1. Kurt Busch- Brilliant calls in the pits by Pat Tryson allowed Kurt Busch to stay out during the final caution and get the rain-shortened race win. It wasn’t all luck though, Kurt had raced his way up to 11th before the pit strategy came into play and then had to deal with an aggressive Robby Gordon at the end. The win was exactly what the No. 2 Miller Lite team needed. Good Call!
2. Tony Stewart- Smoke had arguably the most dominant car of the day as he led 132 laps on Sunday and was looking to sweep the weekend in Loudon. Unfortunately, the call for fuel and two tires dropped him too far back to recover in the rain shortened race. He finished a respectable 13th and moved up two spots in the point standings.
3. The Gamblers- Michael Waltrip and J.J. Yeley were able to gamble on gas and stayed out during the final caution to finish second and third respectively-- their best finishes of 2008. For once, they both managed to stay out of trouble; giving them a chance to be there at the end and it paid off big.
4. Casey Mears- Days after his first top five of the season, Mears found out that he was out of a ride after this season at New Hampshire. So what does he do? Mears goes out at Loudon, leads 53 laps and finishes seventh--the highest of all the Hendrick Motorsports drivers. I would say his job audition is going pretty well so far.
5. Kevin Harvick- Happy was very happy with his No. 29 Chevrolet all weekend long. He looked stout as he led the beginning of the race but then struggled with handling issues. Todd Berrier made the right calls and had Harvick back in the mix before the rain came. He finished 14th but it was good enough to regain the 12th spot in the point standings.
NOT
1. Jamie McMurray- The ire of Jr. Nation will be squarely on the driver of the No. 26 IRWIN Ford for plowing into the back of the No. 88 AMP Chevrolet as Dale Jr. was heading to pit road late in the race. McMurray claims he never saw Dale Jr. on the apron of the track, so there is proof not everyone watches Dale Jr. every minute of every race.
2. Kasey Kahne- The No. 9 Budweiser tire changers had to suck in bucketloads of brake dust during pit stops as they struggled to setup their Dodge. Kahne, in the meantime, decided to beat up on rookie Aric Almirola--who later gave him some payback as the No. 8 then spun Kasey into the wall. Kahne finished two laps down in 30th and fell to 10th in the points. Message to Kasey: Don’t mess with an Army of One.
3. Juan Pablo Montoya- Mr. Juanderful was in a foul mood on Sunday. First, he knocked his teammate Reed Sorenson out of the way early in the race. Then he took out Kyle Busch during the last caution. NASCAR penalized him two laps for rough driving and the No. 42 Texaco Dodge finished right where he started in 32nd. Temper, temper!
4. Kyle Busch –Rowdy admitted the No. 18 Toyota was not set up right on Sunday and he never cracked the top 10. Then, he forgot his patience, egged on Juan Pablo Montoya, and ended up wrecked during a late caution. He finished 25th and his points lead has been cut to only 64 points. To win the championship, Shrub is going to have to play it smarter than that.
5. NASCAR - Allowing a sponsor to change the number of laps in a race solely for marketing purposes is absolutely ridiculous. Brian France’s love of the all- mighty dollar is showing up just a little too much at the track. What’s next? The Mobil 1 one-mile shootout?
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
This edition of Hot or Not is coming to you live from the pits courtesy of the Miller Lite Race team! A special thank you goes out to the #2 Brew Crew for hosting me again this weekend. Please read my race reports from the garage for a play by play account of my weekend.
All the pictures in this blog were taken by me in the garages this weekend.
HOT
1. Kyle Busch- Rowdy wasn’t on anyone’s radar to win at Sonoma on Sunday with his reputation for aggressive driving and the fact he started 30th. But when the checkers flew, it was the points leader that led the most laps and was one of the few who raced clean and hit his marks on every turn of every lap. To top it off, that was the best combo of doughnuts and M&M’s I have ever seen. Smokin’!2.David Gilliland- Gilly earned high praise from his competitors on Sunday after posting an impressive second-place finish in his Yates Ford. It was no fluke, as he showed off his road racing skills learned from his dad by staying in the top five most of the day. His Free Credit Report probably looks a lot better after that payday!3. Jeff Gordon – I hope Ella does not listen to her dad’s radio yet, because early in the Toyota/Save Mart 350 Gordon went on a cursing tirade and the best he could say about his car was that it was the worst one on the track. His crew jumped to action and changed everything but the driver. And with the benefit of some cautions, the No. 24 Dupont team came back to finish third. No matter whether it was hometrack advantage or champion expertise, either way, Gordon is up to sixth in the points.4. Tony Stewart- Smoke had a rough weekend at Infineon. His qualifying effort left him starting 39th , but some well-timed cautions put him in the lead pack mid-race. He was making his patented march to the front when he got tagged from behind with only 5 laps to go. He restarted 19th and was a bull in a china shop as he picked up nine spots in four laps to finish 10th. That is impressive on a road course. He gets a ‘not’ however, for diss’ing me when I asked for an autograph…5. Marcos Ambrose- Racing in his first Sprint Cup race in the No. 21 Wood Brother’s Ford, this Aussie rookie put on quite a show. He laid down a stellar qualifying lap and was fastest in practice too. During the race, Ambrose was entertaining to watch as he raced with his idols up front. Unfortunately, he didn’t impress Juan Pablo Montoya and then got wrecked by Elliott Sadler--which broke his transmission and ended his day early. His 42nd place finish misrepresents his race because those ‘Honey Buns’ were hot!NOT
1. Kasey Kahne- The polesitter didn’t enjoy the view up front very long as he radioed in on the pace laps that he had no clutch. He managed to lead for the first time on a road course but was never a factor as he quickly dropped through the field and limped to a 33rd-place finish. The driver of the No. 9 Budweiser Dodge dropped two spots in the Cup standings to ninth. He may be down this week, but don’t count him out.2. Kevin Harvick- Happy was on the move, charging from 32nd all the way to fifth on lap 104 before all heck broke loose. The No. 29 Shell Chevy came into turn 4 way too hot and locked up his tires in a power slide as he spun and took out Jamie McMurray, Tony Stewart and Ron Fellows--all top cars. His spotter was priceless, “left side…left side…ew!” Un-happily, Harvick finished 30th and dropped to 13th in the standing, outside of Chase contention.3. David Reutimann- The driver of the No. 44 UPS Toyota was very frank about his lack of confidence on the road courses. It showed. Not only did he wipe out his primary car on Saturday but he took a big hit into the tire barrier in his back-up car on Sunday relegating him to a 40th-place finish. I bet the car felt like the big brown truck around some of those turns.4. Kurt Busch- Despite braking issues, Busch starting third and racing up front until Scott Pruett got into the No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge--causing a bad tire rub on the right rear. Busch was forced to pit and went a lap down in the process, his great day ended with a 32nd-place finish. The Brew Crew can’t seem to catch a break, and apparently, I am not their lucky charm. 5. The Road Ringers- Road racing strikes fear in the hearts of NASCAR drivers and owners, as they often turn to the road ringers to help salvage points. This year, they weren’t much help and a few actually hurt as they had run-ins with several Cup regulars. Brian Simo (43rd), Boris Said (41st), Scott Pruett (38th), Max Papis (35th), and Ron Fellows (29th) all finished at the back of the pack. Perhaps its time to rethink this strategy and just stick with your driver.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. Dale Earnhardt, Jr.- The No. 88 team took a huge gamble not pitting for fuel late in the LifeLock 400 on Sunday and then sweated bullets while Junior babied his AMP Chevrolet around the track during a caution with only two laps to go. The fan favorite benefited from a wreck on the final lap and Junebug coasted right into Victory Lane, snapping his 76-race winless streak. What a perfect Father’s Day gift for Dale Sr. and Mr. Hendrick.
2.Kasey Kahne- The No. 9 Dodge spent much of the race in the top 10 and saved fuel for the last 50 laps to grab a second-place finish at Michigan. He would have won (again) had the caution not flown during the Green-White-Checker finish, and climbs two spots to seventh in the championship standings. A nod to his teammate, Elliott Sadler, who finished ninth. At least one Dodge team is hot, hot, hot!
3. Matt Kenseth- Kenseth was back to his patented racing style as he stalked quietly until he got the lead. Even with a mishap in the pits hitting an official and then later with uncharacteristic trouble on a tire change, the No. 17 Ford finished a strong third and is effectively back in the Chase hunt only 14 points out of 12th. Another nod goes to his Roush-Fenway teammates: Carl Edwards (seventh), David Ragan (eighth) and Jamie McMurray (10th).
4. Brian Vickers- Vickers started 18th and came flying to the lead 33 laps later, showing that the No. 83 Red Bull Toyota was the car to beat on long runs. He kept it up front and finished fourth and is sitting only 97 points out of 12th in the standings. Vickers had the conspiracy theorists licking their chops during his post race interview by saying NASCAR told him to let Mark Martin go by or get black flagged with two to go. The truth is out there…
5. Tony Stewart- Smoke battled a tight Home Depot Toyota for much of the race but he stayed persistent and used good pit strategy to finally get a top 5 finish moving up one spot in the standings to 11th. Even better, Stewart donated his earnings to the American Red Cross for the Midwest flood victims. If that isn’t hot, I don’t know what is.
NOT
1. Penske Racing- The Daytona 500 winner Ryan Newman broke his drive train on lap 76 and went on to finish 42nd, 68 laps down. The No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge was junk coming off the hauler and so scary loose that Kurt Busch spun out mid-race but managed to hold on for a 21st place finish. Sam Hornish, Jr. was a bright spot as he led some green flag laps late in the race until he spun off turn 4 causing the caution with two laps to go. This Dodge team is still struggling.
2. Chip Ganassi Racing – Dario Franchitti was off the pace on lap 25 with a broken valve spring and was soon black flagged and out of race, finishing 43rd. Juan Pablo Montoya was lapped early and often as the No. 42 Big Red Dodge was not set up right and finished 38th. ReedSorenson was never a factor and as usual, finished in the back of the pack in 34th. This Dodge team is toast.
3. Jeff Gordon – Big Daddy did not have a good Father’s Day as the No. 24 Dupont team is still searching for the right setup. With water gauge problems, being way too tight, an ill-advised pit strategy, and a pit road speeding penalty, the best Gordon could do was an 18th place finish sliding him to ninth in the point standings. Thank goodness the road course is up next!
4. The No. 16 Pit Crew- Greg Biffle was having another stellar run but on the last pit stop, his crew chief, Greg Erwin, made the call to “go on the drop of the jack.” Well, the Biff did as he was told, but the front tire changer wasn’t clear and got the air hose caught in the splitter. Biffle ran over the hose, the crewman hit the deck, and it resulted in a penalty that dropped the No. 16 Roush- Fenway Ford to a 20th place finish. Hexed, I tell you, hexed…
5. Debris- I do not understand why debris, specifically hot dog wrappers, is such a constant problem at Michigan. It is ridiculous that trash on the speedway greatly affects the outcome of the race by altering when cars have to pit to avoid overheating. I don’t know what the answer is but NASCAR has plenty of power to wield to fix this and they should…what Mr. Helton? No complaining? Oh, ok, I will just shut up and write…
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. Kasey Kahne- The Pocono 500 polesitter led early but looked to be in big trouble after a pit road mistake on lap 57 knocked him back to 38th. Kahne picked his way through the field, making 88 passes under green flag conditions, until he got the lead back and the victory. The dominant No. 9 Budweiser Dodge continued the trend as five of the last six races at Pocono have been won from the front row. Kahne is up three spots to ninth in the Sprint Cup Standings.
2.Team Red Bull - The No. 83 Red Bull team made wholesale changes to their car to get Brian Vickers a second-place finish on Sunday at Pocono, a track where he has three career top five finishes. Teammate A.J.Allmendinger started eighth and had great pit stops all day from his No. 84 Red Bull crew as he came home a career best 12th. More evidence Team Toyota has gained across the board.
3. Denny Hamlin- With two wins at the triangle track, Hamlin came into the race as a favorite. He, too, had problems on pit road as he ran into the No. 70 car which caved in his right front fender. The No. 11 FedEx team used the red flag restart to fix the damage sending Denny all the way back to 42nd. They used good pit strategy to get back up to the lead… but couldn’t quite catch eventual race winner Kasey Kahne. Hamlin finished third and climbed four spots to fifth in the points.
4. Half of Hendrick- Dale Earnhardt Jr. accused his cousin and crew chief, Tony Eury, Jr. of using adjustments from the 90’s” as they struggled to get the No. 88 to turn. With creative pit strategy, Junior climbed to second but had to settle for fourth at the end. He remains third in the points. Teammate Jimmie Johnson led at the start and looked strong in the beginning of the race but crew chief, Chad Knaus called for a completely different pit cycle than the rest of the field which would have been brilliant had a late caution not happened. Nonetheless, the No. 48 Lowe’s team finished a solid sixth and climbed a spot to sixth in the point standings.
5. Kurt Busch- On lap 39, KB took a spin and caught some air as he went flying through the grass breaking all the splitter struts. The Pat Tryson led No. 2 Miller Lite crew stayed calm, cool, and collected as they expertly fixed the splitter and Kurt did his job working his way back into the top 10. He finished eighth and is up to 20th in the points. Finally, this team gets a good finish despite trouble.
NOT
1. Kyle Busch – Rowdy wrecked his primary Sprint Cup car and started at rear of the field in a backup car Sunday. On lap 46, he tried to squeeze into a spot in front of Jamie McMurray but didn’t make it and smacked the wall. The crew had to take off the entire front nose and rear housing just to get the No. 18 M&M’s machine back out to log laps. Just like Big Brown, the heavy favorite finished dead last –but Busch at least maintained his points lead by only 21 points. Perhaps running three races in three states in three days is not such a good idea.
2. GregBiffle- The Biff had no cooling box for the second week in a row and a disastrous pit stop where he hit is own crew member and then was hit by the No. 00. He soldiered on and was looking good as he led late in the race. Unfortunately, he was too fast exiting pit road on his last stop, got black flagged and went one lap down. He finished 15th but fell two spots in the points to seventh. The No. 16 team seems hexed.
3. Tony Stewart- Smoke and Zippy were on a road course pit schedule and had executed it perfectly. The No. 20 Home Depot Toyota was out front and looking good until the last pit stop. But, you guessed it, he got caught speeding off pit road. Stewart went one lap down with the penalty and finished 35th knocking him down to 12th in the points--only ten points ahead of 14th. Ouch! I bet those cabinets in his hauler were taking a beating again after the race.
4. Clint Bowyer- Driving too aggressively, Bowyer got loose under the No. 15 and lost his No. 07 Jack Daniels Chevrolet on lap 80. He got tagged by Juan PabloMontoya, who had no where to go, and slammed into the inside wall. Bowyer finished 39th and fell three spots in the points to 11th. I have a bad feeling the only thing he is going to be “chasing” this year is Jack Daniel's.
5. Open Wheelers- PatrickCarpantier and SamHornish, Jr. practiced beautifully choreographed spins together as they took turns knocking each other around, bringing out two separate cautions in the process. Dario Franchitti, who returned to Cup competition after breaking his ankle at Talladega, fought for “the patch” with David Gilliland, lost and then backed it into the wall on lap 130, racking up his own two cautions. Too many spins on the triangle left our open wheel friends 32nd, 42nd, 41st respectively.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. Kyle Busch – Rowdy was the first non-Roush-Fenway driver to lead multiple green flag laps at Dover and when he did on lap 236 he said “buh-bye” to the rest of the field and cruised again into Victory Lane. He continues to be the most exciting driver on the track and showed he is listening to feedback--his post race interview was polished. Take another bow, Kyle!
2. Roush Fenway Racing – Had all five drivers finish in the top 15 and had several moments of the most domination during the race on Sunday. Greg Biffle led the most laps of the race, but had an alternator problem that left him third. However, he made the biggest jump in points to sixth. Carl Edwards dominated the middle of the race, and despite some entertaining hand gestures, he couldn’t quite catch Rowdy at the end. Matt Kenseth had hisbest run of the year as he finished fourth and is up to 16th in points. JamieMcMurray qualified fifth and kept his car up front most of the day to finish 10th. David Ragan rounded out the bunch,continuing his solid string of finishes as he came home 15th.
3. Jeff Gordon- Team DuPont showed why they are champions as they made big changes and dialed in the No. 24 Chevrolet to finish a solid fifth. Big Daddy had the most consistent Hendrick Motorsports car on Sunday and made the smart call to stay out on track to get those 5 bonus points for leading a lap when they knew they had nothing for the race leaders. Gordon vaults up four spots to sixth in the points.
4. Martin Truex, Jr. – The reigning race winner started 20th and fought an ill-handling race car much of the race. He managed to stay on the lead lap and was the only Dale Earnhardt, Inc. driver to finish in the top 20. Truex was the last car on lead lap as he finished sixth and is only 83 points out of 12th.
5. Dave Blaney- The driver of the No.22 Caterpillar Toyota was in the top 10 all day long and kept it there to finish ninth. Blaney moved up four spots to 31st in the point standings and is now solidly in the show without having to qualify on time. I will say it again--a Toyota other than Gibbs will get to Victory Lane this year.
NOT
1. The Race – Half of the top 12 drivers in the championship were wrecked on lap 17, leaving Roush and Rowdy to battle it out up front without any drama whatsoever. Long green flag racing and dominant cars left only six cars on the lead lap at the finish. Worse, most of the passing that took place up front was the leader putting cars a lap down and not cars battling for position. BORING!! NASCAR had better do something to help this car get racy and adjustable because it has become a game of track position and follow the leader—and that is not racing.
2. Elliott Sadler – The driver of the No. 19 Best Buy Dodge came down on David Gilliland on lap 17, spinning himself into the wall and caused Dover’s “big one” that ended up involving a total of 11 cars. Sadler got T-boned by Tony Stewart and hit hard from behind by Denny Hamlin. Three wrecks in four weeks, for Sadler’s sake, lets hope bad things come in threes.
3. Denny Hamlin- Apparently Denny forgot where the brake pedal was on the No. 11 FedEx Toyota as he came flying around turn 2 and drove right into the back of Elliott Sadler without slowing during the lap 17 wreck. Hamlin said he couldn’t get the car to stop, but I am not sure he even tried. Hamlin finished 43rd and took a huge hit in points falling five spots from fourth to eighth.
4. The Demolished - Tony Stewart, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., and Kevin Harvick, all had major damage from the lap 17 wreck and drove around the rest of the race with beat-up race cars logging laps for points. They all finished in the back of the pack and only Junebug kept his spot in the point standings (third). Smoke and Happy both dropped three spots to 11th and 10th respectively.
5. Clint Bowyer- Was involved in the lap 17 wreck and had brake problems, yet he was able to make it all the way back up into the top 10 before he cut a tire and then he went several laps down with a broken right front shock absorber. His 36th place finish dropped him three places in the point standings to eighth. That is two bad races in a row—time to step it up.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. Kasey Kahne – Lowe’s Motor Speedway is now Kahne’s house as he became only the sixth driver ever to win the All-Star Race and the 600 back to back. Kahne methodically worked his way through the long race and had his No. 9 Budweiser Dodge up front to take advantage of Tony Stewart’s mishap with two laps to go. He climbed two spots to 12th in the point standings and got a celebratory bath from his Gillett Evernham Motorsports teammate, Elliott Sadler, who also had a good run finishing eighth.
2. Kyle Busch- Once again, Rowdy proved he has matured by battling through handling problems that put him a lap down mid-race and he didn’t need no stinkin’ free pass to get back on the lead lap either, he got it back the hard way. Busch also battled a bad battery but brought his No. 18 M&M’s Toyota right back to the front to finish third. The candy man won the Nationwide race the night before to make that a grueling 900 laps this weekend--your points leader is driving like a champ.
3. Gas Gamblers – Jeff Gordon knew his No. 24 Dupont Chevrolet was a 10th place car at best as he was mired one lap down most of the race. He gambled on fuel and it paid off with a fourth place finish and Big Daddy maintained his10th-place spot in the points. His teammate Dale Earnhardt, Jr. looked to finally win as he led the most laps on Sunday but blew a tire, smacked the wall, and got a “no-call” gift from NASCAR that allowed him to hang around and play the fuel mileage game as well. Junebug finished fifth with a beat-up National Guard car and retained his third place spot in the standings. Sometimes it pays to be lucky, good, and the favored son.
4. Greg Biffle- Seemed destined to have a frustrating night as he nearly lost his No. 16 DISH Network Ford with a flat tire, then lost a lap after having to stop when a ¾-ounce wheel weight came off the right front. Add to those headaches, he had to use Denny Hamlin’s race car to #### debris off his grill to avoid overheating and later feared he had yet another loose wheel. Good thing this race was 600 miles because the Biff needed every one of them to get this second-place finish. Always the bridesmaid—and to the same bride!
5. David Reutimann- Maybe some of Big Brown’s speed is rubbing off on the No. 44 UPS team as Reutimann got a solid 10th-place finish on Sunday night. It was his best finish ever in his Cup career. All of the Toyota teams had moments of brilliance during the Coca Cola 600 and with runs like this, a Toyota other than one owned by Joe Gibbs Racing will find Victory Lane.
NOT
1. Tony Stewart – Smoke worked hard to stay on the lead lap while he waited for the sun to go down so he could get his car to turn. He amused himself by beating up on Juan Pablo Montoya and by bringing the field to the green WAY too slow on lap 305, causing the drivers behind him to stack up and wreck. The No. 20 Home Depot Toyota was a lock to win until he blew a right front tire with two laps to go and ended up one lap down in 18th. Karma?
2. Jimmie Johnson- Chad Knaus said he took the speed out of the No. 48 Lowe’s machine to get it to drive better and J.J. was up front at the 500 mile marker. Unfortunately, not only did they give up speed, but the motor also gave up with 49 laps to go and Johnson ended up with a 39th place finish and fell three spots to ninth in the points. Teammate Casey Mears, the defending race winner, did not even get a mention the entire broadcast--I am not sure which is worse.
3. Leading- The Beast of the Southeast had it in for the leaders during the Coca Cola 600. Kurt Busch, Brian Vickers, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. and Tony Stewart were all out front when they blew tires or broke wheels and smacked into those SAFER Barriers, eliminating their chances to win despite having dominant cars. Perhaps the track itself was angry at the loss of its favored leader, Humpy Wheeler, and got some payback…stranger things have happened.
4. Brian Vickers- The No. 83 Red Bull Toyota was racy early as Vickers led 61 laps. Unfortunately, his All-Star pit crew didn’t get those lugs tight and he lost his entire left rear wheel and hit the wall hard. The wheel was hit by David Gilliland and took a scary ride over the infield fence into a camper. Luckily, no one was injured. His 42nd place finish dropped him three spots in the standings to 20th.
5.Clint Bowyer – The No. 07 Jack Daniel’s Chevrolet had a horrible qualifying run, bad practices, and was on pit road by lap 19 with an overheating problem. Bowyer went down several laps early and was never a factor in the Coca-Cola 600. Bowyer and crew need to step it up to stay in the race for the Chase or Cinderella won’t be returning to the ball this season.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
All of NASCAR’s All-Stars are hot, so I bring you a special edition of Hot or Not this week…HOT or HOTTER to honor the sport’s superstars.
HOT
1. AJ Allmendinger – The Sprint Showdown winner raced his way into the All- Star Race, but not without controversy. The Red Bull racer took out Elliott Sadler early in the Showdown but surprisingly held on for the win in his first “victory” in NASCAR.
2. Jimmie Johnson- Came home fourth in the All-Star Race thanks to a gutsy call by Chad Knaus to “stop and go” during the final pit stop of the night. But it was his highly entertaining performance in the Burnout Challenge that makes him hot this week. Jimmie showed his raucous side as he smoked and skidded his way to the most penalties in the event and he tried to take out as many cones as possible. Give me more of that guy on the track!
3. Dale Earnhardt Jr.- Many were hoping Dale Jr. would continue his domination of non-point races this season but alas, it was not to be. He did lead several times throughout the All-Star event and finished a respectable eighth, but that is not what gets him on this list either—it was his ultra-cool silver and black special paint scheme, a-la the “grey ghost” driven by Buddy Baker. The No. 88 looked sweet under the lights and will probably make Junior a million in die cast sales alone.
4. Dale Jarrett- Finally got the chance to race the truck, and with tears in his eyes, the classy veteran took the green flag for the last time Saturday night. DJ has hung up his keys and heads now to the broadcast booth. Signed, Sealed and Delivered. Best of luck in your new career DJ!
5. The No. 83 Red Bull Pit Crew- Ben, Jake, Brian, Aaron, Daniel, Shaun, Mike, Doug, & Greg won the Pit Crew Challenge with an impressive time, just edging out the FedEx pit crew in an all Toyota finish on Thursday. The pit crews rarely get the props they deserve so big kudos to all of the teams for a job well-done all season long.
HOTTER
1. Kasey Kahne – Kahne did not race his way into the All-Star Race, but the fans had his back and voted him in Saturday night. Apparently, those hot dance moves were worth a Million as he was the first driver ever to win the fan vote and the race. The cash is for Kahne, but this BUD is for all of you!
2. Kyle Busch- Grabbed the All-Star Race pole with a couple of smokin’ qualifying laps and a pit stop that was equally impressive. He looked to continue his winning ways as he blew the field away in the first segment, but those Joe Gibbs engines were just too hot and it blew by the half way point…to Junior Nation’s delight. Unfortunately, much of the night’s excitement left with Rowdy.
3. Greg Biffle- Won the new All-Star Weekend fun feature, The Burnout Challenge, and will use his $10,000 in winnings to fund no-kill animal shelters. The Biff had one of the dominant cars as he won the third segment of the All-Star Race Saturday night and was the only one within striking distance of the winner at the end.
4.Carl Edwards- Humpy Wheeler picked Edwards to win the big show this weekend, and he was an early favorite. The driver of the No. 99 won the second segment of the All-Star Race and expressed disappointment that he wouldn’t be able to beat Rowdy on the track. Unfortunately, his Office Depot team failed to keep up with the changing track and he wasn’t even a factor at the end as he finished tenth.
5. Sam Hornish Jr – Transferred into the All-Star event by finishing second in the Sprint Showdown by racing like a champ--fast and smart--and saving his stuff for the feature race. Hornish arguably put on the best show of the night as he strutted his ‘yawed out’ rear end and came from 2 laps down to finish seventh. Not to shabby for a rookie!
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. Kyle Busch – Rowdy just cannot be stopped. Not by angry Junior Nation, glowing brake rotors, the most “pathetic race car”, bad glue on the lug nuts resulting in bad pit stops and especially not by the wall! He came from 23rd to take the lead for good on lap 304 despite many of the drivers saying it was “impossible to pass” at Darlington. He led the most laps on his way to victory and extended his points lead. He is Hot. Period.
2. Roush Fenway Racing- Carl Edwards came from 36th to finish second Saturday at Darlington, David Ragan finished fifth and broke into the Top 12 in points for the first time ever. Finally, Matt Kenseth had a good run and came home sixth and Jamie McMurray, one of the few without a Darlington stripe, brought it home 11th. They all reported front end vibrations but they must have been good, good, good…good vibrations!
3. Half of Hendrick Motorsports- Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. bothled laps and struggled with tight race cars, but used good pit strategy and clean racing to finish third and fourth, respectively. Junior retained third place in the point standings while Gordon moved to 10th overall. Both drivers were clearly frustrated with top-five finishes and that is a good sign for fans of the No. 24 and No. 88. Can they revert The Chase strategy again and get the Championship with consistency alone? Stay tuned...
4. Travis Kvapil- Racing a retro No. 28 LaFayette Ford paint scheme made famous by Fred Lorenzen in the 1960’s, Kvapil kept it up front Saturday, got his Darlington stripe, and finished an impressive eighth. This talented young driver is less than 100 points out of 12th in the standings and the lone hope for Yates Racing.
5. Dave Blaney- The driver of the No. 22 Caterpillar Toyota missed the Talladega Cup race just 2 weeks ago, had a strong top 20 run last weekend at Richmond and improved even more as he finished in the top 10 under the lights at Darlington. With weekly improvements like these, he might just pull it into Victory Lane one of these races.
NOT
1. Elliott Sadler – Took out fan favorite Tony Stewart on lap 2with an uncharacteristic rookie mistake, but at least he took responsibility for it. Sadler finished 42nd and is mired way back in 28th in the point standings. His McDonald’s sponsor can’t be loving it.
2. GregBiffle – The record-breaking polesitter led early and even went for a long, exciting slide thanks to Kyle Busch—leading him to predict that Shrub wouldn’t be there in the end. Alas, it was Biffle who wouldn’t make it all the way as his engine expired on lap 235. He finished the day in last place, the only Roush Fenway driver to not finish in the top 12 at Darlington.
3. Part of Penske- Ryan Newman had pit road problems all night. First, a tire violation, then he missed pit road, and finally, got nailed by Brian Vickers entering pit road. He finished 37th and fell out of the Top 12 in points. Sam Hornish Jr. got heavy right side damage on lap 12 after he blew a right front tire. He gave the Lady in Black more kisses than any other driver out there and finished 38th. One bright spot – Kurt Busch was the highest finishing Dodge on Saturday (12th ).
4.Kyle Petty – No argument here that Kyle Petty is the most charitable driver in NASCAR, but he is quickly becoming a charity case in the races. On Saturday night, Petty hit the wall on lap 9, was in the garage by lap 16, and finished 41st. He is well outside the Top 35 in points, and needs to take a good hard look at his decision to continue racing.
5. Kevin Harvick – Happy took one of the hardest licks on Saturday night as his No. 29 Shell Chevy snapped loose on lap 46, and he spent the rest of the race in and out of the garage to finish 39th. He dropped four spots in the standings to ninth and increased his winless streak to 46 races.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. Clint Bowyer- Took the lead in his No. 07 BB&T Chevy just before theyellow flag with two laps left in “regulation” and survived the green-white-checker finish score his second career Sprint Cup Series victory Saturday night at Richmond. As a result, Bowyer is up to fourth in the point standings and his Richard Childress Racing teammates are right there with him in the Top 5. Championship contenders? You can bank on it.
2. The Rivalry- Kyle Busch v. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. – With a breathtaking move, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kyle Busch split Denny Hamlin late in the race as they both caught a glimmer of hope for victory. Junior and Rowdy were racing hard and clean until one Big Mo’ with three laps to go when the No 18 slid into and turned the No 88 ending Junior’s hopes for a win and drawing the wrath of Jr. Nation. This rivalry is now boiling, look for payback, and remember that AMP and M&M’s don’t go all that well together.
3. Denny Hamlin- Was putting on a clinic at his hometown track Saturday night as he set a track record for most laps ever led at Richmond (381) until a slow leak in his right front tire ruined his night. Hamlin clearly tried for a caution to avoid going a lap down but NASCAR was hip to his plan and parked him for a two lap penalty. Hamlin finished 24th , but to dominate an impound race like he did was impressive. A nod must go to his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, Tony Stewart who quietly finished fourth.
4. Mark Martin- Driving the same No 8 Army Chevy he drove at Phoenix, Martin ran second much of the night and raced hard at the end to finish third. With the success he has been enjoying driving part time, I think Martin has paved the way for a new kind of “retirement” for drivers. Another nod must also go to his Dale Earnhardt Inc. teammate, Martin Truex, Jr. who had a strong run and finished fifth.
5.Jeff Gordon – Started dead last and was lapped early, but Gordon and his No 24 Dupont Chevy team showed tremendous perseverance throughout the night and ended up with a ninth place finish. Even with all his struggles this year, Gordon sits only six points out of 12th in the Sprint Cup standings. That is not a good sign for the competition.
NOT
1. Jimmie Johnson- The Sprint Cup Champion is still not in good form as he ran mid-pack most of the race, was lapped halfway through and then got wrecked “pretty damn bad” in the “big one” according to his crew chief, Chad Knaus. Johnson finished 10 laps down in 30th and fell two spots in the points to seventh. If this is the best they’ve got, there will be no three-peat.
2. Michael Waltrip – Spent much of the race kissing the outside wall until he finally knocked a screw loose, wrecked Casey Mears, and then proceeded to ram the No 5 car all the way down the backstretch in a fit of insanity. NASCAR parked Waltrip for the rest of the race. I would expect penalties and a trip to his anger management consultant later this week.
3. Patrick Carpentier – The former open-wheel star had a promising start from the fourth spot but couldn’t hang with the leaders. Carpentier was holding his own until he became the ping-pong ball portion of the wreck started by JJ Yeley on lap 230. Carpentier took several hard licks as he got hit on all sides but also had to put up with DW calling him “Pat”…if that’s not a bad day, I don’t know what is.
4.Kurt Busch – The No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge left the track on the back of a wrecker after more bad luck. Kurt Busch had worked his way up to 12th before getting caught in the “big wreck” resulting in his second DNF and falling to 24th in the point standings. Saturday’s finish had to Taste Awful and was certainly Less (ful) Filling.
5. Matt Kenseth – Another driver sorely in need of some good racing luck, Kenseth was also caught up in the “big wreck” Saturday night at Richmond. He avoided a DNF but ended up 65 laps down in 38th and fell to 22nd in points. Now that Robbie Reiser got Carl Edwards solidly in the Top 12 its time to come save his little buddy.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. KyleBusch- Even Rowdy thought he was out of it early in the Aaron's 499 as he radioed, "We are in trouble." That was way before he missed his pit stall and went one lap down thanks to a block on pit road by teammate Denny Hamlin. Busch still had to tangle with Jamie McMurray in a 200 mph grudge match before he finally took the lead with 10 to go and never looked back until he got one sweet victory.
2. Denny Hamlin – The most aggressive driver on Sunday, Denny Hamlin spent most of the day teaming up and pushing his competitors to the lead in a brilliant show of "co-opitition." The driver of the No 11 FedEx Toyota did, however, annoy his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch on several occasions and made a bad move at the end. Still, he finished third and moved up two spots in the point standings to fourth with his performance.
3.Juan Pablo Montoya- The former Formula One driver had a "Juanderful" day with new crew chief, Jimmy Elledge, as they adjusted his No. 42 Juicy Fruit Dodge throughout the race and got it best at the end. Montoya raced clean, chewing up his rivals and spitting them out to finish second. He moved into the coveted 12th spot in the standings and was named a beautiful person in People en Espanol's Top 50. Caliente!
4. David Ragan – Continues to make a name for himself at Roush Fenway Racing as he kept his No. 6 AAA Ford up front all day long and finished an impressive fourth. He is up to 15th in the point standings and didn't even need to call on his sponsor to fix up a broken car.
5. The Car- After the über-boring COT debut at Talladega Superspeedway last October which showcased follow-the-leader racing, I was very worried Sunday was going to be no different. Thankfully, I was thrilled by how racy the car was, allowing for two-, three- and often times four-wide racing safely. The car also seemed to be easier to get control of when it did get bent out of shape – allowing for several big wrecks to be avoided. Clearly the best new maneuver is the two car draft breakaway that could blow by the rest of the field. As Dale Earnhardt Jr. said "Rude!" but in a good way...
NOT
1. Unhappy Cambers- Roush Fenway Racing teammates Matt Kenseth and Carl Edwards both had too much camber in the right front causing them both to blow tires and wreck. Kenseth ended up 38 laps down in 41st place while Edwards, who incurred his second hard lick in two days, finished 40th.
2. Dale Earnhardt Jr. – The "Pied Piper" of Talladega Superspeedway has now gone two full years since winning a points race to the dismay of Junior Nation. While he looked poised to contend for the win Sunday, Dale Jr. got sloppy and had a hand in both of the "big wrecks" late in the race, damaging his own car in the process. Earnhardt did manage to finish 10th and remains third in points, but definitely did not live up to the AMP'ed up hype late in the 188-lap event.
3. Tony Stewart – Tony Stewart had probably the strongest Toyota in the field Sunday as he led the most laps at Talladega, but a cut right front tire on his No. 20 Home Depot Toyota brought out the third caution. Later, Stewart battled back and tried a "Digger" impersonation during the "mini-big one," but his hole closed squeezing him into several other cars and sending him to the garage with a 38th place finish. Watching his teammates finish well has to irritate the veteran and may be more ammo to leave Joe Gibbs Racing at the end of his contract...
4.Kurt Busch- The No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge lost the draft early and ran one lap down much of the race. Busch finally got back on the lead lap courtesy of the "Lucky Dog" and was running with the leaders when he ended up wrecked with no where to go 15 laps from the finish. With a frustrating 39th place finish, Busch fell four spots to 20th in the point standings. This Penske team needs it to be Miller Time real soon.
5. JeffBurton’s Pit Crew – First, the Sprint Cup Series points leader was sent to the back at the start of the race for a wiring problem. Then, several of his crew were hit by the No. 9 Bud car because they were standing in Kasey Kahne's pit stall during pit stops! Finally, his gasman didn't get the fuel tank full during one of the pit stops, causing Burton to have to return for service early. The driver of the No. 31 A####mp;T Chevrolet was hampered by his pit crew's mistakes but overcame them to finish 12th, allowing him to barely hang onto the points lead. The crew needs to put down those iPhones and pay attention!
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
This edition of Hot or Not is coming to you live from the pits courtesy of the Miller Lite Racing team! A special thank you goes out to the #2 Brew Crew for hosting me again this weekend.
HOT
1. JimmieJohnson- A contender all night long who made the call himself to stay out and gamble on gas as he coasted all the way to Victory Lane. The Lowes team is finally firing on all cylinders and might be on the verge of getting hotter than a jalapeno.
2. Richard Childress Racing – Jeff Burton started 39th and was collected in Newman’s oil spill but still managed to stay on the lead lap. He and teammate Clint Bowyer both gambled on fuel and hit pay dirt with a second place finish for the No. 07 team and another sixth place finish for the No. 31 team as they leave the desert still leading the points.
3. Carl Edwards – Raced early for the lead but got caught a lap down mid-race and had a pit road violation when his team jumped off the wall too soon- they must have seen a rattlesnake! Edwards was back in the Top 10 with 50 laps to go and brought it home an impressive fourth…told ya he would be riding high into the sunset.
4. Mark Martin – The wily veteran did his best roadrunner impression when he took the lead on lap 272 and looked to be in position to win but ended up fifth because they were one lapshort on fuel. Beep, Beep!
5. Dale Earnhardt Jr. – Jr. led throughout and looked poised to finally end his winless streak but a tight race car and the need for fuel left him with a 7th place finish. Jr. Nation looked like leapin’ lizards in the stands as he raced his old No. 8 car late in the running of the Subway Fit 500 and provided some of the most exciting racing on Saturday night.
NOT
1. Matt Kenseth – Went one lap down 37 laps into the race and 5 laps later smacked the wall causing serious damage to the right front suspension. The No. 17 DeWalt team missed the set up big time and Kenseth’s 300th start was snake bit.
2. Ryan Newman – The pole sitter went from first to worst (43rd) during the 312 lap Sprint Cup race Saturday night. They could have filled the Grand Canyon with all the oil that spilled out of the No. 12 Alltel Dodge when Newman’s engine blew on lap 133. Newman fell two more spots to 12th in the point standings.
3. Gillette Evernham Motorsports – The Valley of the Sun wasn’t much fun for GEM. Elliott Sadler’s day started off promising from the outside pole but a blown engine gave him a 41st place finish. His teammate Kasey Kahne fought a loose race car all day and brought out the 8th caution after he blew a tire, slapped the wall, and eventually finished 36th.
4. Joe Nemechek – Front Row Joe managed to qualify but didn’t race much as he blew a right front tire early and finished 40th. The Furniture Row racing team is way outside the Top 35 in points and is feeling the heat….but at least it’s a dry heat!
5. Dodge- Of the eleven Dodge machines in the race, only Bobby Labonte finished inside the Top 15 on Saturday night. Nine Dodges finished 20th or worse and three of those were in positions 41-43. The manufacturers teams combined to experience two engine failures in cars that started on the front row, a brake problem and several wrecks. Dodge started the year winning the Daytona 500 but they seem to be the weakest manufacturer in NASCAR now, even though they had two cars on the front row at Phoenix International Raceway. Let’s hope as Dodge leaves Phoenix, they too can rise from the ashes.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
Mysteriously one of my NOT awards has gone missing from this weekend's Subway Fit 500 Hot or Not article...luckily I have the original copy! LOL Here's what you would have missed...
FOX – The network’s commitment to show the end of the Yankee’s v. Red Sox’s game making NASCAR fans sit through endless foul balls and missing the promised green flag had fans howling like a pack of rabid coyotes. Yet more evidence the broadcasts need to use split screen technology on race day.
Stay tuned Tuesday morning for the rest of Hot or Not from Phoenix!
1. CarlEdwards- The “King of the Road” on 1.5 mile tracks, Edwards dominated the Texas race weekend to get his third victory of the season and his second win at Texas. He is back in the Top 10 in points and will be riding high into the sunset next week at Phoenix.
2. JimmieJohnson- Unbelievably was the only Hendrick car to finish on lead lap at Texas. Johnson made some great moves and drove confidently but couldn’t lasso in the leader at the end. His second-place finish moved him up four spots to sixth in the point standings. Yeehaw!
3. JoeGibbs Racing – Kyle Busch (3rd), Denny Hamlin (5th), and Tony Stewart (7th) did the Texas two-step all over the competition on Sunday as they continue to be one of the most consistent teams on the track. If they keep it up, Toyota just might have a championship this year.
4. Jeff Burton – The championship leader qualified 35th but was impressive as he worked his way through the herd to finish sixth in Sunday’s Cup race. This cowboy is always a good bet to strut his stuff at Texas.
5. MichaelMcDowell – McDowell tested the theory that everything is bigger in Texas as he went for a wild ride on Friday in his Aarons Dream Machine in what some call NASCAR’s biggest wreck. The Michael Waltrip Racing rookie climbed out with no serious injuries and went on to finish 33rd on Sunday. The fact that he was able to race at all gets him on the Hot List.
NOT
1. Jeff Gordon- Missed the setup from the get-go and was lapped early. Then Big Daddy spun himself and turned the race into a test session for the no. 24 DuPont Crew. Gordon has finished 43rd only twice in his entire racing career and they were both at Texas. Want some friendly advice Jeff? Don’t mess with Texas.
2. Kasey Kahne- Budweiser did not strike oil this week with the amount of airtime they got at Texas. Kahne’s performance barely warranted mention as he finished an unimpressive 25th and fell five spots in points to 12th.
3. J.J. Yeley – The no. 96 DLP Toyota brought out the fourth caution with a hard lick to the inside wall. With his 42nd place finish on Sunday, Yeley is dangerously close to falling out of the Top 35 in owners points. Time to play a little Texas Hold ‘Em.
4. Greg Biffle- Biffle simply couldn’t compete with Roush Fenway Racing teammates Carl Edwards or Matt Kenseth, but had a decent car until an engine problem hog tied him. The Biff finished 39th on Sunday and fell six spots in the point standings to ninth. Better Giddy-up!
5. Petty Enterprises – Kyle Petty actually said he would drive for another team after he was replaced by Chad McCumbee for the Texas weekend and then no. 45 didn’t even make the race. Bobby Labonte, who finished 20th on Sunday, is mulling over a lifetime contract with Petty but Richard Childress Racing stole his primary sponsor and might steal him away, too. Soon, Richard Petty could be all hat and no cattle.
My weekly picks are dedicated to the memory of Cindi Redding who was respected and loved by all who knew her, especially her friends in the FOXSports.com community.
1. DennyHamlin- The Virginia native led the first lap and, more importantly, the last lap. Hamlin overcame a miscommunication mid-race in the pits and gave Toyota Sprint Cup victory number two. Wonder how much FedEx is going to charge him to ship that grandfather clock home?
2. Hendrick Motorsports- Early on it looked like Team Hendrick would dominate as Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jimmie Johnson all took turns leading with Casey Mears playing wing man. Much of the race they were running nose to tail inside the Top 10 but pit strategy, adjustments, and a few minor setbacks ultimately took its toll. They all had Top 10 finishes and are moving up in the points but it is AMP that’s driving this camp.
3. JeffBurton- The veteran was involved in an early mishap on pit road with Matt Kenseth but was persistent and ran a smart race. He stayed out late for track position and held on for a 3rd place finish. The new points leader took his leadership role seriously and had some strong words for rookie Michael McDowell about respect after the race. Sing it Aretha!