Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) - With the IndyCar Series beginning their
month-long preparations for the Indianapolis 500 and the Formula One Series
off, NASCAR's Sprint Cup event will highlight a light racing week.
NASCAR
Sprint Cup
Crown Royal 400 - Richmond International Speedway - Richmond, VA
The series travels north to Virginia for race No.10 of the 26-race "regular"
season and the "Chase for the Sprint Cup" picture is beginning to take shape.
At the top of the charts are points leader Jeff Burton, two-time winner Kyle
Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Denny Hamlin. The four drivers are within 100
points of each other and the way they are performing are seemingly pretty safe
to make the "Chase." All four have at least six top-10s to their credit with
"Junior" leading the way with a series-high seven.
Two-time defending series champion Jimmie Johnson leads the second group of
four drivers (also Kevin Harvick, Clint Bowyer and Greg Biffle) who are
between 102 and 199 points behind Burton.
However, the race for the final four positions is a free-for-all in which at
least 10 drivers are contenders.
Tony Stewart holds down the ninth position and always improves as the
temperature warms up. Carl Edwards is 10th overall, but leads the series with
three wins and would be seventh if not for a 100-point penalty incurred after
his win in Las Vegas. Ryan Newman, the 2008 Daytona 500 winner and Juan Pablo
Montoya hold down the final two spots, but they are anything but secure.
Kasey Kahne sits just one point behind Montoya and a ticket into the "Chase."
Jeff Gordon, four-time series champion is just 11 points behind Montoya after
a well-publicized slow start, but he and his No.24 Dupont Chevrolet team are
obviously capable of putting together a string of wins.
Also close enough to be real contenders for the "Chase" are David Ragan, Brian
Vickers, Martin Truex Jr. and David Gilliland. All are within 100 points of
12th-place Montoya.
And that list of 18 drivers doesn't include such perennial "Chase" drivers
as Matt Kenseth or Kurt Busch. Driving the No.17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford,
Kenseth has never missed the "Chase" while Busch won the it all in 2004 and
has qualified for the "playoffs" in three of four years.
At Talladega, Busch fought back from one lap down and was sitting near the
top-10 when he got caught up in one of the "big ones" near the end of the
race.
"It looked like the No.20 (Stewart) tried to go for a hole that closed and
clipped the No.43 (Bobby Labonte) and that triggered the crash," said Busch.
"It was another bad day for the Miller Lite Dodge and that's about all you can
say," Busch added. "This was a race where we had high hopes to do really well
and things just didn't turn out that way. It's very disappointing."
Busch has one win and four top-10s in 14 starts at RIR. Kenseth has been a
little more reliable at Richmond with one win and nine top-10s in 16 starts.
Four drivers in particular are very good on the 0.75-mile oval. Stewart owns
three wins here as does Earnhardt Jr., while Gordon has two wins in 30 starts.
But if you are trying to predict a winner, you would probably have to go with
the No.48 Chevrolet and Johnson. The HMS driver swept both events in 2007
including a whopping three-second win in September.
Nationwide
Lipton Tea 250 - Richmond International Speedway - Richmond, VA
The 2008 Nationwide Series championship remains a three-way battle between
Sprint Cup regulars Clint Bowyer, defending series champion Carl Edwards and
Kyle Busch. However, Busch continued to remain mum on whether he will compete
in the series for the entire season.
"The consideration is there," Busch said. "But we're not letting anything out
of the bag quite yet. I don't even know if there's anything in the bag."
Bowyer, the defending race winner, leads Edwards by 27 points and Busch by 39
points. He won last year's event by 1.483-seconds over Matt Kenseth. Kenseth
was set to cruise to the checker, but Derrike Cope was spun by J.J. Yeley to
bring out a caution flag and set up a 23-lap fight to the finish.
Edwards and David Ragan took a gamble and stayed out, but Bowyer's crew got
him first across the stripe while Kenseth came out fourth. The gamble didn't
work for Edwards, who was sixth before the caution, and he finished 13th.
Bowyer, Jeff Burton and Kenseth battled for the win. The No.2 Chevrolet got
through the two fading leaders faster than Burton and Kenseth and built a 1.2-
second lead. Kenseth and Burton continued to fight each other for second
place, but it allowed Bowyer to expand on his margin even further. It was over
two seconds with 10 laps remaining and he cruised to the checkered flag.
While the three Sprint Cup drivers are dominating the top of the charts, there
are five Nationwide Series-only drivers in the top-10. Mike Bliss leads the
quintet, which also includes Brad Keselowski, Jason Leffler, Mike Wallace and
Bobby Hamilton Jr.
For Hamilton Jr., who finished sixth in last year's final standings, it is his
first appearance in the top-10. Amazing considering he did not run in Mexico
City (road-course specialist Boris Said was behind the wheel). Hamilton
finished third at Talladega, his best finish since 2004 when he finished
second at Nazareth.
"Overall, it was a pretty good day," said Hamilton Jr. "Talladega is simple:
Put yourself in position and you're going to have a shot at winning."
The late Bobby Hamilton Sr., won at Richmond in 1989, for his only NASCAR
Nationwide Series victory.