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Day of Records: Kyle Busch Takes Sprint Cup Pole at The Glen

[media-credit name=”Matt LaFlair” align=”alignright” width=”166″][/media-credit]Kyle Busch took pole position for tomorrow’s (or Tuesday’s) 26th Annual Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen in commanding style. After the two Richard Petty Motorsports drivers, Marcos Ambrose and A.J. Allmendinger decided to lay down laps fast enough to take the pole (for the time) Kyle Busch, who qualified last because of his first practice speed, decided to add to the drama that was Sprint Cup qualifying here at The Glen.

The #43 car of A.J. Allmendinger became the first Sprint Cup car to break the 70-second mark in qualifying around the 2.45-mile short course here at Watkins Glen International with his lap time of 1:09.997.

Not to be outdone, Kyle Busch’s lap of 1:09.767, the fastest qualifying speed ever here at The Glen, was good enough to take pole position for the 220-mile race slated to go tomorrow at 1PM. His pole here at Watkins Glen marks his 8th of his career, and the first for him this season. Also with the pole today, Joe Gibbs Racing drivers have taken both pole positions this season at the two road courses after Joey Logano took the pole earlier this season at Infineon Raceway.

Busch’s lap time was just a hair off of where Marcos Ambrose’s fast lap was yesterday in Final Practice. Ambrose ran a lap just one-tenth quicker than Busch’s qualifying lap today. Ambrose will start just behind Busch in third tomorrow, and it will be interesting to see how fast he will make a charge to the front following the green-flag around 1PM.

Stay tuned for more here from The Glen…

 

Starting Lineup
Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen, Watkins Glen International
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/qual.php?race=22
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Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time
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1 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 126.421 69.767
2 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 126.041 69.977
3 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 125.984 70.009
4 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 125.662 70.188
5 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 125.654 70.193
6 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 125.314 70.383
7 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 125.238 70.426
8 99 Carl Edwards Ford 125.202 70.446
9 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 124.968 70.578
10 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 124.94 70.594
11 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 124.915 70.608
12 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 124.908 70.612
13 20 Joey Logano Toyota 124.904 70.614
14 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 124.791 70.678
15 51 Boris Said Chevrolet 124.701 70.729
16 6 David Ragan Ford 124.55 70.815
17 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 124.451 70.871
18 4 Kasey Kahne Toyota 123.998 71.13
19 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 123.854 71.213
20 83 Brian Vickers Toyota 123.682 71.312
21 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 123.663 71.323
22 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 123.635 71.339
23 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 123.517 71.407
24 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 123.507 71.413
25 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 123.476 71.431
26 13 Casey Mears Toyota 123.455 71.443
27 22 Kurt Busch Dodge 123.436 71.454
28 16 Greg Biffle Ford 123.433 71.456
29 37 Scott Speed Ford 123.379 71.487
30 55 J.J. Yeley Ford 123.283 71.543
31 7 Robby Gordon Dodge 123.176 71.605
32 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 122.956 71.733
33 66 Michael McDowell Toyota 122.956 71.733
34 150 T.J. Bell* Chevrolet 122.928 71.749
35 32 Andrew Ranger Ford 122.372 72.075
36 71 Andy Lally* Ford 122.196 72.179
37 60 Mike Skinner Toyota 122.13 72.218
38 36 Ron Fellows Chevrolet 121.993 72.299
39 0 David Reutimann Toyota 121.66 72.497
40 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 121.419 72.641
41 34 David Gilliland Ford 120.339 73.293
42 11 Denny Hamlin+ Toyota
43 38 Terry Labonte Ford Champion’s Provisional 0

Kurt Busch Snags Pole For NASCAR Nationwide Series’ Zippo 200

It will be an all Busch front row today for the NASCAR Nationwide Series Zippo 200 this afternoon. Kurt Busch, filling in for a sore Brad Keselowski, was 4th quick in the only practice session yesterday for the Nationwide cars, but broke the track record in NASCAR Nationwide Series.

[media-credit name=”Matt LaFlair” align=”alignright” width=”100″][/media-credit]qualifying here at Watkins Glen International this morning.

Busch’s speed of 123.241 was good enough to take the top starting spot for this afternoon’s Zippo 200 here at The Glen. The previous track record has only held up for one year as Macos Ambrose set fast lap last year in his NASCAR Nationwide Series Car with a speed of 122.410.

The top three qualifiers for this year’s Zippo 200 all were faster that Ambrose’s qualifying lap last year. The Busch brothers claimed the front row, with Carl Edwards starting third this afternoon.

The rest of the top 10 are Elliot Sadler 4th, road course specialist Ron Fellows in 5th, Jimme Johnson driving for JR Motorsports in 6th, Paul Menard in 7th, Joey Logano in 8th, Jason Leffler in 9th, and James Buescher in 19th. Points leader Ricky Stenhouse Jr will start 12th.

Stay tuned throughout the day for more live updates from The Glen including, Sprint Cup Qualifying and Zippo 200 results!

Starting Lineup
Zippo 200 at the Glen, Watkins Glen International
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/qual.php?race=23
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Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time
===========================================
1 22 Kurt Busch Dodge 123.241 71.567
2 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 122.97 71.725
3 60 Carl Edwards Ford 122.628 71.925
4 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 122.354 72.086
5 5 Ron Fellows Chevrolet 122.288 72.125
6 7 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 122.183 72.187
7 33 Paul Menard Chevrolet 121.85 72.384
8 20 Joey Logano Toyota 121.426 72.637
9 38 Jason Leffler Chevrolet 121.391 72.658
10 30 James Buescher Chevrolet 121.305 72.709
11 16 Trevor Bayne Ford 120.9 72.953
12 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 120.665 73.095
13 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 120.619 73.123
14 66 Steve Wallace Toyota 120.599 73.135
15 32 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 120.263 73.339
16 11 Brian Scott Toyota 119.956 73.527
17 88 Aric Almirola Chevrolet 119.684 73.694
18 9 Kenny Wallace Toyota 119.682 73.695
19 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 119.519 73.796
20 153 Andrew Ranger Dodge 119.511 73.901
21 167 J.R. Fitzpatrick Ford 119.502 73.806
22 21 Tim George Jr. Chevrolet 118.95 74.149
23 19 Mike Bliss Chevrolet 118.922 74.166
24 39 Casey Roderick Ford 118.905 74.177
25 23 Alex Kennedy Chevrolet 118.603 74.366
26 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 118.536 74.408
27 62 Michael Annett Toyota 118.526 74.414
28 164 Jason Bowles Toyota 118.396 74.496
29 113 T.J. Bell Dodge 118.105 74.679
30 182 J.J. Yeley Dodge 117.992 74.751
31 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 117.941 74.783
32 15 Timmy Hill* Ford 117.905 74.806
33 97 Kyle Kelley Chevrolet 117.617 74.989
34 175 Chris Cook Ford 117.594 75.004
35 14 Eric McClure Chevrolet 117.429 75.109
36 49 Mark Green Chevrolet 116.984 75.395
37 81 Blake Koch* Dodge 116.8 75.514
38 52 Dan Clarke Chevrolet 116.362 75.798
39 40 Josh Wise+ Chevrolet 113.934 77.413
40 89 Morgan Shepherd+ Chevrolet 113.277 77.862
41 70 Dennis Setzer+ Dodge 110.733 79.651
42 28 Derrike Cope+ Chevrolet
43 44 Jeff Green Chevrolet 116.787 75.522

Clint Bowyer Still Positive About Chase Chances Despite Crazy Luck

Clint Bowyer still has a shot at making the Chase for the Sprint Cup but for him to do so he needs to find consistency. And not the bad kind that he says has been following him around lately.

[media-credit id=43 align=”alignright” width=”213″][/media-credit]“That’s obviously the goal,” said Bowyer of making the Chase, “but just keep having crazy things happen. Had another good run going in Pocono last week and the radiator tab broke and the radiator fell out of the thing. I mean it’s just one crazy thing after another.”

Bowyer sits 12th in points, just outside the top 10 who guaranteed a spot in NASCAR’s postseason. He’s not safe in 11th or 12th, however, because of NASCAR’s new wildcard format, where drivers with victories who sit 11-20 in points would consist of the final two Chase spots.

Bowyer doesn’t have a win and therefore would be out of the Chase had it started this weekend. Luckily it doesn’t and there’s five more races ahead for Bowyer and his team to make a turnaround and either find victory lane for climb their way into Chase contention.

This weekend the series is in Watkins Glen for the second and final road course race of the season. Bowyer has never won a road course and has been on the wrong side of the chart at The Glen with his best finish being a ninth in 2009. It’s his only top 10 at the track where he’s finished 14th or worse in four of his five career starts there and he has yet to lead a lap.

Even so, Bowyer enters the weekend with confidence.

“Hopefully we can get a good run here,” Bowyer said on Friday. “We haven’t had a ton of luck here, broke a truck arm out of the car last year. I feel like this is the track where we can capitalize. This is the track out of any of these ones ahead of us that you can stand to gain or lose a lot of ground but you’ve got to look at this as an opportunity and try to gain as much ground as possible.”

Early this season it looked like Bowyer was going to have plenty of opportunities to gain ground in the Chase. He finished second in back-to-back weeks at Texas and Talladega where he nearly beat Jimmie Johnson to the finish line. Entering June Bowyer had led 253 laps and had seven top 10 finishes and two top fives.

Since then his No. 33 Cheerios team has been trying to dig themselves out of a hole. Bowyer has led just nine laps and his top 10 and top five finishes have only increased by one. Yet, he still only sits 41 points behind 10th place Dale Earnhardt Jr.

“Any gap is hard to overcome especially when you start getting up in that elite crowd,” Bowyer said. “The further up you go the harder it is to pass them. You just have to be able to capitalize on somebody’s mishap and that’s what it’s going to come down to. These teams are too good and things are too close in this sport right now to just overcome a huge spread in a short amount of time unless you have some help.”

According to Bowyer, Watkins Glen is the perfect track to be able to do that. Some consider it to be a wildcard of its own and that if a driver doesn’t take advantage of it then they’ll soon start feeling that time is quickly running out to make a Chase charge. No longer are there room for bad days and certainly not for Bowyer.

Behind him in points are three drivers with wins and one driver, Brad Keselowski, has two wins. It was aggressive strategy says Bowyer, which gave Keselowski his second win last weekend in Pocono. And whether it’s through strategy or moves on the track, aggression is something a driver will be fighting with over the next five weeks as they try to put themselves in Chase position.

“You just got to be careful,” said Bowyer. “You have to be careful but you have to be aggressive all at the same time. You got to be aggressive enough to make passes, to make bold passes but you’ve got to be careful enough to not dig yourself in a deeper hole than you are already in.The No. 2 car [Keselowski] winning that race last week was a pretty aggressive move.”

Bowyer thought the race at Pocono was over when it started raining and Joey Logano was leading. In fact, he said that most everyone thought it was over and the drivers headed back to their motorhomes. But, thank God for Keselowski as Bowyer said, it wasn’t and the Penske team was presented an opportunity they made the best of.

“Those are the aggressive calls you’ve got to take,” said Bowyer. “The hindsight of all of that would have been devastating for him and may have been the very move that kept him out of the top 20. It’s a gamble that you’ve got to be willing to take.”

Bowyer says his team have made those calls too but starting this weekend in Watkins Glen they’re hoping they start working out better than they have.

Tim Richmond; 22 Years Later and Still Not Forgotten

Every 10-30 years, a young driver comes along who shakes up the NASCAR world, and more time than naught, it’s usually these types of drivers that come into the sport with some kind of a racing background.

[media-credit name=”Photo Credit: unknown” align=”alignright” width=”190″][/media-credit]Tim Richmond was a lot different since he did not grow up with racing in his blood, and did not come from the hard working middle class lifestyle that most of NASCAR’s big names came from. Instead Richmond was born into wealth, and because of this, it would later turn out to be one of his biggest drawbacks because of his fast paced, Hollywood playboy lifestyle he lived throughout his racing career.

Since NASCAR was born on the back country roads of some of America’s most famous moon shining families, Richmond’s flamboyant lifestyle on and off the track clashed with the southern roots most fans were used seeing from their drivers.

Richmond’s standard of living along with his daily routine mirrored that of someone you would have thought was born and raised in California, unlike his hometown of Ashland, Ohio where he was born on June 7, 1955. The “lets party all night attitude” he chose to live by would be frowned upon by NASCAR, as Richmond would find out later during his short lived racing career.

Richmond was a hit with the fans as well as the ladies, and at times he would pull down his racing suit to sign autographs, which really got the women excited, but at the same time got the heads of NASCAR even angrier. NASCAR wasn’t ready for this type of driver to enter into their hallowed premier racing series, and it was only because Richmond’s driving style matched the lifestyle that he was living.

During his eight years as a Winston Cup driver which didn’t start until the age of 21, Richmond visited victory lane 13 times, along with 78 top-10 finishes in the 185 starts hr made in the series. Richmond collected a career-high seven wins in 1986 while driving the No. 25 Folgers-sponsored Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Monte Carlo, to go along with his 14 careers poles, and his very first victory coming on a road course in Riverside, California.

The 1986 season would be his best year driving in the Winston Cup series, finishing third in points behind eventual cup winner Dale Earnhardt Sr. Most of his fellow racers said that he was one of a few drivers who had guts enough to challenge Earnhardt and drive side by side with him. Richmond had a “take no prisoners” type of driving style which showed in the way he handled the road courses, and he was known as one of the few drivers who had the guts to challenge and race side by side with Earnhardt.

Richmond’s life was loosely portrayed in the movie Days of Thunder by the character of Cole Trickle, and aside from stock cars he also competed in open wheel racing finishing ninth in the 1980 Indianapolis 500. In 1986 at the height of a very promising career, his whole world came crashing down on him when he was diagnosed with A.I.D.S.

By the time 1987 rolled around, life would become even more challenging to his already troubled life, and it wasn’t until the middle of the season that he would return, and pick up back to back wins at Pocono and Riverside, and the win at Riverside would ultimately be his last. By the following year, NASCAR would step in and deal Richmond a very sour hand, when the organization would begin to treat him like he was some sort of drug addict.

NASCAR defamed his integrity by making him take a drug test because of his deteriorating health, and afterwards suspending him indefinitely because they said he had tested positive for a controlled substance.

Richmond demanded another test, and when those results came back…they were negative. NASCAR would later admit the first test that Richmond took was also negative; the only substance that showed up was Sudafed and Advil. Little by little NASCAR tried to not only defame Richmond, but they also wanted him out of the Cup series for good, and eventually they got their wish.

NASCAR would not let him race until he came up with all of his medical records, it was then Richmond filed a defamation of character lawsuit, but he would eventually withdraw it and leave the sport. Richmond would move back to Florida where he eventually died in 1989.

NASCAR to this day has not apologized for the brash and disrespectful way that Richmond was treated. In 1990, The New York Times reported that Dr. Forest Tennant, who was at that time the National Football League’s drug adviser, “falsified drug tests” that ultimately helped shorten Richmond’s NASCAR career.

Washington television station WJLA-TV, in early 1990, reported the sealed court documents and interviews showed Tennant and NASCAR, “allegedly used false drug-test results in 1988 to bar Richmond from racing.”

Reporter Roberta Baskin stated that NASCAR had targeted Richmond, requesting that Tennant establish a substance-abuse policy with Richmond in mind. NASCAR chose not to mention any of these findings, and basically swept it under the rug with the, “We don’t see anything or what did we do wrong scenario?”

Richmond was one of their own, even though he didn’t fit the mold that NASCAR wants all of their drivers to follow, even though he was still a human being, breathing the same air as them, and also bringing money into their prestigious racing empire. Richmond would be inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2002, an award that not even the France family could ever take from him.

NASCAR would put the final nail in his coffin by only writing one line about him, and not including a single picture of him anywhere in the annals of NASCAR history. For those who chose to support and follow his career…Tim Richmond has been dearly missed, maybe not so much by NASCAR, but by the fans and drivers who stood next to him through thick and thin.

22 years ago we lost one of our own, but even today he is still in the hearts and minds of those who remember the impact he made to the sport, both on and off the track.