Home Blog Page 5301

Matt Kenseth lives up to early season expectations, relieving some pressure

Photo Credit: David Yeazell

Going into a new season, there’s always pressure there to get off to a good start. However, when you’re with a new team, the pressure is even twice as much. Matt Kenseth admits feeling that pressure when he made the move over to Joe Gibbs Racing. He wanted to be able to show Coach Joe Gibbs that he could live up to the expectations that he would win races and championships. After all, the team he is working with won two championships with Tony Stewart.

“Before this year I can’t remember the last time I’ve ever been nervous at all inside of a race car, and every week it gets a little bit better,” he said. “But you’re always a little bit nervous and you want to meet their expectations or exceed them, and you want to go do your job to the best of your ability.”

There was also the added pressure once he got to know the guys, especially crew chief Jason Ratcliffe, as he saw the potential.

“I felt like coming over here and getting to know Jason (Ratcliffe), and really everybody in the shop and the organization and everything, you know, just it’s a great feeling about the season,” he said. “We’re only three weeks in, but man, all three races we had a car, if everything would have went right, that we could have won, and it feels pretty awesome to have this win here.”

At Daytona International Speedway to open the season, he would finish 37th after blowing a motor while running in the top two. He would come back at Phoenix International Raceway a week later and finish seventh. With the win in the third race, Kenseth currently sits  seventh in points.

Leading to those final laps at Las Vegas, though, you could sense the nerves and pressure with Kenseth in how he was yelling at spotter Chris Lambert to get the lap cars out of the way.

“He is so good,” Kenseth said of his new spotter. “He helped us win that race.  He gave me the information that we needed, and it was really important.  He understood what was important to me, but it was very important not to let Kasey get on the side of me.  If he did, I was done, and he did a really good job of telling me where he was running.

Kenseth added that he was yelling like that because there was only 20 feet in the corner that he could run and still be fast as his car was getting tight being on the old tires.

While this moment does bring some relief for Kenseth, this is just the beginning of a long schedule with 33 more races, and the pressure doesn’t end. Now it’s all about continuing the momentum and possibly taking home the championship at the end of the year.

“You want to go to the next one and start thinking — we go on a plane to go home tonight, start thinking about Bristol and what we’re going to try to do there,” Kenseth commented. “That’s the great thing about the sport, it never stops, you only get to enjoy it for a couple days.”

In working at that, Kenseth says that he is “the lucky guy sitting in the seat” as he believes the people at Joe Gibbs Racing, including Ratcliffe, are set to build him cars that can win races all year.

“It is about the organization, it’s about the stuff that they give you, the engines TRD builds, the job Jason does not only with making the cars fast and adjustments, calling the races but also with his leadership, and getting the guys organized and cars prepared to win races,” Kenseth said. “I’m just the lucky guy sitting in the seat.  Of course I’m going to give it everything I’ve got every race no matter where I’m running, but if he wouldn’t have put it out front and made all the adjustments and done that, I wouldn’t have been in position to win the race.”

His theory is backed up as he and his teammates Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin have ran well this year. The only problems they have ran into have been engine related, which TRD believes they’ve sorted out as a valve spring issue.

At the height of those issues and being one of the drivers to have a blown motor in Daytona, you’d think it’d play on the mind most of the new driver in the organization. However, Kenseth says he was probably feeling the best of anybody in the organization leaving Daytona with looking at how they performed.

“When you’re trying hard, you’re always trying to make the most power to make your car handle the best you can and do all that kind of stuff, every once in a while you’re going to have something happen,” he said. “And I didn’t mess it up.  We were leading, and I would have been more disappointed leading Daytona if I were leading the last lap and finished eighth.”

The win for Kenseth on his 41st birthday topped off a solid week after he got to spend time with wife Katie and his two girls throughout the week leading up to the race.

“I got to Phoenix on Thursday or whatever, and then Katie and my two girls and her mom and dad came to Phoenix on Saturday and loaded up our Sequoia, and I felt like Clark Griswold,” he said. “And we drove up through Sedona and up through the Grand Canyon.  There was a zoo down there by Flagstaff.  We did all that for a few days and got here Wednesday. We’ve been gone for a fair amount of time, and we’re all ready to get home.”

From the Grand Canyon to the thunder bowl, Kenseth now gets set to tackle Bristol Motor Speedway.

PrimeSportsMotorsports: Las Vegas Recap

Ed Coombs, Mary Jo Buchanon and Brad Keppel of SpeedwayMedia.com will join Greg to recap the weekend in NASCAR.

PrimeSportsMotorsports: Las Vegas Preview

Matt Laflair of SpeedwayMedia.com will join Greg for the Las Vegas preview show!

Three Races In, Some Things are Fuzzy, but Some Things Are Clear

Photo Credit: David Yeazell

Watching yesterday’s Kobalt 400 from Las Vegas Motor Speedway, it appeared from the beginning that this was a race that was supposed to be won by Hendrick Motorsports. The lineup of Kasey Kahne, Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. is formidable. What more could you ask? It’s a power team if there was one, and yet, it all fell apart all because of other teams that have learned to be as tough as they are. It happened last year and it seems to be happening again.

Consider the case of Kasey Kahne or maybe even Jimmie Johnson. They dominated the event. In former years, it would have been over from the beginning, but a little bit of Joe Gibbs Racing and even Penske Racing played their cards right and the Gibbs bunch pulled off the win. It didn’t hurt that Matt Kenseth is the most underrated driver of this decade. Who can wheel a car better than Kenseth? While at Roush Fenway, he won a championship that someone in the sanctioning body thought was tainted and the horrible Chase was created, and yet he continued to be a steady winner. Two Daytona 500 wins and a championship has never given Kenseth any respect. It boggles my mind that a man who has done so much is ignored by everyone in this sport. Yes, talk about Junior or Tony or Jimmie or even Harvick ( not to mention Danica), but what about Kenseth?

You can also ask the question about our reigning champion, Brad Keselowski. While changing manufacturers, from Dodge to Ford, he has maintained a sterling fourth, fourth, and third place in finishes, second only to Johnson, but still only the only driver with three top five finishes in three races. Truth is, if you don’t drive for Hendrick Motorsports , you have to be overlooked. That organization is just too big and powerful, plus they have the power drivers – Johnson, Gordon, Earnhardt, and Kahne. They run up front and have the history behind them, but a lot of good things are happening elsewhere. Kenseth, Kyle Busch, and even controversial Denny Hamlin are a formidable team at Gibbs. No one can doubt that Edwards, Biffle, and even Stenhouse , a ten race winner, a guy who can wheel a car, and a two time champion are not junk. The reigning champ and the young prodigy at Penske (Keselowski and Logano) are not junk. Not to mention that Richard Childress Racing has the power to move its three drivers into the spotlight. And yet popularity seems to be the reason. Everyone loves a winner.

All of that said, we’ve seen three different races. The restrictor plate race that Johnson won—a crapshoot, the Phoenix race that Edwards won, and Las Vegas and the Kenseth race. Three races and three manufacturers have won. It sounds like parity to me, and yet all the talk is about four drivers who haven’t done much with one exception. It’s the way it goes.

We head to Bristol this weekend, if it doesn’t rain ( the forecast is iffy), and we’ll see what the en 6 car does there. One thing is clear. It appears that things are pretty much equal. Just