Posts Tagged ‘Denny Hamlin’
On To California
Now that the Daytona 500 dust has settled for most of the cup teams, it’s time to head to California.

All the time, effort and changes the teams have put into their race teams is about to show. Not day Daytona wasn’t important but stats show that the past couple of winners, Ryan Newman in 2008 and Matt Kenseth in 2009 didn’t make the Chase for the Cup championship. Kenseth even made it two wins in a row at California and struggled the rest of the season to finish 14th in the points.
Kevin Harvick won the big race in 2007, finished 10th in the standings and hasn’t won a Cup race since.
On the other hand, a bad day in the 500 isn’t a disaster, either.
That’s the reason that four-time defending Cup champion Jimmie Johnson isn’t all that worried his fourth
consecutive bad start at Daytona. This time, it was a flat tire late in the race that relegated Double J to a 35th-place finish.
No worries. He’s got 25 more races to make up for that bad day and put himself among the 12 drivers who qualify for the 10-race Chase. And Johnson goes into this season as the only driver to have made it into the Chase every year since it began in 2004.
Denny Hamlin, who hopes to be the driver to unseat Johnson as champion, got off to a so-so start at Daytona, finishing 17th. But he’s looking forward to starting to find the groove in California.
“Why is this race at California important? “ Hamlin said. “All of our hard work over the off-season is going to show up right here in California. This is the first real race track that we go to where the setups are going to matter, the driving and all that is a lot different.
“This is our first real race of 2010 that’s not a superspeedway. It’s a big one for us because it kind of gives everyone a gauge of if we were heading in the right direction during the off season or not.’’
McMurray, who won Daytona in his first race for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing, is anxious to see how the team stacks up on the intermediate tracks that make up the bulk of the Cup schedule. Teammate Juan Pablo Montoya was solid on the 1 ½ and 2 mile ovals a year ago, racing well enough to make the Chase.
“Certainly going and running well at Fontana is the goal from here on out,’’ McMurray said. “As far as putting any thought into what the previous three (Daytona winners) have done, I’m not really paying any attention to that kind of stuff.’’
Now teams need to considerate on the rest of the season and let the past be the past.
Dale Earnhardt JR. had a great finish in the 500 and hopes to keep the momentum going into to this week at the Auto Club Speedway in Fontana. Hopefully he can show to his fans and doubter that he can drive a race car.
“That’s great, but we have to see what happens at California, Las Vegas and Atlanta,’’ Junior noted. “If we run good at a couple of those races, then we’All know all that work that was done, all the changes that were made over the winter, are paying off.’’
But the Daytona 500 is a season of it’s own. And it’s over.
Speed TV contributed to this report.
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