May 23, 2009

F1: Monaco GP Lineup

Jenson button continues to be the hottest driver on the Formula 1 circuit. Despite an average starting position of nearly 12th in seven attempts, he put down a blistering fast lap of one minute, 14.902 seconds and will roll off from the pole. That is critical to success on the tight, twisty Monaco road course.

Kimi Raikkonen is in the second position in a Ferrari.

Button is not the only Brawn driver at the front of the field. This new organization has topped the Unified Power Rankings in recent weeks, and teammate Rubens Barrichello starts third.

Lewis Hamilton's struggles continue. He crashed barely four laps into qualification and will have to roll off the grid deep in the field in 16th. He will be lucky to earn a single championship point and should not be considered a good bet to win.

Lineup

StartDriverAvg. FinAvg. StartAttempts
1Jenson Button11.1411.717
2Kimi Raikkonen10.256.258
3Rubens Barrichello8.818.9416
4Sebastian Vettel5.0019.001
5Felipe Massa7.1710.836
6Nico Rosberg15.676.333
7Heikki Kovalainen10.509.502
8Mark Webber10.2010.205
9Fernando Alonso6.575.717
10Kazuki Nakajima7.0013.001
11Sebastian Buemi


12Nelson Piquet Jr17.0017.001
13Giancarlo Fisichella9.699.3813
14Sebastian Bourdais20.0016.001
15Adrian Sutil17.5018.502
16Lewis Hamilton1.502.502
17Nick Heidfeld9.4413.569
18Robert Kubica3.506.502
19Jarno Trulli11.257.5012
20Timo Glock12.0010.001

F1: Ecclestone to Ferrari "quit and I'll sue"

In the latest barrage in the war of words, Bernie Ecclestone has told Ferrari that if they carry through with their intention to leave F next year, FIA would sue for breach of contract, according to PlanetF1.com.

Our View: Ferrari has become too accustomed to getting their way in motorsports, but fair is fair, If they have a contract, they should be expected to honor it.

May 22, 2009

Elliott to make 800th start

Bill Elliott will make his 800th Cup start this weekend when he rolls off the grid in the Coca-Cola 600.

Our View: Experience counts in this race and no one in the field has more than the Georgia native.

Persistent back pain could shorten Gordon's career

If last week's procedure to alleviate his back pain is not successful, Jeff Gordon may retire from NASCAR sooner than he hoped, according to SceneDaily.com.

Our View: Gordon has talked about retirement off and on for several years now, so it would seem that any further problem could push him over the edge.

Hendrick has confidence in 2 Juniors

Rick Hendrick has expressed confidence over the pairing of Dale Earnhardt Jr. and crew chief Tony Eury Jr., according to SceneDaily.com.

Our View: The first question is "based on what?" (Obviously something we can't see.) Regardless of whether Hendrick is confident, none of that will matter if Earnhardt continues to make catastrophic mistakes in the pits.

IRL: Castroneves free at last

Friday was a good day for Helio Castroneves. In addition to topping the practice chart, it was announced that federal prosecutors dropped the final charge against him in his tax evasion case, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

Our View: Stress free, Castroneves can now turn 100% of his attention to winning the Indy 500.

Dominating the front of the pack

A driver's finishing position on a track is certainly important—and in the long run, that is the only way most fantasy games pay points—but it is not always the best indicator of who has been strongest. When handicapping a race, we often find it helpful to look at the number of laps drivers have spent in the top 10.

There are two reasons why this is important. The most obvious of these is that driving in the first quarter of the field means a racer and his car has raw power, but equally important is the fact the further forward a car is in the pack, the less likely the driver is to get into trouble. Top-10 drivers are far less likely to make silly mistakes that could cause your fantasy selection to end the day in the garage.

During the last five years, one driver stands head and shoulders above the competition, and he will come as no surprise to anyone who's played the game for more than a year. Jimmie Johnson remains the master of this track, with five victories and 14 top-15s in 16 starts and his time spent in the top-10 reflects this. Johnson has been that far up on the grid in 79 percent of the laps he's run, boasting 2,588 of a possible 3,275 circuits.

The next driver on the list might be a bigger surprise, however. Despite finishing 25th or worse in five of the last 10 races held at Lowe's, Kyle Busch has managed to log 1,850 laps with the leader, which equals 56.5 percent of the time. More important still, most of these laps came in the last three Lowe's races and he converted those strong runs into three consecutive top-fives.

Kasey Kahne is the only other driver to spend more than half of his time among the top-10 during the last five years. He's run with the leaders 50.8 percent of the time (1,665 laps) and has been even more productive than Busch or Johnson in recent events. In his last six starts on this track, Kahne has won three times and finished second on another occasion. With the new Dodge engine in his car this week, he should be considered a threat once more.

Top-10 Laps, last five years

DriverTop-10 LapsPossible Laps%
Jimmie Johnson 2,5883,27579.0%
Kyle Busch1,8503,27556.5%
Kasey Kahne 1,6653,27550.8%
Mark Martin 1,6343,27549.9%
Dale Earnhardt Jr.1,6343,27549.9%
Greg Biffle 1,6253,27549.6%
Jeff Burton 1,5533,27547.4%
David Ragan5931,47140.3%
Ryan Newman 1,2743,27538.9%
Kurt Busch 1,2273,27537.5%
Jeff Gordon 1,1723,27535.8%
Clint Bowyer7262,20532.9%
Denny Hamlin8352,54132.9%
Matt Kenseth 1,0603,27532.4%
Tony Stewart 1,0433,27531.8%
Brian Vickers 9142,93831.1%
Elliott Sadler 8663,27526.4%
Carl Edwards 8163,27524.9%
Casey Mears 7893,27524.1%
Joe Nemechek 5772,53822.7%
Scott Riggs7263,27522.2%
Jamie McMurray 6823,27520.8%
David Reutimann2831,40720.1%
Bobby Labonte 6203,27518.9%
Michael Waltrip 5102,87517.7%
Kevin Harvick 4593,27514.0%
Dave Blaney 4443,27513.6%
Martin Truex Jr.3492,60513.4%
Reed Sorenson2272,20510.3%
David Gilliland1741,8059.6%
Tony Raines 2122,5398.3%
Sam Hornish Jr.567347.6%
David Stremme801,8074.4%
Robby Gordon 1413,2754.3%
Bill Elliott431,4712.9%
Mike Bliss 311,0702.9%
A.J. Allmendinger81,4710.5%
Juan Montoya51,4710.3%
Paul Menard11,4710.1%
Todd Bodine03340.0%

F1: Ecclestone sees end in sight

"I think everybody is more or less happy with the budget cap," Bernie Ecclestone said in a report at AutoRacingDaily.com, "although just how much? They will go with it higher, maybe it will be lower. It’s just a case of sorting it out. I am confident all the teams will still be racing next year.”

Our View: It appears that teams are willing to participate, so long as the two-tier technical requirements are scrapped. Any kind of salary cap should provide closer competition, which will make fantasy races more interesting.

IRL: Indy 500 Final Practice

The final practice for the Indy 500 is in the books and only two drivers topped the 223 mph mark. Helio Castroneves posted a single fast lap of 223.920, which was nearly one mile per hour faster than the third quickest driver Mario Moraes. The only racer in the same zip code was Will Power, who clocked in at 223.560.

Practice Times

RankDriverSpeed
1Helio Castroneves223.920
2Will Power223.560
3Mario Moraes222.951
4Dan Wheldon222.386
5Ryan Briscoe222.374
6Dario Franchitti222.357
7Scott Dixon222.017
8Graham Rahal221.771
9Townsend Bell221.434
10Davey Hamilton221.371
11Tony Kanaan221.104
12Paul Tracy220.979
13Vitor Meira220.607
14Raphael Matos220.348
15Marco Andretti220.205
16A.J. Foyt IV220.119
17Scott Sharp219.977
18Tomas Scheckter219.887
19Alex Tagliani219.833
20Hideki Mutoh219.627
21Ed Carpenter219.602
22Mike Conway219.560
23Danica Patrick219.328
24Oriol Servia219.317
25Alex Lloyd219.262
26Justin Wilson218.919
27Ryan Hunter-Reay218.593
28Robert Doornbos218.164
29E.J. Viso217.788
30Milka Duno217.599
31Sarah Fisher217.315
32John Andretti217.296
33Nelson Philippe216.631

Schrader 13th at Cresco

Ken Schrader finished 13th in an USMTS Modified race at Cresco Speedway in Iowa in a race won by Zack VanderBeek. He was competing in his third consecutive race with that series after finishing 13th at Oskaloosa and 12th in Marshalltown.

Our View: At least he was consistent.

May 21, 2009

Yahoo! Qualification Story

Check out this five-page summary (.pdf) of who's hot at Lowe's after qualification for the Coca-Cola 600.

Newman wins 44th pole

Ryan Newman paced Lowe's with a speed of 188.475 mph to earn his 44th pole for the Coca-Cola 600.

Our View: Despite the length of this race, qualification is important and Newman is in great shape to earn his first top-10 at this track since 2005.

IRL: The Granddaddy of Them all

Event Day Games Preview: When NASCAR was just a gleam in Big Bill France's eye, America already had one of the biggest sports events in the World—the Indy 500.

Memorial Day is one of the best days in auto racing. Get up early to watch the Monaco Grand Prix, grab a second cup of coffee, and then fire up your cell phones to play Event Day Games' first-ever IRL contest. We just couldn't help becoming part of the 93rd running of this great American race.

The Indy 500 is so big that the Indy Racing League takes the entire month of May to prepare for it and the drama has already started. Helio Castroneves drew first blood by winning the pole over his Penske teammate Ryan Briscoe. The front row is crowded with Chip Ganassi's Dario Franchitti lined up to the outside of this amazing three-abreast configuration and watching them barrel down into turn one is hair raising.

Further back in the field, equal rights are alive and well as Danica Patrick, Sarah Fisher and Milka Duno locked up more than 25 percent of the field for women drivers. Fisher starts 21st and has the most experience of the group as she competes in her eighth Indy 500, but Patrick has better odds since she rolls off the grid 10th.

Join us at http://www.eventdaygames.com/ this week to play along with our unique fantasy game.

Qualification order

Jayski.com has posted the qualification order for the Coca-Cola 600.

Our View: Track position is important at Lowe's and the track should get fastest as the temperatures cool. Jimmie Johnson rolls off the grid 19th and most of the fastest cars in practice are earlier than that, which should create an interesting session.

N'Wide: Townley crashes

John Wes Townley became the latest casualty of Nationwide practice. He crashed near the end of practice two.

Our View: Have you noticed how much more exciting Nationwide practice is? That's why these guys need track time.

Martin wins practice

Mark Martin continues to be the hottest driver on the NASCAR circuit and he topped the first practice session with a speed of 185.217 mph. This is a session in which drivers typically work on qualification setups.

Our View: That makes him the favorite to win Thursday night's pole and the way he's run in the last month, he has to be considered a front runner for the Coca-Cola 600 as well.

F1: Ferrari loses round one in budget spat

According to PlanetF1.com Ferrari has lost the first round of the budget gap spat after a French court ruled against their injunction, saying there is no "imminent danger" preceding the May 29th deadline to declare intentions to run 2010.

Our View: Max Mosley needs to become familiar with the term, "win the battle; lose the war," however.

F1: Alonso doesn’t want to race "small teams"

In an article at AutoRacingDaily.com, Fernando Alonso said "If the big teams and the big manufacturers leave Formula One then I don’t want to race with small teams, because it is not any more F1 and there are many other categories.”

Our View: This tempest in the teapot is threatening to become a hurricane due to the heavy handed handling by Max Mosley.

Gordon has Texas car

The No. 24 team has brought their Texas car to Lowe's for Jeff Gordon to drive this weekend.

Our View: That's the car in which Gordon snapped his long winless streak, so he's got to be watched closely in Coca-Cola 600 prelims.

Wallace 9th, Schrader 12th in USMTS

On Wednesday night, Kenny Wallace and Ken Schrader traveled to Marshalltown, Iowa to challenge the USMTS dirt track racers. Wallace finished ninth after starting 20th. Schrader finished 12th after starting ninth.

Our View: There's nothing like a little dirt in the teeth to help identify the real racers.

N'Wide: Bliss changes engine

Mike Bliss missed a shift in the first practice session for the Carquest Auto Parts 300 and will be forced to change an engine. He will join Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski at the back of the pack to start on Saturday.

Our View: Bliss was expected to be one of the top Nationwide Regulars, and this certainly doesn't improve his odds. Look for a solid but unspectacular run now.

N'Wide: Keselowski crashes again

Déjà vu. Brad Keselowski destroyed a second car in the first practice after apparently cutting a right front tire for a second time on Thursday.

Our View: Luckily, the shop is just around the corner, so they can get a third car to the track before Saturday, but that Chevy will start the race with no practice time at all.

N'Wide: Knupp crashes hard

Brandon Knupp has crashed Bob Schacht's unsponsored No. 75 in Nationwide practice. Hopefully, they have a backup car, because that one isn't going anywhere.

Our View: A graduate of the ARCA Truck series, Knupp has made nine Camping World Truck Series starts, but he hopes this will be his first Nationwide race.

Truck: Fitzpatrick joins Harvick

Canadian driver J R Fitzpatrick will join Kevin Harvick, Inc. for eight Camping World Truck Series races beginning at Dover, according to PaddockTalk.com. Ironically, the announcement came the same week as one sending American Cale Gale to Canada in a joint KHI effort.

Our View: Fitzpatrick started the season with a ride in The Racers Group truck until funding dried up. Harvick will be able to provide greater resources.

F1: Rosberg tops P2

On Thursday, Nico Rosberg posted the fastest time in the second practice session for the Monaco Grand Prix, according to PlanetF1.com.

Our View: Rosberg led Lewis Hamilton, Rubens Barichello, Jenson Button and Felipe Massa as the top five drivers. This is a good indication of who will finish up front in the race.

Practice Two Speeds

RankDriverBest TimeLaps
1Nico Rosberg1:15.24345
2Lewis Hamilton1:15.44535
3Rubens Barrichello1:15.59041
4Jenson Button1:15.77436
5Felipe Massa1:15.83242
6Sebastian Vettel1:15.84733
7Heikki Kovalainen 1:15.98445
8Kimi Räikkönen 1:15.98543
9Kazuki Nakajima 1:16.26043
10Nelson Piquet Jr.1:16.28643
11Fernando Alonso 1:16.55239
12Mark Webber 1:16.57927
13Adrian Sutil 1:16.67538
14Jarno Trulli 1:16.91543
15Sebastian Buemi 1:16.98348
16Sebastian Bourdais 1:17.05248
17Nick Heidfeld 1:17.10940
18Timo Glock 1:17.20745
19Giancarlo Fisichella 1:17.50445
20Robert Kubica No time2


Practice One Speeds

N'Wide: Ky Busch has milky oil

Kyle Busch is reporting that his oil is turning "milky," which is an indication that water is getting into it. The team will probably change engines (pending NASCAR's approval) and start at the back of the pack in the Carquest Auto Parts 300.

Our View: It doesn't matter where this kid starts; he'll contend for victory before the night is over.

N'Wide: Keselowski crashes in first practice

Brad Keselowski cut a tire and destroyed his Nationwide Series car only five minutes into Thursday's 90 minute session. A bolt on the suspension was the culprit.

Our View: This happened early enough that the team should be able to recover, but don't commit to the No. 88 until they get on track with their backup car and so you can see how fast it is.

F1: Kovalainen downplays speed

Heikki Kovalainen is downplaying his and teammate Lewis Hamilton's speed in the first practice session that placed them third and fourth on that grid, according to PlanetF1.com.

Our View: He says that while this is a step in the right direction, their speed was nearly a half second slower than leader Rubens Barrichello.

Practice One Speeds

F1: Barrichello draws first blood

Rubens Barrichello drew first blood in practice for the 2009 Monaco Grand Prix according to PlanetF1.com, posting a time of one minute, 17.189 seconds and narrowly beating Felipe Massa.

Our View: Third-best Lewis Hamilton is still hoping to turn his season around, while Heikki Kovalainen and Kimi Raikkonen rounded out the top five.

Practice One Speeds

RankDriverBest TimeLaps
1Rubens Barrichello1:17.18925
2Felipe Massa1:17.49930
3Lewis Hamilton1:17.57825
4Heikki Kovalainen 1:17.68629
5Kimi Räikkönen 1:17.83929
6Kazuki Nakajima 1:18.00029
7Nico Rosberg1:18.02427
8Jenson Button1:18.08027
9Fernando Alonso 1:18.28330
10Mark Webber 1:18.34822
11Sebastian Buemi 1:18.69536
12Nelson Piquet Jr.1:19.20436
13Sebastian Vettel1:19.23316
14Sebastian Bourdais 1:19.25531
15Giancarlo Fisichella 1:19.53428
16Robert Kubica 1:19.55531
17Nick Heidfeld 1:19.57923
18Adrian Sutil 1:19.60024
19Timo Glock 1:19.69824
20Jarno Trulli 1:19.83128

F1: BMW undecided about 2010

With a May 29th deadline looming to secure a place on next year's Formula 1 grid, BMW has yet to decide whether they will participate in Max Mosley's proposed two-tier salary cap scheme, according to team principal Mario Thiessen.

Our View: Mosley has threatened that unless people honor the May 29th deadline, there may not be a spot open later. His bigger concern should be whether he is able to fill that grid at all with Ferrari and Sauber threatening to pull out and several other teams in BMW's shoes.

N'Wide: Davis gets sponsor

Marc Davis has signed a sponsor for the Nationwide Carquest Auto Parts 300, according to SceneDaily.com. That sponsor is The Word Network.

Our View: Davis is attempting to become the first fulltime Black driver in a major NASCAR division since Wendell Scott and he's doing it the same way—as an owner/driver. Fans of dark horses have to think of him as a sentimental favorite.

Schrader 13th at Oskaloosa

On Tuesday night, Ken Schrader did not fare very well in his first of three nights competing against the USMTS dirt track stars at Southern Iowa Speedway in Oskaloosa. After starting 15th in the 30-lap A main, he was able to climb to only 13th at the end of the race.

Our View: For Schrader, this is as much about having fun doing what he loves. He would certainly have wanted a better result, but the track time was important nonetheless.

Jason Hughes won the feature.

Kahne gets new engine

Kasey Kahne will run the new Dodge engine in the Coca-Cola 600 according to SceneDaily.com.

Our View: This adds another unknown to the equation. If the engine holds together, Kahne could be a favorite to win this weekend, but fantasy owners have to be willing to roll the dice in case he blows up.

May 20, 2009

N'Wide: McDowell gets three more races

Michael McDowell and JTG Daugherty Racing has received funding for three more races in the No. 47 car, according to SceneDaily.com.

Our View: McDowell has posted two Nationwide top-10s and several top-20s, so if you caught him on the right week, he's produced for you. Unfortunately, he's been hard to handicap.

Mears wants to return to Lowe's victory lane

Two years after Casey Mears earned a surprising win at Lowe's in the 2007 Coke 600, he would like to contend for another victory, according to SceneDaily.com.

Our View: Hope springs eternal, but that victory is his only top-10 in the last three years at Lowe's and during that span his average finish is only slightly better than 20th.

Petty wants more consistency

Richard Petty wants more consistency from all four of his drivers, according to SceneDaily.com. “They really were a two-car team, and we brought two cars in and kind of got us behind, I think, on some of the stuff,” Petty said. “Hopefully, we’re going to get it together. If it don’t, we'll keep working until we do."

Our View: We all want that Richard… we all do.

IRL: Tracy gets two more races

It's official. According to IndyCar.com, Paul Tracy will run a KV Technology car in the two Canadian IRL races at Toronto and Edmonton.

Our View: In these one-off rides, Tracy could be one of the best values in the game. Put a note in your calendar.

Mayfield retains counsel

According to ESPN.com, Jeremy Mayfield has retained legal counsel to represent him and help clear his name after being suspended by NASCAR for violating their substance abuse policy.

Our View: His lawyer Bill Diehl represented Elliott Sadler earlier this year while he was fighting Richard Petty Motorsports for wrongful termination. This could be a long, drawn out process.

IRL: Fastest rookie Matos gains confidence

Raphael Matos has gained confidence with his qualification run that places him 12th on the grid for his first career Indy 500, according to IndyCar.com.

"It was a big accomplishment for team and for myself," said Matos about setting the fastest time among rookies. "Being the fastest rookie means a lot to me and being the quickest of the second day means a lot to me as well. It gave me a lot of confidence, which allowed me to work on race setup. The car ran flawless all month and we're proud to be here today.

Our View: The Indy 500 starts 33 cars, which is the IRL's biggest field of the year, but that is still relatively small and allows for some great dark horses. Matos could be one of these.

Long Day's Journey into Night

Event Day Games Preview: The Coca-Cola 600 is a long day's journey into night.

By a quirk of the schedule, NASCAR runs two of their toughest races back-to-back. Two weeks ago, points were on the line at the "Track Too Tough to Tame." This week, NASCAR adds 100 miles to a typical race and runs the longest event of the year—the Coca-Cola 600. Those extra trips around the track are no small factor as engines are already stretched to their breaking point during a 500-miler.

Two weeks ago at Darlington, some surprising faces graced the top 10 and that could happen again at Lowe's. Rookies are not supposed to fare well on that tough old track, but Brad Keselowski backed up his victory at Talladega with another top-10. Joey Logano likewise posted his second top-10 of the season on that unforgiving course, and this is a race that could fit his driving style to a "T." So far in 2009, he's shown a tendency to improve as the race progresses and 100 extra miles give him and crew chief Greg Zipadelli plenty of opportunities to adjust.

The usual suspects will dominate the front of the grid, however. Lowe's is the house that Jimmie Johnson built and he once earned five victories and eight top-three finishes in eight consecutive races. "Rowdy" Kyle Busch swept the top-five in his last three starts, but his record in Nationwide is what truly recommends him this week. In the second series, he swept victory lane last year and finished second in fall 2007.

One way or another, the 600 will be one of the most competitive races of the year for fantasy owners, because those extra miles equal 100 Jokers in an already stacked deck.
Join us at http://www.eventdaygames.com/ this week to play along with our unique fantasy game.

Long suspended for 12 weeks

NASCAR handed down one of their toughest penalties ever to a driver few have heard of. Carl Long has been docked 200 points, fined $200,000 and placed suspended for 12 weeks for a rule's violation at Charlotte during the All-Star weekend, according to NASCAR.com.

Our View: The infraction was for an oversized engine and NASCAR seems to be sending a very clear message. Luckily for them (not so much for Long), this did not happen to one of the marquee drivers.

For the record, this gives car owner Danielle Long -153 points.

Week 22 Unified Power Rankings

With all the major series taking last week off from points' paying races, this week's Unified Power Rankings were reorganized by two factors. First, the Camping World Truck Series raced under the lights at Lowe's, which allowed their top contenders to make up a little ground in the standings, and the All-Star race was run the following night.

Secondly, since the Unified Power Rankings looks at only the last three months, the Daytona Speedweek races are aging off this list. Drivers who peaked in the first race of the season are falling by the wayside.

Tony Stewart earned his first victory as an owner/driver and that allowed him to make up some ground on the Formula 1 giants at the top of the standings. However, their advantage is too great, so Jenson Button and Rubens Barrichello continue to dominate the first two spots. Each of these drivers should be anchoring your fantasy roster in their respective games.

Kurt Busch's solid third-place—combined with Jeff Gordon's accident in the All-Star race—caused those two drivers to swap positions four and five. Since Busch is a lesser value in most fantasy games, however, his worth on fantasy owners' rosters takes an even greater leap.

Truck driver James Buescher earned his fifth consecutive top-15 in that series to make him a solid mid-range pick while he climbs onto this list for the first time in 2009. Meanwhile, Cup regular Martin Truex Jr. failed to advance from the Sprint Showdown and now hovers on the cusp of falling outside the top 50.

Unified Power Rankings

RankDriverPointsLast week+/-
1Jenson Button107.8010
2Rubens Barrichello96.0020
3Tony Stewart91.5030
4Kurt Busch88.7351
5Jeff Gordon87.824-1
6Jason Leffler87.4471
7Denny Hamlin84.506-1
8Jimmie Johnson83.3680
9Ryan Newman82.93101
10Ron Hornaday Jr82.60111
11Timo Glock81.609-2
12Kyle Busch80.04131
13Jeff Burton78.8212-1
14Mark Webber78.40140
15Carl Edwards77.55150
16Sebastian Vettel77.20171
17Brad Keselowski76.79236
18Greg Biffle74.8616-2
19Matt Kenseth74.7518-1
20Matt Crafton74.00277
21Fernando Alonso73.80210
22Mark Martin73.7520-2
23Joey Logano72.79318
24Dale Earnhardt Jr71.71262
25Kasey Kahne71.00294
26Juan Montoya69.7319-7
27Scott Lagasse Jr69.224215
28Steve Wallace68.894315
29Kevin Harvick68.8325-4
30Mike Skinner68.80322
31Brian Vickers68.6724-7
32Clint Bowyer68.3822-10
33Jason Keller68.0030-3
34David Reutimann67.8628-6
35Johnny Benson Jr67.6034-1
36Justin Allgaier67.33459
37Lewis Hamilton65.2036-1
38Nico Rosberg65.2037-1
39Jamie McMurray65.09467
40Jarno Trulli64.0039-1
41Chad McCumbee62.60476
42Rick Crawford62.605614
43David Ragan62.5633-10
44Marcos Ambrose62.4535-9
45James Buescher61.806217
46Stacy Compton61.60537
47Nick Heidfeld60.80503
48Martin Truex Jr60.5538-10
49David Stremme59.82545
50Brendan Gaughan59.7848-2


The Unified Power Rankings are based on "percentage points." Starting with a 100 score for the winner of a Nationwide race, each subsequent position is decremented by a percentage that relates to the number of drivers in the field. In a 50-car field of potential qualifiers, the second-place driver receives 98 points, third-place gets 96 points, the 43rd-place driver gets 16 points (because he beat eight other driver to even get into the field) and so on until the last non-qualifier in 50th-place gets two points.

Only races run in the last three months count in this formula.

The Cup, IRL and Formula 1 series start at 110 points for a victory (since its so difficult to win one of these races) and then decrements 1/50th of 110 points for each subsequent position. It’s an unscientific way to determine who is the best in their series, while simultaneously trying to compare apples to oranges.

Previous Unified Power Rankings:

Week 21
Week 20


Stewart aims for Lowe's sweep

"I like sweeps – it’s happened here a lot," Tony Stewart said following his All-Star win last Saturday night. "That’s a good sign hopefully. We’ll have a good car – we have a great engine and chassis package from Hendrick. I think we learned a lot tonight and we really didn’t get much practice. We got about 40 minutes – we had problems the first half of the practice session and then the next 40 minutes and then the rest of the 40 minutes we were basically undoing what we did after the first run when we found the mistakes. It was kind of like a shot in the dark tonight – we threw a lot of things at it and learned a lot too.”

Our View: Kasey Kahne pulled off the sweep last year and then went on to finish second in the fall, but Kevin Harvick was not as lucky in 2007. That year, he finished 21st in the 600 after winning the All-Star race and was 33rd that fall, so fantasy owners still want to watch Stewart closely in practice.

F1: Last five Monaco races

The Monaco Grand Prix could very well be the biggest test of the new found strength of Jenson Button and the Brawn Racing team, because he's been miserable at Monaco during the last three years, posting consecutive 11th-place results. Rubens Barrichello also needs to bring his "A" game to earn his first top-five since 2006. And these two drivers highlight how unpredictable the start of this season has been.

Conversely, we will see if Lewis Hamilton can reverse his fortunes after winning in 2008 and finishing second in his first attempt in 2007.

Monaco Grand Prix, last five years


DriverAvg Finish20082007200620052004
Lewis Hamilton1.5012


Robert Kubica3.5025


Juan Montoya 3.67

254
Sebastian Vettel5.005



Fernando Alonso5.601011412
Felipe Massa5.8033995
Cristiano da Matta6.00



6
Rubens Barrichello6.20610483
Alexander Wurz7.00
7


Kazuki Nakajima7.007



Nick Heidfeld7.20146727
Michael Schumacher7.67

5711
Mark Webber7.674

316
Olivier Panis8.00



8
Jenson Button8.75111111
2
Zsolt Baumgartner9.00



9
Ralf Schumacher10.00
168610
Kimi Raikkonen10.209820113
Heikki Kovalainen10.50813


Scott Speed11.00
913

Jarno Trulli11.20131517101
Giancarlo Fisichella11.8018461219
Timo Glock12.0012



Jacques Villeneuve 12.50

1411
Jacques Villeneuve Jr12.50

1411
Tiago Monteiro14.00

1513
Gianmaria Bruni14.00



14
David Coulthard14.20191431718
Christijan Albers15.00
191214
Giorgio Pantano15.00



15
Vitantonio Liuzzi15.67
221015
Nico Rosberg15.67161219

Franck Montagny16.00

16

Patrick Friesacher16.00


16
Nelson Piquet Jr17.0017



Adrian Sutil17.501520


Narain Karthikeyan18.00


18
Anthony Davidson18.00
18


Takuma Sato18.67
1722
17
Christian Klien19.00

18
20
Sebastian Bourdais20.0020



Mark Weber21.00
2121

Gordon undergoes back surgery

Jeff Gordon has undergone minor back surgery, which should alleviate most of his pain, according to NASCAR.com.

Our View: If he has been strong enough eight top-10s so far this year, any improvement in his performance at all will make him a place-and-hold driver.