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This Week in Auto Racing April 10 - April 12

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(@mvbski)
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This Week in Auto Racing April 10 - April 12

Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) - With Formula One, IndyCars and the truck series taking some time off, it's a light week in racing headlined by the Sprint Cup race in Phoenix.

NASCAR

Subway Fresh Fit 500 - Phoenix International Raceway - Phoenix, AZ

If the Chase for the Sprint Cup started today, there would be some very big names left without a "ticket to the dance." NASCAR invites just 12 drivers to compete in the "Chase." Currently outside the top-12 are: Matt Kenseth, Jeff Gordon and Kurt Busch - all former series champions. Others who would be left off the list include: Martin Truex Jr., who made last year's Chase, Juan Pablo Montoya, Jamie McMurray and Casey Mears.

Kenseth, the 2003 Sprint Cup Champion, is the closest to qualifying for the "Chase," just 54 points behind both Kasey Kahne and Clint Bowyer. (Note: this is being written before any penalty against Ryan Newman for failing post-race inspection at TMS last Sunday.)

The No.17 team has gone through changes this season with a new crew chief (Chip Bolin) which might explain his start. Kenseth, one of the most consistent drivers in the series has four top-10s, but twice has finished 30th or worse (Daytona, Martinsville).

Gordon, part of the Hendrick Motorsports team of drivers which dominated in 2007 winning 18 of 36 events, has struggled all season to find the right setup. He has also been beset by mechanical problems which don't usually effect HMS cars. In Daytona, Gordon had a suspension failure and didn't finish the race. He also failed to complete all the laps in Las Vegas after taking a horrific hit against the inside retaining wall on lap 262. Last Sunday he was credited with a third DNF (did not finish) after an accident on lap 110. He already has two more DNFs than in all 36 races last year.

"I can't remember the last time we struggled this bad," said the four-time series champion.

In 2008 a Kurt Busch sighting in the top-10 has been a rare event. After pushing Penske teammate Ryan Newman to the victory at Daytona in February, Busch, the 2004 Sprint Cup Champion, has failed to earn a top-10. He has led just nine laps - all in that first race. The last two weeks Busch has finished 33rd at Martinsville and 23rd at TMS to drop from 10th in the standings to 15th overall.

"We missed the setup again and it's really frustrating," said Busch after Sunday's race. "All we can do is keep plugging away."

Truex Jr., now the lead driver at Dale Earnhardt Inc. with the defection of Dale Earnhardt Jr. to Hendrick Motorsports, has earned just one top-10 all year - a sixth-place result in California. He has led just two laps all season and his 36th-place finish in Texas dropped him to 16th overall.

After a great rookie campaign which included a win and six top-10s, much was expected of Montoya this season. So far the Colombian has been seem more on commercials than in the top-10. His best finish is a 13th-place at Martinsville. Meanwhile, McMurray (Roush Fenway Racing) and Mears (Hendrick Motorsports) have done little despite being on teams that are supposed to finish near the top because they have the best available equipment and crew.

But the good news for these guys and the rest of the drivers outside the top-12 is that there is plenty of time left to get it together and make the "Chase." There are still 19 races remaining before the Sprint Cup "regular" season ends in Richmond on September 6th.

Gordon, for instance, is the defending champion both at PIR and the next race in Talladega. Busch has one win and five top-10s in 10 starts at PIR and Kenseth has a win and six top-10s in 11 PIR starts.

It is time for those who started slow to step up their game if they want to have any fun this fall.

Nationwide

Bashas' Supermarket 200 - Phoenix International Raceway - Phoenix, AZ

Richard Childress Racing's Clint Bowyer enters this week's Nationwide Series race in Phoenix with everything going right. He is the series points leader - by 57 points over defending champion Carl Edwards. Bowyer is also the defending champion for this week's race at PIR. And his team has overtaken the No.33 Kevin Harvick Inc. team to lead the owner's points championship.

In the 2007 race, Bowyer was in the lead with seven laps to go. On the final restart he pulled away from Matt Kenseth. Jeff Burton, in third place, began to challenge Kenseth for second and while the two fought it out for the runner-up spot, Bowyer cruised to the victory.

In the last three years (six races at PIR) 13 RCR cars have been entered and they have come away with 11 top-fives. Besides Bowyer (No.2) and Burton (No.29), youngster Stephen Leicht will drive the No.21 RCR Chevrolet.

Leicht finished seventh in the 2007 Nationwide Series standings for Robert Yates Racing, but was left without a ride when the team decided to focus on its Sprint Cup teams. Leicht has made two starts for RCR - finishing 10th in California and 12th at Nashville.

Behind Bowyer and Edwards in the standings are David Reutimann, David Ragan and Kyle Busch.

The speedy Busch has won at least one race in the Craftsman Truck Series, Nationwide Series and the Sprint Cup Series for the fourth consecutive year.

"To win in all three series four years in a row or something like that - I just want to race," Busch said. "I just go out there and drive what I can. To win is the ultimate goal, and to go after points is second."

"Rowdy" could easily have notched four Nationwide wins in 2008. Busch and Tony Stewart were the two fastest cars in the season opener at Daytona and the veteran Stewart edged his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate. At Atlanta, Busch led 153 laps and was the best on the track but with 25 laps to go Busch's right-front tire went flat causing him to crash into the first-turn wall to ruin another great performance. In Nashville, Busch led 125 laps when he spun his Toyota.

"Just a stupid mistake on the driver's part," said Busch after the race.

Then last Saturday Busch started deep in the field, yet still led 126 of 200 laps en route to his first win of the season. He has led a series-high 471 laps this year in the first seven events.

Unless something very strange happens, expect this week to be a battle between the RCR cars and Busch.

 
Posted : April 9, 2008 6:44 pm
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Auto Racing Glance

Subway Fresh Fit 500 - Phoenix International Raceway - Phoenix, AZ

Schedule: Thursday, qualifying (Speed Channel, 7 p.m.); Saturday, race (FOX, 8 p.m.).

Track: Phoenix International Raceway (tri-oval, 1 mile, 11 degrees banking in turns 1-2, 9 degrees banking in turns 3-4).

Race distance: 312 miles, 312 laps.

Last race: Carl Edwards dominated at Texas Motor Speedway, leading a race-high 123 laps while building a lead of more than 7 seconds at one point. Edwards has been unbeatable on intermediate tracks this season, also winning at California and Las Vegas. And he could have won at Atlanta had his motor not failed while leading.

Last year: Jeff Gordon tied the late Dale Earnhardt for sixth place on the career victory list with 76, winning for the first time since July 2006. Gordon's win in the Subway Fresh Fit 500 ended a 26-race victory drought.

Fast facts: Jeremy Mayfield parted ways Tuesday with Haas CNC Racing, and Johnny Sauter will drive the No. 70 this weekend. The split comes after he placed 38th at Texas, his fifth finish of 30th or worse in seven events this season. Mayfield is 36th in the standings, and the car now must qualify on speed to make this weekend's race. ... Ryan Newman became the latest driver penalized by NASCAR, losing 25 points Tuesday because his car failed inspection at Texas. Newman's Dodge was too high when it was inspected following his fourth-place run, an adjustment that could provide additional downforce. The penalty dropped Newman from eighth to 10th in the standings. ... All three Richard Childress drivers are among the top 12 in the standings. ... Gordon's victory last year was the only one from the pole through the first 20 years of this event. He has eight top-five finishes and 15 top-10 placings in 18 career starts at Phoenix. ... Jimmie Johnson won the most recent Phoenix event on Nov. 11 for his only victory at the track. ... Stewart Cooper was hired as crew chief for Kyle Petty on Tuesday, taking over the slumping No. 45 Dodge after it missed the past two races. Cooper replaces Billy Wilburn.

Next race: Aaron's 499, April 27, Talladega, Ala.

Bashas' Supermarket 200 - Phoenix International Raceway - Phoenix, AZ

Schedule: Friday, qualifying (Speed Channel, 5 p.m.), race (ESPN2, 9:30 p.m.).

Track: Phoenix International Raceway (tri-oval, 1 mile, 11 degrees banking in turns 1-2, 9 degrees banking in turns 3-4).

Race distance: 200 miles, 200 laps.

Last race: Kyle Busch won at Texas Motor Speedway in dominating fashion, leading 126 of the 200 laps and finishing more than a second ahead of Jeff Burton. With an average speed of 151.708 mph, it was the fastest Nationwide race at the 1 1/2-mile high-banked track.

Last year: Clint Bowyer won a stirring duel with Matt Kenseth, taking the lead with 14 laps to go and holding on at Phoenix International Raceway. Bowyer led five times for 120 laps, while Kenseth led just once for 17 laps. As usual, Cup drivers dominated the race, with Timothy Peters in 13th the top finishing Nationwide regular.

Fast facts: Sprint Cup regulars have won all six Nationwide races during which both series competed on the same weekend. ... Less than two months into the 2008 NASCAR season, the 22-year-old Busch already has victories in all three major series. He has accomplished the feat four straight years. ... The 13 cars entered by Richard Childress Racing over the past six Nationwide events at Phoenix have combined for 11 top-five finishes. ... Carl Edwards has never finished outside the top 10 in six starts at Phoenix.

Next race: Mexico 200, April 20, Mexico City

 
Posted : April 9, 2008 6:47 pm
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