Sunday, February 13, 2011

Kurt Busch wins Budweiser Shootout




DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Budweiser Shootout winner Kurt Busch got it right -- Daytona is a whole new game.

With a push from 2010 Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray, Busch won Saturday night's season-opening exhibition race when Denny Hamlin drew a black flag for passing below the yellow out-of-bounds line as the cars approached the finish.

Getty Images

Hamlin, who was inches ahead at the stripe, was demoted to 12th for the infraction and scored as the last car on the lead lap.

Without a teammate in the race, Busch took his first victory at Daytona -- and his first victory on a restrictor-plate race track, for that matter -- in the No. 22 Penske Dodge.

McMurray came home second, narrowly edging Ryan Newman, who led the race off the final corner, only to have Hamlin slingshot past him in the dogleg. Newman was third, followed by Jimmie Johnson and Greg Biffle.

This was a brand-new Daytona, with a brand-new asphalt surface and a brand-new style of racing. The fast way around the 2.5-mile superspeedway was to pair up in a two-car draft, and that was what fans saw for the entire event.

The race produced a record 28 lead changes among nine drivers.

"What an unbelievable experience, this two-car draft," Busch said. "I had no idea what to expect going in. I was just going to take it one lap at a time and see how it played out. I wanted to learn as the race went on how this Shell/Pennzoil Dodge raced.

"[McMurray] was the man [Saturday night]. He stayed with us. He stayed true. I can't thank him enough for doing that. I hope it was the show the fans wanted to see."

For McMurray, the experience was equally novel.

"It's completely different plate racing than we've ever had," McMurray said. "I hope it was exciting for the fans to watch. But from the driver's seat, it was actually really exciting to push two-by-two and do the side draft. It is awesome the runs you were able to get, so I hope the fans enjoyed it."

Hamlin said he chose to dip below the yellow line, rather than knock Newman into the fence.

"That yellow line is there to protect us and the fans in the stands, and I just chose to take the safer route," Hamlin said. "A win in the Shootout is not worth sending the 39 [Newman] through the grandstands. For me, as fast as we're running, if I got into his left rear, that car will go airborne."

Polesitter Dale Earnhardt Jr. was the victim of a multi-car crash on the backstretch on Lap 28. Contact from Regan Smith's No. 78 Chevrolet turned Carl Edwards' No. 99 Ford into Earnhardt's No. 88 Chevy and spun it into the outside wall. The chain-reaction crash also collected Joey Logano, Juan Montoya and Kevin Conway.

Johnson also sustained right-side damage in the incident but brought his car to pit road for repairs and remained on the lead lap.

"We were three- or four-wide back there, and I was going between the 88 and the 78, and I don't think the 78 knew I was in there," Edwards said. "He kept coming down, and I just had enough of my car in there. I laid up against the 88 and then the 78 got me in the right-front, but that's just everybody trying to get the best position they can so we can go out there and race."

Jeff Burton led 13 of 25 laps in the first segment of the 75-lap race, including Lap 25, as cars danced in pairs around the track. In an oft-repeated scenario, cars would team up and draft to the front only to fall back dramatically when they separated to get air to the engine of the pushing car.

Kevin Harvick and Burton teamed well together, as did Earnhardt and Kyle Busch, though during the break after the first segment Earnhardt said Busch's No. 18 "jacks my car around like he has Velcro on that thing." Earnhardt led four laps in the first segment, tied for second most with Tony Stewart.

At the completion of the 25-lap opening segment, there was a 10-minute break to service and adjust cars on pit road.


Earnhardt Jr on pole for Daytona 500

Dale Earnhardt Jr and Jeff Gordon will start on the front row for next weeks Daytona 500. Here is the starting lineup:
188Dale Earnhardt Jr.ChevroletAmp Energy / National Guard 186.08948.364Leader
224Jeff GordonChevroletDrive to End Hunger 185.96648.396-0.032
321Trevor BayneFordMotorcraft / Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center 185.44548.532-0.168
427Paul MenardChevroletPeak / Menards 185.42248.538-0.174
533Clint BowyerChevroletCheerios / Hamburger Helper 185.22348.590-0.226
631Jeff BurtonChevroletCaterpillar 185.07148.630-0.266
739Ryan NewmanChevroletU.S. Army 185.00348.648-0.284
85Mark MartinChevroletGoDaddy.com 184.99148.651-0.287
914Tony StewartChevroletOffice Depot / Mobil 1 184.91148.672-0.308
1016Greg BiffleFord3M 184.91148.672-0.308
1122Kurt BuschDodgeShell / Pennzoil 184.89648.676-0.312
1242Juan MontoyaChevroletTarget 184.76348.711-0.347
139Marcos AmbroseToyotaStanley 184.74848.715-0.351
1429Kevin HarvickChevroletBudweiser 184.74048.717-0.353
1548Jimmie JohnsonChevroletLowe's / Kobalt Tools 184.68748.731-0.367
166David RaganFordUPS 184.61248.751-0.387
1709Bill ElliottChevroletPhoenix Construction 184.53248.772-0.408
1899Carl EdwardsFordAflac 184.47548.787-0.423
1943A.J. AllmendingerFordBest Buy 184.29048.836-0.472
2038Travis KvapilFordLong John Silver's 184.27148.841-0.477
2187Joe NemechekToyotaAM FM Energy 184.22248.854-0.490
2217Matt KensethFordCrown Royal Black 184.10248.886-0.522
2300David ReutimannToyotaAaron's Dream Machine 184.01948.908-0.544
242Brad KeselowskiDodgeMiller Lite 184.00848.911-0.547
25115Michael WaltripToyotaNAPA Auto Parts 183.96648.922-0.558
2636Dave BlaneyChevroletTommy Baldwin Racing 183.79448.968-0.604
271Jamie McMurrayChevroletBass Pro Shops / Tracker 183.68548.997-0.633
2878Regan SmithChevroletFurniture Row Companies 183.68148.998-0.634
294Kasey KahneToyotaRed Bull 183.60249.019-0.655
3018Kyle BuschToyotaM&M's 183.59549.021-0.657
3147Bobby LabonteToyotaKroger / USO 183.57649.026-0.662
3283Brian VickersToyotaRed Bull 183.55749.031-0.667
3356Martin Truex Jr.ToyotaNAPA Auto Parts 183.45649.058-0.694
3420Joey LoganoToyotaThe Home Depot 183.20649.125-0.761
3560Todd BodineToyotaTire Kingdom / Valvoline 183.05749.165-0.801
3697Kevin ConwayToyotaExtenze 182.94949.194-0.830
3713Casey MearsToyotaGEICO 182.86749.216-0.852
3834David GillilandFordTaco Bell 182.69749.262-0.898
3977Steve Wallace Toyota5-Hour Energy 182.57449.295-0.931
4066Michael McDowellToyotaHP Racing LLC 182.43449.333-0.969
417Robby GordonDodgeSpeed Energy 182.12049.418-1.054
4232Terry LabonteFordU.S. Chrome 181.49249.589-1.225
4337Robert Richardson Jr.FordNorth Texas Pipe 181.46649.596-1.232
4411Denny HamlinToyotaFedEx Express 181.31649.637-1.273
4546J.J. YeleyChevroletRed Line Oil 180.97749.730-1.366
4671Andy LallyChevroletAdobe Road Winery 180.82849.771-1.407
4764Derrike CopeToyotaSta-Bil 177.89450.592-2.228
48192Brian Keselowski DodgeK-Automotive Motorsports 177.58150.681-2.317

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Rowdy wins with AMAZING las lap pass at Talladega




TALLADEGA, Ala. -- Kyle Busch made a last-ditch slide past Aric Almirola at the finish line, then brushed aside Almirola's suggestion that he should be stripped of the victory.
With his truck on the verge of spinning out, Busch appeared to put two wheels below the yellow out-of-bounds line at the bottom of the track just as he made his wild move to win Saturday's Truck Series race at Talladega Superspeedway by 0.002 seconds. He wasn't penalized.
Kyle Busch / Autostock
Mountain Dew 250
Results

Pos. Driver Make
1. Kyle Busch Toyota
2. Aric Almirola Toyota
3. Johnny Sauter Chevrolet
4. Matt Crafton Chevrolet
5. Ricky Carmichael Chevrolet


"I don't even know if I got near it, below it, next to it, on it, I have no idea," Busch said. "All I know was I was trying to save my truck and keep it straight and hopefully make it past the start/finish line before the rest of the guys."

Almirola went to NASCAR officials immediately after the race to plead his case, but he said they ruled that Busch was trying to keep his car from spinning out and wasn't subject to a penalty.

"My perspective is, I feel like I won the race," Almirola said. "NASCAR's perspective is, we ran second. I guess [Saturday], we lose. I'm disappointed in that."

It was the closest finish in series history when using electronic scoring, NASCAR officials said.

It was Busch's series-high sixth victory in 13 Truck starts this season -- and his second consecutive Trucks victory at Talladega.

Busch was in third on a restart with two laps to go, made his way to second and then ducked under Almirola and beat him by a nose as the checkered flag came out.

With Johnny Sauter charging behind him, Busch said he didn't have any other choice than to duck under Almirola.

"I had to bring it back down, and I got underneath Aric," Busch said. "At that point you've just got to stay in the throttle and keep digging. I don't even know where the yellow line was, but for as loose as my stuff was there, I was trying to save it."

NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pemberton said officials reviewed video of the finish and ruled that side-to-side contact between Almirola and Busch caused Busch's truck to get loose.

"He wasn't forced down there, he got down there because of the door-to-door contact," Pemberton said. "We looked at it two, three times; we had three, four good camera angles and there was absolutely no question whatsoever."

Almirola finished second, followed by Sauter, Matt Crafton and Ricky Carmichael.

The always-feared Big One -- a massive wreck unique to Talladega -- came with three laps to go, collecting points leader Todd Bodine, contender Ron Hornaday and several others.

Bodine now leads Almirola by 216 points in the series standings.

It was a rough day for Bodine, whose truck sustained minor damage in a mid-race incident. Bodine then was penalized for speeding on pit road during a late round of pit stops before getting collected in the accident.

Hornaday escaped serious injury even though his truck flipped on its roof and had to be flipped back over by a tow truck before Hornaday could climb out.



"Ron's fine," Bodine said in a television interview after he left the infield medical center. "He's in there joking about it."

Hornaday joked that he wanted to go watch a replay of the wreck. He still was holding the steering wheel from his wrecked truck.

"If you can't win, you've got to bring the steering wheel back," he said.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Brad K can clintch Championship at Texas


22-Brad Keselowski just needs to start the final three races of the season to clinch the Nationwide Series championship, or he can clinch at Texas with a finish of 20th or better.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Earnhardt Jr. to run specian "Legend of Hallowdega" car at Talladega


Junior will drive this car on 10/31 at the Amp Energy Juice 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.

The reason we havnt been posting

Shane and I have been very busy with school work considering we are now freshman. However we plan to continue running and updating this site as best as we can, posts may be a few days late. Thanks and please continue to visit our site =)

~Shane and Brendan

Hamlin wins, closes in on Johnson's lead.


MARTINSVILLE, Va. -- Denny Hamlin passed Kevin Harvick for the lead with 29 laps to go Sunday and won his third consecutive Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway.

Hamlin became the first driver since Jimmie Johnson to sweep both races on the smallest track in NASCAR's premier series, and both he and Harvick closed the gap on Johnson in the points race with four races remaining. Hamlin trails by just six points, Harvick by 62.

Harvick finished third after Mark Martin passed him in the closing laps, but Harvick still had his best showing in 19 career starts at the track. He'd never been better than seventh.

Johnson, the four-time defending champion, rallied to finish fifth.