Posts Tagged ‘Sprint Cup Series’
Jimmie Johnson Bounces Back To Win California

After a bad finish at Daytona Jimmie Johnson bounces back to wins his 48th race in the #48 Lowes Chevrolet at the Auto Club 500 in Fontana California.
Johnson led the last 24 laps of the race to beat out a hard charging Kevin Harvick. Harvick chased Johnson down in the last 20 laps, cutting down a two second Johnson lead. With only five laps to go Harvick slid coming out of turn 4 slapping the wall spoiling any chance to get by Jimmie Johnson.
“Life is good, man,” said Johnson, who is pursuing his fifth straight Sprint Cup championship. “We’re right back in victory lane.”
Luck was on Johnson’s side as with 27 laps to go Johnson pitted for his final stop of the race, and the caution came out for Brad Keselowski when he lost control and spun down the frontstrech, Johnson got off of pit road just in time, so he would start up front on the restart.
“The fact that we were on pit road when the caution came out gave us track position, and we finally got the car turning,” Johnson said.
Harvick was pushing hard and said he lost control of his car trying to catch up to Johnson.
“The 48 saw me coming and moved up,” Harvick said. “I lost the nose of the car and got in the wall and knocked the right front fender in.”
Harvick who got a pit road speeding violation, putting him to the back of the field drove his car top the front to challenged Johnson at the end of the race.
Completing the top five were Jeff Burton, Mark Martin and Joey Logano.
“I think we have a little bit of work to do, although we won the race,” Johnson said. “We’ll just keep working hard. This is a good step in the right direction.”
The race saw a lot of different challengers at the front of the field, that were contributed by NASCAR’s new aero package and a new tire compound that Goodyear brought to the race. It was unbelievable at how many pit road violation there were considering NACAR warned the driver after the Nationwide race. Teams seemed to have more engine failures than normal, mostly thought do to the long green runs and the cooler weather making the engines rev higher and longer.
Kasey Kahne brought out the second caution when he lost control coming out of turn four spinning into the wet infield bending up the left side of the front splitter and right front fender damage.
Johnson, Harvick and Montoya were up front of the field for most of the first half of the race, round half way Montoya’s engine gave way ending the #42 Target’s car day.
A few laps later after spinning his tires on the restart, Ryan Newman blew his engine up big time on the fronstrech ending his day and giving Newman his second DNF of the season.
At lap 70 with bad weather threatening most of the leaders were forced to make a green flag pit stop.
A light sprinkle bought out a caution with Denny Hamlin leading the race. A few laps into the caution Denny Hamlin was forced to pit giving up the lead to Scott Speed. Speed led a few laps under caution to get his 5 bonus points, hoping the rain would come, but he was forced to pit running low on fuel.
After the rain delay there were only 50 laps to go and Jeff Burton and Kyle Busch lead to field to the green. The crew chief were looking to the sky as more bad weather was threatening.
Carl Edwards and Denny Hamlin got together after the restart causing Hamlin’s left rear tire to go flat.
Jeff Burton was showing the strength of the Earnhardt Childress engines with 42 laps to go looking like Burton had the car to beat. Unfortunately for Burton the handling went away in the closing laps losing the battle with Harvick for second place. The RCR cars were strong all day putting all three cars in the top ten.
Videos From California
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Jammie McMurry’s Hot Streak Continues In Fontana

Looks like McMurry’s good fortune continues. The #1 Bass Pro Shops Chevy Impala is sitting the pole for the Sunday’s Auto Club 500.
With his teammate Juan Pablo Montoya in his #42 Target Chevrolet sitting in the outside front row.
“I’m a little bit shocked after winning the 500,” said McMurray in a fit of understatement.
McMurray’s qualifying lap was nearly half a second faster than his practice lap. “I think it says a lot about Earnhardt Ganassi Racing and the cars they’re building,” said McMurray, who earlier in the day visited the ACS infield care center for an antibiotic after his exhausting week of media appearances from coast to coast.
McMurry still riding high on emotions from his full week after winning the Daytona 500.
“It’s just unbelievable,” he said. “And I think something else that has been kind of an eye-opener is that I knew what it meant to win this race, but from the fans and from my peers in the garage, whether it’s like Tony Stewart coming up last night to dinner to congratulate me, it’s just unbelievable. I mean I’ve won a few races. And you see a few guys in the garage and they say, you know, ‘Good job.’ Everybody wants to come up and shake your hand and congratulate you. And that, honestly, is what if the most enjoyable part of it to me. As I walk through the garage, from both sides, I see people like staring at me waiting on me to get to them to shake my hand. And it’s just been wonderful.”
Clint Bowyer was the first car out of the 46 attempting to make the race, running a lap of 183.127 mph in his Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet. That time stood up through the next 23 challengers, until McMurray hit the track. Bowyer ended the session third, an excellent effort.
Starting alongside Bowyer on Row 2 Sunday will be Kasey Kahne, who cranked off a lap of 182.913 mph in his Richard Petty Motorsports Ford Fusion. Completing the top five was Dave Blaney, fastest of the go-or-go-home cars at 182.908 mph.
The second five consisted of Kevin Harvick, four-time defending NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, Sam Hornish Jr., Kyle Busch and Mark Martin.
Lets hope Jammie can keep this momentum going, I for one would like to see him do well this year.
Three drivers failed to qualify: Johnny Sauter, Casey Mears and Terry Cook.
RESULTS: Auto Club 500 Qualifying
Speed TV contributed to this report.
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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Blickensderfer Replaced As Kenseth’s Criew Chief

Todd Parrott has been named crew chief of Roush Fenway Racing’s No. 17 Ford, effective immediately.
Drew Blickensderfer, who has served as crew chief on the No. 17, driven by Matt Kenseth, since the start of the 2009 season, will assume a role in Roush Fenway’s research and development department.
Blickensderfer replaced as crew chief of No. 17 Ford
T. Parrott takes over after team finished eighth at Daytona
Kenseth finished eighth in the season-opening race at Daytona on Sunday.
Parrott, who won the Cup Series championship with Dale Jarrett in 1999, has the third-most wins — 29 — among active crew chiefs in the Cup Series.
Blickensderfer and Kenseth came out of the box hot in 2009, winning the first two races of the year, at Daytona and Fontana. However, that success was short-lived.
Kenseth, the 2003 Cup Series champion, struggled throughout the remainder of the season — only 10 top-10 finishes in the final 34 races — and posted a 15.4 average finish and also missed the Chase for the first time since the system was implemented in 2004. He finished 14th in points.
Parrott was given his first opportunity as crew chief in fall 1995, when he accepted a position at Robert Yates Racing to lead Ernie Irvan’s team. Parrott teamed up with Jarrett for the 1996 season.
Parrott also served as general manager for Robert Yates Racing briefly in 2003, then resumed crew chief duties for Elliott Sadler, David Gilliland and Travis Kvapil while with Yates.
Last year, Parrott was the crew chief for Bobby Labonte and the No. 96 team. The duo also worked together at Petty Enterprises.
NASCAR.com contributed to this report.
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Drivers Look to Rebound From Daytona
Any NASCAR Sprint Cup driver or crew chief will tell you pretty much the same thing about the Daytona 500, It’s not an accurate predictor of what’s to come in the year. Daytona has its own unique challenges being a restrictor-plate race, and tracks like Auto Club Speedway and Las Vegas Motor Speedway are a better gauge of performance, of who’s fast, who isn’t and who is capable of winning.
No driver, especially those with championship hopes, wants to start the year with a bad race at Daytona. Last year, for example, Mark Martin suffered through two engine failures and a catastrophic tire explosion in the first four races and spent the next 22 races furiously digging out from 34th in points to get back in the top 12 in points.
Several of the top drivers in the Cup series had a disappointing Daytona 500, so they’ll be looking to rebound in a big way Sunday at Auto Club Speedway in Southern California, with the running of the Auto Club 500.
Six of the 12 drivers who qualified for the Chase for the Sprint Cup in 2009 finished outside the top 20 in the Daytona 500: Tony Stewart (22nd), Kurt Busch (23rd), Jeff Gordon (26th), Kasey Kahne (30th), Ryan Newman (34th) and Jimmie Johnson (35th). Certainly, it isn’t panic time for any of them by a long shot.
“It sucks,” Johnson said of his Daytona 500, which ended with a broken rear axle. “But it’s a long season and we came out of here last year with a crashed race car and still came back. We have a little work ahead of us.”
“Daytona was very disappointing – more so than I think a lot of people realize,” said Newman, Stewart’s teammate at Stewart-Haas Racing. “We were just biding our time in the back of the field and, with 10 laps or so to go, we decided it was time to make our move. I don’t really know what happened, but I was the recipient of it. We were seven laps from the end of the race, well before the green-white-checker, and we ended up with a destroyed race car. It was just very disappointing. We wanted to come out of the box strong at Daytona, but we walked away with a 34th-place finish. We had good cars but we didn’t get the finish we wanted.”
Gordon, who finished second at both ACS races last year, is ready for better days, too.
“I’m hoping we can run better and get better as the season goes on,” said Gordon, “I certainly feel that we have that capability. Last year, I think we were the best team during the first 10 races, but we flattened out. We’re looking at the championship differently this year. We want to start the season off right, but we want to build and get better as the season goes along. “And show our strengths at the right time — not only for winning races, but battling for the championship.”
Speed TV contributed to this report.
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