Home Blog Page 6099

Surprising and Not Surprising: Talladega Good Sam Club 500

After a moment of silence in memory of Dan Wheldon, who rode with every car at Talladega Speedway, and a hearty rendition of the National Anthem sung by the 82nd Airborne Chorus, here is what was surprising and not surprising from the 43rd running of the Good Sam Club 500.

[media-credit name=”Credit: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”257″][/media-credit]Surprising:  It was surprising that the number 100 played such an important role in the restrictor plate race at ‘Dega this weekend. Clint Bowyer’s No. 33 race car, adorned in celebration of Chevrolet’s 100th anniversary, also scored team Richard Childress Racing its 100th win in the sport.

This was Bowyer’s fifth win in 213 Cup races and his first victory in 2011. Bowyer, who seems to have mastered racing at Talladega, scored his second victory and sixth top-10 finish in twelve races at the Superspeedway.

“What an awesome point scheme,” Bowyer said. “This is Richard’s (Childress) 100th race that he has won in the Cup Series.”

“I told him congratulations and I guess I am going to have to race his ass for the 101st,” Bowyer continued. “It meant a lot to me to get all these guys back in Victory Lane before we cap of this season.”

Not Surprising:  To no one’s surprise, Bowyer had not just a little bit, but a great deal, of help from a friend to secure the win. Jeff Burton, who has had one of the most miserable seasons to date in his No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet, pushed Bowyer to victory and scored a close but second place finish for his efforts.

This was Burton’s 14th top-10 finish in 36 races at Talladega. But it was just his second top-10 finish in 2011.

“Well, that is plate racing,” Burton said. “We put ourselves in position to win the race.”

“Clint did a great job,” Burton continued. “We had a great day and anytime you leave here and the car is in one piece, you should be happy.”

“Part of me wants to cry and part of me wants to cheer, but to come that close after the year we have had is pretty disappointing.”

Surprising:  Thanks to one of the most surprising finishes, as promised, kids will eat free at Golden Corral. Dave Blaney scored that top ten required for the free meal, bringing his No. 36 Golden Coral Chevrolet home in third.

Blaney was most grateful to Brad Keselowski, who worked with him all day at ‘Dega.

“I can’t thank Brad Keselowski and that whole team enough,” Blaney said. “Man, he could really push me well.”

“It turned out good,” Blaney continued. “I’m happy for Golden Coral, finally get to feed a lot of kids on Monday and that is big for us.”

Not Surprising:  While Blaney may have been playing the part of fairy godfather, the Cinderella story continued for that driver who worked so well with him at ‘Dega. Brad Keselowski, behind the wheel of the Blue Deuce, continued his fairy tale run with a finish of fourth, hoisting him up three spots to third in the Chase point standings.

“This is exactly how we needed to leave Talladega, with a strong finish,” Keselowski said. “I gained points on the leader; gained points on really all the Chase cars.”

“We put ourselves in contention.”

Surprising:  In spite of having its windows confiscated on Friday after failing to pass inspection, the MWR teams, including Michael Waltrip, Martin Truex, Jr. and David Reutimann, rallied to finish ninth, tenth and thirteenth respectively.

“We were right where we needed to be,” Truex, Jr., the driver of the No. 56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota Camry said. “We’ve had good cars this season but not a lot to show for it.”

“I’m really happy,” Truex, Jr. continued. “We almost had the win.”

The driver of the No. 00 Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota Camry, David Reutimann, echoed his teammate’s sentiments.

“We had good stops and a good strategy,” Rooty said. “The entire crew did their part to put us in contention at the end.”

Not Surprising:   Although the Red Bull tandem, especially Kasey Kahne, had some struggles early in the race, the team took flight and finished top-10 at Talladega. Brian Vickers, behind the wheel of the No. 83 Red Bull Toyota Camry, finished fifth, while Kasey Kahne, piloting the No. 4 Red Bull Toyota Camry, finished right behind him in sixth.

“The Red Bull Camrys did a great job of working together today,” Vickers said. “Kasey and I had to go to the back four or five times, but we always got back to the front.”

“This race is nerve-wracking,” Vickers continued. “It takes about two hours to go to sleep after this because your mind is still going 100 miles-per-hour.”

Surprising:  In spite of being ‘dateless’ for much of the early part of the race, Denny Hamlin actually managed to finally find a dance partner and finish the race in the eighth position.

The driver of the No. 11 FedEx Office Toyota Camry for Joe Gibbs Racing described his race this way.

“It was one of those races where it was just one of those days,” Hamlin said. “I was the odd one out for the whole race.”

“The best I can describe it is we were stuck without a date to the prom, so I was just hitting on everyone’s mom.”

Not Surprising:  With such strange deals and partnerships evolving throughout the race, to continue Hamlin’s analogy, it was not surprising that some prom dates were left jilted at the end of the dance.

Probably no one was more surprised by a betrayal than four-time champion Jeff Gordon, who had agreed to work with Trevor Bayne at the end of the race, only to be jilted, finishing 27th.

Gordon, behind the wheel of the No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet, had lost his wingman and dance partner Mark Martin after an on-track spin. Gordon agreed, or so he thought, to partner with his young plate protégé Trevor Bayne, behind the wheel of the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford, late in the race.

But to Gordon’s dismay, Bayne, following Ford team orders, ditched the champ, going on to work with Matt Kenseth, another Ford driver, instead.

“I just think it could have been handled better,” Gordon said. “If somebody is going to screw you, you’d like them to say it to your face, you know, or at least on the radio.”

“We already had a history of working well together and I thought it was a no brainer,” Gordon continued. “But I probably should have known better.”

“Politics play out sometimes.”

Surprising:  It was surprising that the seemingly dynamic duo of Hendrick Motorsports teammates Junior and Johnson faded into such obscurity by race end. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., in the No. 88 Diet Mountain Dew “Paint the 88”/National Guard Chevrolet, finished 25th and Jimmie Johnson, in his No. 48 MyLowe’s Chevrolet, finished right behind in 26th.

“On that last restart at the end, we had some issues with my car overheating,” Johnson said. “We lost our momentum there and got to the outside and kind of stalled out on top and finished far worse than we had hoped to.”

“We raced a little bit but not a whole lot whenever we thought they were getting a little bit crazy,” Junior said. “The cautions kept coming out and we ran over some debris.”

“We just didn’t have the track position at the end to make a run with two laps to go,” Junior continued. “Just not enough time.”

Not Surprising:  Roush dominance, to no one’s surprise, continued to reign in the point standings even after the rough race at Talladega. Cousin Carl, who finished eleventh in his No. 99 Subway Ford, now reigns atop the leader board with a 14 point advantage.

“I don’t know that I’ve ever been so excited about 11th place,” Edwards said. “Even though it is not a win, it is a big battle in the war and a huge day for us.”

Now nipping at his heels, however, is Edwards’ teammate, steady Matt Kenseth, who finished 18th in his No. 17 Jeremiah Weed Ford , moving up one position to second place in the points.

“It was frustrating that we ran up there most of the day,” Kenseth said. “David (Ragan) was a great drafting partner but he broke something on the last restart.”

“I had to try to find somebody with two laps to go and that is hard,” Kenseth continued. “We made it through so I guess the damage could have been worse.”

Surprising:  It was blessedly surprising how well all of the safety measures worked at Talladega, one of the sport’s fastest, and most dangerous, superspeedways. Just ask Regan Smith, who took one of the hardest hits of the day.

“Yeah, it was not a fun hit,” Smith, behind the wheel of the No. 78 Furniture Row Chevrolet, said after crashing so hard into the safer barriers that they had to be repaired before the race could re-start. “It is what we do at restrictor plate tracks and we unfortunately get caught up in other people’s messes.”

To add insult to injury, Smith’s hauler suffered a fire after the race as a result of some fuel spillage.

“It is what it is,” Smith said with a sigh.

Not Surprising:  With the wreck and death of Dan Wheldon in the IndyCar Series last weekend weighing so heavily on everyone’s mind, it was no wonder that many of the drivers were just grateful to come out of the Talladega race unscathed.

“I am alive, so that is good,” Marcos Ambrose, driver of the No. 9 Stanley Ford, said simply. “I am disappointed with the result but with everything that was going on out there and with as much stuff as happened, I am pretty thankful that we were just able to cross the finish line at the end.”

Perhaps Brad Keselowski summed up the Talladega race weekend best.

“It must have had something to do with the memory of Dan (Wheldon) on the back of the car,” Keselowski said. “I just want to say a shout-out to him and his family.”

Carl Edwards Was Prepared to Lose the Point Lead at Talladega Instead He Extends It

With the Chase as close as it has been through five races and especially with the new point system, it’s hard for a driver to extend their point lead. It’s even harder to do so after a race at Talladega Superspeedway but Carl Edwards did so on Sunday afternoon.

[media-credit id=2 align=”alignright” width=”227″][/media-credit]Entering the day with a five-point advantage on Kevin Harvick, Edwards like every other Chase driver was just looking to survive. He did so by playing it safe and earning an 11th place finish. It puts him now 14 points ahead in the Chase lead, the largest it has been, over teammate Matt Kenseth.

“I don’t know that I’ve ever been excited about 11th place,” said Edwards afterward. “This race was one that is nerve-wracking for everyone. We came in here with a small points lead and we’re leaving with a bigger one. That’s a huge day for us.”

Thanks in part to another teammate, Greg Biffle. The two played possum in the back of the field for nearly all of the races 188 laps. Looking to avoid trouble and be around when it mattered most. Edwards also didn’t want to cause any trouble, something he did in the Chase a few seasons ago which not only ended a few drivers’ championship bids, but earned him a new enemies as well.

Not the case on Sunday. He and Biffle stayed out of trouble and capitalized on other drivers problems. Because of the new two-car drafting Biffle became an important part of Edwards’ day and success. The two stuck together, never leaving each other’s bumpers and worked their plan from start to finish. Something that Edwards was thankful for in the end.

“I cannot believe how much Greg helped us today,” said Edwards. “I owe him a lot. Greg stuck with me all day. The last lap, he was driving my car from back there. We got separated and he was screaming, ‘Go, go, go.’ Then somehow he found me again, pushed us back up through there a little bit. Just a very, very good day. Just really appreciate Subway being onboard. Good to get them a good finish. Even though it’s not a win, it’s a big battle in the war, a huge day for us.”

The series next stop is the paperclip in Virginia, a track that Edwards has never won on. But following his performance and good fortune Sunday, he now says he has never been as excited to get to Martinsville as he currently is. Ready to rock, is what Edwards feels.

But it doesn’t mean that he’ll be breathing any easier. Unlike Talladega where a driver isn’t in control of their own destiny, Edwards knows that anything can happen over the next four weeks.

“No, no,” said Edwards about feeling in good shape and taking a breath. “That would be nice, I’d love that. We’d have to have a hundred-point lead to take a breath. Anything can happen. I’m proud of our team, where we’ve come from, how far we’ve come in the last 18 months. It’s unbelievable.”

Edwards says that it shows how hard everyone has worked. And how much responsibility everyone is willing to take in order to fix what was needed to be fix. It helps Edwards have fun driving what he believes is the best team and best cars in the sport. Yet, he knows he has stiff competition from another driver who has exactly the same thing.

Coming off a win at Charlotte and a 18th place finish at Talladega, Matt Kenseth is also in championship form and now Roush Fenway Racing drivers sit one-two in points.

“I’m a little nervous about Matt, honestly, ‘cause I know how good he is and how good his team is,” Edwards said. “Having him in second doesn’t make me breath easier competitive wise.”

Neither does the fact that Edwards has been here before. Chasing a championship and being oh so close to holding the trophy. In those cases though, Edwards was left standing on the sideline watching another driver do it. And with some of his best tracks ahead, he still won’t think about what could be for 2011.

Instead he’s content just knowing that his team is competitive every week. Right now, says Edwards, his team is better than they were in years past when they were in this position. Everything is better in fact, the team and the cars.

“Just glad to be in the position I’m in,” he said. “It’s amazing to drive these Fords right now for Jack [Roush, owner]. It’s a lot of fun.”

Jeff Gordon and Trevor Bayne Provide the Fireworks at Talladega

Clint Bowyer claimed the victory at Talladega and Richard Childress Racing captured its 100th Sprint Cup win. The real drama of the race, however, was provided by Trevor Bayne and Jeff Gordon.

[media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”247″][/media-credit]Gordon had been instrumental in Bayne’s surprise win at the Daytona 500 early in the season so the two of them had some history working together.

But Gordon probably knew what everyone had been hearing all week. The order had come down from Ford Racing that Fords would only work with Fords.

Still, Gordon had lost his drafting partner and he probably figured it was worth a shot.

So before the last restart of the race Jeff Gordon radioed Bayne and proposed that they work together on the final run.

Gordon didn’t expect him to agree but when Bayne said, ‘Yeah man, I’m pushing you. We’re good,’ Gordon said, “I believed him. But I think they had a different plan.”

Unfortunately, the partnership never really happened. Bayne, who insinuated that he was acting on team orders, left Gordon high and dry. Gordon finished a disappointing 27th and Bayne finished in the 15th position.

Bayne posted on Twitter shortly after the race to explain his actions.

@tbayne21I’m not happy about what this has become… It’s too premeditated. We should be able to go with whoever is around (us).

@tbayne21: I would have rather pulled over and finished last than tell @JeffGordonWeb I would work with him and then be strong armed into bailing.

Gordon was understandably upset after the race.

“I was going to go with (Casey Mears),” he said, “but Trevor lined up behind me and when he agreed to it, I said, ‘Hey, we can’t go with a better person than that. He’s got a fast race car; we already have history of working well together’ and I thought it was a no-brainer. But I probably should have known better.”

When Gordon was asked if he thought Bayne was following team orders, he answered, “It would seem to me like that’s it.”

But the story doesn’t end there.

Kevin Woods, Senior Director of Corporate Communications at Roush Fenway Racing, was also on twitter following the race attempting a little spin control.

When I questioned him about what happened he indicated that the choice was in Bayne’s hand, quite the opposite of what Bayne had said earlier.

@PRKevinRFR @angiecampbell_ He could do what he needed, but NOBODY is going to hang out a teammate…not Gordon, not anyone…

@PRKevinRFR @angiecampbell_ He made the deal before he knew Matt was going to have an issue. He did exactly what Gordon would have done for the 48,88,5

I’m sure this is not the last we will hear about the matter but it does appear that Roush Fenway Racing is now the one leaving Trevor Bayne high and dry.

Bob Pockrass with SceneDaily.com reported on twitter that Roush Fenway President Steve Newmark had this to say.

“No one at Roush gave a specific instruction to Trevor about what he had to do in that situation.”

The aftermath leaves several questions unanswered and the truth slightly unclear.

Did Ford or Roush Fenway Racing give orders that Fords could only work with Fords or that teammates could only work with teammates?

Was Trevor Bayne specifically told not to work with Jeff Gordon and help a teammate instead?

Do fans really want to see manufacturers racing manufacturers or do they want to see individual drivers racing to win?

Or should the entire situation be blamed on the two car tandem racing that is becoming the norm at restrictor plate race tracks? When a partner is a necessity at these types of races, is it any wonder that the team mentality comes into play?

One thing is certain; NASCAR has some work to do at these types of tracks.

Steve O’Donnell, Senior Vice-President of NASCAR, acknowledged this on twitter saying, “(I) know we have work to do on Superspeedway(s) and we’ll certainly stay after it.”

The Non-Race at Talladega and Team Orders

The twice a year non-race was held at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday, sort of like the non-races held twice a year at Daytona. This bastardization of what stock car racing is all about is about 25 years old and in all that time, no solution has been found for the restrictor plate, the device that robs cars of horsepower and allows the nonsense that lately has two cars working in tandem so they can go faster. Those that refuse to pair up go to the back. Just ask Denny Hamlin. The poor guy didn’t have a partner and until he found one, he was dead in the water. Is this really racing?

[media-credit name=”Credit: Chris Graythen/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”246″][/media-credit]I used to gripe about the long lines that restrictor plate racing brought to the table, but this is worse. It is apparent that nearly everyone had secured a “dancing partner” before the race along with orders to go along with it. Teammates with teammates make a lot of sense. It wasn’t too long ago that Jeff Gordon said, and I reported it, that he was going to work with his teammates and that included Tony Stewart. Everyone knows that Hendrick Motorsports supplies cars for Stewart-Haas Racing, so it was surprising that so much controversy when Trevor Bayne was asked to desert Hendrick Motorsports’ Jeff Gordon in the closing laps of the race. It seems that young Bayne doesn’t really understand how the system works. There’s a championship on the line and helping a competitor, especially pushing him is not accepted.

It’s a shame that it has to come to this, but it has. The monster that has been created rests with antiquated thinking. There probably is a solution, but it’s too easy to ignore what could be done and go along with what has already been done. Maybe it’s the cars. Maybe it’s the tracks. Maybe it’s something else, I don’t know. What I do know is that people love this kind of racing, or at least I thought they did. From the looks of the empty seats at Talladega on Sunday, I’m not so sure.

I blame Jeff Gordon for taking advantage of a young man who may not understand how the system works. It’s especially upsetting to me that he took advantage of that young man. I can just read the comments from fans who want to talk about “mean old Jack Roush ordering young Trevor around,” and not remembering that most of the teams were doing the same thing. I’m sure it was upsetting to Bayne, but he is going to find the same thing all around the garage as long as this kind of racing is permitted. It’s also telling that Gordon admitted as much earlier this year.

I really cannot wait until this weekend when we go back to real racing. Martinsville has true racing as it was meant to be. There may be team orders, but not to the extent we saw Sunday. I’m going to be frank and admit that I do not know the answer to this problem. My only hope is that we somehow and someday do come up with an answer that will let every competitor race for himself or herself and not have to worry about teammates and what they’re doing. It’s just insane.

Layoff Bayne, It’s Just Plate Racing

Trevor Bayne is receiving a lot of flak for “Ditching” Jeff Gordon. And okay. I get it! Giving someone your word and then leaving them out to dry isn’t going to win many “Most Popular Driver” awards. As bad as it was, this is the way of restrictor plate racing. “Ditching,” people has and always will happen.

[media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”249″][/media-credit]Take the 2000 Daytona 500 for example. Late in the running, 2 time Daytona 500 champion Dale Jarrett’s crew chief Todd Parrott walked to Mark Martin’s pit and told them he wanted to stay with Martin and go to the front. Martin and crew chief Jimmy Fennig agreed.

However, later on in the race Mark Martin shot high. Jarrett, who was behind Martin stayed low, leaves Martin out to dry in a long line of cars. Jarrett went on to win the 500, Martin ended up 5th. Jarrett would apologize in victory lane for the incident.

What makes this situation different? Trevor Bayne is a great guy, who apologized for the incident just like Jarrett. Why is he getting flak? Do I believe him he was given team orders? Of course! It’s Jack Roush’s job to put his guys in the best situation and by telling Bayne to draft with Kenseth he did that.

Roush is trying to win a championship with Matt Kenseth and Carl Edwards. If you’re an owner of a company and one of your employees can help benefit another for the benefit of the organization, wouldn’t you do that? Who wouldn’t?

The problem is simple- The two car draft. NASCAR has done a nice job trying to fix the problem, but so far their steps have been unsuccessful. Expect more steps to be taken as we head closer to the Daytona 500 in February.

Trevor Bayne and Jack Roush are both not at fault. It’s Talladega people! Both did what they should have done. Don’t hate those guys, hate the racing!