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Dan Wheldon Dies At 33

Sunday afternoon, two time Indianapolis 500 champ Dan Wheldon died in a horrific mult-icar crash in Las Vegas.

[media-credit name=”indycar.com” align=”alignright” width=”223″][/media-credit]Weldon, 33, was in the running for the $5 million if he won the race. The officials stopped the race and had a meeting with the other drivers and were informed of Wheldon’s passing. When the race resumed, pit crews lined pit road weeping and trying comfort each other.

“I could see within five laps people were starting to do crazy stuff. I love hard racing but that to me is not really what it’s about. One small mistake from somebody. Right now I’m numb and speechless,” he said.

“One minute you’re joking around in driver intros and the next he’s gone. He was 6 years old when I first met him. I told his son Thursday night at the parade on The Strip that I’ve known his dad since he was your age. And then I talked to a friend of mine, Jesse Spence, that I used to race go-karts with that we’ve known him since he was this little kid. His mouth worked plenty good, but he was just this little kid and the next thing you know he was my teammate in INDYCAR. We put so much pressure on ourselves to win races and championships and today it doesn’t matter.” Franchitti said about the death of his long time friend.

Wheldon leaves behind his wife Susie Behm, 2 year old son Sebastian, 16 month old son Oliver his parents and three siblings.

Dan Wheldon Dies in Crash at IndyCar Season Finale at Las Vegas

Following a wreck on lap 12 of the IZOD IndyCar Series Season Finale race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, 33-year-old Dan Wheldon has died due to injuries sustained in the crash.

“IndyCar is sad to announce that Dan Wheldon passed away from unsurvivable injuries,” IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard said in a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers are with Dan and his family. INDYCAR, its drivers and teams have decided to end the race. We will run a five-lap salute in honor of Dan.”

Following the press conference of the announcement, the 19 cars that were not involved did five-laps around the track in a 3-wide formation.

The incident happened on lap 12, which saw three cars catch air and involve a total of 15 cars. Multiple replays show the top of Wheldon’s cockpit hitting the catch fence, breaking the hoop.

“I saw two cars touch each other up in front of me and then I tried to slow down, couldn’t slow down,” Paul Tracy told ESPN. “Then Dan’s car, from what I saw in the videos, came over my back wheel and over top of me. Just a horrendous accident.”

“The debris we all had to drive through the lap later, it looked like a war scene from Terminator or something,” Ryan Briscoe added. “I mean, there were just pieces of metal and car on fire in the middle of the track with no car attached to it and just debris everywhere.”

Will Power was transported to hospital following the incident, complaining of back pain, though has since been released. Pippa Mann and JR Hildebrand were also transported to hospital. They both will be kept overnight for observation.

Wheldon was the 2005 IndyCar Series Champion and won theIndianapolis500 twice, including this year’s running. This past season, Wheldon had been running a part-time schedule due to no ride while also testing the new IndyCar for next season.

Wheldon was expected to join Andretti Autosport to compete full-time next season. He leaves behind his wife Suzi and two children.

As a result of the race being canceled, Dario Franchitti wins his fourth IndyCar Series Championship.

Surprising and Not Surprising: Charlotte Bank of America 500

After Jacquelyn Butler, David Ragan’s girlfriend won the ‘Better Half Dash’ and Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne shared a heartfelt invocation, the engines fired under the lights at NASCAR’S home track, Charlotte Motor Speedway.

[media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”237″][/media-credit]Here is what was surprising and not surprising from the 52nd Annual running of the Bank of America 500.

Surprising:  With a surprising show of emotion and his dry sense of humor emerging, the driver of the No. 17 Fluidmaster Ford took the checkered flag with whoops of joy, saying in Victory Lane that it was not too late for departing sponsor Crown Royal to reconsider staying on the car.

Kenseth scored his victory from the outside pole position, qualifying surprising well for a driver not known for the most successful time trial efforts. This was Matt Kenseth’s 21st career victory and his third win of the year.

“It was an awesome win for us,” Kenseth said. “It was a good race.”

“Track position was really important, so qualifying helped,” Kenseth continued. “It made a big difference.”

Kenseth was also surprisingly appreciative of the win, especially after not having been to the winner’s circle for twenty races.

“I’m always thankful to get to victory lane,” Kenseth said. “You never know if you’re ever gonna win another race or when your last win is.”

“I’m thankful for them all and I greatly appreciate being in a position to be able to win races and these guys giving me the cars and the crew and the opportunity to do that.”

Not Surprising:  To no one’s surprise, the two drivers finishing second and third had some intense conversation with one another right after the race.

Carl Edwards, who finished third in his No. 99 Aflac ‘Now Hiring’ Ford, almost immediately jumped out his car at the finish to lean into the bridesmaid-yet-again Kyle Busch’s second place No. 18 M&Ms Toyota for a chat.

“We were just talking about the way we were racing there,” Edwards said. “We’re fine. We’ve talked about it and we’ll move on.”

“Hey, this is NASCAR and we’re racing as hard as we can,” Edwards continued. “And we didn’t wreck each other.”

“He just said he didn’t like the way I raced him off Turn Two that one time when he got under me,” Busch said. “He made me loose and it was steering me down the track and I was just trying to hold on.”

“Great run by the M&Ms Camry,” Busch, who not only rebounded from starting last to leading a race high 111 laps, continued. “Best run we’ve had here in a while but still coming up short.”

With his finish, Edwards maintained the points lead by five, with Kyle Busch improving his position by four spots, up to the fourth position, just 18 points behind the leader.

“Overall it was a really good day for our Aflac Fusion,” Edwards said. “We’re trying to have a championship year here and we dodged some bullets.”

“We’ve got to keep finishing like this,” Busch said. “That’s all it takes. If we can finish second here on out, we might win this thing.”

Surprising:  At a track often known for Chevy domination, particularly of the Hendrick Motorsports kind, it was surprising to see the Ford brand, primarily the Roushketeers, not only in victory lane but dominating the front of the field. There were four Fords to Chevrolets three in the top ten for this season’s Charlotte fall running.

The win was also significant for Ford team Roush Fenway, marking their 298th overall victory and their 20th NASCAR victory at Charlotte Motor Speedway. It was the first Cup win for owner Jack Roush at Charlotte since 2002.

“All of the Ford cars ran well tonight,” Jack Roush, team owner said. “It was just a matter of time until Matt broke loose from his obscurity in the back and middle of the pack and worked his way to the front.”

As surprising as the Ford dominance was, particularly of Roush Fenway Racing, it was equally surprising to see how poorly the Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team ran. The HMS highest finisher was Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in the 19th position.

“I was not the faster car,” the driver of the No. 88 Amp Energy/National Guard/Chevy 100th Anniversary Chevrolet said. “We got a couple wave-arounds and had a loose wheel that cost us another lap.”

“We just have to correct some of those mistakes,” Junior continued. “We just had a couple of little circumstances that cost us a shot at finishing in the top ten.”

Hendrick Chevrolet teammates Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon and Mark Martin also had surprisingly, and uncharacteristically, difficult runs at Charlotte. Their poor finishes, 34th, 21st and 37th respectively, was surprisingly poignant for the teams sporting the Chevy 100th anniversary emblems.

Jeff Gordon, in the No. 24 Drive to End Hunger/Chevy 100th Anniversary Chevrolet, went for a wild ride at one point in the race and struggled the rest. Mark Martin in the No. 5 GoDaddy.com/Chevy 100th Anniversary Chevrolet, suffered mechanical problems that left him in the garage for many laps making repairs.

Probably the toughest of the Hendrick finishers was five-time champ Jimmie Johnson, whose No. 48 Lowes/Chevy 100th Anniversary Chevrolet hit hard into the wall, taking his breath away.

“That one stung for sure,” Johnson said of his hit. “Just thankful to have safe race cars, safe walls, softer walls and everything did its job.”

With the wreck and the DNF, Johnson was also the biggest loser in the point standings, dropping five positions to eighth.

“This is not going to help us win a sixth championship,” Johnson conceded. “We will go for every point we can from here on out and hopefully we are still champions at the end of the year.”

Not Surprising:  It was not surprising to see the infamous grin of the driver from down under after finishing fifth. Marcos Ambrose, behind the wheel of the Richard Petty Motorsports No. 9 Stanley Ford Fusion, could not have been more pleased with his Charlotte run, scoring his third consecutive top-10.

“I ran great,” Ambrose said simply. “I just really appreciate that opportunity.”

RPM teammate AJ Allmendinger, behind the wheel of the No. 43 Best Buy Ford Fusion, also continued his solid runs, finish seventh.

“It’s not what I wanted, but the end result is good,” Dinger said. “I’m happy there were so many Fords in the top 10.”

Surprising:  As surprisingly strong as Brad Keselowski has been, surging forward in race finishes as well as in the points, the driver of the No. 2 ‘Blue Deuce’ had an equally surprisingly tough day at Charlotte.

Keselowski finished 16th, falling two positions to sixth in the point standings. He currently sits 25 points behind points leader Carl Edwards.

“I feel frustratingly fortunate,” Keselowskis said. “The yellows really hurt us. It just wasn’t meant to be.”

Not Surprising:   Tony Stewart, who scored his first pole at Charlotte Motor Speedway, overcame tight conditions as well as some damage to his No. 14 Mobil 1/Office Depot Chevrolet, to rally back for a top-10 finish.

“We were good off the front there, just when we got back in traffic, we got really tight,” Smoke said. “We just kind of rallied back.”

Not surprisingly, teammate Ryan Newman also scored a top-10 finish in his No. 39 Cookies for Kid’s Cancer/Gene Haas Foundation Chevrolet.

“We needed to get at least that much tonight,” Newman said after the race. “We’ll take a top-10 here tonight and now it’s on to the next one.”

With their finishes, Stewart advanced two positions to the fifth spot in the Chase, while Newman moved up one position in the points to tenth.

Surprising:  With the image of Hall of Famer Glenn Wood on the famed No. 21 Motorcraft Ford Fusion, it looked like the young driver Trevor Bayne had a fast car and would have a good run. Surprisingly, the car ran out of gas on Lap 238.

“That’s a bad feeling to run out of gas, especially when you’re not expecting it,” Bayne said. “The 21 was just fast.”

“It must have been sucking up more fuel than we thought being that fast, but I think something just had to be funky in the fuel cell or something messed up on the can.”

Not Surprising:  Call him ‘Closer’ or ‘Lurker’ but it was not surprising to see Kevin Harvick have yet another solid race, finishing sixth and maintaining his second place position in the point standings. With that, the driver of the No. 29 Jimmy John’s Chevrolet confirmed that he was just happy to be at the half-way in the Chase race.

“We made it through the first five Chase races this year,” Harvick said. “We had had a lot of goals that we wanted to achieve this year and that was one of them.”

“IF you would have told me we would come out of Charlotte with only a five point deficit going into the next five races, I would be really happy.”

Not Only are Matt Kenseth and Roush Fenway Racing Back in Form, They’re Better Than Ever

It’s an old cliché but nowhere else does it fit perfectly than in NASCAR and Roush Fenway Racing has been putting it to work in 2011. That cliché? What a difference a year makes.

The flagship Ford team has turned around their embarrassing 2010 campaign to become familiar with victory lane again and become serious championship contenders. Saturday night in Charlotte RFR driver Matt Kenseth won again and team owner Jack Roush couldn’t have been happier with Ford’s seventh win of the season.

[media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”241″][/media-credit]“I’m really proud of what Matt and Jimmy [Fennig, crew chief] did tonight,” said Roush. “With all the engineering and technical support behind these teams, it comes down to decisions, the last 20 percent of the decision is worked out between driver and crew chief.”

Roush praised his championship quality crew chief and the performance of Kenseth. Saying that he was sitting back waiting, knowing that Kenseth would break loose from the middle of the pack and get to the front. The victory was Kenseth’s third of the season and 21st career. As the season turns toward its final five races of the season, Roush believes Kenseth and Fennig who will be one of the factors in the championship.

However, Saturday night was about Kenseth and more. For RFR it was further prove that they are indeed back in form. Not only are they back in form they’re better than ever. All four RFR drivers led at least one lap Saturday, combined they led 117 of 334 laps and they all finished inside the top 15.

“I don’t know if you saw the same race that I did, but we had seven of our cars tonight that ran in the top 10 most of the night except for the problems we had,” said Roush about Ford when asked about the race.

“We are at the top of our game as far as our mile-and-a-half program,” he said. “There’s other teams that have got good programs but nobody has got a better mile-and-a-half program than us and including tonight there was three races left, mile-and-a-half races left in the Chase and I felt really good about that. Ford has given us great stuff for our Fusion, we have a good aero package and mechanics work well based on the lab testing and engines make a lot of power.”

Roush has good reason to be satisfied and say that his teams are the best of the best on mile-and-a-half tracks. The statistics back it up. Kenseth and Edwards together have won three races on mile-and-a-half tracks and if you count the non-point events held at Charlotte in May RFR has won five such races.

Charlotte in fact, has been nothing but sweet to Roush. David Ragan won the Sprint Showdown, Edwards won the All-Star race and now Kenseth wins the Bank of America 500. RFR even won both Nationwide Series races held at CMS this season and had it not been for a fuel mileage gamble in the Coca-Cola 600, they might have won every race held at CMS in 2011.

And just for giggles, throw in the fact that Ragan’s girlfriend, Jacquelyn Butler, won the “Better Half Dash” charity race Saturday afternoon. Kenseth capped off an what continues to be an incredible season for Roush and it shouldn’t be surprising that he was the one to do it.

Driving the same car that he dominated with at Texas and won, as well as dominated the Coke 600 but finished 14th, Kenseth scored his second win at CMS. His first came in May of 2000 when he won his first career Sprint Cup Series race; he’s also won the non-point Sprint All-Star race, 2004. It doesn’t end there; Kenseth also has three NNS wins at Charlotte.

Not only has RFR turned things around, Kenseth has as well. He went winless in 2010 after winning the first two races of 2009. Now he’s got three checkered flags in 2011 and the season isn’t over yet. He’s looking to win his second Cup title in five weeks too.

“I’m happy to have won obviously,” said Kenseth. “It’s been 20 races, which doesn’t seem that long because I don’t know how many before that, I think it was 70 some, so you’re always thankful. I’m always thankful to get to victory lane. You never know when you are going to win your last race – I’m certainly in a great position to be able to win races and these give me the cars and the crew and the opportunity to do that.”

Kenseth went on to say that another reason he was glad they won was because he didn’t want to be the weak link. Feeling as though there were other races they should have been first to the finish line, Kenseth said he was glad he wasn’t the one who cost the No. 17 team the victory. Roush though wasn’t ‘embarrassed’ that his teams had not won more because it was strategy not performance that cost them.

“But we are in championship form,” said Roush. “And in my 24 years, I’ve never had better cars for the championship stretch than we have got and we are anxious to see how it’s going to work out.”

And says Roush about having those great cars and wining in the Chase, “I don’t feel vindicated, I just think that the hard work everybody’s done is paying off, and we re getting what we deserve.”

Old System At A Glance: Carl Edwards 5 races away from second title

Carl Edwards took over the championship points lead away from 2-Time Champ Jimmie Johnson as Jimmie had a vicious crash near the end of the race. Carl’s teammate Matt Kenseth won the race and took the bonus points along with it to try and climb back into the championship battle with just five races left to go in the season. The standings now look like this:

[media-credit id=2 align=”alignright” width=”227″][/media-credit]1.Carl Edwards LEADER
2.Kyle Busch – 15 (Finished 2nd to Kenseth. Led most laps. Earned extra point. Talladega will be make it or break it for Kyle.)
3.Jimmie Johnson – 25 (Still has chance to get #3, but will have to wait until after Talladega to see for sure.)
3.Kevin Harvick – 25 (Sixth Place Finish has him tied for third with Johnson.)
5.Matt Kenseth – 32 (Win helps his cause, but maybe out of contention.)
6.Kurt Busch – 76 (Another ho-hum finish dampens championship hopes.)
7.Jeff Gordon – 78 (Started to come on late, but was involved in a spin when David Ragan tried making it three wide into one. Kahne was also involved, but they still finished well. Gordon finished 21st and it looks like the Drive for 7 will have to wait until 2012.)
8.Tony Stewart – 111 (Too little too late for the Two-Time Champion.)
9.Ryan Newman – 117 (One win won’t get you a title.)
10.Brad Keselowski – 140 (Under the lottery system, you have a shot at the title, but you need to be consistent all year not just in the middle of the season to be a contender, but big rebound from 2010! I will give you that!)
11.Dale Earnhardt Jr. – 154 (Well a big rebound this season for Jr. compared to 09-10, but the crew can’t seem to put their nuts in place and Jr. has little or no confidence in himself. That alone will destroy a championship run.)
12.Clint Bowyer – 210 (The departing Bowyer is the only bright spot on RCR besides Harvick.)

Who is missing? Denny Hamlin.

Something is fishy at RCR and it’s not even the team orders; Burton should be the one let go!

Trimming down a race team from four cars to three cars has now taken it’s second and possibly final trip with Richard Childress Racing. At the end of 2009, it was Casey Mears who was given the pink slip after just one season behind the wheel. Now, as we are in 2011, it was time for Richard to let Clint Bowyer go, but was Bowyer the correct choice in letting go? I can think of one driver in particular that ought to leave RCR.

[media-credit id=26 align=”alignright” width=”218″][/media-credit]Jeff Burton. Come on, Richard. This is a guy that is in his mid 40’s now and he simply isn’t up to par anymore. This year Burton has only managed to finish in the top-10 one time at Michigan and his team used fuel strategy to get that finish.

I have split the standings into different sections. There are 30 drivers this season who have run the entire schedule thus far.

Seven of those 30 drivers have accumulated 1,000 points or more this season they include: Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch, Jimmie Johnson, Kevin Harvick, Matt Kenseth, Kurt Busch, and Jeff Gordon. As you can see here… one of RCR’s four cars is in the “awesome” list, so you can’t get rid of Harvick.

Four drivers have 900-999 points. They include: Tony Stewart, Ryan Newman, Brad Keselowski, and Dale Earnhardt Jr.  No RCR cars in the “Approaching The Awesome List.”

Now, we have the drivers from 800-899. I call these guys the “Up And Comers List.” These guys include: Clint Bowyer, A.J. Allmendinger, Denny Hamlin, Kasey Kahne, Greg Biffle, David Ragan, Marcos Ambrose, Juan Montoya, Mark Martin, and Paul Menard. Ah, there is Menard….but RCR can’t let him go. Why?? His daddy is rich and sponsors him. If he dumps Menard, Richard will have sponsorship issues and that stinks.

Unfortunately from 700-799 are the snoozers this season. And notice how Burton has not appeared thus far. I will give Truex and Logano the benefit of the doubt for being at 790 and 791 respectively, but to be this far down at this point in the season is just unsatisfactory. These guys include: Logano, Truex, Burton, Vickers, Smith, McMurray, Reutimann, Labonte, and Gilliland.

Jeff Burton (761 accumulated points) or Bowyer (868 accumulated points). Who really is the one that should have left RCR at the end of the season? Burton is 317 points behind championship leader Carl Edwards (1078) and second place Kyle Busch (1063).

And heck this is the 43 to 1 points system! Can you imagine what the number would be with the old system in place?

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