May 29, 2009

Four go home from Dover

Four drivers failed to qualify at Dover for the Autism Speaks 400. They are Brad Keselowski, Max Papis, Derrike Cope and David Starr.

Our View: That's a bit of a shocker were Keselowski and Papis are concerned. This is the first race in 2009 that the No. 13 has failed to make.

Reutimann on Dover Cup pole

David Reutimann picked up where he left off last week—at the head of the field. The No. 00 won the pole with a speed of 156.794 mph.

Our View: No one can say that he backed into this result. Starting up front is crucial at Dover, so this gives him good odds to finish in the top 10.

Gordon crashes in quals

Jeff Gordon has crashed in qualification and will likely have to roll out a backup car.

Our View: Last year, Jimmie Johnson overcame a crash in practice, so it can be done. In fact, with the new pit road – it should be slightly easier.

Charlotte was final straw for Hendrick/Jr.

According Brian Whitesell, Charlotte's disappointing result was the final straw for Rick Hendrick in his decision to replace Tony Eury Jr. In a press conference this week, he said: “The race at Charlotte [was the final straw], we did not get the result there that we were looking for. The decision was made by Mr. Hendrick that it was time for a change and that’s the reason it happened this week."

Our View: His 40th-place finish was bad enough, but worse still, the No. 88 was never in contention.

N'Wide: McDowell admits "monster" is scary

Heading into the weekend's Nationwide race, Michael McDowell admits that Dover International Speedway can be a little intimidating, saying "“The ‘Monster Mile’ is a bit more scary than the monster statue out front, for sure. I was a little intimidated the first time I came here in the Cup car. We ran decent, but most importantly, I learned a lot about racing the track and being comfortable in the seat. Dover is most like a high speed rollercoaster ride.”

Our View: This will be McDowell's first Nationwide start and he hasn't been overly impressive in Cup with a best of 29th in two starts.

Trucks: Hornaday on Dover pole

Ron Hornaday Jr. bettered a field of 36 cars to win the pole for the AAA Insurance 200. His top speed was 155.541 mph.

Our View: Hornaday was already considered a favorite this week, but you may want to take a look at the outside of the front row. Colin Braun in a Roush-Fenway Ford F-150 starts there and this organization is strong in all divisions.

Starting Lineup (on Fox Sports)
Avg. Finish, last five races

Digger not to blame for Fox decline

According to Fox Sports chairman David Hill, "Digger" is not to blame for the declining ratings for NASCAR.

Our View: Perhaps it's a combination of things: Fox's broadcast style that that features "entertainment" over reporting the race, an overabundance of commercials and refusal to implement the same kind of side by coverage that IRL fans love—and yes, that stupid gopher is the face of their frivolousness.

N'Wide: Leffler to make 200th start

Jason Leffler is scheduled to make his 200th career Nationwide start this week at Dover, according to NASCAR.com.

Our View: In his first 199 starts, Leffler has 57 top-10s, 29 top-fives and two victories. With the way he's run in this series this year, he could start his third hundred run with a third victory.

Reutimann fastest in Dover's first practice

David Reutimann posted the fastest single lap in Friday's practice session, with a speed of 157.467 mph.

Our View: Drivers typically work on qualification trim in this session, so Reutimann is a good bet to start up front for Sunday's race.

IRL: Scheckter to run at Milwaukee

Tomas Scheckter will race for Dreyer & Reinbold Racing this week, according to IndyCar.com.

Our View: Scheckter has some strong runs there with third-place finishes in 2005 and 2006, but his last attempt was a little more what fantasy owners can expect this week. In his most recent outing in 2007, he finished 17th.

Last Five Races Average Finish

Mayfield also withdrawn

Jeremy Mayfield has withdrawn his entry for J.J. Yeley from the Dover race, according to ESPN.com.

Our View: Along with Todd Bodine's withdrawal, this makes the entry list 47 cars. That should make it a little easier for your favorite "go-or-go-home" driver make the show.

Gunselman withdraws from Dover, seeks driver

Todd Bodine has decided to step down as driver of the No. 64 Larry Gunselman Toyota, which has caused them to withdraw their Dover effort and seek a new driver, according to the team.

Our View: Fans of dark horses have to pull for every independent team, but the chances of the No. 64 making the show in the next few months are slim with any driver behind the wheel.

Busch bangs Starr in practice

A much faster Kyle Busch banged into David Starr in the early stages of the first practice session and made slight damage.

Our View: Starr refused to make room for Busch, which is one of the perils of this tight track.

Ky Busch weighs in on Jr.

Kyle Busch has added his two cents to the Dale Earnhardt Jr. crew chief change, according to RacingOne.com.

Our View: "You got to make the most popular driver in the sport competitive -- so you got to do what you got to do, I guess," Busch said. There is a little bitterness to that statement, considering that Busch was the driver moved out of his ride to make room for Earnhardt.

Trucks: Dover's last five races

There is a long history of part time drivers finding success in the Camping World Truck Series at Dover. From last year's winner Scott Speed, to Tony Stewart who finished second in 2005, Cup and Nationwide drivers have used this race to get the rhythm of the week started.

Partly due to their success, Truck regulars have not dominated the top of the average finish grid. Only Ron Hornaday Jr. and Johnny Benson Jr. enter the weekend with at least three consecutive top-10s, which makes them best bets to highlight your roster. That also leaves the field wide open for the remaining spots—and given the strength of interlopers, this might be a good week to gamble on Max Papis.

Notably, this track has not been kind to Kyle Busch. He won there in 2005, but has slowly been sliding down the grid since until he bottomed out with a 27th-place finish last year. In the Cup series, he's also been hit or miss with a victory last spring, but two 40-something finishes in his last five starts.

Results, last five years

DriverAvg Fin20082007200620052004
Scott Speed1.001



Tony Stewart2.00


2
Hank Parker Jr3.00



3
Mark Martin3.50
61

Ron Hornaday Jr3.753174
Mike Bliss4.50
54

Dave Blaney 6.00



6
Ricky Craven 7.00


7
Andy Houston 7.00



7
Travis Kvapil 7.6743

16
Colin Braun8.008



Carl Edwards 8.00

2
14
A J Allmendinger9.00
9


David Reutimann9.00

5517
Mike Skinner 10.007722104
Aaron Fike10.00
10


Timothy Peters10.00

146
Rick Crawford 10.609238112
David Starr 11.606251188
Terry Cook 12.0013816320
Deborah Renshaw12.00


12
Aric Almirola12.00

12

Jon Wood 12.5015


10
Stacy Compton12.50232


Kyle Busch12.502712101
Bobby Hamilton Jr13.00

13

Johnny Benson Jr13.50104634
Willie Allen14.00
14


Shane Sieg14.5014


15
Chad Chaffin 15.0021

231
Ryan Matthews15.00
15


Jack Sprague 15.402289299
Ted Musgrave Sr15.601120181712
Chad McCumbee16.00121323

Justin Marks16.0016



Blake Bjorkland16.00
16


Matt Crafton 16.8052615929
Donny Lia17.0017



Tim Sauter 17.00
17


Bobby East17.00

17

Ken Schrader17.33
33
145
Dennis Setzer 17.601819201318
Todd Bodine 17.752911328
Shelby Howard19.0019



Bobby Hamilton Sr20.00


2119
Todd Kluever20.00


20
Andy Lally22.0022



Ken Weaver22.00



22
Regan Smith 22.00


22
Brad Keselowski22.50


1530
Erik Darnell22.67251825

Brendan Gaughan22.7520361916
Robert Huffman 23.00


3511
Shane Hmiel 23.00



23
Chase Montgomery23.00


1828
Tracy Hines23.00


2521
Steve Park 23.33

213613
Kevin Lepage23.50

2819
Landon Cassill24.0024



Shane Huffman24.00
24


Erin Crocker24.00

24

Jimmy Spencer Sr24.00


24
Kevin Love24.00



24
Jason White26.003022


Robert Pressley 26.00


26
Derrick Kelley26.00



26
Marcos Ambrose26.00

26

Scott Lynch27.00
27


Rich Bickle 27.00


27
Kyle Krisiloff27.00

27

Scott Lagasse Jr27.33262135

Morgan Shepherd29.00
29


Kerry Earnhardt29.00

29

T J Bell30.00
30


Bill Lester30.00
35303025
J C Stout31.0031



Kraig Kinser31.00
3131

Kelly Sutton31.33

363127
Brandon Whitt31.50


3231
Brian Scott32.0032



Dana White 32.00
32


Jerry Hill 32.00



32
Joey Miller32.00

32

Ryan Seaman33.0033



Wayne Edwards 33.00


33
Boston Reid33.00

33

Lance Hooper 33.00



33
Larry Gunselman34.0034



Clint Bowyer34.00
34


Phil Bonifield 34.00



34
Johnny Chapman34.00

34

Nick Tucker35.0035



Mark McFarland 35.00



35
Butch Miller36.0036



Robert Richardson37.00

37

Ryan Moore38.00

38

May 28, 2009

Monster Slayers

Event Day Games Preview: Drivers have been in survival mode lately. From the track Too Tough to Tame, to NASCAR's version of Noah's Ark last week in Charlotte, to the Monster Mile, it just keeps getting rougher.

Dover is one of the toughest tracks on the circuit. Concrete high-banked courses require drivers to pull heavy G-loads in the corners, and this track is nearly as much turn as it is straightaway. The groove at exit is narrow, since all of that momentum pushes a car from the bottom of the course to the outside wall and track blocking, "Big One" crashes are nearly as prevalent at Dover as on one of the restrictor-plate superspeedways.

It’s a rhythm track, however, and once a driver learns the secrets to conquering the Monster, they can often string together some incredibly long streaks. Carl Edwards enters the weekend with five consecutive results of third or better, and this could very well be the week he snaps out of his early-season funk.

Roush-Fenway teammates Greg Biffle and Matt Kenseth are two other drivers who swept the top-five last year and in the fall, three of the Cat in the Hat's men finished first, second and third. If you think you see a pattern emerging, jump on it.

Expect Hendrick Motorsports to be in their mirrors. Last fall, Mark Martin and Jimmie Johnson finished fourth and fifth on the Roushketeers' bumpers and Jeff Gordon came home just a couple of spots further back in seventh.

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

Earnhardt gets new chief

Beginning this week, Dale Earnhardt Jr. will have a new crew chief, according to SceneDaily.com. At Dover, Brian Whitesell will take over the duties for one week, while Lance McGrew will take over the permanent post next week at Pocono. Meanwhile, Tony Eury Jr. is being put to pasture in the research and development department.

Our View: Fantasy owners can reasonably expect short term benefits, but Earnhardt still has a way to go before he's going to be recommended for your roster.

May 27, 2009

Week 22 Unified Power Rankings

The three major auto racing series ran one of the biggest races of their season last week when Formula 1 took to the streets of Monaco, the NASCAR Cup series ran the "Coke 341," and the IRL ran the granddaddy of them all: the Indy 500.

Each of those races carry bonus points. Instead of 110 points for a first-place finish, drivers receive 125, but we had to make some adjustments for the Cup race. Since several drivers remained on track and received better results than they earned through the strength of their cars, we based the Power Point system on average running position for this week.

No matter how count them, Jenson Button continues to be the hottest driver in auto racing having won his fifth Grand Prix in six starts. The twisty streets of Monaco make passing a near impossibility, so no one was surprised that he took the checkers after sitting on the pole. Rubens Barrichello continues to be his wing man and finished second in Formula 1 competition for the third time this season. He's going to be hard to dislodge from that spot, in fact, because he's swept the top-five alongside Button.

Tony Stewart had flashes of brilliance last week in the rain-shortened "Coke 341," but when the field was shuffled by the final rain storm he found his No. 14 Chevy stranded in 19th. Five top-fives in the previous six races, however, gave him enough momentum to stay third on the grid and first among Cup regulars.

Nationwide regular Jason Leffler ran a smart race in the Carquest Auto Parts 300 to finish sixth. That helped elevate him into the top 10 on the Unified Power Rankings scale since it was his sixth consecutive top-10 in recent races.

The Indy Racing League finally ran enough races to include them in this formula and despite winning the Indy 500, Helio Castroneves does not top their chart. There a reason for that; even though the series has run enough times, the driver has not since he was forced to sit out the Honda Grand Prix of St Petersburg while being his trial for tax evasion was going on.

Dario Franchitti gets that honor. After winning the Grand Prix of Long Beach and finishing in the top 10 in three of the first four IRL races this year, he's the best of class. He shouldn't get too used to the position, however; unless Castroneves crashes early next week at Milwaukee, he is virtually guaranteed to dislodge the Scotsman.

Unified Power Rankings

RankDriverPointsLast week+/-
1Jenson Button110.6710
2Rubens Barrichello99.8320
3Tony Stewart91.6730
4Jason Leffler88.5073
5Kurt Busch88.4550
6Ryan Newman85.93104
7Jimmie Johnson85.9181
8Jeff Gordon85.454-4
9Denny Hamlin85.086-3
10Ron Hornaday Jr83.75111
11Dario Franchitti83.50NR
12Ryan Briscoe83.50NR
13Mark Webber82.00141
14Tony Kanaan81.25NR
15Danica Patrick81.00NR
16Dan Wheldon80.75NR
17Jeff Burton79.7512-5
18Mark Martin79.75202
19Kyle Busch79.5913-6
20Timo Glock79.509-11
21Brad Keselowski79.23232
22Carl Edwards77.3715-7
23Greg Biffle76.5416-7
24Fernando Alonso76.1721-3
25Joey Logano74.89316
26Kasey Kahne74.36293
27Matt Kenseth74.1918-9
28Scott Dixon74.00NR
29Matt Crafton73.7527-2
30Juan Montoya72.0019-11
31Dale Earnhardt Jr71.7926-5
32Nico Rosberg70.00375
33Brian Vickers69.5024-9
34Mike Skinner69.5032-2
35Johnny Benson Jr68.7534-1
36Jason Keller68.2530-6
37Scott Lagasse Jr68.25425
38David Reutimann68.2328-10
39Sebastian Vettel67.5017-22
40Steve Wallace67.38433
41Kevin Harvick66.7625-16
42Justin Allgaier66.75453
43Clint Bowyer65.9222-21
44Jamie McMurray65.91462
45Martin Truex Jr64.0038-7
46Rick Crawford63.755610
47Lewis Hamilton63.6736-11
48Stacy Compton63.00535
49James Buescher62.006213
50Marcos Ambrose61.9135-15

Dover Yahoo! preview

At one-mile in length with high banks and a rough, concrete surface, Dover is one of the most challenging tracks on the circuit. It's a rhythm track where drivers post long streaks of top-10 finishes. Check out this week's Yahoo! Fantasy Preview (.pdf) for a sneak peak at who'll be strong.

Johnson has Darlington chassis

This week at Dover, Jimmie Johnson will run the same chassis that he took from 42nd to second at Darlington two weeks ago, according to a team press release.

Our View: Don't worry overly if something happens to this car. His backup chassis is the same one he started and finished third at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Edwards finds success in the corners

Carl Edwards attributes success in the corners at Dover to success on the track, according to a team press release.

"Dover is pretty much a one-groove track so you need to handle well through the center of the corners in order to keep your position. We won this race in 2007, and we had two strong races there in 2008. My Aflac team is working hard and making some improvements."

Our View: If Edwards is going to turn his season around, this is a great place to do so. His last five efforts at Dover ended in finishes of third or better.

Kenseth's strong at Dover

It took a while for Matt Kenseth to get a hang of this track, according to a team press release, but once he did, the No. 17 has been one of the best cars on the track.

Our View: According to the team, Kenseth did not lead a single lap in his first nine starts at Dover, but he's been up front in seven of his last 11 attempts. He's turned that into five top-10s in his last six races.

IRL: New tire for Milwaukee

Firestone will bring a new tire to the Milwaukee Mile in an attempt to get rid of the tight condition that plagued teams last year, according to a press release from the company.

Our View: All cars will be on the same tire, which levels the playing field, but veterans usually adjust to new circumstances faster than Young Guns.

Gordon Dover preview

"Getting the car balanced right to maximize grip is pretty tricky here," said Jeff Gordon in this week's preview press release. "It's a one-mile track that is high-banked, fast and action-packed. And you're in the corners a lot here."

Our View: Gordon has been one of the strongest drivers on this concrete course during his career, but he has not posted a victory there since 2001. This is one of the most important tracks on his personal schedule, since sponsor DuPont is headquartered just up the road.

May 26, 2009

Mediocre performance plagues Roush-Fenway

In 2009, Roush-Fenway Racing has been plagued by mediocrity, according to SceneDaily.com, with no wins in the last 10 races and two drivers (Jamie McMurray and David Ragan) outside the top 20 in points.

Our View: Dover could be a cure for that ill, however. The other three Roushketeers, Greg Biffle, Matt Kenseth and Carl Edwards each swept the top-five on this concrete track last year and they could be extremely good values.

IRL: Tracy to drive for Foyt

According to IndyCar PR, Paul Tracy will drive AJ Foyt's No. 14 at the Milwaukee Mile. Last week, Vitor Meira took a hard hit to the wall in the Indy 500.

Our View: The combination of these two fiery personalities could either be explosive on the track, or one of the biggest train wrecks in auto racing history, but one way or another—something exciting is going to happen.

May 25, 2009

Reutimann wins Coke 600

David Reutimann had the right strategy by staying out during the last (of many) rain delay and he won the Coca-Cola 600.

Our View: He was nowhere close to the strongest driver, but NASCAR pays points based on winning no matter what the circumstances.

Penske may add 4th team

According to Jayski.com, Penske Racing South is considering adding a fourth Cup team with Justin Allgaier as a part time pilot.

Our View: With so many Cup drivers in the Nationwide Series, it's been a while since the Cup guys have seemed to have a developmental plan in place. Allgaier will be a good value in selected events—not because of his talent, but due to the strength of this organization.

Riggs, Baldwin part company

After the Coke 600 is completed (assuming that ever happens), Scott Riggs and Tommy Baldwin will part ways, according to SceneDaily.com. Riggs cites the lack of competitiveness of the No. 36 as the reason.

Our View: Mike Skinner and Patrick Carpentier are schedule to run the car in most or all of the remaining races, but without sponsorship, this team will not be a good fantasy value.

Competition caution coming

According to Dustin Long, NASCAR is expected to throw a competition caution around lap 40 in the Coke 600.

Our View: Since drivers have not been able to touch there cars and the race has switched from a night race to a day race, this is going to be critical to a team's success.

IRL: Milwaukee, Last five races

Tony Kanaan had another terrible Indy 500 when he crashed before the halfway mark and finished 27th in a 33-car field. If the past is any indication though, he should rebound nicely this week. The Indy Racing League has been going to the Milwaukee Mile for five years and Kanaan has never finished outside the top-five there. In fact, he took top honors in back-to-back season in 2006 and 2007, which makes him one of the favorites to win again this week.

Nearly as stout, Dario Franchitti is back from his NASCAR sojourn and he's never finished worse than sixth in four starts on this track. He won the inaugural race in 2004 and then posted runner-up results in 2005 and 2007. Last week, he was in contention for the 500 victory until trouble in the pits relegated him to seventh, so he will be looking for redemption.

Dan Wheldon does not have the overall numbers of Kanaan and Franchitti, but he's certainly come on strong lately. He struggled to an 18th-place finish in 2004 and was a modest eighth in 2006, but every other result has been a top-five—and that is enough to recommend him for this week's Milwaukee race.

Results, Last five years

DriverAvg Finish20082007200620052004
Tony Kanaan2.6031144
Dario Franchitti2.75
2621
Sam Hornish Jr3.75
9213
Oriol Servia6.006



Justin Wilson7.007



Patrick Carpentier7.00


7
Bryan Herta7.33

769
Alex Barron7.50


87
Dan Wheldon7.60438518
E J Viso8.008



Adrian Fernandez8.00



8
Townsend Bell8.5011


6
Jeff Simmons9.50
109

Danica Patrick10.0098419
Scott Dixon10.2024101322
Scott Sharp 10.75
6121015
Tomas Scheckter 11.00
173321
Vitor Meira11.202251595
Buddy Rice11.60101811172
Hideki Mutoh12.0012



Kosuke Matsuura12.50
12171110
Helio Castroneves 12.60516141612
Felipe Giaffone 13.00



13
Jeff Bucknam13.00

13

Ed Carpenter13.20207161211
Ryan Briscoe13.671
1822
Marco Andretti13.6721155

Mark Taylor14.00



14
Jimmy Kite14.00


14
Will Power14.0014



Sarah Fisher14.00
14


Anthony Foyt IV16.751713
2116
Roger Yasukawa15.00


15
Ryan Hunter-Reay15.0015



Darren Manning15.751311
2019
Enrique Bernoldi16.0016



Jaques Lazier17.00



17
Bruno Junqueira18.0018



Buddy Lazier 18.00


18
A J Foyt IV16.751713
2116
John Andretti19.0019



Tora Takagi20.00



20
Mario Moraes23.0023



Jaime Camara24.0024



Graham Rahal25.0025



Mario Dominguez26.0026



Marty Roth27.0027



May 24, 2009

IRL: Indy 500 Results

It was an exciting Indy 500 with several incidents and drama surrounding who would win. That is until the final laps. At the close of the 500-miler, Helio Castroneves ran away from the field in the closing laps.

Dan Wheldon finished second, but the next biggest newsbreaker in the race was female driver Danica Patrick, who posted a career-best finish of third in the Indy 500. One or two more tweaks and she might have been the first lady to win American auto racing's biggest event.

Indy 500 Results

FinishStartDriverLapsStatusAvg Fin
11Helio Castroneves200Running6.11
218Dan Wheldon200Running9.00
310Danica Patrick200Running9.00
424Townsend Bell200Running12.00
59Will Power200Running9.00
65Scott Dixon200Running9.14
73Dario Franchitti200Running9.00
817Ed Carpenter200Running13.83
913Paul Tracy200Running5.50
1016Hideki Mutoh200Running8.50
1130Alex Tagliani200Running11.00
1226Tomas Scheckter200Running17.25
1311Alex Lloyd200Running19.00
1420Scott Sharp200Running16.08
152Ryan Briscoe200Running13.25
1619Anthony Foyt IV200Running17.00
1721Sarah Fisher200Running25.38
1827Mike Conway200Running18.00
1928John Andretti200Running21.67
2031Milka Duno199Running23.33
2114Vitor Meira173Accident9.00
2212Raphael Matos173Accident22.00
2315Justin Wilson160Accident25.00
2429E J Viso139Mechanical25.00
2532Nelson Phillippe130Accident25.00
2625Oriol Servia98Mechanical18.50
276Tony Kanaan97Mechanical14.25
2823Robert Doornbos85Accident28.00
2922Davey Hamilton79Accident14.22
308Marco Andretti56Mechanical14.75
314Graham Rahal55Accident32.00
3233Ryan Hunter-Reay19Accident19.00
337Mario Moraes0Accident25.50
34
Alex Tagliani0Did Not Qualify11.00
35
Buddy Lazier0Did Not Qualify11.23
36
Stanton Barrett0Did Not Qualify

F1: Monaco GP Results

Is there any stopping Brawn Racing? Already the dominant force in not only Formula 1, but also the Unified Power Rankings (which is our attempt to compare all of the major series), Jenson Button has now won five of the first six races and he's going to pad his lead in those standings because the Monaco Grand Prix has a bonus attached to it as one of racing's marquee events.

Of course teammate Rubens Barrichello came in second, but that didn't catch anyone by surprise either.

Pretty much everyone held serve and finished close to where they started, with the exception of drivers like Heikki Kovalainen who crashed on lap 51 and slipped from seventh to 16th and Sebastian Vettel, whose stellar fourth-place qualification effort went for nothing when he wrecked on lap 15.

Monaco Grand Prix Results

FinishStartDriverLapsStatusAvg Fin
11Jenson Button78Running9.88
23Rubens Barrichello78Running8.41
32Kimi Raikkonen78Running9.44
45Felipe Massa78Running6.71
58Mark Webber78Running9.33
66Nico Rosberg78Running13.25
79Fernando Alonso78Running6.63
814Sebastian Bourdais78Running14.00
913Giancarlo Fisichella78Running9.64
1019Timo Glock77Running11.00
1116Nick Heidfeld77Running9.60
1220Lewis Hamilton77Running5.00
1318Jarno Trulli77Running11.38
1415Adrian Sutil77Running16.33
1510Kazuki Nakajima76Running11.00
167Heikki Kovalainen51Accident12.33
1717Robert Kubica28Brakes8.00
184Sebastian Vettel15Accident11.50
1912Nelson Piquet Jr10Crash Damage18.00
2011Sebastian Buemi10Accident20.00

Castroneves wins Indy 500

Helio Castroneves won the 93rd Indy 500 in dominant fashion.

Our View: He was uncontested in the last segment, which took all the stress away from his fantasy owners.

May 23, 2009

Rain suspends HH practice

Moments after Robby Gordon slapped the wall in Happy Hour, rain started to fall, which suspended practice. This will probably be it for the night.

Our View: Drivers knew this was coming and spent most of the first session testing things they would have tested in Happy Hour, so the net effect will not be very great.

R Gordon hits wall in HH

Robby Gordon slapped the wall at the five minute mark of Happy Hour and dropped debris on the track. He porbably won't need a backup car.

Our View: The urgency of practice is picking up with rain just outside the track.

N'Wide: Edwards on Lowe's pole

Carl Edwards posted a lap of 183.175 mph to sit on the Nationwide Carquest Auto Parts 300 pole. His closest rival in the points, Kyle Busch qualified second, but will have to drop to the back of the pack Saturday night because of an engine change.

Our View: Starting up front in a 300-mile race is very important, so Edwards has to be considered a threat. Busch cannot be discounted, however, since that kid can work traffic better than almost any other driver in the field.

Rain does not affect Kahne

In response to a question of whether Kasey Kahne approached the first practice session differently because of potential rain canceling Happy Hour, he replied “not really. We just tried to get as many laps in as we could. Hopefully we can get the last session in because the conditions will be very similar to what we should have for tomorrow night’s race. We have a pretty good Budweiser Dodge Charger and we need to keep wrenching on some things to make it as good as we can.”

Our View: Kahne has been able to run strong at Lowe's even when he's struggled elsewhere, which makes him a very interesting sleeper.

Hamlin posts fastest lap in Sat a.m. practice

Denny Hamlin posted the single fastest lap in Friday morning's practice with a speed of 184.338 mph.

Our View: That's all well and good, but his average speed of 179.385 mph during 27 laps was only seventh best on that grid.

F1: Vettel has lightest car

Sebastian Vettel qualified fourth for the Monaco Grand Prix with the lightest car on the grid. With the driver weight and fuel load, his car is nearly 10.5ks lighter than anyone else. The complete list can be found at Crash.net.

Our View: If not for the fact that Jenson Button and Rubens Barrichello were in front of him, Vettel might be able to scoot to the lead, but they are going to be hard to pass. Once in the lead, they have more fuel on board to give them a chance to employ alternate strategy.

Newman wins Sat a.m. practice

Ryan Newman posted the quickest average speeds in practice one, with a speed of 180.180 mph during 17 laps.

Our View: With regards to the talking heads at Fox – one fast lap does not win either practice or a race.

Sorenson slaps wall, McMurray eats donut

Reed Sorenson and Jamie McMurray got together at the seven minute mark in the first practice session, which put a donut on the No. 26 and slammed the No. 43 into the wall.

Our View: McMurray was faster, but discretion dictates a little give and take. That is the same kind of impatience that has made him a risky proposition on a weekly basis during the race.

Practice begins amidst sprinkles

The first race-trim practice session for the Coca-Cola 600 is underway with rain sprinkling the track.

Our View: Actually, this may replicate Sunday night's conditions fairly well. The track is cooler than it otherwise would be and the heavy air mimics dew,

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.