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Matty’s Picks 2012 – Vol. 15 Michigan International Speedway – Quicken Loans 400 – June 17, 2012

It has been a couple weeks since you’ve heard from me due to my boycott of having to watch two races at Pocono each year. Much to my surprise, and a surprise to many, the race from the tricky triangle actually contained some action…

Amidst the controversies on pit road, the games being played in regards to fuel strategy, and the uncertainty the new surface would carry with it, I actually enjoyed watching the race from Pocono last weekend. Being just a short three and-a-half hour jaunt down to Pocono International Raceway, from my hometown near Syracuse, New York, you would think the tricky triangle would be on my list of most-visited NASCAR venues. WRONG – I have made only one trip to the track in the Poconos, a trip I cannot post the details of here.

I was happy I was able to watch the first race on the new surface at the tricky triangle, and am happy to see the race finally entail some side-by-side action for more than just the caution laps. As a result of last Sunday’s race in Pennsylvania, I am rescinding my boycott and will complete my column for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series’ second visit to Pocono on August 5th.

Dover Recap

I will not bore you to death this week with my recap of two weeks ago but thought I would mention that my picks were not very impressive yet again here in 2012. I picked “Concrete Carl” two weeks ago to win the FedEx 400, a pick that seemed good at the start, but turned sour just past the ¼ way mark. It was tire issues that sent Edwards into the outside wall on lap 164, paving the way for his 26th place finish.

It was the hometown guy, Martin Truex Jr. who was my hope for a win two weeks ago in the first state. After starting 18th, Truex climbed into the top 10 just before the halfway mark, and reached a race-high 7th. He would move no further and finish 7th at the Monster Mile, netting me a much-needed top 10.

Michigan Picks

Since it is Father’s Day this weekend, I feel obligated to share my thoughts on the guy who is responsible for my addition to racing, my dad. He’s the guy that spent his weeknights fixing broken heim joints, repairing bent roll cages, and cleaning carburetors all in an effort to put my brother and I atop the standings in the Jr. Honda and (HEAVY) Mod classes. Each time I travel past the .25-mile track on the grounds of the New York State Fair, it brings me back to my days of waiving ‘Hi’ to my grandmother just before the Novice feature on Friday night. It was those long Friday nights at the famed quarter-midget track in Central New York that have made me into the motor-head I am today. So here’s to you Dad for all those years of wrenching on twisted equipment!

So we visit our second track in as many weeks to receive a facelift since the last races at each facility last season, and again this week, the festivities have begun with a day of testing the new surface. Testing on Thursday was not enough for NASCAR, Goodyear, or teams to be comfortable enough with the tires to attack the Quicken Loans 400. NASCAR and Goodyear have added a practice session for this evening to give teams and drivers a chance to get a feel for the new tires brought to Michigan as a result of the blistering speeds posted this week. Nobody knows what the new tires will do to the cars and how they have been handling this week, so the start of Sunday’s race should be fairly interesting.

Winner Pick

This week, I’m going with a guy who is yet to visit Victory Lane this season, but has finished twice in the spring portion of the 2012 Sprint Cup schedule. Kevin Harvick has won just once at Michigan International Speedway, and has struggled finding his groove in the shadows of the Motor City. He has finished in the top 5 in all but one of the four practice sessions thus far and has shined at MIS. Watch for Harvick to win one for baby Otis this week.

Dark Horse Pick

Why not go with a guy used to the blistering speeds we’ve seen so far this week in Michigan? Juan Pablo Montoya is one of the guys in the field who is used to averaging speeds over 200 mph. His best finish at Michigan (6th) came in the 2009 season, so this one might be a little far-fetched. Plan on him being in my column next week, but I will feel a little more confident in picking him at Infineon, rather than on the oval in Michigan.

That’s all for this week so until we hit the road course…You Stay Classy NASCAR NATION!

Logano wins the Alliance Truck Parts 250 at Michigan

[media-credit name=”Credit: John Harrelson/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”224″][/media-credit]Under bright skies and sparse stands, the NASCAR Nationwide series took the green flag today at the Michigan International Speedway. That has been one of the stories with the Nationwide series all year, as well as NASCAR as a whole – good racing but fewer people to watch.

Cole Whitt started on the pole for today’s Alliance Truck Parts 250, but in the opening laps, things didn’t go as planned for his teammate, Danica Patrick. On lap two, she had an incident with the driver of the #38 car, Brad Sweet. They both spun coming off of turn-2. Neither driver had too much damage and both were able to continue.

On lap 25, NASCAR slowed the field for a competition caution to check the tire wear on the cars. Tire wear has been a big issue at Michigan this weekend, as NASCAR announced prior to the race that the Sprint Cup cars would have a special practice session later in the day to test a new left side tire being used on Sunday due to excessive speed and tire wear during practice. Joey Logano led everyone onto pit road during the competition caution and Sam Hornish Jr. came out first after taking only 2 tires. Hornish Jr. ended up holding off the field for a good number of laps with almost everyone behind him taking four tires instead of two.

About 15 or so laps into the second long green flag run of the day, Austin Dillon came down pit road because he had a vibration. Dillon took two right side tires. This was a very risky move because you usually should take four tires when you feel a vibration, just to make sure that you changed the correct tires. Dillon felt that the vibration was coming from the right side of the car, so they took two tires only and fell 1-lap down and settled into 27th position. Luckily for Dillon, just as he came on the radio to tell his crew chief, Danny Stockman that the vibration had not gone away, the caution flag flew once again. Dillon received the “lucky dog” pass and was back on the lead lap in no time.

The leaders headed to pit road again. Hornish took four tires because of only taking two on the prior stop, while Paul Menard, Elliot Sadler and James Buescher were among the leaders that took two tires and led the way off pit road.

During this caution, points contender Ricky Stenhouse Jr. came down pit road and the team opened the hood to take a look at the right front suspension. Stenhouse has had bad luck and very poor runs the past few weeks, and this has put him in second place in the championship race.

After the restart on lap-55, Brad Sweet had another incident. This time it was with Brad Keselowski and the #22 Discount Tire Dodge. Sweet got loose and barely kissed the outside wall. Keselowski made a nice save up in the marbles and kept the car off the wall.

With 40 laps to go, the first green flag pit stops of the day started with Keselowski being the first taker to hit pit road. Michael McDowell in the #20 Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) car was next and then Menard pitted from the lead. Menard had a bit of trouble on the right rear during the pit stop. This was because the right rear tire changer had a fireball come up into his face and had part of his goatee burnt off! Yes, you heard me right! It caused Menard to drop from 1st to 4th once all the green flag stops cycled through.

When Danica Patrick pitted, she took two tires only, but ended up waiting on fuel. During that time she could’ve changed all four tires and lost basically no time at all. Plus, she reported that she had a vibration so that would’ve fixed that problem for sure.

After all stops, Elliot Sadler, your NASCAR Nationwide Series points leader, was your race leader over Logano, Kurt Busch in the #54 Monster Energy Toyota driving for his brother, Kyle Busch Motorsports, and Menard in the #33 Menards/Rheem Chevrolet.

With 22 laps to go, Austin Dillon, who was still trying to make his way up through the field, was racing with Patrick for position when Dillon tried to go to Patrick’s inside. Patrick got loose and spun out again in the middle of turns 1 and 2. Although there was no direct contact made by Dillon, it seemed as though he sucked the air out from under her car and caused her to spin around.

On the next restart with 18 laps to go, Sadler, who started second, got an awful restart and lost a total of six positions and dropped back to seventh. Five laps later, Patrick and Sweet were involved in another accident, but this one was a little more severe.

Battling for 14th spot, Danica got loose and ended up with her right rear into the outside wall and it was heavily damaged.

With 10 laps to go and Logano still leading, Menard got a bad restart and Busch, like he was doing all day on the restarts, made it 3-wide going down into turn-1 and gained a lot of spots. James Buescher settled in second and Dillon in third when there was, you guessed it, another yellow flag. This one involved Jamie Dick and Josh Richards.

There was an oil spill so NASCAR decided to red flag the race to clean up all the debris and oil. Also, something strange happened; after Richards got out of his car, it rolled down the 18 degree banking by itself. It settled on the infield grass and nobody was hurt by the unmanned stock car rolling downhill.

The last restart of the day came with five laps to go. Logano led, Buescher was second and Busch was third. Buescher stayed on Logano’s bumper for the next four laps. On the last lap, going into turn-1, Buescher got to Logano’s inside, but he couldn’t make it stick. Logano had the momentum coming off the top side of the race track and went on to win the Alliance Truck Parts 250, his fifth NASCAR Nationwide win of this season.

Busch finished in third place, Cole Whitt finished fourth and Dillon rounded out the top-5.

Some other notables were Johanna Long, who didn’t get that much TV time, finished in the 16th spot, Sadler in 11th, Patrick 18th and Stenhouse Jr. who had handling problems all day, brought it home 25th.

The second place finisher, Buescher, said “there were a lot of moves at the end of the race” and that they “didn’t have all the speed [they] needed getting into the center of the corner. Restarts were good. I thought I was gonna get Joey but once I got to the bottom, I was just too loose.”

Adam Stevens, the crew chief for Joey Logano after the race said that it “feels great” to keep winning these Nationwide races. The winner, Logano, talking about racing Buescher for the win, said that “it’s hard to get away from anyone. I knew the 30 [Buescher] was waiting on me.”

Talking about his momentum, Logano said that he’s “been on a roll lately [and we] just gotta keep it going. I’m very confident right now in my abilities.”

This race at Michigan had high hopes after seeing the high speeds being posted earlier in the week and I think that NASCAR fans everywhere would agree when I say that it did not disappoint.

Unofficial Race Results
Alliance Truck Parts 250, Michigan Int’l Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/race.php?race=13
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 3 18 Joey Logano Toyota 0
2 4 30 James Buescher Chevrolet 0
3 15 54 Kurt Busch Toyota 0
4 2 88 Cole Whitt * Chevrolet 41
5 1 3 Austin Dillon * Chevrolet 40
6 11 12 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 39
7 13 20 Michael McDowell Toyota 0
8 7 33 Paul Menard Chevrolet 0
9 17 11 Brian Scott Toyota 35
10 9 22 Brad Keselowski Dodge 0
11 6 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 34
12 18 43 Michael Annett Ford 32
13 16 44 Mike Bliss Toyota 31
14 8 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 31
15 23 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 29
16 14 70 Johanna Long * Chevrolet 28
17 22 14 Jeff Green Toyota 27
18 5 7 Danica Patrick Chevrolet 27
19 19 81 Jason Bowles * Toyota 25
20 30 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 24
21 28 19 Tayler Malsam Toyota 23
22 27 40 Erik Darnell Chevrolet 22
23 36 108 Tony Raines Ford 0
24 12 38 Brad Sweet * Chevrolet 20
25 20 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 19
26 32 41 Timmy Hill Ford 0
27 33 4 Danny Efland Chevrolet 17
28 37 124 Angela Cope Chevrolet 0
29 21 23 Jamie Dick Chevrolet 15
30 24 39 Josh Richards Ford 14
31 31 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 14
32 35 50 T.J. Bell Chevrolet 12
33 39 89 Morgan Shepherd Chevrolet 11
34 10 199 Kenny Wallace Toyota 10
35 42 52 Tim Schendel Chevrolet 9
36 34 15 Blake Koch Chevrolet 8
37 38 175 Scott Riggs Chevrolet 0
38 29 46 Chase Miller Chevrolet 6
39 26 42 Josh Wise Chevrolet 0
40 41 171 Michael Guerity Chevrolet 0
41 40 47 Matt DiBenedetto Chevrolet 0
42 25 10 Kevin Lepage Toyota 2
43 43 174 Mike Harmon Chevrolet 1