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Hot 20 over the past 10 – Can Jimmie win at Texas and really get the whiners upset?

Photo Credit: David Yeazell

Don’t you just hate excellence? The New York Yankees won five straight World Series titles in the 1950’s, 27 in their history. How should we respond? That’s right, hate ‘em.

The Boston Celtics won eight straight NBA crowns between 1959 and 1966. They have won 17 over the course of the past 56 seasons. What should we do about that? Hate ‘em, of course.

It might have only been a six team league at the time, but the NHL’s best team in the 1950’s was the Montreal Canadiens. Ten straight final appearances, six wins including the last five straight. They have 24 to their credit in total. Best way to recognize them, you ask. Hate ‘em.

Now, I understand the feelings of Red Sox, Laker, and Maple Leaf fans. However, your feelings toward your rivals is less hate and more jealousy. I mean, in 2004 when the Yankees folded their tents after taking a three game lead in the American League final, Boston fans thought the lads from New York were just swell.

Which brings us to Jimmie Johnson. All he did was win five straight Sprint Cup titles and two of this season’s six races. Some just hate the guy because he wins. Let us think about that for a second. He wins too much, so those with the attention span of a gnat threaten to walk away from the sport in a huff because one man is having an historic run? Pardon me, but that is just dumb as a stick stupid.

There are some upset that last Sunday when Dale Earnhardt Jr got spun, Johnson could have stopped the line of traffic he led to allow his team mate to get squared away. Instead, he continued by to put him down a lap. If you are a Junior junkie, I can understand why you might be a tad disappointed.  Junior said Jimmie did nothing wrong, but I get it when you wish that things had turned out better for your favorite driver. That is a totally different thing.

If Jimmie wins, it must mean crew chief Chad Knaus cheated. Maybe he did, but it is not a crime unless you are caught. Smoky Yunick made a career out of seeking out advantages, to work within the grey area of what was acceptable and what was innovation. One day they will put him in the Hall of Fame, right beside Knaus.

Apparently NASCAR favors Johnson. So, you have the beloved Junior, that nice guy Jeff Gordon, the colorful Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick, and Kyle Busch, but NASCAR has decided that Jimmie Johnson is their man?  Jimmie is a nice guy, a hell of a driver, but he is no Darrell Waltrip or Bobby Allison. If the outcome is as rigged as a pro wrestling match, surely they would go with a Stone Cold, Rock, or Triple H type than Jimmie Johnson.

Yet, for the longest time, the biggest criticism of Johnson is that he wins and for five years he did not share the title. In fact, some are worried Tony Stewart and Brad Keselowski got the crown on loan, with Jimmie poised to reclaim it. Bad for business, they say. Funny, Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt remain the sport’s greatest icons, and they split 14 season titles between them. That is more than 21% of the 64 championships handed out since 1949 going to just two guys. Add the still active Johnson, Gordon, and Stewart and you have a dozen more spoken for. My God, include three-time kings Lee Petty, David Pearson, Cale Yarborough, and Waltrip and you have damn near 60% of all the championships claimed by just nine guys. There are more players who win a single baseball, basketball, or hockey title any given season, never mind over the course of 64 years.

So, my humble advice for those who hate Jimmie Johnson because they deem him as winning too much would be to quit your bitching and enjoy history being made. As for who is hot, Jimmie is not too far behind Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch among those who have done the most lately. Our biggest mover this week is Aric Almirola, who moves up four spot to 12th. Meanwhile, Martin Truex Jr is going the other way, dropping five spots and falling right off our chart.

 

Name Points POS LW W T5 T10
  Brad Keselowski  375 1 1 0 5 8
  Kyle Busch  372 2 2 1 8 8
  Jimmie Johnson  348 3 3 4 5 6
  Greg Biffle  343 4 5 0 1 7
  Dale Earnhardt, Jr.  336 5 7 0 3 7
  Kasey Kahne  324 6 4 1 5 6
  Clint Bowyer  315 7 10 1 4 6
  Carl Edwards  312 8 8 1 3 3
  Matt Kenseth  301 9 6 1 2 5
  Paul Menard  296 10 9 0 0 4
  Kevin Harvick  291 11 11 1 1 4
  Aric Almirola  283 12 16 0 1 2
  Ryan Newman  282 13 13 0 3 5
  Kurt Busch  280 14 12 0 2 5
  Joey Logano  275 15 14 0 1 1
  Jeff Gordon  268 16 17 1 2 4
  Jamie McMurray  260 17 20 0 0 2
  Denny Hamlin  244 18 15 0 2 2
  Tony Stewart  243 19 19 0 1 2
  Jeff Burton  234 20 22 0 0 1
  Marcos Ambrose  234 20 21 0 0 1

 

Crunching The Numbers: Texas/Rockingham

Photo Credit: Barry Albert

With the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Nationwide Series in Texas this weekend and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series heading to Rockingham, this weekend marks the first split schedule between the three series and the first night races of the season at Texas.

Sprint Cup Series

After a rough and tumble day for the Sprint Cup Series at Martinsville last week, the series heads back to a 1.5 mile track at Texas for their first trip of the season there and the first night race of the year in the NRA 500 on Saturday night. Given the two great outings the Gen6 car has had at the two previous 1.5 mile or larger tracks at Las Vegas and California, this race should provide more of the same, especially with the track surface at Texas Motor Speedway having a good amount of age and wear on it.

Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
Matt Kenseth 21 2 12 15 0 772 15.8 8.3
Jimmie Johnson 19 2 9 14 1 443 8.8 9.3
Kevin Harvick 20 0 3 10 0 5 20.8 12.5
Tony Stewart 22 2 6 12 1 727 18.2 12.7
Clint Bowyer 14 0 3 8 0 84 12.7 12.8
Dale Earnhardt Jr 21 1 3 12 2 448 11.8 13.6
Mark Martin 24 1 8 13 0 208 15.1 13.9
Kurt Busch 20 1 3 12 0 235 16.4 14.1
Kyle Busch 15 0 5 6 0 521 15.3 14.9
Carl Edwards 16 3 5 7 0 493 14.4 15.1


Who To Watch: Matt Kenseth has made 21 starts at Texas and has collected two wins, 12 top fives, 15 top tens, and has an average finish of 8.3. With those kind of stats and the great start Kenseth has had in 2013 in his first year with Joe Gibbs Racing, the No. 20 should be one of the drivers to keep an eye on this weekend. Others who run well at Texas include: Jimmie Johnson, who has two wins in 19 starts and an average finish of 9.3; Kevin Harvick, who despite having no wins in 20 starts, has three top fives, 10 top tens, and an average finish of 12.5; Tony Stewart, with two wins in 22 starts and an average finish of 12.7.

Nationwide Series

After two weekends off since the Nationwide Series last race in late March at Auto Club Speedway, the Nationwide Series heads to Texas to take on the O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 on Friday Night. With the Nationwide Series running a companion weekend with the Sprint Cup Series, the Nationwide regulars will have their hands full facing off against a slew of Cup regulars that will be running in this race as well.

Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
Austin Dillon 2 0 1 2 0 14 4.0 5.5
Kyle Busch 14 5 11 12 3 1252 7.8 6.9
Matt Kenseth 15 2 7 13 2 317 11.5 7.3
Kevin Harvick 14 5 6 11 0 654 7.2 8.6
Kevin Swindell 1 0 0 1 0 0 20.0 9.0
Dale Earnhardt Jr 5 1 1 3 0 6 13.4 10.4
Trevor Bayne 5 1 1 1 0 10 11.0 10.6
Justin Allgaier 9 0 0 4 0 0 15.2 12.8
Brad Keselowski 12 0 6 8 0 25 16.6 13.1
Reed Sorenson 9 0 3 5 0 31 16.0 13.8


Who To Watch: Austin Dillon leads the Nationwide regulars in stats at Texas with one top five and two top tens in two starts at the track. However, right on Dillon’s heels are Sprint Cup regulars Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth, and Kevin Harvick, who have a combined 12 wins between them and average finishes of 6.9, 7.3, and 8.6, respectively. Newcomer Kevin Swindell had a great outing in his first run at Texas last year with a top ten finish and looks to back it up this go around. Others to keep an eye on include Dale Earnhardt Jr, Trevor Bayne, Justin Allgaier, Brad Keselowski, and Reed Sorenson, who is driving the No. 43 in relief of Michael Annett who was injured at Daytona.

Camping World Truck Series

The Camping World Truck Series makes its second appearance at Rockingham Speedway after its inaugural race last year. Many of the drivers who ran well last year, including winner Kasey Kahne and Nelson Piquet Jr, who led numerous laps, are not running this year’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200, so the race will be a good chance for the drivers who have a great 2013 season to continue their momentum and for drivers who aren’t having such a great year to get things turned around before getting too far into the season.

Driver Races Win Top 5 Top 10 Pole Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
James Buescher 1 0 1 1 0 0 16.0 2.0
Matt Crafton 1 0 1 1 0 40 8.0 3.0
Johnny Sauter 1 0 1 1 0 0 10.0 4.0
Timothy Peters 1 0 1 1 0 7 3.0 5.0
Joey Coulter 1 0 0 1 0 0 17.0 6.0
Ty Dillon 1 0 0 1 0 0 12.0 8.0
Jeb Burton 1 0 0 0 0 0 27.0 11.0
Ron Hornaday Jr 1 0 0 0 0 0 22.0 12.0
David Starr 1 0 0 0 0 0 21.0 13.0
Dakoda Armstrong 1 0 0 0 0 0 11.0 14.0


Who To Watch: Since the Trucks have only run at Rockingham once, we will look at the top finishers from last year to get an idea of who will be up front on Sunday. the top five finishers from last year including James Buescher, Matt Crafton, and Johnny Sauter, who is two for two so far in races in 2013 should be strong this weekend. Throw in other frontrunners such as Timothy Peters, Joey Coulter, and Ty Dillon and the race win could go to any of these guys.

Carl Edwards – NRA 500