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Elliott Sadler looks for success on the twisty turns of Road America

[media-credit name=”Dan Sanger” align=”alignright” width=”239″][/media-credit]Coming off three top-10 finishes in the last four races, it’s no secret that Elliott Sadler has high expectations heading into Road America this weekend.

“I really feel like a road course is a place that we can gain some points and get some good finishes,” he says. “I’ve always been pretty good on road courses through my career.”

Last year in his first start at Road America, Sadler started the race seventh and finished fourth.

“Taking the same car back again this year,” he continues. “Feel like I have a lot better knowledge and understanding of what I need as a racecar driver to be fast at Road America. So we’re looking forward to the challenge this weekend, think we can go up there and have a really successful race.”

Sadler says that for his team, it’s all about keeping the same mentality from track to track that evry track on the schedule they can go and win at.

“From the test sessions we had, from the results we had last year on road courses, we have a good attitude on this team,” he says.

Beyond testing, Sadler says that he’s been studying the in-car camera video from last year’s race to get himself mentally prepared.

“Also, my crew chief and I watched it together trying to select gear selections, ratios, rear gears, brakes, different things, saying, I was good here compared to this car in front of me, but maybe I was bad on this side of the track,” Sadler adds. “We try to adjust our car to what we think the track is going to give us on Friday. Just a little different mentality as far as studying the turns, what gear you’re in. It’s almost like studying for an exam going to a road course. That’s the way I approach it. So when I get there, my learning curve is as short as I can make it.”

Sadler made the move from the Sprint Cup Series to the Nationwide Series last year after spending four years in the Sprint Cup Series with no wins, three top fives and 16 top 10s in 144 races. He says now going to the track, knowing he has a chance to win, it’s been a totally different experience these last two years.

“It’s fun showing up to the racetrack and having a bunch of guys around you that believe in you and having a bunch of guys that want to win and want to be there and want to be part of a good race team,” he says. “I think it showed up on the racetrack, in my attitude, and I think it showed up in how fast the cars are each week. We really believe in each other.

“It says a lot for a driver’s confidence when you’re with a secure team, there’s a lot of stability there, you feel like you’re racing week-to-week to get better and better and be part of a championship conversation. It’s a lot more fun on me as a driver than things I went through in the past.”

While some have said moving back down a series is not the best idea, Sadler says that he’s confident in this decision as he wants to be with a competitive team, no matter the series it’s in.

“This is what I want to do,” he says. “If a call comes one day and I’m able to get back in a competitive Cup car and go run, I would love to do that. I’m not going to go to Cup just to say I’m a Cup driver to ride around 25th and 30th and not be a contender. I’m having way too much fun being competitive. This is why I’m do it. I’m a competitive person whether I’m on the racetrack or off the racetrack. I love the situation I’m in right now because of that.”

Between this year and last year in the Nationwide Series with 47 races, Sadler has two wins, 18 top fives and 34 top 10s, along with finishing second in points last year. So far this year, he leads the points, eight points ahead of teammate Austin Dillon.

With having the points lead going into Road America, Sadler says it allows them to be more aggressive since they can take some more chances.

“You can’t be aggressive when you’re so many points down because if you lose more points than that, you dig yourself into a hole,” he says. “The mentality changes it’s based on how much you’re ahead or behind racing for that particular spot.”

Ambrose captured the pole for Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma

[media-credit name=”Credit: By Ezra Shaw, Getty Images” align=”alignright” width=”245″][/media-credit]

Marcos Ambrose captured the pole for Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma, CA with a lap of 95.262 MPH, 75.203 seconds around the 1.99-mile road course for his second pole in a row.

“’We put a lot of effort into this road course program. I’m thrilled for my team and it takes a whole team to qualify on pole two weeks in a row.” Ambrose said.

Jeff Gordon had the fastest lap during the first practice session and was the last one to qualify. Gordon just missed the pole with a lap of 95.067 MPH.

“I thought it was a really good lap. To pick up from practice and have a good day like we did all day today with the Drive To End Hunger Chevrolet. You’ve got to give credit where credit is due Marcos (Ambrose) laid down a heck of a lap. We came up just a little bit short.” Gordon said.

Jimmie Johnson qualified third, Greg Biffle fourth and Martin Truex Jr. qualified fifth.

Last weeks winner at Michigan, Dale Earnhardt Jr. qualified 19th.

“We had a little more speed than that for qualifying. The car was pretty comfortable. I think I was too conservative with my driving. But, it never helps when you spin out the run before the last run of practice (smiles); that knocks some time out of you.” Earnhardt Jr. said.

Starting Lineup
Toyota/Save Mart 350, Sonoma, CA
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/qual.php?race=16
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Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time
===========================================
1 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 95.262 75.203
2 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 95.067 75.357
3 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 94.795 75.574
4 16 Greg Biffle Ford 94.722 75.632
5 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 94.686 75.661
6 15 Clint Bowyer Toyota 94.679 75.666
7 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 94.632 75.704
8 51 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 94.557 75.764
9 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 94.524 75.79
10 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 94.509 75.802
11 99 Carl Edwards Ford 94.503 75.807
12 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 94.319 75.955
13 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 94.269 75.995
14 20 Joey Logano Toyota 94.209 76.044
15 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 94.206 76.046
16 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 94.199 76.052
17 22 AJ Allmendinger Dodge 94.184 76.064
18 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 94.103 76.129
19 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 94.026 76.192
20 13 Casey Mears Ford 93.991 76.22
21 55 Brian Vickers Toyota 93.949 76.254
22 195 Scott Speed Ford 93.913 76.283
23 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 93.84 76.343
24 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 93.824 76.356
25 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 93.732 76.431
26 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 93.728 76.434
27 38 David Gilliland Ford 93.524 76.601
28 32 Boris Said Ford 93.268 76.811
29 34 David Ragan Ford 93.166 76.895
30 43 Aric Almirola Ford 93.153 76.906
31 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 93.064 76.979
32 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 92.964 77.062
33 98 David Mayhew Ford 92.833 77.171
34 7 Robby Gordon Dodge 92.563 77.396
35 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 92.459 77.483
36 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 92.14 77.751
37 119 Chris Cook Toyota 92.076 77.805
38 249 J.J. Yeley Toyota 91.927 77.931
39 93 Travis Kvapil Toyota 91.836 78.009
40 26 Josh Wise* Ford 91.729 78.1
41 10 Tomy Drissi+ Chevrolet 90.579 79.091
42 83 Landon Cassill+ Toyota 89.341 80.187
43 33 Stephen Leicht* Chevrolet 91.686 78.136