this venue.

Five Time won there in the spring, and he won there last fall. His worst finish was on his first attempt in 2002, when he came home 35th. Since then, his worst finish is 12th, to go with an 11th, to go with 16 Top Fives, 20 Top Tens, in 23 Martinsville starts. As for Kenseth, he goes in 0 for 27, with just eight Top Tens in his career.

Game four of the World Series goes Sunday night as St. Louis hosts Boston. That could wind up a closer contest than what we might see out of Virginia. It is not over, but I think somebody just knocked on the Fat Lady’s dressing room door. Enjoy the week, for it appears the odds favor Johnson enjoying his Sunday afternoon.

McMurray won, but the question remains … was it racing?

Photo Credit: Kala Perkins

Jamie McMurray is one of the nicest guys in the garage. He’s a family man and gives everything he has to be successful. When he was tagged to replace a retiring Mark Martin so long ago, much was expected of him. It never came to fruition. It has been the same story since moving to Earnhardt Ganassi Racing. It’s not that he hasn’t had the talent; it’s more than he didn’t have the talent behind him.

In NASCAR for the last decade, it’s been Hendrick, Roush Fenway, Joe Gibbs, and at times Richard Childress Racing and Penske Racing. They have been the dominant players with Hendrick and Gibbs being the main players. Even though McMurray went to Roush, he was never successful. He signed with EGR and found some success, but in truth, that was short-lived. It’s refreshing to see someone out of the top five organizations do well, even if it was at Talladega or Daytona. Remember that those two tracks are different from the others. Anyone from David Reagan to Michael Waltrip can win there. It’s unfortunate that wins at these two tracks are considered less in the eyes of purists, but it’s true. The restrictor plate tracks are the great equalizers—the one place anyone can win. That is the fault of a sanctioning body that can’t – even tried to figure out what to do with a large speedway with high banking. It’s been a lot of years, and still choking engine to half horsepower is the answer?

I align with myself with David Poole, the great writer of the Charlotte Observer and one of the hosts on SiriusXM radio’s morning shows. I do not consider those races a race. It’s a spectacle that was created and has many fans. You can’t call it racing because there is no give and take unless you have the draft. It’s close race, which many like, but it’s so uncharacteristic of real racing. I watched a race that wasn’t a race on Sunday. I saw people move from the back with ease and only to see them move to the back when they lost the draft. You can’t say anyone “had a good car” because it didn’t matter much. It’s the antithesis of racing where the good car wins. In this sort of racing, it’s only who can get someone to help. It’s the racing version of a crap shoot, and still we are fascinated with it. No wonder so many unlikely winners have emerged from James Hylton to Ragan.

Too many people like this form of racing, I don’t see it going away again and compared to what we see at many races it seems to be a better show, but it’s still a show and not a race. Back in the day, it wasn’t that way, but I’m old and probably irrelevant these days. Whatever happened to the insurance problems with a car going 200 mph in a lap? Looks like a few tracks have that problem and insurance is never even mentioned.

This takes nothing away from McMurray’s win. He followed the rules and won. He should be congratulated, but like I said so long ago, it wasn’t racing. It was the four times a year spectacle. There has to be a solution. I’m not smart enough to figure that out, but surely someone in the sanctioning body can. It’s just too popular to do anything about it.

Johnson regains points lead at Talladega

Photo Credit: Kala Perkins/Speedway Media

Jimmie Johnson leads the most laps and finishes 13th, but that was good enough to regain the points lead from Matt Kenseth. While others tried fading to the back, Johnson tried to stay as close to the front as possible.

Though, Johnson’s stats at Talladega are great compared to many drivers, they are mediocre compared to most other tracks for Johnson. He has two wins, six top-5’s, and ten top-10’s. For this weekend, however, mediocre was good enough.

Kenseth ran strong all day, but a severely loose race car just past the halfway point put him into a situation where he could not battle for position. The car was fast, but he had trouble when getting around other cars. He did manage to lead 32 laps, but only managed a 20th place finish.

Other Chase notables:

Dale Earnhardt Jr. led 38 laps en route to a second place finish, the fourth of the year and 22nd of his career. The strong run permitted him to gain three spots in the standings to sixth, 52 points out of the lead. Earnhardt commented about his run, “We had such a good car, since I been working with Steve, we just haven’t really had a good combination here and maybe I’ve torn up some really good cars and never got to see how good they were in races in the past, but I knew in practice car was strong, just wondered of everybody was showing everything they had.”

Kyle Busch, who has been trying to work his way back toward the front after a disastrous Kansas race, overcame an early pit road penalty to score another top-5 finish, his 16th of the season. Kyle gained two spots in the points and now sits in third, 26 back from the leader.

Kevin Harvick slipped from third to fourth in the standings. He was never really a factor in today’s race, but managed a respectable 12th place finish. He now sits 26 points back behind Johnson.

Jeff Gordon has been very strong since the start of the Chase. At Talladega, however, Gordon left a little on the table. Gordon led three laps and finished 14th, falling from fourth to fifth in the standings, 34 out of the lead.

Greg Biffle led five laps and looked strong early, but the No. 16 Scotch Blue Ford faded and finished 11th. Biffle lost one spot on the standings and now sits seventh, 53 points out of the lead.

All-in-all, Talladega was pretty kind to the Chase contenders. Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the biggest gain, with Johnson regaining the lead. The race was pretty calm, with only three yellows. One yellow for fluid on the track, a second on lap 80 for a tow car incident on the frontstretch that ended the day for Juan Pablo-Montoya. The final caution flew on the last lap, when Austin Dillon, driving the No. 14 Stewart-Hass Racing Chevrolet for Tony Stewart, got upside down on the backstretch. Since the white flag had been thrown, the race ended with the yellow, freezing the field, and sending Jamie McMurray to victory lane.

The series now heads to Martinsville Speedway for the Goody’s 500 on Sunday Oct 27th.