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Edwards feels ‘there’s something in Vegas I’m not supposed to go do’

One year ago today Carl Edwards had firm control of his Sprint Cup Series title hopes. He was the favorite heading into the Chase, having led the point standings for much of the year and performing at a level of consistency that hadn’t been matched.

But here, on September 3, 2012 Edwards sits looking for a miracle just to get into the Chase. Following another disappointing race, an engine failure and 36th place finish, he’s on the outside looking in. Out of the top 10 in points; winless to boot.

[media-credit id=18 align=”alignright” width=”270″][/media-credit]Yet Edwards, who earned many fans and praise for his class in defeat during last year’s championship battle, showed the same on Sunday night. Climbing from his No. 99 Subway Ford Fusion with his head held up and never give up attitude.

“This is not the interview I wanted to do after the race. Our Subway Fusion was pretty good,” said Edwards in the garage. “I was having a lot of fun driving. I love this racetrack, but it looks like a piston or something. It started to making noise about 25-30 laps ago and it’s just hard to put into words.

“That’s just how our season has been going and I don’t know what the reason is. We treat these engines like gold and we hardly ever have engine troubles. These guys do a great job – Doug Yates and everyone at Roush Yates Engines – but we’ll go to Richmond and go win that race and somehow maybe a miracle will happen. We’ll make the Chase and go win this championship. That’s our mission.”

A tall task for Edwards who sits 14th in points, he entered the night sitting 12th. His only shot to make this year’s Chase is to win the race and hope everyone he’s fighting have really bad days. It’s not impossible, but this late in the game, the preverbal fat lady is starting her first note.

But Edwards expected it, this is what he’s been fighting all year. Doesn’t make it any easier though, sometimes he’s not sure what to say. Or how differently he can answer any of the same questions. But he does, he keeps talking. Honestly and openly.

“I don’t know what to say. Somebody is trying to teach me something here,” he said. “I hope we get this out of our system soon because it sure is fun to go win these races and be in the hunt. This is not fun.”

In 25 races Edwards has just 11 top 10s, and only two top fives. It’s been brought up over and over, the championship hangover. The second place curse. Edwards has heard it, he’s acknowledged it and says it has nothing to do with what he’s going through this year. But after Sunday, even he has think there’s more to the story.

He hasn’t won since March of 2011 at Las Vegas. This season he’s led just 256 laps, 206 of those coming at Richmond in the Spring. Edwards had dominated that race and looked to be headed toward victory, until a late race restarted took it all away.

NASCAR says he jumped it, Edwards says he was told he was the leader. Either way, he finished 10th. From there the problems got worse, eventually he got a new crew chief. While Edwards and the team continued to keep their heads up, show up with a smile on their faces and work as hard as they could, nothing changed.

Sunday night they were running in the top 10 when the engine started to go sour. He started to slow and tried to get out of everyone’s way. The radio communication was calm as the team attempted to diagnose the problem. Edwards running only as hard as he had to, trying not to blow it up.

“We still could be within distance. Anything can happen,” said Edwards of his Chase chances. “I don’t ever quit and this team doesn’t ever quit, but, man, that’s getting kicked when you’re down. That’s not what we needed, but we’ve got big shoulders. If there’s anybody that can take it, we’ll take it and we’ll go out and do our very best.

“Like they say, a bad day at the race is better than a good day doing almost anything else. I really enjoyed the race tonight. I had a good time and I’m just trying to come to grips with how pivotal this is for our season, how bad it is, but that’s just the way it is.”

Kasey Kahne and Kyle Busch hold the two Wild Card positions. Kahne has two wins; Busch holds one. Jeff Gordon, 13th in points, also has a win. Edwards sits behind them with nothing but a hope and a prayer. Still gracious in defeat but looking to be the ultimate victor.

And so, he’ll pump up his guys. He’ll keep encouraging them, as he did even from inside the car on Sunday night as he sat on pit road with the hood up. The race, and most likely the Chase, continuing without him.

“We don’t give up. We won’t quit,” Edwards said. “I told my wife today, ‘There’s something in Vegas I’m not supposed to go do.’ I just can’t believe this. We’ve never had this bad of luck. I’ve been trying to live right and do the right things, so I hope there’s a reason for all of this, but it’s just so frustrating.

“It’s so amazing how many things can compound and go bad, but we’re still standing up and everybody is alright. We’ll go racing at Richmond for the win. There’s no better place. This is as good as it gets and Richmond is almost as good as this place for us.”

Gordon says he should have moved Hamlin for Atlanta win

[media-credit name=”Credit: Jerry Markland/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Should Jeff Gordon fail to make the Chase after next weekend’s race at Richmond he might look back to one lap during the 2012 season. Not the many bad weeks he had to start the year, not the hard fought yet mediocre finishes, but one lap in Atlanta.

The last lap where Gordon didn’t do what he says he should have. Or at least what the 41-year-old Gordon should have done. He finished second to Denny Hamlin in the AdvoCare 500, coming up short on the final lap after getting to the outside of the No. 11 going into turn three.

He settled for second, it seems. Instead he could have taken the win from Hamlin. Moved him out of the way and went on by and possibly into the Chase.

“What a battle. You know going into this race that it’s gonna be a fight,” Gordon said afterwards. “The track is just so slick and your car has a lot of grip for about five laps and all of sudden it starts going sideways. We just never could get my car tight enough.

“On the short runs we were really fast which worked to our favor, to get second place and almost that win. I’m just mad at myself right now. I don’t know, I guess I’m getting soft in my old age. I’m too nice. Fifteen years ago I would have just moved him right up the race track, I don’t know why I didn’t do that.”

On a night when Gordon and DuPont commemorated their 20 years in the sport, the No. 24 Chevrolet out of Hendrick Motorsports put on a show. Starting fifth and leading six laps early on, the fastest car on the track when the sun was still up. But once he lost the lead Gordon ran quietly in the top 10.

Then came alive again the deeper the night went. The second to last restart, with 46 laps to go, was a turning point as Gordon quickly made his way back into the top five and into second as the laps wound down. But Martin Truex Jr. had driven away and Gordon needed another caution in order to have a shot at the win.

He got it, along with a final pit stop in which he came off pit road third. The last restart was exactly the one Gordon wanted, he laid back and pushed Hamlin into turn one and then tried to grab the lead on the last lap.

It was all going according to his plan as Gordon wanted to get to Hamlin’s quarter panel and try to make something happen. Yet, when he got there, he was carrying too much speed and ended up pushing up the track. Hamlin earned his fourth win of the season and second straight, Gordon still has his lone win from Pocono.

More importantly, he still has a shot at the Chase. Heading into the final regular season race next weekend at Richmond, he’s 13th in points, 12 behind Kyle Busch. Busch won at RIR in the Spring and currently holds the second Wild Card spot. In order to make the Chase, Gordon will either have to win the race or finish ahead of Busch.

“Well, you don’t want to have to go beat Kyle Busch at Richmond, he’s pretty strong there,” said Gordon of his Chase chances. “We’re really going to focus on our own program like we always do. We focus on tuning the car, communicating and working the setup the best we possibly can. And try to have the fastest racecar out there and if we can do that, then we try not to make any mistakes. Driving on pit road and pit strategy. If we don’t have the fastest car then we have to switch it up.

“Puts little more pressure on the crew chief or maybe even on me if we try some tire strategy, fuel mileage strategy, whatever we do track position wise. You can’t predict any of those things, you just got to go out there and race. Got to race hard.

“I’m not going into it thinking that we got to finish 12 positions ahead of Kyle. I’m thinking we got to win. And if we don’t make it, as long as we put our best effort forward, we didn’t make it and we go try to win races in the final 10.”

Richmond is set up for a championship showdown. Only two spots remain up for grabs, the top 10 drivers all locked in after Atlanta. And Gordon knows all about trying to make the Chase at Richmond, he’s had to do it before. Most notably in 2005 and he failed to make it into NASCAR’s playoffs.

It’s what makes that one night in September an intense race and a crazy night. Now he’s back in the thick of it, his team has the pressure on, they’re going with guns loaded and ready to fight until there’s nothing left to fight for.

Gordon hasn’t won at Richmond since 2000 however, and admits his team badly missed the setup in the April race. Going back he has higher expectations and confidence. And, as he joked with Brad Keselowski on Sunday night, he’s going to race and end things differently on the final lap.

“It’s not going to happen twice,” he said.

Hamlin holds off Gordon and wins at Atlanta

[media-credit name=”Noel Lanier” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Denny Hamlin held off Jeff Gordon on Sunday and won the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series AdvoCare 500 Atlanta Motor Speedway. This was Hamlin’s fourth win of the season, the most of any driver thus far and places himself in position to top the standings when the 12-driver Chase starts after next weekend’s race at Richmond.

“I wanted this one real bad. The car faded a little bit, but the pit crew won me that race. That’s what a championship team is all about. This year, I think we have it all.” Hamlin said.

Jamie McMurray brought out the final caution flag of the night after hitting the wall on lap 320. Setting up a shootout between Hamlin, Gordon, Brad Keselowski and Martin Truex Jr.

Gordon bumped Hamlin for the lead on the restart and then went high entering turn-1. Hamlin was able to stay in front and hold off Gordon on the final lap and captured his first win at the speedway and the 21st of his career.

“I should have just run into the back of him going into three and move him up the race track and we would have been sitting in victory lane right now and counting another win. This Chase is too important for me to be in it and not to make a move like that….I wouldn’t have wanted to wreck him but I would have liked to have that one over again.” Gordon said.

Keselowski finished third, Truex Jr. fourth and Harvick finished fifth.

“A solid night here at Atlanta and proud of the effort. Got some good consistency and some great cars and it feels good to be locked into the Chase, too.” Keselowski said.

On lap 269, Jimmie Johnson, Ryan Newman and Sam Hornish Jr. all were involved in a crash on the backstretch. Johnson and Newman both had heavy damage and went to the garage. Johnson finished 34th and Newman finished 35th.

“I think the 48 just ran out of room and it was unfortunate. We have one chore to do with the U.S. Army team and that is to go into Richmond and win. We have done it before and we can do it again.” Newman said.

Carl Edwards lost his engine on lap 264. Edwards finished 36th.

“It started making noise about 25-30 laps ago and it’s just hard to put into words. That’s just how our season has been going and I don’t know what the reason is. We treat these engines like gold and we hardly ever have engine troubles.” Edwards said. “These guys do a great job, Doug Yates and everyone at Roush Yates Engines. But we’ll go to Richmond and go win that race and somehow maybe a miracle will happen. We’ll make the Chase and go win this championship. That’s our mission.”

Next week at Richmond International Speedway shapes up to be a shootout between Kasey Kahne (751 pts), Kyle Busch (746pts), Gordon (734pts) and Edwards (720pts). Kahne and Bush currently hold the wild card spots. Kahne has two wins and Busch and Gordon both have one.

Unofficial Race Results
AdvoCare 500, Atlanta Motor Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/race.php?race=25
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 7 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 48
2 5 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 43
3 21 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 41
4 28 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 41
5 24 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 40
6 3 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 39
7 35 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 37
8 18 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 36
9 4 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 35
10 6 55 Mark Martin Toyota 34
11 15 22 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 0
12 26 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 32
13 16 51 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 31
14 27 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 30
15 2 16 Greg Biffle Ford 30
16 32 21 Trevor Bayne Ford 0
17 10 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 27
18 9 20 Joey Logano Toyota 26
19 25 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 25
20 40 83 Landon Cassill Toyota 24
21 33 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 23
22 1 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 23
23 11 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 21
24 20 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 20
25 22 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 19
26 41 93 Travis Kvapil Toyota 18
27 30 15 Clint Bowyer Toyota 17
28 14 34 David Ragan Ford 16
29 23 10 Danica Patrick Chevrolet 0
30 42 32 T.J. Bell Ford 0
31 29 38 David Gilliland Ford 13
32 13 43 Aric Almirola Ford 12
33 19 13 Casey Mears Ford 11
34 8 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 10
35 17 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 9
36 12 99 Carl Edwards Ford 8
37 36 195 Scott Speed Ford 7
38 34 249 Jason Leffler Toyota 0
39 31 30 David Stremme Toyota 5
40 39 23 Scott Riggs Chevrolet 4
41 43 37 J.J. Yeley Chevrolet 3
42 38 191 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 0
43 37 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 0

Ford Atlanta Post-Race Quotes

Down but never out for Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and the No.6 team

[media-credit name=”Noel Lanier” align=”alignright” width=”232″][/media-credit]Don’t give up, don’t ever give up. The famous line from Jimmy Valvano in 1993 during his ESPY speech has remained an inspiration around the sports world.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and his Roush Fenway Racing team have made their 2012 season all about never giving up. From their first win of the season in Las Vegas to the most recent Saturday night in Atlanta, the No. 6 Cargill team is one that just doesn’t quit.

Stenhouse did what was thought to be the impossible on Saturday, he passed Kevin Harvick for the win in the NRA American Warrior 300. On the last lap no less, after Harvick had spanked the field – leading 157 of 195 laps – and leading by almost 15 seconds during one portion of the race, with only eight cars on the lead lap. But it was Stenhouse, who led just 16 laps, who got a great restart and sailed to Victory Lane.

“We were a little off there to run with the 33 [Harvick] and Mike [Kelley, crew chief] kept tightening it up and tightening it up and ended up getting to where we were closer to the 33,” Stenhouse said of the win. “We still probably weren’t exactly where we needed to be, but we were close enough to get him on that restart.

“Just a great effort by the Cargill Beef team. They worked really hard all weekend and prepared really hard for this race in the shop. The body guys and everybody has done a great job with it and it was a great team effort tonight.”

As Harvick dominated Stenhouse preserved his Ford. Admitting to the team that he wasn’t even trying to run down the No. 33, instead choosing to try and save his tires. A wise decision that paid off later, Stenhouse and company continued to make adjustments to get them in the ballpark with Harvick and then took advantage on a restart with four laps to go.

“I don’t think you can save anything to surprise him, they were fast,” said Stenhouse of Harvick. “But I knew if I got a good restart I could hang on his outside and slow him up enough to give ourselves a shot at it. It was probably our best restart all-night and just nailed it. Was able to hang on the outside of him and slowed him down he gave us the top, he wanted the bottom.

“And then the 22 [Brad Keselowski] gave us a good push down the front straightaway and Kevin gave us the top again and didn’t slow our momentum up. Definitely paid off for us but I really felt like we were going to run that restart and I was going to try to get to second and hang on. But when we got the good restart I went for it.”

Never giving up. Stenhouse showed the same strength at March in Las Vegas. That day it was veteran Mark Martin with the upper hand as Stenhouse repeatedly told his team he wasn’t comfortable with the car. They worked and worked on it, then Stenhouse, again on a restart, pulled away from Martin and led the final laps.

After the checkered flag the team told him that’s why you never give up and on Saturday at Atlanta they were screaming it over the radio. That’s why you never give up, they said, it’s never over until it’s over.

“It was just really nice to be able to rely on your driver,” said Kelley. “We didn’t have the best car. I’m not gonna sit up here and tell you we did. I think we made gains on our car during the night, but when it came down to the end that was Ricky Stenhouse willing himself to a win and he carried our team to Victory Lane tonight.”

The win, sixth of his career and first at Atlanta, was the fourth of the season for Stenhouse, tying with Elliott Sadler for the most on the season. Joey Logano, a full-time Cup Series driver, is ineligible for points but has won six races this year. Stenhouse admits that he may have stolen Saturday’s race, but says he doesn’t feel all that bad because plenty have been stolen from him.

He gladly takes the bonus points toward the championship. Another place Stenhouse and his team aren’t giving up. After three straight races in May where they finished outside the top 25 they fell from the point lead. He’s now back up to second after earning nine top nine finishes in the last 11 races, with his worst finish being 12th. It brings him back to within 12 points of Sadler heading into Richmond.

Stenhouse is looking to become just the sixth driver in NNS history to win back-to-back championships. He moves to the Sprint Cup Series full-time in 2013 for Roush but right now, with nine NNS races left, feels he has the momentum for a great fight to the finish.

“I think all of the race tracks that we have left are ones that we run really strong on, but the problem is the 2 [Sadler] runs really strong on them as well, so I don’t think either one of us really has an advantage as far as the race tracks go,” said Stenhouse. “They’ve got great equipment. We’ve got great equipment and it’s just gonna be who doesn’t make as many mistakes.

“We’ve got to make sure we do our job on pit road. I’ve got to do my job on the track and we just have to keep everything together and double check everything that we do because it’s gonna be a tough battle.”