Home Blog Page 5205

Surprising and Not Surprising: Kansas STP 400

Credit: Jamie Squire/Getty Images

In a week where those impacted by the Boston Marathon bombing were remembered, here is what was surprising and not surprising as NASCAR’s elite visited Kansas Motor Speedway for the 3rd annual STP 400.

Surprising:  The heartland of Kansas witnessed a driver rebirth of sorts with Matt Kenseth following his own yellow brick road to Victory Lane. And the man behind the wheel of the No. 20 Home Depot/Husky Tools Toyota proclaimed that for him this win was a “dream come true.”

“You don’t know if or when you’ll ever win again,” Kenseth said. “I’m so thankful to have another win.”

“This is a dream come true to drive this stuff.”

Surprisingly, Kenseth, unlike his other Joe Gibbs Racing teammates, dominated the race, starting from the pole and leading the most laps, 163 to be exact.

Even more surprising, however, was that Kenseth’s dream run came crashing down after a severe penalty was levied on the No. 20 car and team due to having a connecting rod in the engine failing to meet the minimum weight.

Kenseth’s crew chief Jason Ratcliff was fined $200,000 and suspended for six races, JGR lost 50 owner points and Kenseth lost 50 driver points.

JGR will of course appeal.

Not Surprising:  The Kansas curse continued for Kyle Busch, who spun in the early laps and then crashed so hard with Joey Logano that he had to drive his car to the garage backwards before abandoning it to the scrap heap.

“Absolutely no grip for me,” Busch said. “Spun twice on our own.”

“Just don’t know what to do with Kansas.”

Surprising:  Jeff Gordon started dead last in the 43rd position, his worst starting position ever in his career. Yet surprisingly and in spite of having to take the wave around after being trapped in the pits under caution, Gordon was able to battle back for a 13th place finish.

“We weren’t the best car, but we made some great improvements throughout the weekend,” the driver of the No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet, said. “We were able to make our way up through there.”

“All in all I thought it was a great effort.”

Not Surprising:  With a team that not only has Boston roots, but one that has also faced a week of difficulties and penalties, it was not a surprise that Brad Keselowski had to dig deep for the Kansas race.

The driver of the Blue Deuce also had to overcome a great deal of adversity on the track, from early damage to getting lapped. Yet, he persevered to attain a top ten finish, scoring a sixth place in a most eventful race and week.

“We got ‘Boston Strong’ on the back of this car and that was a good inspiration for this weekend,” Keselowski said. “That was a gritty effort by the 2 team.”

“A day where you can fight through adversity like we did today and get a solid finish, that kind of is a win.”

Surprising:  Kasey Kahne surprisingly had his head in the clouds, or at least was wishing for a cloud to come out to assist him in getting around Kenseth at the end of the race. The driver of the No. 5 Farmers Insurance 85th Anniversary Chevrolet finished a close second.

”We tightened up a little bit on that final run,” Kahne said. “I just did everything I could.”

“I needed clouds.”

Not Surprising:   While this driver may have been disappointed with his continuing runner up finishes, Martin Truex Jr. was well pleased with his fourth place finish at Kansas.

“Got a lot of questions last week about being second and how I seemed so disappointed and all that,” the driver of the No. 56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota, said. “This is the complete opposite.”

“All in all, I’m very happy with fourth place.”

Surprising:  Two drivers who returned to Cup competition, Sam Hornish Jr. and Elliott Sadler, had surprisingly bad days at the race track, finishing 37th and 40th respectively.

Hornish Jr. hit Marcos Ambrose so hard during his wreck that he bit the inside of his lip and broke the tach off with his knee.

“I couldn’t see anything,” Hornish Jr. said. “I just wish we could have done a little better.”

Sadler, behind the wheel of the No. 81 ALERT Energy Gum Toyota, got loose into turn three and never recovered.

“The car was kind of darting around on me too quick,” Sadler said. “Just ended a lot shorter than I wanted to.”

Not Surprising:  While those returning to Cup competition did not fare well, old five time continued his not surprising top-five finishing ways. Jimmie Johnson, driver of the No. 48 Lowes/Kobalt Tools Chevrolet, finished fourth and maintained his top dog spot in the point standings.

“Everybody worked real hard to get the car right and we had a great race car,” Johnson said. “At times I felt like I had a shot to win but we just didn’t have enough for Matt and Kasey.”

“A very solid performance for our Kobalt Tools Chevrolet.”

Surprising:  Danica Patrick endured trash on the track, as well as some trash talking after the race. Patrick’s race was spoiled by some litter that stuck to her grille, causing her water temps to rise and necessitating an unexpected trip to the pits.

“We had a tire rub at one point and issues with the splitter from some contact we made,” the driver of the No. 10 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet, said. “The trash on the grille was what really hurt us today.”

But the trash talking after the race was even more interesting after the rookie complained about competitor David Gilliland racing her inappropriately.

“He tries to take me out every time,” Patrick complained of Gilliland. “I’m coming after him if he does it again.”

Gilliland in return issued this statement aimed at Patrick through his PR rep, “Shut up and race.”

Not Surprising:  One Kansas boy, Clint Bowyer, who hails from Emporia, finished nicely in the fifth position at his home track.

“We needed a turnaround after last week,” Bowyer said. “Certainly you want to win it at home but a good top-five finish is a great way to get things bounced back with our 5-hour Energy Toyota.”

Surprising:  There were some surprising names amongst the top-ten finishers in the STP 400, including Jamie McMurray in seventh, Aric Almirola in eighth, and Paul Menard in tenth.

“I honestly thought we had one of the better cars,” McMurray said. “Good job by our team.”

“It was a good day for us,” Almirola said. “That’s two top-10s two weeks in a row and I’m proud of that.”

“We’ve got some of the best pits stops in the business,” Menard said. “We always end pretty good.”

Not Surprising:  In spite of getting trapped in the pits during a caution, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. is still trying to maintain a positive attitude as he faced yet another week of not quite getting the finish he wanted or expected. The driver of the No. 88 National Guard Chevrolet finished 15th.

“We were a lap down and hard to take the wave around,” Junior said. “That put us to the back behind a whole bunch of lead-lap cars and there was no time left.”

“It’ll come around,” Earnhardt, Jr. continued. “We’ve just got to keep working and stay positive.”

Hot 20 over the past 10 – If Penske thought he had a bad day in Texas, it got worse for Gibbs after Kansas

Photo Credit: Brad Keppel

You know you have had a bad day when you dominate a race, win it, and wind up with three fewer points than the guy who crashed out first. That is the current fate of Matt Kenseth after “winning” at Kansas when NASCAR discovered a single connecting rod in his engine that weighed less than their minimum specifications. I don’t know exactly how much a rod weighing 2.7 grams lighter than the minimum pays an advantage, especially when you consider that the one next to it was about 4 grams heavier than the minimum.

Crew chief Jason Ratcliff received a $200,000 fine and is gone for the next seven weeks, including the all-star race. Car owner Joe Gibbs lost 50 car owner points, the victory counts for nothing except to pad Kenseth’s stats, and he is gone himself for seven weeks and won’t be eligible for any of the car owner points over that time. As for Kenseth, his 48 point pickup at Kansas becomes -2 (as in minus 2) and he gets no credit for the pole other than for statistical purposes. As for Toyota, they lose the five manufacturer points they got for the win.

The engine came from Toyota Racing Development, and they claim there was no intent, and I believe them. I also believe that when they say they are going to get to the bottom of what happened. I also believe that NASCAR does not care who did what to that engine, but they are making damn sure that power plants that do not measure up, each and every specific piece of them, are going to result in somebody paying some severe consequences.

Is it fair? Initially it seems rather an overkill reaction, but it did not help that Kenseth dominated things in Kansas with what he had. The engine may have arrived from the manufacturer, but Gibbs is the owner, the crew chief let the car go out, and Kenseth drove it and all benefited supposedly from the modification, if there was any benefit to be had.

To me, that is the crux of the matter. If there is a proven benefit, then Gibbs and crew pay the piper. If there was not, then this penalty is too harsh. However, NASCAR already has proof that one component did not measure up to its minimum specifications, and that is where the story will end.

Despite his own recent penalty, Brad Keselowski takes over as king of the hill amongst the hottest drivers, as Kyle Busch slips down two spots. Carl Edwards is hot, and we should mention how well Aric Almirola has been recently as he jumps up five spots to eighth.

Those experiencing a chill include Kenseth, who falls five, and Joey Logano. His Texas penalty combined with the Kansas disaster drop him six spots. Meanwhile, Tony Stewart tumbles right out of our Top Twenty as hot is something Smoke at present is definitely not.

 

Name Points POS LW W T5 T10
  Brad Keselowski  384 1 3 0 5 9
  Carl Edwards  355 2 6 1 4 4
  Kyle Busch  342 3 1 2 7 7
  Greg Biffle  340 4 2 0 2 6
  Kasey Kahne  338 5 7 1 5 6
  Jimmie Johnson  332 6 4 2 4 6
  Dale Earnhardt, Jr.  320 7 5 0 3 6
  Aric Almirola  316 8 13 0 0 3
  Paul Menard  308 9 11 0 0 5
  Kevin Harvick  307 10 8 1 1 3
  Clint Bowyer  305 11 9 0 4 5
  Ryan Newman  282 12 12 0 3 6
  Jamie McMurray  272 13 15 0 0 3
  Mark Martin  264 14 18 0 1 4
  Matt Kenseth  259 15 10 2 2 4
  Kurt Busch  251 16 16 0 2 4
  Marcos Ambrose  251 17 19 0 0 1
  Martin Truex, Jr.  244 18 21 0 2 4
  Jeff Gordon  238 19 20 1 2 3
  Joey Logano  234 20 14 0 2 2
  Jeff Burton  234 21 22 0 0 1
  Tony Stewart  233 22 17 0 0 1

 

Win #1 Is Coming Soon For Both Aric Almirola & Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Photo Credit: Speedway Media

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. is eight races into his rookie Cup season and is closing in fast on securing his first win racing at the pinnacle of NASCAR. At Kansas, his chances of winning were very high until a late race debris caution thwarted the young racer’s chances at victory. He ended the race 11th tying his career best. Aric Almirola has raced in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) for six years but this is just his second full-time season. He started up front last Sunday and his #43 Ford Fusion for Richard Petty Motorsports (RPM) adorned a throwback STP paint scheme that the legendary Richard Petty once ran. He finished 8th after running as high as 2nd during the event.

There’s no question that these two will win their first NSCS race soon and it shouldn’t surprise anyone if they both do it in 2013. Ricky was battling with Scott Speed for the ARCA championship back in 2008 and things got pretty ugly between the two. After Stenhouse took Speed out in what looked to be an intentional incident, Speed retaliated handing the title to Justin Allgaier. After that, Roush moved Ricky up to Nationwide (NNS) where he would struggle to find his footing throughout the 2009 season wrecking very often. Towards the end of 2010 when rumors started to swirl that Ricky might lose his ride, something clicked inside his brain and he started ripping off top 5’s all over the place. He went on to win the NNS title in both 2011 and 2012 before taking over the #17 from Matt Kenseth in the NSCS.

Photo Credit: Mike Holloway/Speedway Media
Photo Credit: Mike Holloway/Speedway Media

Ricky is one of the more aggressive drivers in the sport today but he’s learned to temper that aggression over the past few years. In 2013, he has yet to post a top 10 finish but that doesn’t mean he hasn’t spent any time up front. On the contrary, he was within arm’s reach of victory lane at Kansas before a caution came out while he was on pit road ruining his day. Aric Almirola is quietly sitting 12th in the standings right now and ripped off his first two top 10’s of the season at Texas (7th) and Kansas (8th). The RPM driver is gaining momentum as he looks to bring the famous No.43 back to victory lane for the first time in the 21st century.

His NASCAR career started back in 2004 when he competed in four truck races finishing inside the top 10 twice. In 2006, he went full time in the Camping World Truck Series finding little success and struggling to an 18th place finish in the standings. He also won the pole for a NNS race that year at Daytona. In 2007, he got his chance in Cup and I believe he was thrown into the car way too soon like so many other drivers. In 4 years of driving part-time, he accumulated one top 5 and two top 10’s. In 2011, he joined JR Motorsports and ran for the NNS title finishing a solid 4th in the points. He was ready to go back to Cup and Richard Petty knew it offering him the #43 seat which was vacated by AJ Allmendinger. Aric’s results were sporadic and disappointing but things look a lot different in 2013. He has driven smart races, contends for top 10’s every week and stays out of trouble finishing well.

Now that the history lesson is over, let’s talk a little about the future of these two very talented racers. Stenhouse was brought up the “right way” and is ready to battle for wins against the likes of Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth. Almirola is just now getting to that point and is outperforming teammate Marcos Ambrose; it was the other way around last year.

If fate was kinder, Ricky could have won Kansas this past weekend just eight races into his rookie year and with 28 races remaining, he’s got plenty of time for redemption. I don’t see Ricky making the chase this year unless he wins a race or two which he’s fully capable of doing. On the other hand, the consistency of Aric Almirola could be enough to get him inside the top 10 and into the chase with no wins. He needs to turn those 14th’s and 15th’s into 7th’s and 8th’s though which he seems to be doing. That famed #43 has been driven by a lot of people since that Martinsville win way back in 1999 so history isn’t on his side but that car hasn’t been this fast in a while either. Ricky will win in 2013, Aric might but they both will end up winning multiple races before their careers are over.

They both have the talent, the team, the crew chief and the passion to get it done and they will.

Crunching The Numbers: Richmond

After a blazing fast weekend at Kansas Speedway, the NASCAR world sets its sights on Richmond International Raceway and the second night race of the year for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Nationwide Series. As one of the few short tracks on the circuit, Richmond always provides great racing in each series and this weekend’s events should be no exception, especially with the Sprint Cup drivers getting their first shot at this track in the new Gen6 car.

Sprint Cup Series

For the third time this season, the Sprint Cup Series makes its way to a short track and will take on the 3/4 mile Richmond International Raceway under the lights on Saturday night for the first night-time short track race of the season. Will Joe Gibbs Racing and Hendrick Motorsports continue their stranglehold on Victory Lane with the new Gen6 car, or will we see a new contender emerge after 400 laps in the Toyota Owners 400?

Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
Kyle Busch 16 4 12 13 1 891 12.7 5.4
Clint Bowyer 14 2 2 8 0 163 14.1 9.6
Tony Stewart 28 3 11 19 0 950 17.7 10.4
Ryan Newman 22 1 5 13 1 450 11.3 11.6
Kevin Harvick 24 2 6 15 1 942 16.5 11.7
Mark Martin 54 1 18 30 5 449 9.7 11.9
Dale Earnhardt Jr 27 3 9 11 1 494 15.9 13.9
Jeff Gordon 40 2 16 25 5 1415 7.9 14.4
Carl Edwards 17 0 3 8 1 442 11.7 14.9
Jeff Burton 37 1 9 16 1 942 15.2 15.0

Who To Watch: With four wins in 16 races at Richmond along with 12 top fives, 13 top tens, one pole, 891 laps led, and an average finish of 5.4, Kyle Busch leads all active drivers with the best statistics at this track. After a terrible weekend last week in Kansas, this race could be just what the doctor ordered for Busch to get back to his winning ways.

Others to keep an eye on include: Clint Bowyer, who won last fall to give himself two wins and has an average finish of 9.6; Tony Stewart, who has had a lackluster season thus far, but could rebound here due to his two wins and average finish of 10.4; Ryan Newman, Stewart’s SHR teammate, who has one win and an average finish of 11.6; and Kevin Harvick, who has two wins and an average finish of 11.7.

The rest of the drivers in the top ten statistically at Richmond (Mark Martin, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Jeff Gordon, Carl Edwards, and Jeff Burton) could also be threats here Saturday as they have a combined seven wins and average finishes of 15.0 or better.

One last note of importance that could come into play here is that Toyota has won seven of the last eight races at Richmond, will we see their dominance continue or will Chevrolet or Ford have something to say about it?

Nationwide Series

Friday night’s running of the Nationwide Series’ ToyotaCare 250 will be full of Sprint Cup regulars coming in to see if they can steal the show away from the Nationwide regulars. Sounds like a recipe for some great racing pitting the Nationwide drivers running for points against their Sprint Cup counterparts who just want the trophy and the win.

Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
Kyle Busch 15 4 9 12 3 772 8.9 6.7
Kevin Harvick 23 6 15 18 2 1089 8.3 7.0
Brian Vickers 5 0 1 3 0 0 20.4 12.4
Reed Sorenson 9 0 2 6 0 4 11.6 13.3
Austin Dillon 3 0 0 2 0 14 12.0 13.7
Justin Allgaier 8 0 1 3 0 0 16.4 14.1
Trevor Bayne 4 0 1 2 0 0 6.8 14.8
Parker Kligerman 1 0 0 0 0 0 7.0 15.0
Joe Nemechek 22 1 5 9 0 201 13.8 15.5
Elliott Sadler 19 0 2 6 0 58 19.7 16.1


Who To Watch: To say that Kyle Busch has been dominating the field this season in the Nationwide Series would be an understatement and Busch is poised to continue that dominance in Friday night’s race. Heading into the weekend, Busch has four wins, nine top fives, 12 top tens, three poles, 772 laps led and an average finish of 6.7 in 15 starts at Richmond. However, another Sprint Cup regular hot on his heels at Richmond is Kevin Harvick, who has six wins, 15 top fives, 18 top tens, two poles, 1089 laps led, and an average finish of 7.0 in 23 starts. Following behind Busch and Harvick is a slew of Nationwide regulars, including: Brian Vickers, Reed Sorenson, Austin Dillon, Justin Allgaier, Trevor Bayne, and Parker Kligerman, all of whom have average finishes ranging from 12.4 to 15.0.