Monday, October 28, 2013

Updated LVH odds to win 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup following Martinsville

No wins on 1.5-mile tracks and 2 to go, yet JJ is -140 favorite to win Chase
2013 SPRINT CUP CHAMPIONSHIP 

JIMMIE JOHNSON 5-7
KYLE BUSCH 30
KASEY KAHNE xxxx
MATT KENSETH 11-10
JEFF GORDON 12
CLINT BOWYER 200
GREG BIFFLE 200
CARL EDWARDS 500
DALE EARNHARDT JR 200
KEVIN HARVICK 12
JOEY LOGANO 1000
RYAN NEWMAN xxxx
KURT BUSCH 500

Jeff Gordon takes Martinsville for eighth time, his first win of season


Jeff Gordon wins his eighth career race at Martinsville, and first win of the season 
                    Martinsville Results

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Harvick on Dillon Brothers: "They've had everything fed to them with a spoon"

Love it when Kevin Harvick rolls out some nice quotes
Kevin Harvick's impending departure from Richard Childress Racing has been amicable. Emphasis on the past tense, please. Because it's not in the present tense any longer.

Harvick, who was racing in Saturday's Camping World Truck Series race, crashed with Ty Dillon with 11 laps to go after the two made contact. Dillon is Childress's grandson and drives for RCR in the Truck Series. RCR is the only Sprint Cup Series team that Harvick has driven for until next season, when he'll be with Stewart-Haas Racing.

After the crash, Harvick, who was driving for NTS Motorsports Saturday, stopped in Dillon's pit stall, where he was confronted by Dillon's crew -- and even had a sledgehammer thrown at his truck. Then, when he climbed from his battered truck in the garage, he had this to say:

“(Dillon) just dumped me," Harvick said. "Exactly the reason why I’m leaving RCR because you’ve got those kids coming up and they’ve got no respect for what they do in this sport and they’ve had everything fed to them with a spoon."

"So, I cut him slack all day and, you know, he just dive-bombs me in there, dumps me. I’ve got to thank all these Anderson Syrup guys for everything that they do (Harvick's race sponsor). It’s a shame you’ve got to get taken out by some rich kid like that.”

Read More Here....Yahoo! Sports

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Updated LVH Martinsville Odds: Johnson lowered to 8/5

Danica Patrick is 2,000/1 to win this week; her boyfriend is 300/1
GOODY'S HEADACHE RELIEF SHOT 500
MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2013


JIMMIE JOHNSON 8-5
MATT KENSETH 8
KYLE BUSCH 5
KASEY KAHNE 12
DENNY HAMLIN 12
JEFF GORDON 5
KEVIN HARVICK 12
BRAD KESELOWSKI 18
KURT BUSCH 40
MARTIN TRUEX JR 40
CLINT BOWYER 12
DALE EARNHARDT JR 12
CARL EDWARDS 50
JOEY LOGANO 30
GREG BIFFLE 100
RYAN NEWMAN 60
JAMIE McMURRAY 60
JUAN MONTOYA 100
JEFF BURTON 100
MARK MARTIN 300
PAUL MENARD 300
RICKY STENHOUSE JR 300
ELLIOTT SADLER 500
ARIC ALMIROLA 300
MARCOS AMBROSE 500
KYLE LARSON 1000
DANICA PATRICK 2000
FIELD 1000

Martinsville Practice Notes: Kenseth Showed More Speed than Johnson

 Kenseth  faster than Johnson in all practices 
Joey Logano and Dale Earnhardt Jr were fastest in the Saturday’s final two practice sessions at Martinsville Speedway in preparation for Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500, but perhaps the most amazing revelation from all was that Matt Kenseth was faster than point leader Jimmie Johnson in all three sessions.

It’s not unusual for Kenseth to be faster than Johnson at several other tracks on the Sprint Cup circuit, but at Martinsville, that is a pretty big deal. This was supposed to be a track Johnson put some distance between the 4-point gap he has over Kenseth in the Chase. Johnson came into this race the with the lightest odds (9/5) in Las Vegas seen on a favorite in any race this season.

Kenseth did lead 96 laps in the spring Martinsville race, won by Johnson, but has only three top-5 finishes in 27 career starts. It’s safe to say this isn't one of Kenseth’s favorite tracks. But it looks like he and his Joe Gibbs Racing team have their best opportunity to not only compete with Johnson, but actually win.

The only timed segment on Friday and Saturday that Kenseth wasn’t faster than Johnson was during qualifying where Johnson will start second on the front row, just ahead of Kenseth who will start fourth. Kenseth will not only have to battle his past Martinsville skeletons, along with having the pressure of only four Chase races remaining, but he’ll also have Johnson’s eight grandfather clock trophies looming.

Johnson has won the past two Martinsville races, and is using the same chassis from the spring race this week. His eight career wins and 5.3 average finish in 23 starts at the flat half-mile track puts him in an entire other category of drivers dominating at specific track. At Martinsville, he is NASCAR’s equivalent of Alabama football in a home game at Tuscaloosa, and Kenseth would be Arkansas.

They still have to race the race and anything can happen, but the larger than life image of Johnson at Martinsville is a daunting task for anyone to tackle, especially for a driver with Kenseth’s track resume.

After Friday’s practice and qualifying, it looked as though Denny Hamlin would be competing for his fifth Martinsville win. He was third fastest in the 90-minute practice and then set a track record in qualifying to gain the pole. But then Saturday came around, and he wasn’t so fast anymore. His JGR teammates, Kyle Busch and Kenseth remained quick, but Hamlin slid to 28th fastest in the early session and then 17th in happy hour.

Hamlin is still a live play for Sunday, but when looking at those speeds from Saturday, you start thinking about how this season has gone and him not having a top-5 finish in his past 20 races. There is still doubt with Hamlin despite this being his favorite track and being from Virginia.

Earnhardt Jr. had the fastest single lap and 10-consecutive lap average during happy hour, and is a candidate to win his first career race at Martinsville. The only problem in wagering on Junior, other than he doesn’t win anywhere lately, is that he’s too nice on the jumbled track. He’s had a few golden opportunities in the past at Martinsville where he either got bullied, or he didn’t want to do any bullying himself when it was warranted.

Clint Bowyer looks like he’s ready to take that next step and get his own Grandfather clock as well. He’s been very close over the past three events there and looked outstanding in all practices.

Read More Here.............Final Driver Ratings


The Battle at Martinsville: No. 1 vs No. 2

1 - Jimmie Johnson (No. 48 Lowe's Chevrolet)
· Season-to-Date Driver Rating: 108.2
2013 Rundown
· Five wins, 13 top fives, 20 top 10s; two poles
· Average finish of 11.5
· Led 20 races for 1,606 laps
Martinsville Speedway Outlook:
· Eight wins, 16 top fives, 20 top 10s; three poles
· Average finish of 5.3 in 23 races
· Series-best Average Running Position of 5.9
· Series-best Driver Rating of 123.8
· 889 Fastest Laps Run, second-most
· Series-best Average Green Flag Speed of 91.569 mph
· Series-high 7,849 Laps in the Top 15 (92.0%)
· 596 Quality Passes (passes of cars in the top 15 under green), second-most

2 - Matt Kenseth (No. 20 Dollar General Toyota)
· Season-to-Date Driver Rating: 110.2
2013 Rundown
· Seven wins, nine top fives, 17 top 10s; two poles
· Average finish of 12.7
· Led 23 races for 1,434 laps
Martinsville Speedway Outlook:
· Three top fives, eight top 10s
· Average finish of 15.8 in 27 races
· Average Running Position of 16.9, 16th-best
· Driver Rating of 80.5, 15th-best
· 904 Green Flag Passes, third-most
· 4,049 Laps in the Top 15 (47.4%), 13th-most

Martinsville Final Driver Ratings Following All Practice Sessions

Micah Roberts‘ Top-10 Driver Ratings
Goody’s Headache Relief Shots 500
Martinsville Superspeedway
Sunday, October 27, 2013 -  11:16 a.m. PT

Rating    Driver     Odds       Practice 1    Qualified   Practice 2    Practice 3

 1. Jimmie Johnson 9/5             11th             2nd              9th               6th 
Eight-time winner, including the last two; using same chassis he won with in the spring race.
 2. Clint Bowyer 12/1                   1st              5th              5th              2nd 
Career-best runner-up in spring race; best 10-consecutive lap average in practice 1.
 3. Kyle Busch 7/1                       2nd             3rd              2nd              4th 
Runner-up last fall and fifth in spring; best 10-consecutive lap average in practice 2.
 4. Jeff Gordon 6/1                      8th              9th             10th            10th 
Seven-time winner with 26 top-5 finishes and seventh-place average in 41 starts.
 5. Denny Hamlin 12/1                 3rd             1st              28th            17th
Four-time winner; would be rated higher, but hasn’t had a top-5 finish in past 20 races on season.
 6. Brad Keselowski 12/1             4th            11th             11th             8th 
Sixth-place last fall and in spring; had very good average speeds in final practices.
 7. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 18/1         19th           12th              3rd              1st 
Runner-up in 2008 and 2011; best 10-consecutive lap average in practice 3.
 8. Joey Logano 30/1                  12th             6th              1st               9th 
2010 runner-up, his only top-5 finish in nine starts; using Watkins Glen chassis.
 9. Kasey Kahne 10/1                 22nd           25th              7th              3rd 
2005 runner-up, third last fall and fourth in spring race; using same chassis from spring.
10. Matt Kenseth 10/1                  9th             4th               4th              5th
Only three top-5 finishes in 27 career starts, but led 96 laps in spring and practiced well.

Note: Johnson, Gordon and Hamlin have combined to win 15 of last 20 Martinsville races.

Odds courtesy of the LVH Super Book.

Micah Roberts, a former sports book director, has been setting NASCAR lines in Las Vegas since 1995. For more Roberts insights on the race, go to The Linemakers on SportingNews.com or follow on Twitter: MicahRoberts7. 



Friday, October 25, 2013

Denny Hamlin on pole at Martinsville with track record qualifying lap

Hamlin sets track record at Martinsville, grabs pole in sweet purple scheme 
MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Points leader Jimmie Johnson will start on the front row Sunday at Martinsville Speedway, but he will have top challenger Matt Kenseth right behind him.

Denny Hamlin won the pole for Sunday's Sprint Cup race with an average speed of 99.595 mph, but Johnson, an eight-time winner at Martinsville, qualified second. Johnson and Kyle Busch tied for second with a speed of 99.344 mph but Johnson gets the second spot based on points.

Busch, who is tied for third in the Chase, will start third, followed by Kenseth, Clint Bowyer, Joey Logano, Jamie McMurray, David Ragan, Jeff Gordon and Kevin Harvick. Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski was 11th and Dale Earnhardt Jr. 12th.

Danica Patrick, who wrecked in practice, qualified 41st in a backup car.

Johnson enters the race with a four-point lead on Kenseth with four races remaining, while Busch and Harvick are 26 points back.

Johnson said it's no surprise that the top Chase drivers qualified up front again.

"Year after year, the guys racing for the championship continue to rise up," Johnson said. "It's pretty cool that everybody rises up like that, but it makes for some stressful nights."

Hamlin, who has had a miserable season after suffering a broken vertebra in his back earlier this year, has four career victories at Martinsville and vowed earlier in the day that he plans to contend for the win Sunday.

"Anytime we qualify on the pole, it usually bodes well for us on Sunday," Hamlin said.

Hamlin has had a rash for mechanical problems, including engine failures in recent weeks, as his team has been experimenting while out of the Chase. Hamlin said he is not experimenting this weekend, but going for his first win of the season. All three Joe Gibbs Racing drivers qualified in the top five.

"All three cars being in the top five is a good sign," Hamlin said. "Our cars have had strong speed. If we have a mechanical failure this weekend, it's just a freak thing."

While Johnson, Kenseth and Busch will be trying to stay up front to protect their Chase positions, Hamlin will be going all out for the win.

"It is all working out nicely for us this weekend," he said. "This is our best shot to get a win. We have a race-winning car this weekend."

- Sporting News

Starting Lineup

Jimmie Johnson talks with media about Kenseth Friday morning at Martinsville

Johnson is 9/5 favorite to win for ninth time at Martinsville
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Martinsville Speedway and discussed racing at Martinsville, which driver and team he is focused on at this point in the Chase, the No. 48 Chevrolet SS team as closers and other topics.

FOUR RACES TO GO THIS RACE TRACK HAS BEEN VERY GOOD FOR YOU TALK ABOUT AND JUST TALK ABOUT YOUR OUTLOOK NOW YOU HAVE A FOUR POINT LEAD WITH FOUR RACES TO GO:
“Without a doubt it’s been a good race track for the No. 48 team. It doesn’t guarantee anything for this weekend’s race and we have to go out and get everything we can in this first practice session and then try to get our best two laps possible for qualifying. We all know how important that first pit stall is and it can make life so much easier come Sunday afternoon. Very happy to be here, the week was a comfortable week, one from having a decent finish at Talladega and taking the point’s lead. Then two rolling into a track that is historically really good for the No. 48. It’s been a good week, but again that doesn’t guarantee anything for the weekend. We have to go out here and get the job done and work hard.”

DOES IT SURPRISE YOU THAT MATT KENSETH SAID THAT THEY MIGHT AS WELL JUST PENCIL YOUR NAME IN ON THE TROPHY FOR SUNDAY?
“Yeah, I mean it’s flattering, I appreciate it, but there are four or five guys that really stand a chance each time we come here. I think the No. 24, No. 29 and the No. 18 has been knocking on the door. Matt (Kenseth) ran in the top-five, even led laps here in the spring. We have had a good run over the years. I understand where that comes from based on past history, but again it doesn’t guarantee anything for this weekend. At most it’s flattering, but we’ve got to go out there and get to work.”

HOW IS RACING MATT (KENSETH) NOW AT THIS POINT IN THE CHAMPIONSHIP HOW DOES IT COMPARE TO 2006 WHEN YOU GUYS WENT HEAD TO HEAD? HOW IS HE DIFFERENT? OR IS THIS THE SAME MATT KENSETH AS 2006? HE SAID HE TEXTED YOU THIS WEEK ASKING NOT TO ASK HIM FOR ADVICE THIS WEEK WHAT DID YOU THINK OF THAT?
“(Laughs) we have had a good banter texting back and forth. For a guy that can come across dry at times, as we all know in here, he is awfully funny. He asked me to not pester him and ask him for too many tips this weekend and a bunch of different things. Certainly having fun with Matt he’s a great guy and one awesome race car driver. We have all grown and changed a lot over the years. I think that especially racing Matt with the experience that he has he understands the big picture, how to race, when to race, what to do. I think his departure from Roush and then joining up at (Joe) Gibbs it’s filled in some weak spots that you would normally think that Matt would have. This track is a perfect example. I think his run in the spring was pretty darn strong. I think the relationship that he has with his team and his crew and his crew chief they are vibing pretty good. I’m not going to put my guard down here even though it is one of our better tracks. I look forward to a battle all the way to the last lap at Homestead with him. If we slip at all the No. 29 and the No. 24 and the No. 18 have shown they are not going away. We need to certainly worry about the No. 20, but also there are four or five cars we have to really pay attention to here. If Matt and I slip those guys are right back in it.”

WHEN YOU WERE THIRD IN POINTS YOU SAID YOU ONLY REALLY FOCUSED ON THE GUYS IN FRONT OF YOU. NOW YOU ARE FIRST WHAT IS YOUR FOCUS ON NOW?
“Really this weekend especially doing the best job that I can, in general that is really what I have done, Chad (Knaus, crew chief) has done and what we preach to our guys. If we put our blinders on and focus on the No. 48 and do our jobs we will be alright. That mentality definitely is there, but the first car I worry about right now is the No. 20. Then it kind of goes back from there with the points. I feel like (Jeff) Gordon and (Kevin) Harvick are going to be awfully tough this weekend. It’s a good track for them. I think the No. 29 was here and tested so that’s going to be helpful for those guys. It is going to be a good race. I think you are going to see the Chaser’s racing for the win.”

WHEN IT COMES TO FEAST OF FAMINE THIS PLACE SEEMS TO BE PRETTY EXTREME. IT SEEMS THAT GUYS EITHER DOMINATE OR STRUGGLE. WHY DO YOU THINK THAT IS HERE?
“It’s a track that we don’t run on anything like this. It’s the only paperclip out there for us to run on. I don’t know why the switch was flipped for me. I know how. I’ve said it a million times I was following Tony Stewart here as he came to lap me I think my sophomore season and something clicked. We came up and tested my rookie year a couple of times. Looked at data that Jeff (Gordon) was driving around the track and I couldn’t piece it together. There was something that finally clicked. I think once it clicks here for a driver it’s a place they always have. If it doesn’t it gets under your skin and aggravates you and continues to fester and create the flip side. You are happy and enjoy the place, you run well then the flip side is if you don’t and it festers you just have a tough time here and don’t like this place.”

IN THE PAST YOU HAVE TALKED SOME ABOUT RACING THE FIRST SEVEN RACES OF THE CHASE AND THEN REALLY WORRYING ABOUT WHOM YOU ARE RACING. IT SEEMS THAT YOU HAVE REALLY FOCUSED A LITTLE BIT ON (MATT) KENSETH A LOT THE LAST FEW WEEKS. ARE YOU MORE FOCUSED ON HIM THAN OTHER COMPETITORS IN THE PAST? IF (KEVIN) HARVICK WAS SECOND COULD YOU HAVE RAN 29 MILES YESTERDAY?
“I might have to slide a few miles in on the bike if it was (Kevin) Harvick (laughs). I don’t know I made 20 pretty well, but 29 that’s a whole other game. I am focused mostly on the No. 20. He’s been ahead of me, you know Talladega has been looming out there as we’ve all known. I didn’t want to put too much stock in just chasing the No. 20 until we got out of Talladega. But without a doubt that has been my focus. I was pretty frustrated after Charlotte. I was in front of him all day long and then when it finished up he was right there in front of me at the end of the race. My focus is on the No. 20 first and foremost, but again if we slip. I’m not sure at 25 back if Harvick heated up real good if there is enough time to really be concerned or (Jeff) Gordon or Kyle (Busch) is even a little further back yet.”

IS THIS ANY DIFFERENT THAN WHAT YOU’VE DONE IN THE PAST?
“No, I mean I guess maybe social media and other things allow people to see more of what goes on during the week, but I’ve always been focused on a particular guy when we get to the end of the year. One year it was Carl (Edwards), one year it was Denny (Hamlin) you certainly do draw focus. The later you go you focus in on one or two cars and drivers much more at that point. Yeah, especially as you wind down I will be much more focused on individuals.”

WE GO TO TEXAS NEXT WEEK. 2007 YOU AND MATT KENSETH PUT ON WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN THE GREATEST RACE OF THE LAST 10 YEARS. WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER ABOUT THAT AND DO YOU GUYS EVER TALK ABOUT THAT?
“I think about it. I don’t necessarily talk to Matt (Kenseth) about it. I’m not sure he’s thrilled with the results of how it turned out. We put on a heck of a show. I was just there testing and remembering that battle. I was inside of him for many laps. Both of us are sideways and just driving the wheels off the cars. From my standpoint I think it was an amazing race. I’m sure Matt would agree on most levels, but the results I think he would want differently. I just remember knowing that second would be okay, but that is just not in my DNA. We had an opportunity to win and I also had confidence in Matt that we would race. It wouldn’t cross that line and was able to push and put on a great show.”

HAVE YOU HAD A CHANCE TO TALK TO THE OTHER DRIVER’S ABOUT THE KIND OF ANTICLIMACTIC FINISH OF LAST WEEKEND’S RACE? SECONDLY DO YOU KIND OF EXPECT THAT SAME KIND OF CAUTIOUS RACING HERE OR DO YOU THINK WHEN YOU GUYS GET OUT THERE BOUNCING OFF EACH OTHER THAT WILL ALL GO OUT THE WINDOW?
“Any team member or driver I’ve seen this week they all ask the same question. Why wasn’t everybody racing? I don’t know. We had more side-by-side action on lap one, lap 100, on through than we did in the last few laps. I think everybody especially in the first five to 10 positions they were waiting for their opportunity. Waiting for someone to pull out and in anticipation no one made a move. I can’t quite explain it. I’m a little puzzled by it as well. It falls within that strategy mindset. Guys were trying to get their best finish. At Daytona you might make a run down the backstretch. At Talladega the finish line is out at the tri-oval a lot further away so if we made it to turn three, turn four, there would have been a lot going on at that point. But we crashed down the back and didn’t get that chance. For my sake I wish that we would have started racing earlier. I tried a couple of times tried to get the bottom line going and nobody wanted to. Then this weekend it’s a short track so all the cautious driving is going to go out the window. It’s a short track.”

WHAT DID YOU TEXT BACK TO MATT KENSETH WHEN HE ASKED YOU NOT TO ASK FOR ANY TIPS THIS WEEKEND?
“Let me pull out my phone. I will try to remember the exact dialogue. He just texted me again and said ‘be ready for the media center.’ He basically said ‘we are friends and all but he would appreciate me from refraining of asking too much advice or pointers about this weekend at Martinsville.’ He hopes that ‘I would understand and I’m not offended.’ I told him ‘I completely understand and wish I could offer him some help one of these days.’ Then it just went back and forth. Then he gave me the heads up what was going to happen in here (laughs).”

WHEN YOU WENT OUT ON YOUR RUN YESTERDAY DID YOU JUST HAPPEN TO RUN 20 MILES OR DID YOU HAVE THAT NUMBER IN MIND?
“No, for the last couple of weeks I’ve been building up. Last week I ran 17, the week before it was 15. 20 was the number my coach and I talked about it last week when we got to 17. As I got near the end of it I think my coach said 20 for the 20. That kind of planted the seed in my mind and helped me run strong at the end.”

INAUDIBLE:
“No, I have just been training hard and working hard on things. Running those longer distances and paying attention to your heart rate, I ran a conservative heart rate for the first 17 and then at the end started building my heart rate up. I had some left in the tank. I wasn’t sure what was going to happen, but ran home real strong. I was happy about that.”

WHEN IT COMES TO MATT KENSETH HOW MUCH DOES MAYBE KENTUCKY OR INSTANCES WHERE YOU KNOW IT’S NOT GOING TO BE OVER UNTIL THE END ARE YOU GOING TO KEEP THAT MORE IN MIND PERHAPS OVER THE NEXT FOUR RACES THAT HE IS NOT GOING TO GO AWAY EASILY?
“Yeah, for sure I don’t know how I can defend against it, but it is on my mind. Charlotte was another good example of it. I think he ran around the top-five, fifth, sixth, seventh somewhere throughout the night in that position. We were up there dominating the race and I started to think that we might pick up a couple of points on him. Then when the checkered fell he was one spot ahead of me. He is a great driver, great team, and there is no quit in those guys. It just means we need to be buttoned up until the end. It’s no secret that we have missed some opportunity throughout the year. The final laps of a race, restart situations, there have been a handful that have gotten away. At this point I can’t let that happen anymore.”

I DON’T THINK WHEN YOU WON YOUR FIRST CHAMPIONSHIP YOU WERE RUNNING 20 MILES. THE PHYSICAL FITNESS ASPECT OF THIS HAS THE PRESSURE OF GETTING OLDER RESULTED IN YOU LOOKING TO BE MORE PHYSICALLY FIT OR HAVE YOU JUST REALIZED THAT THE DEMANDS OF THIS JOB REQUIRE YOU TO BE IN BETTER PHYSICAL SHAPE?
“I have been in and out of different training routines and I would say really the last five years I have been focused and determined and on the right path with it all. This fascination with the endurance stuff it’s just build over the course of the last year as I got strong been able to compete in a few different events and put up good times. That kind of fueled the fire as well. Then for me mentally as I dedicated more time to it and found a way to manage racing life, personal life and the training side it’s been a very good thing for me mentally oddly enough. Sure there are physical benefits, but there is something in my mind where I feel accomplished, I feel I did all that I could that day to do my job and to be an athlete. I sleep well. I don’t sit up wondering about different things because I’m exhausted. It just generally feels good to get this work done and to have that behind me in the course of the day. There is a strong mental aspect to it that I have enjoyed. Also in the moment suffering on the bike or swimming or running or whatever it’s a similar mindset to driving the race car late in the race or an ill-handling race car, where it’s not fun, but you have to figure out how to get to the end as fast as you can. That mindset has been fun to kind of live during the week days and not only on the weekends.”

THIS WEEK CARL EDWARDS SAID THE NO. 48 GUYS ARE GREAT CLOSER IF THEY ARE AT THE TOP OF THE STANDINGS OR AT THE LEAD IN A RACE THEY ARE GOING TO FINISH IT. EVEN AT THE LAST TWO YEARS, THE LAST COUPLE OF RACES LAST YEAR YOU SURPRISED YOU STILL HAVE THAT REPUTATION IN THE GARAGE?
“Yeah, I mean last year didn’t buy us any stock in that. There have been some races this year late in the event where things have slipped way, but I think people know what our team is capable of. And through most opportunities we show that and we are able to get the job done. We are human and we do make mistakes. I make mistakes, the team does, stuff happens. I’m glad that at least Carl (Edwards) thinks that and hopefully we can live up to that and get the job done and continue to enforce that message.”

About Chevrolet:

Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 140 countries and selling more than 4.5 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature spirited performance, expressive design, and high quality. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

- Team Chevy

Martinsville suits Denny Hamlin's driving style

Hamlin is a 4-time winner at Martinsville
Event: Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500
Date/Time: Oct. 27/1:30 p.m. ET
2012 winner: Jimmie Johnson
2012 polesitter: Jimmie Johnson
Distance: 500 laps/263 miles
Track Length: 0.526-mile
Banking: 12 degrees
Track Shape: Oval


EXPRESS NOTES:

Special Scheme in Return to Martinsville:
Denny Hamlin will run a special #11 FedEx One Rate paint scheme in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway in his return to the half-mile track after missing the spring race due to a back injury. The flat purple paint scheme helps celebrate FedEx One Rate, a new flat-rate shipping option for FedEx Express customers that was introduced earlier this week. Hamlin is making his 16th career Cup Series start at Martinsville this weekend, arguably the 32-year-old Virginia native’s best track on the circuit, where he has recorded four wins and 12 top-10 finishes in 15 starts at the short, flat ‘paper clip.’ Hamlin has qualified on the pole twice at Martinsville and has led at least 12 laps in 10 races, including his last eight starts. Hamlin holds a 10.9 average starting position and 8.2 average finishing position at Martinsville, leading a total of 1,139 laps in his career. Mark Martin drove the #11 FedEx Toyota to a 10th-place finish filling in for Hamlin at Martinsville in April.

Talladega Recap: Hamlin finished 38th in Sunday’s NASCAR race at Talladega after a blown engine after 142 laps in the event won by Jamie McMurray. Hamlin ran among the leaders throughout the race on the high-banked, 2.66-mile track. Rain washed out qualifying and Hamlin started 15th, but quickly emerged as one of the strongest cars in the field. Few on-track incidents led to green flag pit stops for the majority of the race, and Hamlin stayed in the lead pack and was poised to challenge for the win before he felt the engine begin to let go on the backstretch. He coasted the car to the garage, where the team was forced to retire for the day.

FedEx Office – Closest to Martinsville Speedway: 3731 Battleground Ave., Greensboro, NC 27410, (336) 282-5650

Buffalo Ramp Along for the Ride in Martinsville: The FedEx Express center in Buffalo, N.Y. earned the company’s Ramp of the Year award for its commitment to operational excellence. For its efforts, the Ramp’s “BUFR” code letters will be on the b-post of the #11 FedEx One Rate Toyota this weekend at Martinsville Speedway.

FEDEX RACING CONVERSATION — DENNY HAMLIN:

What is your mindset heading into Martinsville with the new-look #11 FedEx One Rate Toyota this weekend?

“Martinsville is obviously one of my favorite tracks that we go to, and I have never been more anxious to get there after missing the spring race. It’s a great opportunity for our FedEx team to get a win, and a place that really suits my driving style. Hopefully we’ll get a good starting spot and pit box, which will help keep the #11 FedEx One Rate Toyota up front all day. Fans will be able to pick out the #11 pretty easily with the flat purple scheme. We have run some pretty good looking cars over the years, and this is right up there with the best.”

- Weber Shandwick Worldwide for FedEx Racing


Clint Bowyer Fastest in Friday's First Martinsville Practice Session

Earnhardt Jr. ran the most laps in practice 
Clint Bowyer was the only driver to top 100 mph during Friday’s first practice session at Martinsville Speedway. His lap at 100.074 mph topped Kyle Busch (99.726) and Denny Hamlin’s (99.532) to be the fastest during the 90-minute session. Among his 29 laps run, he was also able to reel off the fastest 10-consecutive lap average. If Bowyer runs the same lap during today's qualifying, he should be on the pole and break track (98.03 mph) record set by Tony Stewart in 2005.

Of the 43 drivers that practiced, 15 of them tried a run of at least 10 laps in a row, with Kevin Harvick, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Elliott Sadler and Hamlin -- Sadler is in the No. 55 MWR Toyota. Pretty cool seeing Sadler back in the Cup series with a good car. Martinsville wasn’t ever Sadler’s best track, but this car figures to be set-up nice, maybe similar to his teammate this week, Bowyer.

Sadler joins Jeff Burton and Hamlin as competing Virginians racing in Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500. Burton has one win over his career on the half-mile track, but Hamlin has been dominant at times with four career wins.

Danica Patrick had some optimism coming in the weekend because she finished 12th in the spring race, and she brought that same car to race this week. But Patrick spun going into Turn 1 and hit the wall which will force her to use a back-up car. Moments later, her boyfriend -- Stenhouse, slid into the same wall. The team was trying to repair the right rear, no back-up yet. That scene sounds like a sure winner to be Mike Smith's next StockCartoon.

In the Chase battle, Matt Kenseth was ninth fastest in the session while point leader Jimmie Johnson was 11th best. Kenseth has three top-5 finishes -- no wins -- over his career at Martinsville. Johnson has accumulated eight grandfather clock trophies in lees starts.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. ran the most laps (56), but could olny get the 19th fastest lap (98.702).

Qualifying is set for 3:40 p.m. ET and will be televised on Fox Sports 1.

Martinsville Practice 1 Speeds

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Martinsville Chassis Selections: Johnson using winning spring chassis

Jimmie Johnson is using the same chassis he won with in April; he's 9/5 to win

#2-Brad Keselowski: Primary Chassis:PRS-834 - Last Raced Watkins Glen (finished second). Backup Chassis: PRS-838 - Last Raced: Darlington (finished 32nd)

#5-Kasey Kahne: Crew chief Kenny Francis has selected Hendrick Motorsports Chassis No. 5-787 for Sunday's race at Martinsville. Kahne drove this chassis at Martinsville in April, when he started fifth and finished fourth.

#9-Marcos Ambrose: The No. 9 team will bring chassis No. 865 at Martinsville. This chassis was previously ran at the fall Richmond and Loudon races earlier this year.

#10-Danica Patrick: Goody's 500 Racecar Chassis No. 10-535: This car (formerly No. 14-535) debuted in April 2009 with Tony Stewart at the wheel at Phoenix International Raceway, where Stewart used it to qualify sixth and lead once for 19 laps before finishing second. Chassis No. 10-535 returned to another flat track with Stewart in June via New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, but its time on the racetrack was short after an accident in practice. It was repaired with new front and rear clips for its return trip to New Hampshire in September. There, Chassis No. 10-535 led four times for 52 laps before a loose axle cap forced an unscheduled pit stop, which resulted in a 14th-place finish for Stewart. The November trek to Phoenix marked the car's third career start, where it qualified eighth and went from a possible top-10 performance to a disappointing 25th-place result when Stewart was caught up in a multi-car accident on lap 171 of the 312-lap race. With a new body, Chassis No. 10-535 returned to Phoenix with Stewart in April 2010 and had a quiet outing in its fourth start, qualifying 11th and finishing 23rd. The car was quickly turned around and tested by Stewart on April 26, 2010, at Gresham Motorsports Park in Jefferson, Ga. The last outing for Chassis No. 10-535 with Stewart at the wheel was in November 2010, when he started 20th and finished 17th at Phoenix. The car was on standby for the No. 14 team throughout many race weekends in 2011 and 2012 but was never pressed into service. Since the end of the 2012 season, it was updated to the sixth-generation (Gen-6) Chevrolet SS configuration and transferred to the No. 10 GoDaddy team of Danica Patrick and crew chief Tony Gibson. It was first used in April 2013 at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway, where Patrick qualified 32nd but was forced to start from the rear of the field due to an engine change. Despite the setback, Patrick drove to an impressive 12th-place finish one of the best finishes for a rookie in the history of Martinsville Speedway.

#14-Mark Martin: Chassis No. 14-710: This car debuted in April 2012 with Tony Stewart in the Capital City 400 at Richmond (Va.) International Raceway. It qualified 22nd and led four times for 118 laps before a late-race caution canceled Stewart's two-and-a-half second lead and forced him to settle for a third-place finish. It was then tested June 6-7 at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway and again during a Goodyear Tire Test June 12-13 at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway. The Lenox Industrial Tools 301 in July at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon marked Chassis No. 14-710's second career start. There, a new tire compound from Goodyear confounded Stewart and crew chief Steve Addington, and they labored to a 12th-place finish. The car returned to Richmond in September for its third career start via the Federated Auto Parts 400, where it rallied from its 28th-place starting spot to lead 15 laps before finishing fourth. Its last start of 2012 came in October at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway where in its fourth career start, it qualified seventh and finished a disappointing 27th. With 2013 Chevrolet SS bodywork covering it, Chassis No. 14-710 returned to Martinsville in April for the STP Gas Booster 500. After rallying from its 26th starting spot to 10th by lap 200 and then hovering in or near the top-10 for the remainder of the race, Stewart found himself hung in the outside lane following a restart on lap 473. The final 27 laps of the 500-lap race around paperclip-shaped .526-mile oval proved arduous, as Stewart was stuck in the outside lane as the seemingly express lane to his left boxed him out of the preferred line. When the checkered flag dropped, Stewart was 17th. Chassis No. 14-710 sat idle until being tested at Richmond Aug. 26-27 with Mark Martin at the wheel in preparation for the track's Sept. 7 Sprint Cup race. The testing paid off as Martin scored a top-10 after starting 16th. Chassis No. 14-710 returns to Martinsville for its third start of 2013, its second with Martin and seventh overall.

#15-Clint Bowyer: Primary chassis No. 786 is brand new to the No. 15 fleet. It has never raced.

#16-Greg Biffle: Primary Chassis: RK-856 Last ran Richmond finished 12th. Backup Chassis: RK-867 Last ran Loudon finished 3rd.

#17-Ricky Stenhouse Jr.: Primary Chassis: RK 858 last raced at Richmond finished 10th. Backup Chassis: RK 801 - 2012 No. 99 chassis.

#22-Joey Logano: Primary Chassis: PRS-836 - Last Raced: Watkins Glen (finished seventh). Backup Chassis: PRS-848 - Last Raced: Loudon (finished 14th)

#27-Paul Menard: will pilot chassis No. 419 at Martinsville Speedway. This No. 27 Chevrolet SS was previously run this season at Martinsville Speedway, Richmond International Raceway and New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

#29-Kevin Harvick: will pilot chassis No. 420 from the Richard Childress Racing NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stable in the Goody's Headache Relief Shot 500. Harvick has driven this RCR-prepared machine four times this season at Martinsville Speedway in April, to Victory Lane at Richmond International Raceway in May, New Hampshire Motor Speedway in July and again at Richmond in September.

#31-Jeff Burton: will race chassis No. 435 this weekend at Martinsville Speedway. This is a brand new No. 31 Chevrolet seeing its first on-track action during Friday's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice session.

#39-Ryan Newman: Chassis No. 39-790: Chassis No. 39-790 debuted at Richmond (Va.) International Raceway in May 2013, when Newman finished 15th. Chassis No. 39-790 was then wind-tunnel tested in August and was utilized for a test session at Richmond in preparation for the Federated Auto Parts 400 in September. In that race, Newman was a handful of laps from victory until a controversial late-race caution foiled what would have been the second win of the 2013 season for Newman and the No. 39 team.

#47-Bobby Labonte: Crew chief Lance Burns, "Our Clorox Toyota that we will have at Martinsville is a car that we have raced a lot. It is chassis 700 and it is a good short track car."

#48-Jimmie Johnson: will drive a chassis No. 749 at Martinsville, the same one that won in April race. Chassis No. 806 serves as the backup.

#55-Elliott Sadler: Primary 785 has not raced in 2013.

#88-Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Crew chief Steve Letarte will unload Hendrick Motorsports Chassis No. 88-789 for this weekend's race at Martinsville Speedway. Earnhardt first raced this chassis at Martinsville in April.

#99-Carl Edwards: R - 857 last ran at Richmond. RK 866 last ran at Loudon

- compiled by Jayski.com

MARTINSVILLE EVENT SCHEDULE

Thursday, October 24
5:00 PM NSCS HAULERS ENTER

Friday, October 25
7:00 AM NSCS GARAGE OPENS
11:00 AM NSCS ROOKIE & SPOTTER MEETINGS & DRAWING FOR QUALIFYING ORDER
12:00 PM 1:30 PM NSCS PRACTICE
3:40 PM NSCS QUALIFYING
6:00 PM NSCS GARAGE CLOSES

Saturday, October 26
9:00 AM NSCS GARAGE OPENS
10:30 AM 11:25 AM NSCS PRACTICE
12:00 PM 12:50 PM NSCS FINAL PRACTICE
3:00 PM NSCS GARAGE CLOSES

Sunday, October 27
7:30 AM NSCS GARAGE OPENS 9:15 - 11:45 AM Martinsville Speedway Track Walk
11:30 AM NSCS DRIVER/CREW CHIEF MEETING
1:00 PM NSCS DRIVERS INTRODUCTION
1:30 PM Goody s Headache Relief Shot 500 NSCS RACE

NSCS = Sprint Cup Series

All times Eastern

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Harvick to use winning Richmond chassis this week at Martinsville

Kevin Harvick is using winning Richmond chassis this week 
Kevin Harvick
No. 29 Rheem Chevrolet SS
Event Preview Fact Sheet

This Week’s Rheem Chevrolet SS at Martinsville Speedway
… Kevin Harvick will pilot chassis No. 420 from the Richard Childress Racing NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stable in the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500. Harvick has driven this RCR-prepared machine four times this season at Martinsville Speedway in April, to Victory Lane at Richmond International Raceway in May, New Hampshire Motor Speedway in July and again at Richmond in September.

M’ville Short-Track Stats … Harvick has made 24 Sprint Cup Series starts at Martinsville Speedway dating back to the 2001 season. Throughout his years in the Sprint Cup Series, the California native has made one trip to Victory Lane (April 2011). Harvick has also collected one pole award (2010), three top-five and 10 top-10 finishes. He has an average starting position of 13.7 paired with an average finishing position of 16.6, has completed 97.5 percent (11,736 of 12,034) of the laps contested and has 363 laps led to his credit.

Rheem on the Hood … The red Rheem logo will adorn the hood of the No. 29 RCR machine this weekend at Martinsville Speedway for their final of seven appearances during the 2013 Sprint Cup Series season.

Gotta Have a Rheem … Rheem Manufacturing Company (www.rheem.com) is privately held with headquarters in Atlanta and U.S. operations in Alabama, Arkansas, California, Indiana, North Carolina and Texas. In its 88th year of operation, the company manufactures a full-line of eco-friendly, technologically advanced residential and commercial heating and cooling systems; tank, tankless, solar and hybrid heat pump water heaters; whole-home standby generators, controls, swimming pool and spa heaters; indoor air-purification products; and commercial boilers throughout North America and world markets. The company’s premium brands, including Rheem, Raypak, Ruud and Richmond have been recognized with countless industry and consumer awards for reliability, innovative design and high quality. Rheem is the official heating, cooling and water heating supplier to Richard Childress Racing, and is a primary sponsor of RCR’s No. 29 Chevrolet in the Sprint Cup Series and RCR’s No. 33 Chevrolet in the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

Race Rewind … After starting from the 12th position, Harvick and the No. 29 Rheem Chasing the Cure team was relegated to a 32nd-place finish in the TUMS Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway after the engine expired with 27 laps remaining in the 500-lap event.

KEVIN HARVICK QUOTES:

What is it like to race at Martinsville Speedway?

“Racing at Martinsville Speedway is definitely a challenge. You have the tight turns and you also have to worry about the tires falling off. It creates the ultimate challenge of keeping track position, dealing with the fall off of the car, deciding whether you want to be good on the start or end of a run, and when to get tires. There are a lot of challenges in strategy, but also in balancing your car at Martinsville. So, not only does the race track itself create a lot to challenges with the tight racing quarters, but you deal with challenges in the strategy as well.”

You talked about the tires falling off during a run at Martinsville Speedway. Do you think this is a good thing?
“Oh yeah, absolutely. I was brought up racing was on a lot of old worn out short tracks that wore out the tires, so we always had to worry about tire management, strategy and what we put underneath our cars always came into play as we raced on those types of tracks. I think Martinsville (Speedway) is very similar to those tracks I used to race on, and is a good short track that has a lot of elements to think about in order to have a good day.”

There’s a lot of stress that goes along with things like pack racing at Talladega Superspeedway and battling traffic at Martinsville Speedway. How much does that weigh on you as a driver?
“They are completely different styles of racing, but you can still get caught up in someone else’s mess really quick. No matter where you’re running. If you’re the leader and you come up on lap traffic, they want to stay on the lead lap and they will usually become more aggressive as they start pushing their way through the cars ahead of them. Martinsville (Speedway) is much like Talladega (Superspeedway) in the sense that you can get caught up in someone’s mess, and it’s just part of the game that you have to deal with.”

- Richard Childress Racing

Kyle Busch hoping to get to 'next level' at Martinsville

Kyle Busch was runner-up last fall and fifth in spring
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (Oct. 22, 2013) – It’s almost time for Halloween and, for Kyle Busch, there are memories of a time when not many things were spookier than having to make one of his semiannual visits to Martinsville (Va.) Speedway.

That’s because, before a three-race stretch starting in the spring of 2008, the Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) driver who will sport a special M&M’s Halloween Fun Size paint scheme for Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 never finished better than 24th at the .526-mile paperclip-shaped oval.

Of the 23 venues that will host Sprint Cup events in 2013, Busch has won at least once at 20 of those venues in at least one of NASCAR’s top three divisions – Sprint Cup, Nationwide, and Camping World Truck. There are only three current Sprint Cup tracks – Martinsville, Pocono (Pa.) Raceway, and Indianapolis Motor Speedway – where Busch has not scored a victory in any of NASCAR’s top three series.

Despite the lack of a Martinsville grandfather clock in his trophy case, Busch has plenty of reasons for optimism this weekend, especially considering how he has been able to pick up his game at Martinsville ever since being paired with crew chief Dave Rogers.

Busch finally busted through the 24th-place barrier at NASCAR’s shortest oval with a solid fourth-place finish in the fall of 2009 and, after beginning his first full season with Rogers at the helm in 2010, Busch started posting strong finishes at Martinsville beginning with another fourth-place run in October of that year. In his next trip to the tricky Virginia short track in March 2011, Busch led a race-high 151 laps before scoring his career-best Martinsville finish of third. And, in October 2011, he led another race-high 126 laps before being collected in an accident not of his own doing late in the race.

Indeed, Busch feels like the M&M’s team keeps getting closer and closer to that elusive win at Martinsville with each return. Even though there is still a blank in the win column, Busch’s Martinsville resume now includes eight top-five finishes and nine top-10s in his 17 Sprint Cup starts there, with back-to-back finishes of second last fall and fifth this past spring heading into this weekend. That makes it four top-five finishes in his past seven starts at the Southern Virginia short track.

Even more reason for optimism is that Busch and the M&M’s team are coming off a solid fifth-place finish Sunday at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway that allowed him to gain two spots in the Chase for the Sprint Cup standings, where he now sits 26 points behind the new leader, five-time Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson.

As the Sprint Cup Series returns to Martinsville for another Halloween weekend celebration, will it mean a trick, or a treat, for Busch this Sunday? Despite the lack of a win there, Busch has reason to believe it might finally be time to grab the ultimate treat at Martinsville – his first grandfather clock – as the Chase heats up for the final four races of another exciting season.

KYLE BUSCH, Driver of the No. 18 M&M’s Halloween Toyota Camry for Joe Gibbs Racing:

You’ve been so close to winning at Martinsville, lately. Are you hoping this weekend you can finally get that first win there?

“I certainly hope so. We were so close last fall and right on Jimmie’s (Johnson) bumper for the win and we had a good car in the spring, too. I’ve led a bunch of laps there, but we just haven’t been able to hold it for the end of the 500 laps. It’s certainly a racetrack where you can be leading the race and think you’ve got a shot to win the thing in the last 30 laps, and then get beat on from behind and moved out of the way. It’s certainly a racetrack where it’s indicative that, if you’re just a little bit off, then the guys are going to be right on your rear bumper and trying to get by you. For us, it’s been a challenge, but we’re getting better at it and learning some more as we go along. We would like to be able to continue that, but also take it to the next level with a win for our M&M’s Camry team.”

What is the key to you getting a win at Martinsville?
“I’d like to think we’re really close. We’ve been good there – especially the last couple of races there we’ve been really good. It’s a tough racetrack and, anytime you come in the pits and make an adjustment on your car, you certainly hope it goes the right way, or you make enough of it, or you don’t make too much of an adjustment. It seems like I haven’t quite scienced that out for the last run there. The last run can be tricky, too, because you can be coming off a 50-lap run on right-side tires and take four and you’ve only got 30 (laps) to go, or you could have 80 to go and you know you have to manage that run all the way to the end.”

Your racecar is sporting the special M&M’s Halloween paint scheme again this week. What was your favorite Halloween costume you wore as a kid?
“Actually, one year I went as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle. I think that was my favorite costume as a kid. I was Michelangelo and I even had the fake nunchuk. One year, I was a football player and, one year, I even dressed up as Jeff Gordon since he was my favorite racecar driver when I was a kid.”

Growing up in Las Vegas, what do you remember about Halloween and trick-or-treating?
“It was always cold in Las Vegas during Halloween, even though it can be really hot most of the year. I guess the biggest memory was going out to everyone’s house and trick-or-treating and hanging out with friends as a group. Sometimes, people wouldn’t be home, so they had a bucket out and you would reach in and grab whatever you wanted out of the bucket. It was all about how much candy you could collect, not necessarily about how much you would eat when you got home.”

What was your favorite kind of candy?
“Mainly, everyone always had the fun size packs. Back then, which wasn’t that long ago, the fun size pack of M&M’s was always really popular, and I’m sure that hasn’t changed too much, even now.”

- True Speed Communication for Kyle Busch Motorsports

Martinsville Preview: Johnson, Gordon and Hamlin to mix it up again

Johnson does everything well at Martinsville
Jimmie Johnson is home free for his sixth NASCAR Sprint Cup Title, according to updated odds posted at the LVH Super Book where Johnson is an overwhelming 1/3 favorite (Bet $300 to win $100) over second place Matt Kenseth (2/1). Four races still remain before the champion is crowned and Johnson is sitting atop the standings for the first time during the Chase with a slim four-point lead.

Last week at Talladega, Johnson was able to lead the most laps while finishing 13th and gained his separation in points when Kenseth finished 20th. Talladega was a wild card where anything can happen, but Kenseth can’t be happy with his finish. He was running up front most of the race, and to finish that poorly without wrecking will be race Kenseth points to as the one where he lost the championship if Johnson should be holding the big trophy next month.

Speaking of big trophies, Johnson’s trophy case may have had to been expanded just because of all his Martinsville trophies. They don’t hand out normal trophies for winning races there. No, they have the tradition of giving out giant grandfather clocks to the winner and in the first race held there this season in April, Johnson took home his eighth grand-daddy clock, the most among all active drivers.

It’s this weeks race at Martinsville that is the key component in Johnson being such a large favorite despite having such a small point lead. Johnson has dominated Martinsville like no one else in the series while the half-mile flat track hasn’t necessarily been Kenseth’s best. In 27 Martinsville starts, Kenseth doesn’t have a win and has finished in the top-5 only three times.

For Johnson, this isn’t a place like Charlotte where most of his wins came seven to eight years ago, and is shadow of his former self there. He is currently on his dominant Martinsville streak winning the past two races there. In April, he led five times for a race high 346 laps. Ironically, Kenseth had one of his better runs at Martinsville, leading three times for 96 laps, but settled for a 14th-place finish. It was Johnson who passed Kenseth with 37 laps to go to take the lead for good.



 

Clint Bowyer: 'I love going to Martinsville'

Bowyer got out of this jam in spring and finished career best second
CORNELIUS, N.C. — No.15 5-hour ENERGY Toyota driver Clint Bowyer heads to Martinsville Speedway for Sunday’s 500-lap NASCAR Sprint Cup with consecutive top-five finishes in his last two trips to the flat, half-mile, paperclip-shaped oval.

Bowyer, who finished a career best second at Martinsville in April, has three top-five and nine top-10 finishes in his 15 starts at Martinsville. He has led 247 laps with an average finish of 13th. Bowyer ranks eighth in the Sprint Cup Series standings with 2,197 points and trails point leader Jimmie Johnson by 57 points with four races remaining in the Sprint Cup season.

BOWYER ON MARTINSVILLE: “I love going to Martinsville. It’s a great race track with a lot of history. Martinsville has been hosting races for half a century and all the greats have raced there over the years. It really is a throw back in a lot of ways. It’s a flat short track like most of us grew up racing on. It’s tight, flat and fenders definitely get used. It always puts on an exciting show for the fans and there isn’t a bad seat in the house. As a fan of the sport I don’t know how you can’t like Martinsville! And in a lot of ways it’s almost turned into the new go-to track for action and excitement. It doesn’t have the high banks like Bristol, but the racing, bumping, banging and all the fun stuff the fans look for has been every bit as good as anywhere we’ve gone the past few years.”

ON THE FINAL FOUR RACES: “It’s not over until it’s over, but from where we are sitting in points it would take a lot of unbelievably good luck for us and unbelievably bad luck for a lot of real good drivers that don’t often have bad luck. We still have our goals to accomplish. We’re going to go out every week and try to win races. We haven’t done that in a while and we need to get back to victory lane in one of these final four races. And we aren’t that far out of the top-five in points. If we can win a race and get back into the top-five from where we are right now that would be big for us to go into the offseason and get ready for 2014.”

NOTES:
Wild Asphalt Testing:
All three MWR NSCS teams tested at Texas Motor Speedway on Monday and Tuesday. Clint Bowyer in the No. 15, Elliott Sadler in the No. 55 and Martin Truex Jr. in the No. 56. The test was previously scheduled for the week leading into Talladega, but rain cancelled the original test and the teams returned this week. 

MWR in 2014: On Monday, Oct. 14, MWR announced its reorganizational plan for 2014, highlighted by two full-time championship contending Sprint Cup teams with a third Sprint Cup entry will run a limited schedule for research and development. Scott Miller, the team’s executive vice president of competition, will continue his role as crew chief of the No. 55 team into the 2014 season 

MWR in 2013: MWR cars have combined for two wins (Truex Jr. – Sonoma; Vickers – Loudon-1), 19 top-five and 41 top-10 finishes. The three-car team has led 768 laps and won one pole award (M. Martin – Phoenix-1). Bowyer is eighth in points trailing Jimmie Johnson by 57 with four races remaining. 

Racing for a Cause: From now through December 31, 5-hour ENERGY will donate five cents from the sale of every limited edition, specially marked, bottle of raspberry flavored 5-hour ENERGY to Living Beyond Breast Cancer, a national nonprofit education and support organization serving women and families affected by breast cancer. The minimum guaranteed donation is $75,000. 

Chassis: Primary chassis No. 786 is brand new to the No. 15 fleet. It has never raced.

- Michael Waltrip Racing

Matt Kenseth on Martinsville: '...Really proud of our performance in the spring'

Matt Kenseth is 12/1 to win Sunday at martinsville
Matt Kenseth/No. 20 Dollar General Toyota Preview
Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 at Martinsville Speedway

No. 20 Dollar General Toyota News and Notes:

JOE GIBBS RACING AT MARTINSVILLE: Joe Gibbs Racing has 89 Sprint Cup Series starts at Martinsville Speedway earning a total of seven wins, 30 top-five, 46 top-ten finishes, and eight poles. The organization also has led for a total of 3,039 laps and has an average finish of 13.7 at the 0.526-mile short track.

KENSETH BY THE NUMBERS: In 27 Sprint Cup Series starts at Martinsville, Kenseth has completed 13,401 of 13,534 laps (99.0 percent). Kenseth has led for a total of 169 laps and has earned three top-five and eight top-ten finishes at the half-mile track. A runner-up finish is Kenseth’s career best finish at Martinsville (April 2002).

THIS WEEK ON THE NO. 20 DOLLAR GENERAL TOYOTA: Dollar General vendor partners First Quality, Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, Pop-Tarts, Hanes, Orajel, Glad, Coca-Cola, Motrin, and Charmin will be featured on Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 20 Toyota Camry this weekend at Martinsville Speedway.
RACE INFO: The Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 at Martinsville Speedway (0.526-mile) begins at 1:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, October 27th. The race will be broadcast live on ESPN, Sirius XM Channel 90 and MRN Radio. 

From the Cockpit:
Matt Kenseth:
“I think Martinsville is one of those real predictable places where I could give you five names and I bet that unless they have a problem, that all five of them finish in the top-eight. I think Martinsville is actually really, really predictable and I don’t look at that as a big wild card race. I was really proud of our performance in the spring — we led a bunch of laps and I think we finished eighth. We kind of got off on our pit sequence a little and I think we probably should have finished fifth, sixth or seventh under speed and even when we got off a little. I look forward to going to Martinsville this weekend, and again I look at that as an opportunity. Maybe not to beat the 48 (Jimmie Johnson), they’re pretty strong everywhere, but I look at that as an opportunity to hopefully run up in the top-five or six and get a good finish with our DG Toyota.”

From the Pit Box:
Jason Ratcliff:
“Martinsville is a place where I think Matt (Kenseth) is able to view from a different perspective than I think he was used to in the past. We were able to lead some laps back in the spring race this year and hopefully we can go back this weekend with a car that drives as good. I feel like we learned some things since the first Martinsville that I feel like we can apply to this car we’re bringing this weekend. I’m looking forward to it because it’s definitely a place where you can get caught up in someone else’s mess, which can be a little frustrating, but all in all, I think we’ll have a good car to be able to perform how we need to for a strong finish.”

Find the Dollar General store nearest you or learn more about the company at www.dollargeneral.com or on Dollar General’s Facebook or Twitter pages.

- Joe Gibbs Racing

Kurt Busch: 'I love to hate Martinsville'

Kurt Busch had issues in spring, finished 37th. He's 30/1 this week
DENVER (Oct. 23, 2013) – You just have to take a quick look at Kurt Busch’s Martinsville Speedway record to understand why he has a love/hate relationship with the southern Virginia short track.

Though he has one win at Martinsville (October 2002), the Furniture Row Racing driver has had more trouble than success at the historic .526-mile oval.

Busch’s last top-10 at Martinsville was a sixth-place finish eight years ago in October 2005 and his last top-five was nine years ago in October 2004. That’s 15 races without a top-10 and 17 without a top-five.

Adding insult to injury, Busch’s last race at Martinsville (in April) ended with his No. 78 Chevrolet in a ball of fire and a 37th-place finish due to a brake rotor malfunction.

Not the typical numbers for a seven-time Chase participant and former champion in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

“I love to hate Martinsville,” said Busch. “It’s been a tough track for me. I’ve won there, but over the years I also have had my struggles there.”

If there’s a sliver lining for Busch, who is currently ninth in the Chase driver point standings, it’s the test session he and the Furniture Row Racing team conducted at Martinsville a few weeks ago.

“The good news heading into this weekend’s race is that our Furniture Row Racing team tested at Martinsville and we came away feeling pretty good about what we learned,” noted the 35-year-old Busch. “Now it’s a matter of compressing that data and applying it to our race setup in our Furniture Row Chevrolet.”

To have success in Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 Busch said that mastering the center of the corner and adapting to track changes will play key roles in determining the outcome.

“Martinsville comes down to having your car rotate the center of the corner and being able to drive off the corner underneath somebody,” explained Busch. “As the track changes its rubber build up, you have to be able to roll with the changes. You have to be smart enough to keep track of the changing conditions and not overdrive the car early on.”

- DMF Communications for Furniture Row Racing

Danica Patrick hoping for repeat Martinsville performance

Danica Patrick was 12th in the spring, and held her own on tough track
KANNAPOLIS, N.C. (Oct. 23, 2013) – When the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series headed to Martinsville (Va.) Speedway in April, history was going to be made no matter how Danica Patrick finished.

Patrick, driver of the No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet SS for Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR), etched her name in the record books by being the first female driver to compete in a Sprint Cup race at the .526-mile oval. And what a history Martinsville has considering it opened for business in 1947, two years before NASCAR was formed. Every NASCAR champion has raced there and the Sprint Cup Series has conducted events at Martinsville twice a year since 1950.

But Patrick did more than drive in the April race. She surprised many NASCAR observers with a solid 12th-place result – made more impressive by the fact she started 43rd after an engine change before the race. She looked like a veteran on the shortest track on the circuit which, viewed from the air, looks like a paperclip as its long straightaways lead into tight, flat turns. The racing there can be described as “give-and-take,” with drivers giving some bumps and taking some bumps as 43 cars fight for space on its tight confines.

None of that seemed to be an issue for Patrick, whose impressive rookie performance bested those of some other name drivers in their Martinsville debuts, most notably her team owner Tony Stewart, who finished 20th in his first Martinsville start in 1999. Five-time Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson finished 35th in his Martinsville debut in 2002. NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace finished 15th in 1984. Dale Jarrett finished 14th in 1984. Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished 26th in 2000. Kyle Busch finished 39th in 2005. Matt Kenseth finished 21st in 2000. Kurt Busch finished 37th in 2000. And Fred Lorenzen finished 24th in 1956.

Nearly six months after Patrick’s Martinsville debut, she hopes to enjoy the same – if not more – success in her second trip to the historic track for Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500. She and crew chief Tony Gibson will utilize the same chassis, No. 10-535, in their efforts to earn another solid result.

DANICA PATRICK, Driver of the No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet SS for Stewart-Haas Racing:

Talk about going from the biggest track on the circuit, Talladega, to Martinsville, the smallest track on the circuit.

“Two extremes going from Talladega to the short track. I had a great car in the spring at Martinsville, so the challenge for me this time around will be to not downshift from fourth to third when I come out of the pits and over-rev the engine (in practice) and have to start from the back and, in general, just have a better qualifying run so I can start further up and work from there. It’s a short track and those leaders are on you very quickly if you don’t have a good qualifying run. Qualify better and let it play out from there.”

You had a great run in the spring at Martinsville. Talk about that.
“Having never been at Martinsville before, I didn’t know what to expect. All I knew was that it was going to be a little bit crazy. I think you take what the car gives you. Tony Gibson (crew chief) has a really good track record there. He’s a great crew chief. And my car was pretty good all day. We kind of bounced around from being a little loose to a little tight, but we got the GoDaddy Chevy back up there. People talk about the race result but a lot of the time forget that we spun early and were two laps down at one point in time. So, I feel like that’s almost one of the things I’m most proud of is coming back from two laps down to being on the lead lap and then grabbing a 12th place at the end.”

This is the first year for the Gen-6 Chevrolet SS. Talk about the new style of car for NASCAR and how you feel it has performed this year.
“I think it’s been a successful year for the car. I feel like there have been very few issues. It’s just a different balance of a car. I think it suited some driving styles better than others, probably, but I think it really comes down to, as we felt and saw as a team to start the year off, that you’ve got to bring the best cars possible. I feel like we started a little bit behind but have rapidly throughout the year been learning and understanding the car better and better. What is hard is everyone else does that, too, to some degree, but I think it’s going to give us a lot of knowledge going into the offseason for what we need to work on to arrive with better cars next year.”

TONY GIBSON, Crew chief of the No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet SS for Stewart-Haas Racing:

You’ve been racing in the Sprint Cup Series for a long time. Talk about the historic significance of Martinsville
.
“It’s one of those places where there’s a lot of history. It’s like Darlington, where it’s been around forever. It makes or breaks a lot of racecar drivers. When you go into a place like that, you don’t want it to be a bad experience. You want to have a positive experience and be part of the history, not part of the negative history. I enjoy going there and racing where some of the greats have raced.”

Talk about Danica’s race in the spring at Martinsville.
“I never dreamed it would go that well. I knew after Saturday and Friday that we had a good GoDaddy Chevrolet. I knew she was capable of doing it speed-wise and as far as driving. To be able to go through all that beating and banging and survive and finish 12th was unbelievable. I knew that with 30 laps to go the restarts were going to get more and more aggressive, and that’s why I told her it’s not going to get any easier. I was really, really happy to see how aggressive she got. You know, being able to be on the defensive. They would bump her and she wouldn’t get flustered. I was really, really impressed with that. That was the biggest thing I was nervous about – how she would do in a situation like that. It helped her gain some confidence.”

- True Speed Communication for Stewart-Haas Racing

Jimmie Johnson 9/5 favorite to win ninth Martinsville race

Jimmie Johnson has won 8 times at Martinsville; he's easy favorite Sunday
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (Oct. 23, 2013) – “If you’re lost, you can look and you will find me, time after time.” Cyndi Lauper, who recorded the pop song “Time After Time” in 1984, may not be looking for Jimmie Johnson. But perhaps the best advice for anyone trying to find Johnson at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway after Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race is to head to victory lane.

That’s because Johnson is third on the all-time win list at Martinsville. His win at the paper-clip shaped track last April made him the all-time winner among active drivers with eight victories, breaking a tie he had held with Rusty Wallace and Jeff Gordon. Only Richard Petty, with 15, and Darrell Waltrip, with 11, have more. Johnson also holds the series’ best driver rating at the track and has finished outside the top-10 only three times in 23 races. And two of those three finishes were 12th- and 11th-place runs.

Johnson will be going for his third consecutive win at the half-mile oval this weekend. And after taking over the lead in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup by four points from Matt Kenseth last Sunday at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway, he may take some solace in the fact he is headed to a track where he has managed to find victory lane “Time After Time.”

Martinsville Speedway Notes of Interest:
Eight wins (October 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2012, April 2007, 2009 and 2013) in 23 starts. The total is a career best and ties Johnson’s total at Dover (Del.) International Speedway.
Five of Johnson’s Martinsville victories occurred during the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Three poles (April 2006 and 2013, October 2012).
16 top-five finishes (69.6 percent) and 20 top-10s (87.0 percent) in 23 starts.
In 23 races, has finished outside the top-10 only three times (35th in April 2002, 11th in April 2011, 12th in April 2012).
Average start is 11.4 and average finish is 5.3.
One DNF (Did Not Finish) – April 2002.
Has completed 11,480 of 11,534 laps (99.5 percent) and led 2,327.
Sprint Cup’s best average running position of 5.9.
Sprint Cup’s best driver rating (123.8 average of a possible 150 points).
Sprint Cup’s second-best in fastest laps run (889).
Sprint Cup’s best in most laps in the top-15 with 7,849 (92.0 percent).
Sprint Cup’s best green-flag speed of 91.569 mph.

2013 Season Notes of Interest:
Currently first in points, four ahead of second-place Matt Kenseth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Five wins (February and July Daytona, April Martinsville, June Pocono, September Dover).
Two poles (Martinsville, August Pocono).
13 top-five and 20 top-10 finishes.
Sprint-Cup’s best in laps led (20 races for 1,606 laps).

JIMMIE JOHNSON, Driver of the No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet SS for Hendrick Motorsports:

Are you looking forward to going to Martinsville?

“Martinsville has been good to us in the past. We’ve got to go there and race. There is going to be a lot of strong competition. We will make sure we get buttoned up and ready to go for this weekend’s race and go up there to that paperclip and see what we can do.”

Having survived Talladega, what’s your outlook for the remaining four races?
“You know, I feel that the races looking forward, now, are up to where the competitors go earn it. You don’t have this luck issue that can take place at (restrictor) plate tracks. So, I am happy to have the points lead. We went through a lot of work to get there. We were just getting one point at a time (at Talladega) and we got a few more than normal and were able to get the lead. We just go racing from here and that is the thing I am most excited for. Great racetracks, great racecars, and it’s just going to be a dogfight to the end.”

- True Speed Communication for Team Lowe’s Racing

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Kenseth wrecks during Texas testing

Matt Kenseth is 2/1 to win 2013 Sprint Cup
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - Matt Kenseth had his testing at Texas Motor Speedway cut short when he crashed his car because of an issue with his front right tire.

Two days after losing his NASCAR Sprint Cup points lead with a 20th-place finish at Talladega, Kenseth had the session-ending crash Tuesday during a week-delayed Texas test that includes the top eight drivers in the points standings.

"Well, it was up and down. It ended down," Kenseth said. "We just had a tire problem and crashed, so we're done for the test. ... When you run nine laps and one blows apart for no reason, that's always a cause for concern for sure."

Five-time Cup champion and points leader Jimmie Johnson, who now has a four-point lead over Kenseth with four races left, wasn't even aware that his closest competitor had crashed during the test.

Kenseth said the car he crashed in turn one wasn't the Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota he plans to race at the high-banked, 1½-mile Texas track on Nov. 3, which comes after Sunday's race at Martinsville.

"No, she's at home safe ready to get to the track," Kenseth said.

Carl Edwards said he didn't see what happened to Kenseth, but that the Roush Fenway team didn't have any tire trouble.

"I wasn't sure if he was trying to get out of here early," Edwards said, with a smile. "They've had a spectacular year. He'd done amazing, so I think it's going to be a good battle between him and Jimmie."

Read More Here..... AP