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General 300 News and Notes

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(@mvbski)
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Driver to win the Dollar General 300

Tony Stewart +300
Kyle Busch +400
Matt Kenseth +700
Carl Edwards +700
Clint Bowyer +900
Jeff Burton +900
Denny Hamlin +1000
Kevin Harvick +1200
Greg Biffle +1200
Brian Vickers +1500
Brad Keselowski +1800
David Reutimann +2500
Elliot Sadler +2500
David Ragan +3000
David Stremme +3000
Jason Leffler +3500
Field +1000

TheGreek.com

 
Posted : July 8, 2008 12:17 pm
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NASCAR Nationwide Series News and Notes - Chicago

The Cubs aren’t the only turnaround story in Chicago over the last year.

Add the remarkable journey of Brad Keselowski (No. 88 U.S. NAVY Chevrolet) as part of Windy City lore during that span.

Keselowski, a third-generation driver, got his start in racing working in the garage of his family- owned NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series team. He ran eight races in 2004 then returned for a full-schedule the next season.

Late in 2006, Keselowski moved up the NASCAR ladder to drive for Keith Coleman Racing in the NASCAR Nationwide Series. But after what turned out to be an unlucky 13 races, the team suspended operations in June, 2007.

Two weeks later, he got a call from Germain Racing to replace the suspended Ted Musgrave in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Memphis. After grabbing the pole, he led 62 laps and contended for the win until a spin on Lap 190 of the 200-lap event took him out of contention.

But his strong showing caught the eye of JR Motorsports owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. who happened to be looking for a new driver.

Keselowski became that driver for a three-race deal beginning at Chicago. His debut resulted in a solid 14th-place finish. The three-race deal turned into a late-season run where Keselowski responded with five top-10 finishes in his remaining 13 races.

Now in his first full-time season, he’s shown steady improvement with his first win (Kentucky), his first pole (Milwaukee), a second-place ranking in the standings and six top-five and 11 top-10 finishes in 19 races.

“It’s been quite a year,” he said. “Now we’re coming back to Chicagoland and it’s just incredible to look back and see how far we’ve come.

“I got together with the No. 88 team at a time when we both needed to make something happen. Now we’re running up front consistently and battling for a championship. It’s exactly what we were all looking to accomplish.”

NASCAR Nationwide Series Ushers In Night Racing At Chicago

The NASCAR Nationwide Series helps Chicagoland make history Friday with the first night race in the eight-year history of the track.

When the 2008 schedule was unveiled, Chicagoland revealed its plans for night racing in the NASCAR Nationwide Series and NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events. Both races moved up one day from their previous Saturday—Sunday day slots that had been on the calendar since 2001.

Race history shows a strong chance for a first-time series winner. Four drivers have collected their first win in the NASCAR Nationwide Series at Chicagoland, including two-time defending NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson who won the first race at the 1.5-mile track in 2001.

It was the second of Johnson’s two full-time seasons in the NASCAR Nationwide Series and the victory remains his lone win in series competition in 88 races.

Other first-time series winners at Chicagoland include Johnny Sauter (2002), Justin Labonte (2004) and Casey Mears (2006).

Team Rensi Owners Rensi, Weisbaum Return To Home Track

He’s still searching for his own home win at Nashville, but Bobby Hamilton Jr. (No. 25 Smithfield Ford) has already provided his team with a hometown victory.

Hamilton’s Team Rensi Motorsports co-owners, Ed Rensi and Gary Weisbaum are Windy City natives, and Hamilton produced a win for the tandem at Chicago in 2003.

Rensi, the former President & CEO of McDonalds, resides in Downers Grove Ill. Weisbaum, a graduate of Northern Illinois University, formed a marketing agency in Vernon Hills, Ill., before becoming involved in motorsports in 1992. He joined Rensi in 1999 to form one of the longest-standing series-only owner relationships.

Other Illinois natives in the NASCAR Nationwide Series garage include: Matt Swiderski (Chicago) – No. 2 Chevrolet engineer; Ramie Jones (Olney) – No. 32 Toyota engineer; Bill Cole (Milan) – No. 88 Chevrolet transporter driver; Joey Forgette (Springfield) – No. 11 Chevrolet front-tire changer; Lee Bob Cunningham (Forreston) – No. 99 Toyota mechanic / eighth man.

No ‘Sophomore Slump’ For Ragan

David Ragan (No. 6 Discount Tire Ford), the 2007 Raybestos Rookie of the Year in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, is proving not everyone has a “sophomore slump.”

Ragan finished last year with two top fives and three top 10s, earning fifth place in the standings. But at the halfway point this year, he’s already bettered his 2007 performance with two top fives and four top 10s and is already fifth in the standings with 16 races left.

Ragan is a double-duty driver using the NASCAR Nationwide Series to supplement his NASCAR Sprint Cup learning curve. One of the surprises in the premier series Ragan, 22, is in 15th in the standings, 102 points out of the 12th and final spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

No. 20 Goes For 10

Different driver, same opportunity for Dave Rogers and the crew of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

After leading the team to its ninth win of the season last week at Daytona with Denny Hamlin behind the wheel, Tony Stewart takes his turn Friday night at Chicago with Old Spice as the sponsor. Two other drivers have competed in the No. 20 this year.

Stewart has run the last two seasons at Chicago in NASCAR Nationwide Series competition, bringing home a top-10 finish in both.

A 10th win would be significant to series history. When Sam Ard set the series record with 10 wins in 1983 in the No. 00 Oldsmobile, he did so driving for team owner Howard Thomas.

Stewart leads the series in wins (five) and has a pre-race Driver Rating of 100.0 heading to Chicago.

NASCAR Foundation, Nationwide Join Together For Blood & Marrow Drive

The NASCAR Foundation and series sponsor Nationwide Insurance encourage fans to roll up their sleeves and sign up to become donors at participating locations as part of the Third Annual Blood & Marrow Drive Presented by Nationwide on Sept. 11.

A partnership between The NASCAR Foundation, the Jimmie Johnson Foundation, the Hendrick Marrow Program and 26 NASCAR Nationwide Series, NASCAR Sprint Cup and NASCAR Camping World Series West tracks, the event is the largest of its kind in the motorsports industry, and since 2006, has collected enough pints of blood and marrow donor names to potentially save more than 16,000 lives.

In The Loop: Burton Looks To Trade Five Third-Place Finishes At Chicago For A Win

Jeff Burton chooses his races wisely.

He returns to the No. 29 Holiday Inn Chevrolet at Chicagoland after a six-race layoff. The statistics show why Burton chooses it for his NASCAR Nationwide Series return – he’s run five races there in his series career and all five have resulted in third-place finishes.

That statistical oddity is backed up with some of the top-ranked Loop Data in the series. Over the last two Chicago races, Burton owns series-high marks in Driver Rating (121.4), Average Running Position (4.1) and Laps in the Top 15 percentage (97.8%). He also ranks third in Fastest Laps Run with 45.

A couple of the “usual suspects” should join Burton at the front of the pack – most notably two-time series champion Kevin Harvick (No. 33 Camping World Chevrolet) and reigning series champion Carl Edwards (No. 60 World Financial Group Ford). They rank in the top five of most Loop Data stats over the past three years.

Harvick has a Driver Rating of 121.2 (second), an Average Running Position of 5.7 (second), 34 Fastest Laps Run (fifth) and a Laps in the Top 15 percentage of 97.7% (second).

Edwards owns a series-high 78 Fastest Laps Run, along with a Driver Rating of 115.5 and an Average Running Position of 6.4.

The Director’s Take: History Aside, Night Racing At Chicago Brings Challenges

The NASCAR Nationwide Series has the honor of running the first night race at Chicago but that distinction presents challenges according to series director Joe Balash.

“Teams will have to change the way they go about setting up their cars based on all past history being daytime races,” he said.

“There will be the same issues we have at other tracks with the grip levels changing from daytime practices to evening races. As the track cools off, you get a little more grip so teams will have to predict the changes in their cars.”

Chicagoland Speedway

Most Wins: Kevin Harvick, 2
Most Poles: Ryan Newman, 2
Quick Fact: First of two straight races in Ill.

NNS Etc.

Robert Richardson, Jr. (No. 23 Chevrolet)is scheduled to throw out the first pitch Tuesday night at the Continental Baseball League All-Star Game in his hometown of McKinney, Texas.

Richardson will make the honorary first pitch to get the game underway at 8 p.m. CST. The CBL is a newly-formed independent pro league and the All-Star game will be played at The Gabe at the Ballfields at Craig Ranch in McKinney.

ESPN will have live, prime-time coverage from Chicagoland Friday, July 11, beginning at 7:30 p.m.ET with NASCAR Countdown. The telecast from the 1.5-mile track also airs in high definition on ESPN HD. This is the third of five scheduled NASCAR Nationwide Series races carried by ESPN.

Dr. Jerry Punch will be joined in the booth by Rusty Wallace and Andy Petree.

Brad Keselowski will serve as this week’s In-Race Reporter and will talk back with Wallace on the race’s pace laps and during caution periods.

Of Note: Landon Cassill (No. 5 National Guard Chevrolet) celebrated his 19th birthday July 7. … Jason Leffler (No. 38 Great Clips Toyota) will attempt double duty this weekend; he’s also entered in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race Saturday night.

Toyota won its 13th race of the season last Saturday and continued to build its lead in the Bill France Performance Cup standings.

But each manufacturer other than Toyota has at least one win at Chicago led by Chevrolet with four, including Kevin Harvick’s win last year. Dodge has two wins at Chicago while Ford has one.

Clauson Takes Control Of Raybestos Rookie Standings

The mid-way point of the season is a good time to check how the series’ new faces have faired thus far. Bryan Clauson (No. 40 Fastenal Dodge) is one of the new drivers who is beginning to stand out.

Clauson posted his first career pole at Daytona last weekend and went on to finish 19th—the highest-finishing rookie of the race. This season Clauson has one top-five and two top-10 finishes.

What’s impressive about Clauson, 19, is that he has produced on a limited schedule. He’s had to share the No. 40 with fellow rookie Dario Franchitti.

However, with Franchitti’s duties at Chip Ganassi Racing wtih Felix Sabates unresolved, Clauson looks to have the opportunity to gain more experience during the season’s second half.

Raybestos Rookie Of The Year Standings

Rank Driver Points
1 Bryan Clauson 139
2 Dario Franchitti 111
3 Landon Cassill 88
4 Cale Gale 83
5 Chase Miller 68
6 Brian Keselowski 63
7 Patrick Carpentier 41

Results following the Winn Dixie 250 at Daytona International Speedway

Up Next: Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers 250 At Gateway International Raceway

The second half of the NASCAR Nationwide Series stand-alone season gets underway next Saturday, July 19 at Gateway International Raceway.

ESPN2 will carry the broadcast live beginning at 9:30 p.m. ET.

Last year, Reed Sorenson joined two-time series champions Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kevin Harvick as the only drivers to have two wins at the track in series competition.

Scott Wimmer is the defending pole winner at Gateway and shares the series lead in poles at the track (two) with another two-time series champion, Martin Truex Jr.

FAST FACTS

The Race: Dollar General 300 Powered By Coca-Cola
The Place: Chicagoland Speedway
The Date: Friday, July 11
The Time: 7 p.m. ET
The Distance: 300 miles / 200 laps
TV: ESPN, 7 p.m. ET
Track Size: 1.5-mile paved
2007 Winner: Kevin Harvick
2007 Pole: Denny Hamlin

2008 Standings

1 Clint Bowyer 2,814
2 Brad Keselowski 2,612
3 Carl Edwards 2,596
4 David Reutimann 2,588
5 David Ragan 2,489
6 Mike Bliss 2,473
7 Kyle Busch 2,438
8 Mike Wallace 2,273
9 David Stremme 2,231
10 Jason Keller 2,157

Schedule
Thursday–Practice 2:30-3:50 p.m.; Final Practice 6-7:25 p.m.
Saturday–Qualifying, 2:35 p.m.

 
Posted : July 9, 2008 5:03 pm
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Reutimann wins Nationwide pole at Chicagoland
Fri 11th, July 2008

Joliet, IL (Sports Network) - David Reutimann won the pole for Friday night's Dollar General 300 Nationwide Series race at the Chicagoland Speedway. The No.99 Michael Waltrip Racing driver rounded the 1.5-mile oval in 30.606 seconds (176.436 m.p.h.).

Reutimann recorded his second pole in 86 career Nationwide starts. His first pole came in November 2007 at Texas.

"I was really surprised it held on like it did," Reutimann said. "I didn't really know what to expect and went through (turns) one and two pretty good and figured we could make it through three and four, and it would be a pretty good lap. And it turned out good."

Tony Stewart, in the No.20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, will start second after qualifying at 30.666 seconds.

"I was overly impressed today with the car," Stewart said. "I don't know how many guys yesterday got a chance to do qualifying runs, and I was really impressed with what (crew chief) Dave Rogers was able to do."

Stewart will make his second to last Nationwide start in the JGR car at Chicagoland. His final race for the team will be in August at Michigan. He'll merge with Haas CNC Racing in 2009 to serve as both driver and owner of the newly-formed Stewart-Haas Racing.

The red-hot No.20 JGR team will try to score their fourth win in the last five Nationwide races.

Denny Hamlin held off his teammate Kyle Busch in the final laps to win one week ago at Daytona. Tony Stewart drove the car to victory at New Hampshire the week prior, and Joey Logano, in just his third start, won the June 14th race at Kentucky.

Logano, all of 18 years and 21 days at time of his victory, became the youngest driver to win a Nationwide race. He finished second to defending series champion Carl Edwards June 22nd at Milwaukee. Logano will not start at Chicagoland.

Gibbs' No.20 team has won nine of the first 19 races this season.

David Ragan (30.683) and Kevin Harvick (30.729) will start in row two.

Harvick won last year's 300-mile race at Chicagoland. Harvick hung around the top-10 for 173 laps before taking his first lead of the race. He then led the final 27 circuits and crossed the finish line 1.012 seconds ahead of Matt Kenseth. The victory was Harvick's third of the 2007 season.

Harvick is the only repeat winner in seven Nationwide races there. He won in 2005.

The race is scheduled to start around 8:00 p.m. (et).

 
Posted : July 11, 2008 5:28 pm
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