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Commercial Lines 200 News and Notes

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Driver to win Commercial Lines 200

Kyle Busch +180
Kevin Harvick +350
Ron Hornaday +450
Todd Bodine +600
Mike Skinner +1000
Johnny Benson +1000
Colin Braun +1200
Rick Crawford +1800
Matt Crafton +1800
Dennis Setzer +2500
Mike Bliss +2500
David Starr +3000
Terry Cook +3000
Field +1500

 
Posted : March 3, 2009 12:13 pm
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Unfamiliar names near top in trucks
March 4, 2009

Two races into the season, the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series standings include a couple of unfamiliar names among the top five drivers.

Timothy Peters and T.J. Bell are off to a surprisingly strong start.

``Being in the top-10 in points with those veterans means everything in the world to me, especially with our budget and where our shop is,'' said Peters, a 28-year-old driver who is fourth in the points.

His team has two full-time employees - himself and his crew chief - and is run out of a friend's home garage.

``It speaks volumes for us and I'm just proud we've accomplished a lot with less than a lot of other guys,'' Peters added.

``I'd like to think we can continue our performance and top-10s and maybe those will turn into a top-five or a win,'' Peters said. ``We made a big splash and we want to continue that momentum, but our main goal is finding that almighty dollar to keep us going all year long.''

Bell, tied for fifth with three-time series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., is just as excited about his start - and also worrying about finding more money.

``We're guaranteed quite a few races, but we still need to find funding, and that would be the biggest success,'' Bell said. ``Other than that, we want to finish in the top-10 in points and, hopefully, get a victory.''

Peters is trying to keep a positive attitude.

``My dad always taught me to make the best of your situation, and sometimes things are bad. But are they really that bad?'' Peters said. ``If you've got the desire to be in motorsports and are in it, you're very fortunate, and if you want to continue, the sky is the limit. Don't give up. Just look at us.''

BACK ON TRACK: The Wood Brothers team ends its two-week hiatus with Bill Elliott attempting to qualify the team's famed No. 21 Ford for Sunday's Kobalt Tools 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

The pioneer NASCAR team has chosen to run only a partial schedule this season.

After Elliott finished 23rd in the season-opening Daytona 500, the team skipped the races at California and Las Vegas, getting ready for Atlanta, where the Woods have a record 12 wins - the last with Morgan Shepherd in 1993.

After failing to make the Daytona race a year ago, team co-owner Eddie Wood said running it this year was good for the team but yielded mixed results, especially since it was shortened by rain.

``We didn't need it to rain,'' Wood said. ``The way our car was and the way our pit strategy worked out, we needed about 15 or 20 more laps, at least.

``It did help the overall program just because we ran well, and all the work that went into that paid off. The same amount of effort has gone into Atlanta, and will go into every race we run.''

Wood said he did miss being at California and Las Vegas.

``That is kind of the hard part of it, but we are rebuilding and, hopefully, we can get enough sponsorship to go back full time in 2010,'' he added.

CALLING IT QUITS: Longtime race driver Didier Theys has decided to retire, another victim of the global economic crisis.

The 52-year-old Belgian won 18 sports car races all over the world, including two Daytona 24-hour races and the Sebring 12-hour race. His championships include the 2002 Grand-Am Rolex Series, the 1986 Super Vee series and the 1987 Indy Lights title.

Theys also competed in 47 CART Indy car events, and ran in the Indianapolis 500 three times, the last time in 1993.

Last year, he was fifth in the American Le Mans Series LMP2 class at Sebring and also placed third in the LMP2 category last year in the Le Mans Series in Europe with co-drivers Fredy Lienhard and Jan Lammers.

``I enjoyed working with friends like Fredy Lienhard, (team owner) Markus Hotz and Jan Lammers in the last few years,'' Theys said. ``I was planning on retiring in 2009 anyway, but I was hoping to do it at the end of the season, not in March.

``Unfortunately, due to the downturn in the global economy, we weren't able to put together a program for 2009.''

Theys will continue to work in the sport as a consultant and driving coach, both for individual drivers and teams and for World Class Driving in Phoenix, where he is the driving director.

 
Posted : March 4, 2009 1:07 pm
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Busch rebounds for another truck win at Atlanta
Sat 7th, March 2009

Hampton, GA (Sports Network) - Not even late-race transmission problems could stop Kyle Busch from winning his fourth Camping World Truck Series race at Atlanta Motor Speedway as he bounced back in the final laps to take Saturday's American Commercial Lines 200.

Busch, who started on the pole, held the lead for a restart with 12 laps to go, but dropped back in the field after loosing second and third gears. He overcame his mechanical issues by driving past Todd Bodine for the top spot with five laps remaining. Busch then fought off a furious charge by fellow Sprint Cup driver Kevin Harvick in the final two laps to follow up on his victory two weeks ago at California.

"The restart there, I stepped in it, and as soon as I stepped in it and I applied power, it snapped it into (second gear), and I had to go all the way to fourth," Busch said. "I kind of had to lug it all the way around there. I got out of the way so those guys could go and race and did not want to block them up. It felt like an eternity to get this thing up to speed and get going. Once we got there man, I didn't lift those final 12 laps, and I stayed in the gas wide open right in the middle groove and it prevailed."

On the restart, Busch did not get up to speed while Terry Cook passed him for the lead. Colin Braun also passed Busch on the backstretch, but Braun bumped into the back of Cook and then was tapped from behind by Brian Scott. Braun spun and slammed into the inside wall. The fifth and final caution setup an eight-lap shootout to the finish.

Cook held the lead for the final restart, while Busch ran in the ninth spot. But Busch charged to the front in three laps after he got back up to speed.

"I don't think we out trucked them today, but we out drove them at the end," Busch said.

The victory was Busch's 11th career in the series. He won last year's spring event at Atlanta.

Busch has finished either first or second in the first three races this season.

Harvick led the most laps with 68, but finished a truck-length behind in second.

"That was a lot of fun there at the end," Harvick said. "The thing was fast, but it doesn't matter if you can't do a pit stop."

Harvick, competing in his first truck race this season, struggled on his pit stops.

Bodine finished third. Mike Skinner came in fourth, and Cook was fifth.

Chad McCumbee, Ron Hornaday Jr., Mike Bliss, Johnny Benson and Scott completed the top-10.

On lap 74, Braun hit Ricky Carmichael from behind, turning Carmichael around. Dennis Setzer slammed into Carmichael's truck while trying to avoid the incident.

With the victory, Busch increased his lead to 25 points over Bodine.

The next race is scheduled for Saturday, March 28 at Martinsville Speedway.

 
Posted : March 7, 2009 5:32 pm
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