Michigan II Preview

Posted by Mike on Aug 14th, 2008
2008
Aug 14

One of the first topics to come up when a Cup race at Michigan is mentioned is fuel mileage. That is something that usually sets Michigan apart, but this year has already featured four such finishes including the June Michigan race. What is it about Michigan that lends itself to fuel mileage races? I suspect it has to do with a lack of cautions thanks to a wider racing surface plus the ability to pass without incident. It doesn’t explain everything, but it will be a factor come Sunday.

What Happened Last Year

Rain happened. A lot of rain that delayed the race for two days. When the track finally dried on Tuesday morning Kurt Busch was the dominant car, leading 92 laps and winning his second race in three weeks. To be honest, it was a rather uneventful race which seems to fit the mold of rain delayed races. Everyone usually wants to get it over with, pack up and go home.

Notes

  • Only 44 cars are on the Michigan entry list. Quick quiz: When was the last time a race only had 43 cars entered? Hint: It’s probably more recent than you think. Last year’s Daytona 500 featured a 61 car entry list. Now the number of willing participants has dwindled to 44. Granted Michigan is longer trip from Charlotte, but the bottom rung teams are really struggling to afford cars each week. [2004 at Rockingham was the last Cup race to feature only 43 entrants, while the 2002 Loudon race was the last with a short field].

  • Tony Stewart is entered in this weekend’s Nationwide race and he will sport a special paint scheme publicizing the “Give the Kids the Wolrd view-A-Thon”.

    the #20 Old Spice Car will have a new look as it races to help special children from around the world. Give Kids The World, the nonprofit organization that provides week-long, cost-free vacations to Central Florida for children with life-threatening illnesses and their families, will be honored with its very own “Give Kids The World Village” design. The brightly colored car was designed by Wish child Emily Marsala and will be driven by Joe Gibbs Racing driver Tony Stewart.

    In celebration of this unique partnership, Give Kids The World is encouraging NASCAR fans everywhere to participate in a View-A-Thon to help us raise $25,000, or $100 for every mile of the race.

  • Brad Coleman will make his Cup debut on Sunday, when he takes the wheel for Hall of Fame Racing’s #96 car. Coleman is only 20 and is a legitimate prospect. He will need to qualify on time, but given his solid Busch/Nationwide qualifying record (16.7 avg start) he shouldn’t have a problem. It will be interesting to see whether he can improve on JJ Yeley’s numbers for 2008. While Yeley definitely struggled this year, I don’t think it was all his fault. The team could probably use some veteran feedback to set a workable baseline. You know, someone like Mike Skinner. Unfortunately for HoF Racing, Toyota’s official/unofficial consultant is already booked this weekend for Michael Waltrip Racing.

Champs, Chumps and Sleepers

Champ: David Ragan Ragan is inching closer to winning and there won’t be a better chance than at the track that Roush owns (not in the literal sense like Roger Penske formerly did, but in the Jimmie Johnson, My House! sense).

Chump: Kyle Busch Yeah I said it! He wasn’t great at Indy and was decent at Pocono. I think he’s due for a crash this weekend.

Sleeper: Mark Martin Martin is phenomenal at Michigan: 4 wins, 16 top 5’s and 27 top 10’s. He also has an 81.3 driver rating in the past seven events and that includes two cool Batman paint schemes.

Who Will Win?

Matt Kenseth. I don’t need to explain why. He’s due, he’s good at Michigan and Roush cars always win at least once at Michigan. Plus I want to see more robot commercials.

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Brickyard 400 Preview

Posted by Mike on Jul 24th, 2008
2008
Jul 24

It’s Indy time for the Cup guys. That means speeds over 200 mph, a huge purse (last year was over $8 million) and tight racing. With not a lot of room to pass in the corners, horsepower on the straightaways is a driver’s best friend. Dale Earnhardt Jr participated in the recent Goodyear tire test and he also quelled concern about tires.

Tire wear was a big issue. When we first started out, you recall last year and in years past, when we first get there, we go to the cords in about five laps. It takes the whole weekend to build the rubber up on the track before that goes away. We did that again, and we found a tire that will work with another tire that lasted quite a bit longer and ran just as quick.

Because Indianapolis is such a large track, tires can wear out quickly. It’s compounded by the fact that the Trucks and Nationwide cars don’t see the track. That also minimizes the amount of rubber buildup. The fact that Earnhardt is happy with the durability and quality of the tire is a good thing for the level of racing and safety.

What Happened Last Year

Dale Earnhardt Jr dominated the early stages of the race but blew an engine. It was one of three engine failures in the final seven races before the Chase, completely souring his chances to make the Chase or win a race. Tony Stewart took advantage and went on to cruise to an easy win. The win also produced two of the more memorable quotes from Stewart. While closing in on Kevin Harvick, Stewart casually uttered “Here kitty kitty” over the team radio. Then after his win he swore in Victory Lane on live TV. In a post Janet Jackson-FCC crackdown society, Stewart was fined. It didn’t help that it was ESPN’s first broadcast of their new television deal.

Notes

  • In the short history at the Brickyard Jeff Gordon owns almost all of the records. 4 wins, 11 top 10’s, 433 laps led, and three poles are all tops.

  • In 9 Indy starts Dave Blaney has never led a lap. Every driver with more than 4 starts has led at least one lap.

  • Chevy has won the last five races and nine of 14 overall at Indianapolis. Dodge and Pontiac have one win each while Ford has three, although none since 1999. Toyota is tied with Oldsmobile and Scion at zero.

  • James at One Bad Wheel has an interesting article on the history of victory lane celebrations. Todd Parrott is credited with starting the brick kissing tradition in 1996. It’s interesting to see how different traditions start and what makes one action stick while others are considered lame? Kissing bricks, climbing fences and drinking milk. They all make perfect sense. In a way it’s like nicknaming yourself. You can’t try too hard and make it intentional or it looks desperate. His article also reminded me of the time in 2005 when Kurt Busch won the fall Richmond race and kissed the asphalt. No one has done it since, thankfully.

  • Bill Elliott will attempt to make his 15th Brickyard race. While he is no longer a threat to win races, Elliott can still get it done at select tracks. He has never finished worse than 23rd at Indy and has 5 top 5’s and 9 top 10’s in his career. That includes his 2002 win where he led 93 laps.

Champs, Chumps and Sleepers

Champ: David Ragan Ragan is becoming a serious threat on intermediate tracks. Last year he relied on attrition to score a decent finish. This year he is running in the top 10 and top 15 for the bulk of races.

Champs, Chumps and Sleepers

Chump: Carl Edwards Sure Edwards can win at any track, but so far in his career Indy hasn’t agreed with him. A ninth place finish in 2006 is sandwiched by two mediocre finishes (12th, 18th) with bad driver ratings (69.6 and 67.1).

Sleeper: Mark Martin Martin stayed in the top 5 almost all day at Pocono and has already said he can win at Indy. He is not one to exaggerate.

Who Will Get to 1st Base with the Bricks?

Tony Stewart will surely be a popular choice along with his teammates Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin. Kasey Kahne has been very good on speedways this summer and Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr could also show up in strength. Kevin Harvick is also one to watch (no matter what loser bloggers might say about his season, he comes good at Indy). Maybe I’m bored of picking the same four or five drivers each week, but I’m going deeper for my pick this week. Over the last two months
Brian Vickers has quietly ran with the leaders on a weekly basis. His driver rating over the last 8 races is a very neat 92.2. He was the fastest car at Michigan and one of the fastest at Lowe’s, Dover and Pocono. He is ready to win and it will be surprising if he doesn’t have a win by the time the Chase rolls around. Win number one for Red Bull Racing might come this weekend.

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View From the Couch: Who Will Stumble?

Posted by Mike on Jul 21st, 2008
2008
Jul 21

Someone is about to go for a parachute ride. Based on recent history, it’s inevitable that one and maybe two teams sitting on the good side of the points will tumble between now and September. Since the Chase was created in 2004, at least one driver each season has lost altitude and fallen from a Chase position. With only seven races before the Dirty Dozen are chosen for NASCAR’s playoffs, the pack is tight for the final few spots. In recent years drivers like Bobby Labonte, Kevin Harvick, Dale Jarrett, Elliott Sadler, Dale Earnhardt Jr and Greg Biffle have all seen the bottom fall out. A season filled with the hope of a late season run at a championship suddenly squashed by late season problems.

Of course, for every driver that experiences a late summer slide there is another driver ready to swoop for their Chase spot. Just ask Jeremy Mayfield, Mark Martin, Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards, Denny Hamlin or Kurt Busch how that feels. One of the keys to making the Chase was winning. Four of these six drivers were propelled to the Chase on the strength of a win. Mayfield’s was the most dramatic. He won the Richmond race to crack the Chase field on the final night. While all wins aren’t as dramatic as Mayfield’s, they all count equally.

This year will again feature some nail biting for some teams as the races count down. 199 points separate 6th place Jeff Gordon from 15th place David Ragan. Ragan is also only 98 points from 12th place Denny Hamlin. A lot can, and will, happen in the next seven races.

Aside from obviously winning a race or scoring six or seven top tens, the biggest key is to avoid awful finishes. Last year Dale Earnhardt Jr had three top fives in the seven races prior to the Chase. Unfortunately he also had three engine failures that resulted in three 30+ finishes. It also didn’t help that his nearest competitor Kurt Busch won two races in the same span.

While some things like engine failures are out of a driver’s control, driver’s still must do everything they can in these seven races to minimize bad finishes. Allowing a rival to pass is worth losing 3-5 points instead of wrecking and losing 50 or more. Maximizing finishes is especially true when looking at the schedule, which is pretty diverse over the next month and a half. Two things that a driver and team must have are a good speedway car and patience. Speedways like Indianapolis, Pocono, Michigan and California are alternated with tricky short tracks like Bristol and Richmond plus the Watkins Glen road course. If a driver doesn’t fare well on road courses or a short track, they must avoid overdriving and making a costly mistake. If their car isn’t handling well, then they have to start considering gambling on pit strategy or fuel mileage.

At this point it’s hard to imagine a team discovering a new trick or making a large advancement that will help over the next seven weeks. For the most part what you’ve seen so far this year is what you can expect from the teams and drivers. With that in mind here’s one way to try and predict who will sneak in to the ball and who will turn into a pumpkin after Richmond. I’m using driver rating to predict future performance. I realize it’s not perfect, but it’s a decent way of telling who is over- and underperforming in relation to their point standings this year.

Of the nine drivers in the gray area (Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr, Jeff Burton, Carl Edwards and Jimmie Johnson are safe), drivers with the best driver ratings are Jeff Gordon (5th overall, 95.2), Tony Stewart (6th, 94.9), Denny Hamlin (7th, 93.1), Greg Biffle (8th, 89.7), Kevin Harvick (10th, 88.1) and Matt Kenseth (87.3, 11th). Based on their driver ratings compared (which I mentioned earlier in the season) to their point standing Gordon, Stewart and Hamlin are also driving better than they have actually finished. While this doesn’t always translate into improved finishes, it’s a lot easier to take a fast car and finish well than to take a slower car and hope you can outlast enough people for a strong finish. For Gordon, Stewart and Hamlin it’s also a good sign that they have teammates that are running really well every week. That also tells me that they are capable of not only finishing well, but could win a race. Matt Kenseth, despite a miserable start to his season, also falls in the category of a driver capable of winning a race, based on his last nine starts (eight top tens).

Meanwhile drivers like Clint Bowyer and Kevin Harvick have finished decently but their driver ratings aren’t as stellar. Despite a 3rd place finish last weekend at Chicago, Kevin Harvick has been very anonymous this year. Because Pocono, Michigan and California are unreliable for Harvick, he can’t afford bad finishes at the tracks where he is usually strong at like Indianapolis, Bristol and Richmond. The same goes for Bowyer who despite his win at Richmond has been more of a compiler than a front runner this year.

A little further back is Brian Vickers. He is the one person that is a wild card. He has been incredibly good on speedways and has a realistic chance to win at Indy, Pocono or Michigan. Unfortunately with Red Bull Racing still new to NASCAR, mistakes and letdowns are always lurking on the #83 team. The other issue is Vickers record at Bristol, Watkins Glen and Richmond. He has a combined 2 top tens in 20 starts at the three tracks. If he can mitigate the damage at these tracks with top 15’s or better, he has the speed on the downforce tracks to put a scare into the RCR cars for a spot in the Chase.

So you tell me, who will make it? Who will get tossed to the side? Who will have heartburn for the next seven weeks?

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View From the Couch: Chicago

Posted by Mike on Jul 14th, 2008
2008
Jul 14

In the last four races dating back to Sonoma we have seen Kyle Busch in a nutshell. He has won three races at three completely different tracks and also thrown in a nice scuffle at Loudon for good measure. Since his crash at Pocono (and the accompanying nonsense about his lack of focus) he has seen his lead grow from 21 points to 262. If the Chase started today he would have a 50 point lead over Carl Edwards and Kasey Kahne.

After Kyle Busch’s first win of the season at Atlanta, I compared his fourth Cup season (at age 23) to that of Jeff Gordon’s 1995 season. In that season, Gordon’s 3rd in Cup (age 23), he won 7 races, had 17 top 5’s and 23 top 10’s, and won his first of four championships. At the time it seemed like a fair comparison. Through three years, Busch’s numbers were very similar to Gordon’s at the same age. Of course, thanks to Busch’s last four races, he is on a completely different plane. Busch is beginning to look like the Jeff Gordon of 1996-1998 when he won 10, 10 and 13 races respectively.

It’s undeniable that Busch is having a great season, but let’s hold off with the “Legendary” labels for now. The 2007 New England Patriots could speak intelligently on the subject. While some fans still feel the Chase is contrived, it’s one more challenge that Busch and any other driver has conquer. Of course Busch is doing everything he can in the regular season to gain the NASCAR equivalent of home field advantage throughout the playoffs by racing up as many bonus points as possible. Even if his 50 point lead holds up or grows, he will still face serious competition during the final ten races. Remember, 50 points is the difference between 1st and 8th place. Carl Edwards is stout on the 1.5 mile intermediate tracks that litter the Chase schedule. Dale Earnhardt has run in the top 5 for the entire season and Jimmie Johnson is quietly rounding into to form (he will win at least one to two more races before the Chase starts). Even teammates Tony Stewart and Denny Hamlin have the tools to challenge Busch for the title during the final stretch. Go ahead and pile the compliments on Kyle Busch’s plate right now, he’s had a dream season to this point. But be careful to assume that Busch will win continue winning races at this pace or that the Chase is only a formality.

  • Last week I questioned the need for more night races, but Chicago was a good show. It was a lot tougher to pass at Chicago than some of the similar tracks earlier this year and drivers really had to work for several laps to set up passes. Whether that is from the cooler night temperatures, Goodyear’s improved tires, the quality of the Chicago or a combination of factors, it was a good race to watch. The incredible sunset was a nice touch too.

  • Speaking of tough to pass, is there a driver that is tougher to pass than Matt Kenseth? He is so adept at finding the line where another driver wants to be and making it really difficult for other drivers. It’s nothing illegal or cheap but it’s his signature move. Other drivers try it, but no one is able to hold on for so many laps with an inferior car to the one attempting to pass.

  • TNT took a commercial break while the race was under green with 17 laps left. In a race that featured a lot of tight racing and had just featured a late pass for the lead, TNT should have stayed with the final 20 laps until either the finish or a caution flag. I realize how difficult it is to time commercials and balance the coverage with paying bills, but it seemed like a poor decision. What happens if Johnson cuts a tire, or Kyle Busch wrecks trying to run Johnson down? It created a situation where a race-altering move could have been missed in the final laps of the race.

  • Kevin Harvick scored his first top 5 since Richmond nine races ago. The 3rd place finish allowed him to jump 4 spots in the standings to 9th. Richard Childress Racing teammate Clint Bowyer’s tailspin continued. After his win at Richmond, Bowyer sat in 4th place in the points and had scored 7 straight top tens. He now sits in 13th and only has two top tens in the last nine. The reason for Bowyer’s slide? In the first quarter of the season he ran in the top ten and top 15 avoided trouble to maximize his finishes. Now Bowyer is still running in the top 15 but has not been able to improve his position. His driver rating (79.7) is 17th best. If Bowyer hopes to make the Chase, that number will have to improve.

  • Barring major catastrophe the top 5 drivers are pretty well locked into the Chase. Starting with Jeff Gordon in 6th place and back to 15th place David Ragan, there is only a 200 point gap. A lot could happen between now and Richmond to shuffle the bottom half of the Chase field.

  • For more NASCAR opinion plus other major racing series, check out Racing Nation.

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Ten Drivers Looking For a Slump Buster

Posted by Mike on Jun 17th, 2008
2008
Jun 17

Now that Dale Earnhardt Jr has scored his breakthrough win for 2008, who is the next driver to win for the first time this year? Nine different drivers have already won at least one race this year, but there are still a lot of big names looking to kick in the door to Victory Lane. Here’s a list of candidates in order of likeliness.

  • Tony Stewart When it will come: Any day now.

    Stewart has run very well this year but can’t buy a win (I wonder if he’s even tried that?) He can win at any track, especially considering how well JGR cars have run this year. The next four races (Sonoma, Loudon, Daytona and Chicago) are all great tracks for Stewart. Actually the entire summer is ripe for a Stewart breakout.

  • Matt Kenseth When it will come: Chicago, Indianapolis, Michigan, Bristol

    Maybe it’s Robbie Reiser’s help, but the #17 team has come alive since May. Kenseth has scored five straight top tens and has climbed to 14th in the points. In 2005 he faced a similar challenge to make the Chase and it all started with a strong run at Michigan. He went on to dominate at Chicago and win at Bristol.

  • Jeff Gordon When it will come: It could come at Sonoma or Daytona.

    I’ll tell you where it won’t come: an intermediate track. Despite Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr running consistently well on 1.5 and 2 mile tracks, Gordon’s #24 team is out to lunch right now. Gordon has plenty of good tracks this summer, including two road courses, that he will certainly win a race at some point.

  • Greg Biffle When it will come: Michigan, Bristol, California, Richmond

    Engine failures, pit road penalties and loose wheels have all cost Biffle chances at wins this year. You could look at how well he’s run and say he’s close to a win, but it’s also too large of a problem to ignore. Until the #16 team and actually Roush-Fenway as a whole solve their pit crew problems it will continue to cost them wins.

  • Brian Vickers When it will come: Daytona, Chicago, Pocono

    Vickers and Red Bull Racing have really established themselves with their intermediate program. In fact Vickers is probably the hottest driver behind Kasey Kahne over the last month. A win is very likely, but the team still needs to prove they can run up front consistently. Watch out for Vickers at Daytona. Toyota’s horsepower on restrictor plate tracks is unmatched and Vickers is very good in the draft.

  • David Ragan When it will come: Loudon, Daytona, Dover

    Ragan has continued to improve this season. He led late at Michigan but the team decided to pit for fuel to ensure a solid finish. One of Ragan’s strengths has been restrictor plate races. He has a legitimate chance to make some noise at Daytona. On intermediate tracks he’s been solid but hasn’t run close enough to the front to suggest he will win at one of these tracks. If any young driver is going to win their first race this year it will be Ragan.

  • Mark Martin When it will come: Loudon, Indianapolis, Pocono, Richmond

    Martin says he is going to win at Indianapolis, but I would peg him as a safer bet at one of the flat tracks where he ran so well in the spring. He was the best car at the end of the Phoenix race and stayed in the top 5 all night at Richmond. Of course DEI’s history of missing out on details doesn’t instill confidence that they can help Martin out.

  • Kevin Harvick When it will come: Loudon, any road course, any short track, Indianapolis

    The good news is that Harvick is capable of winning almost anywhere. The bad news is he only has two top 5’s this year. RCR cars are finishing decently, but not running up front enough. Harvick will win a race, but it’s hard to see it being more than a once-off.

  • Kurt Busch When it will come: Sonoma, Daytona, Pocono, Bristol

    Busch is having a forgettable season, but he’s too talented to go winless. He has a lot of good tracks this summer and there has to be a win in there somewhere. It could easily come at Sonoma. To me, his lack of success is one of the biggest surprises of the season.

  • Martin Truex Jr When it will come: Loudon, Richmond, Dover, Phoenix

    It’s hard to tell whether Truex hasn’t adjusted to the CoT on intermediate tracks or DEI is simply not giving him fast enough cars. Truex has still managed to post nice results at the flat and short tracks. He nearly won the 2007 Loudon race.

  • Aside from crazy circumstances, a team finding something revolutionary, or a road course ringer, I can’t see any other drivers challenging for wins this year. Anyone else you see winning this year?

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    View From the Couch: Darlington

    Posted by Mike on May 12th, 2008
    2008
    May 12

    As far as Saturday night’s race, Kyle Busch won, he’s a great driver and will win more races this year and in the future. He slapped the wall multiple times and still won, it was impressive, but he is not Wild Thing. Ricky Vaughn, Mitch Williams, The Troggs, even Tone Loc all rank higher than Kyle Busch concerning rights to the “Wild Thing” moniker. Now let’s move on and talk about something that hasn’t been beaten to death in the last few weeks.

    The race itself wasn’t very thrilling. Tires meant very little and track position was everything. On lap 250 Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr surrendered 1st and 2nd to pit for tires, while the cars from 3rd to 10th stayed out. Normally at Darlington a strong car with fresh tires would make its way back to the front rather quickly, but Hamlin and Truex spent the next 50 laps stuck in traffic at the end of the top ten. Darlington was obviously still treacherous, but without the steep dropoff in tires, the race was a little stale. It was the fastest race in Darlington history, speedwise and was almost 30 minutes quicker than the 2007 race, but boy did it feel long. I taped the race and despite fast forwarding through all the commercials, it still felt really long. Maybe it was because nothing exciting happened. I fear for my attention span in two weeks.

    Thoughts

    • A few weeks ago, I wondered if there were two drivers you would want to watch battle for the lead in a tight race, than Greg Biffle and Kyle Busch. Considering the fireworks Biffle and Busch presented on Saturday night, my answer stands. The save Biffle made when Busch bumped him in a turn was incredible. It’s a shame Biffle had mechanical problems because he was the only other driver that had something for Busch, and you knew if he was around at the end it would have been a great fight.

    • While top ten stalwarts like Tony Stewart, Greg Biffle, Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick had trouble, the door was opened for some other drivers to enjoy good runs. David Ragan finished 5th for his second top five in three races. He also moved up to 12th in the standings. Travis Kvapil had another strong race (what does a team have to do to get a sponsor for crying out loud?), spending almost 300 laps in the top 15 before finishing 8th. One of the happiest teams on Saturday night was the #22 team. Dave Blaney climbed as high as 2nd before finishing 9th. The finish also pushes the team past Sam Hornish Jr for the crucial 35th spot in owner points.

      “This is a brand new car, and it was really good all weekend. They kept getting it better and better all night. That last run, we kind of faltered for some reason. But not bad, man. That is run that this team needed.”

    • No rookie finished better than 28th and were at least 4 laps down. Too Tough to Tame indeed.

    • Elliott Sadler handled his incident with Tony Stewart the right way. He publicly, and immediately accepted all the blame. If there is anything else to sort out, he and Stewart can iron it out in private. In the heat of the moment, that’s the wise and classy thing to do. Too often drivers would prefer to point fingers or shirk their responsibility on national television.

    • Nice to see both Bill Elliott and Sterling Marlin back in Cup cars, especially at Darlington. The two have seven combined wins at Darlington. Elliott’s 30th place finish was the best showing for the Wood Brothers in 2008. Marlin drove for the injured Dario Franchitti in the #40 car, which has now come full circle. Marlin and David Stremme, both let go in previous years by Chip Ganassi have both subbed for Franchitti in recent weeks.

    Next up is Exhibition Weekend, I mean All-Star weekend. Boogity, Boogity, Boogity boys, let’s go wreckin’.

    For more racing insight, news and opinion be sure to check out Racing Nation. Tell ‘em Mike sent you (they’ll probably squint and ask, “Mike, who?”, but it’s still worth viewing.

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    NASCAR Quarterly Grades

    Posted by Mike on Apr 29th, 2008
    2008
    Apr 29

    It feels like the Cup boys were just at Daytona, but eight races later the year is one fourth over. I’ve already discussed a few things we’ve learned so far, but it’s time to check out a few teams and drivers and hand out some grades for the quarter. It’s not a final grade (NASCAR is on semesters, right?), but more of a progress report.

    These grades aren’t based strictly on performance, but more on preseason expectations. So a car or team expected to run in the thirties that is running in the teens or twenties is a bigger deal than Carl Edwards or Kyle Busch running well. It’s not a surprise that those two are winning races.

  • Joe Gibbs Racing gets a passing grade for adapting to a new manufacturer with aplomb. Having one of NASCAR’s top engine builders, Mark Kronquist, and three premier drivers definitely helps, but I expected a steeper learning curve with the Camry. Placing three drivers inside the top 12 is no surprise, winning three races and having 9 top 5’s and 17 top 10’s through nine races exceeds even the most hardcore Gibbs fan’s dreams.Grade: A

  • Yates Racing entered the season with a new ownership team (Doug replacing father Robert), no sponsorship and two teams that struggled to stay on the lead lap for most of 2006 and 2007. It’s amazing what a little technical support from Roush Racing can do. Travis Kvapil has two top ten finishes, David Gilliland currently sits in 18th place in the points and both cars have run well on a consistent basis. Now about that full time sponsorship… Grade A-

  • For the last three years I’ve predicted a setback for Jeff Burton and the #31 car. He won a race at Bristol, leads the points and has 3 top 5’s and 6 top 10’s through nine races. Even better, there is a lot of room for improvement from Burton and his RCR teammates. Grade: B +

  • Brian Vickers qualified for the first five races, scored enough points to crack the top 35 and exorcised last year’s struggles. It’s a sign of how far Red Bull Racing has come that a bad day is when Vickers is running in the 20’s. He currently sits in 15th place in the points, right where he was during his time with Hendrick. Grade B

  • He hasn’t won yet, but Dale Earnhardt Jr has done almost everything else right this year. His 108.8 driver rating is the best on tour, as are his seven top tens. He is second in laps led and has led in seven of nine races so far this year. The wins are on their way. Grade: B

  • This grade might be higher if I didn’t think David Ragan was going to improve this year. He finished 23rd last year amidst crashes and struggles. This year he is taking full advantage of Roush-Fenway’s early dominance at intermediate tracks to sit in 16th place. Last year he had three top 10’s and eight top 15’s all season. Through nine races in 2008 he already has two top 10’s and five top 15’s. Grade: B

  • Underachievers

    • When does a driver go from disappointing to simply not that good? Jamie McMurray is flirting with that line. He fell out of the top 35 after five races, and has struggled with the CoT. Owner Jack Roush gave a less-than-ringing endorsement last weekend, “”I predicted initially that there would be winners and losers with Car of Tomorrow, and Jamie has struggled mightily with the loose end characteristic of the car. Jamie has done everything that he knows he can do and everything that I would expect him to do to try to get himself to the point where he can be as effective as Carl is and as Matt is and as Greg is. That hasn’t happened yet.” Grade: C-

    • Matt Kenseth is typically one of the most consistent drivers at the Cup level. Losing crew chief Robbie Reiser wasn’t a large concern at the start of the season, but something is amiss on the #17. His official stats show 4 top tens and no DNF’s, but he already has three poor finishes due to wrecks and sits in 19th place. Teammate Carl Edwards has two bad finishes plus a 100 point penalty, but compensates with his three wins. Kenseth needs to start piling up the top fives if his season is going to turn around. Is this 2005 all over? Grade: D

    • Dodge has struggled in recent years, but at least last year Kurt Busch managed to run well and win a few races. This year he had a second at Daytona and nothing since. Typically a good qualifier, Busch only has one top ten start and a 28.8 average start. He hasn’t scored a top ten or led a lap since Daytona. For a driver as talented as Busch, something is seriously wrong in the #2 camp.Grade: D

    • Incomplete

    • The speedway version of the Car of Tomorrow has only been raced four times, but drivers, teams and fans are far from happy. The car will get better on the track, but there are a few aspects where the CoT has failed, at least according to NASCAR’s own PR. The new car was touted as a versatile model that would eliminate the need for large inventories of cars in each team’s shop. So far, teams are building just as many cars, and spending just as much money. They also touted it as a car to even the playing field between the power teams and the smaller operations. That hasn’t happened either. The safety features of the car are obvious, but if it can’t be a competitive piece what’s the point?Grade: I

    • The 2008 rookie class has been nothing short of awful. The biggest headlines came when Michael McDowell flipped nine times in qualifying at Texas. Otherwise the entire rookie crop has lacked results. The fact that Sam Hornish is the highest rated rookie and he’s in 33rd place is all you need to know about the class. The flipside is that most of the rookies are established racing stars so the talent is obviously there. It will be interesting to see how the group progresses by the end of the season. Grade: I

      • Tuesday is the final day to enter the Daytona 500 DVD contest. Simply submit a comment on an old post and include “A&E” in the comment. That’s it.

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