Homestead Preview

Posted by Mike on Nov 16th, 2007
2007
Nov 16

The final race of the season is parade of “lasts” for many different reasons. It’s the final race in “the old” car, making way for a full season of the CoT. With that in mind, will drivers and crews care about tearing up a car that will have zero Cup value? Maybe it will be like that episode of Beverly Hills 90210 where the Walsh house is sold, so the gang throws a huge party and destroys the property. I fear I’ve revealed too much about my high school television habits. The phasing in of the CoT also means the final race for Chevy in the Monte Carlo. Considering all the cars look the same and it only gets worse with the CoT, this is not much of a milestone.

Saturday also marks the last Busch race as well as the nasty byproduct known as Buschwhackers. Actually the Cup guys will probably still plague the lower division, but they will have a new name. As for the title sponsor Nationwide takes the reins and starts the clock on booting Geico out of the series. It will be more significant when Lauren Wallace is forced out of the sport. Then you will see fans truly make some noise.

Speaking of title sponsors, Homestead is the last race in the “Nextel” Cup. The Sprint Cup takes over next year. It’s not quite the same as switching from Winston to Nextel. Again, you’ll probably hear this “last” mentioned, but really what’s the big deal?

The Ford 400 is also the final race for Ricky Rudd and it’s probably he will quietly slip away just like he did after 2005. Depending on how qualifying goes, Sterling Marlin might be making his final Cup start as well. There are no plans for 2008 and his 2007 season was abruptly interrupted when Ginn Racing couldn’t find enough change in the couch to keep Marlin’s team running. Marlin will most likely attempt some races in 2008, but the ship carrying a full time program has sailed for Sterling. Like Marlin, longtime Cup stalwart Ken Schrader’s timetable was also forced forward. If more Cup races aren’t in the cards for Schrader, it’s a safe bet he will find a race somewhere, including his own I-55 racetrack.

Several high profile drivers will move on next year after Miami. Dale Earnhardt Jr will go out in a blaze of glory at DEI, most likely from another blown engine. Kyle Busch might take the opportunity to pout or blame someone else for not winning the race. Joe Gibbs Racing will also move to Toyota, bidding GM adieu.

Sunday will also be the final race under the current format before Brian France modifies the season to a weighted scoring system that will award an extra 20 points per win, an extra 50 points for winning a jewel event at Daytona, Bristol, Charlotte or Indianapolis and 20 million points for the winner at Homestead. That way the Sprint Cup is always in doubt until the final lap of the final race of the season (note: this one may or may not be realized).

  • While most drivers are ready for the offseason for a variety of reasons, some drivers are just hitting their stride. After racing below his standards for most of 2008, Matt Kenseth has turned it up during the Chase. He has 4 straight top 5’s entering Homestead. Of course that was before the announcement that crew chief Robbie Reiser was promoted to GM of Roush-Fenway. Reiser is the only crew chief Kenseth has had during his Cup career. The change won’t affect Kenseth’s race on Sunday much, but as the team prepares for 2008 is where Reiser’s absence will be noticed. It might be a good change, injecting some fresh ideas into the #17 team.

  • Can anyone beat Greg Biffle at Homestead? Yes. Tony Stewart has two wins and usually runs well there. He won at Chicago in July, a track with a similar configuration. Martin Truex and Kasey Kahne ran very well last year and also have a chance at winning on Sunday.

  • Jimmie Johnson can’t win five straight races. Can he? The two tracks most comparable to Homestead are Las Vegas and Chicago. Johnson won at Vegas and was dominant at Chicago before a flat tire led to a wreck. Yes folks and Hendrick haters, Jimmie Johnson is perfectly capable of winning five straight. Doing it is another thing altogether.

  • My goal for Sunday? Count the number of times someone mentions building momentum for 2008. It’s one of my pet peeves about sports and it’s even worse in NASCAR. How in the world could anything that happens on Sunday relate in any way to anything that happens three months from now?

  • Short and Sweet. My pick to win the race is a Penske car. You pick whether it’s Kurt Busch, Ryan Newman, Sam Hornish Jr or Brendan Gaughan (he’s entered, right?).

  • I’m not sure how exciting the final race will be, but my tentative plan is to blog during the race and update this space every 10-15 minutes. If you are watching the race and have your laptop up, why not stop by, add some comments and make the day more enjoyable. If you don’t, well I’ll be here on Monday with View From the Couch.

3 Responses

  1. Hector Says:

    Good call on picking a Penske racer!!! I’m pulling for Kurt although I’d still like to see a good race between JJ and Gordon. Hopefully if Kurt doesn’t win he at least races well. He deserves a good placing. His Dodge has been great all year, it would be awesome to see them go out with a win.

  2. Mike Says:

    Of the most deserving drivers for a win, Newman and Earnhardt Jr are right up there. At least Busch has two wins this year, but he has run well enough in plenty of others to double that number.

  3. charlie Says:

    I like Newman in this one. He has been right there for most of the Chase races.

    I may be back during the race. If my family lets me.

    Nice post, as always Mike.

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