Friday, October 23, 2009

Johnson chasing no one after Charlotte

He struggled and for a brief spell looked even human among the pack at the Banking 500 at Lowe’s Motor Speedway Saturday night. But in the end, winning by more than three seconds over second-place non-Chaser Matt Kenseth, Jimmie Johnson gave clear evidence that the 2009 Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship is his to lose with five races left.

Giving Johnson a mild chase were teammate Jeff Gordon and Kenseth, both of whom made crucial two-tire strategy decisions early on in the 334-lap race that greatly improved their track positions, with both managing to hold them the remainder of the race. Gordon finished fourth.

Third-place finisher Kasey Kahne took the race lead two-thirds of the way through but forfeited it to Johnson in the race off pit row following the seventh caution, on Lap 292. A smooth green-flag finish was marred by three cautions within a 13-lap span with just 35 laps remaining. But even with only 17 clean laps to the checkered flag, Johnson pulled away from the field, symbolically mirroring the way he has left behind all other pretenders in the points standings.

ROADSIDE RANTS AND RAVES: Twenty laps past the halfway point of Saturday night’s race in Charlotte, Chaser Juan Pablo Montoya, having trouble all night, shed a previously damaged right-rear quarter panel that had been poorly remounted in the pits after an earlier brush on the track. The incident could have created havoc, the big chunk of sheet metal displaying his team’s primary sponsor coming to rest on the apron just inside the racing line in one of the turns. NASCAR needs more vigilant monitoring from its pit officials who too quickly allow cars under repair back on the track. All the cars hurry when in a pressure-packed fix-it mode if more than tires and fuel are needed, but a car like Montoya’s was a potential mine field of disaster with regard to track safety—an issue which NASCAR often belabors with its yellow flags for minor debris…NASCAR must be less than happy with the presence of so many out-of-the-Chase racers in the Banking 500’s final Top 10. Six of the 10 spots were filled by non-Chasers, with only Johnson, Kahne, Gordon, and Kurt Busch making the list from those in the hunt…The Formula One world driver’s championship was settled at Sao Paulo in the Brazilian Grand Prix, as Brawn GP’s Jenson Button grabbed a fifth-place finish after starting 14th on the grid to claim his first world title in the prestigious series. The UK’s Button, in his 10th year in F1, had been the young driver of promise upon his debut in 2000, but a string of failures, misfortunes, and associations with poor-performing teams appeared to relegate him to the scrap heap of drivers doomed to never hoist the world championship trophy. The F1 season closes at the new Abu Dhabi layout in the United Arab Emirates in two weeks.

Johnson chasing no one after Charlotte

He struggled and for a brief spell looked even human among the pack at the Banking 500 at Lowe’s Motor Speedway Saturday night. But in the end, winning by more than three seconds over second-place non-Chaser Matt Kenseth, Jimmie Johnson gave clear evidence that the 2009 Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship is his to lose with five races left.

Giving Johnson a mild chase were teammate Jeff Gordon and Kenseth, both of whom made crucial two-tire strategy decisions early on in the 334-lap race that greatly improved their track positions, with both managing to hold them the remainder of the race. Gordon finished fourth.

Third-place finisher Kasey Kahne took the race lead two-thirds of the way through but forfeited it to Johnson in the race off pit row following the seventh caution, on Lap 292. A smooth green-flag finish was marred by three cautions within a 13-lap span with just 35 laps remaining. But even with only 17 clean laps to the checkered flag, Johnson pulled away from the field, symbolically mirroring the way he has left behind all other pretenders in the points standings.

ROADSIDE RANTS AND RAVES: Twenty laps past the halfway point of Saturday night’s race in Charlotte, Chaser Juan Pablo Montoya, having trouble all night, shed a previously damaged right-rear quarter panel that had been poorly remounted in the pits after an earlier brush on the track. The incident could have created havoc, the big chunk of sheet metal displaying his team’s primary sponsor coming to rest on the apron just inside the racing line in one of the turns. NASCAR needs more vigilant monitoring from its pit officials who too quickly allow cars under repair back on the track. All the cars hurry when in a pressure-packed fix-it mode if more than tires and fuel are needed, but a car like Montoya’s was a potential mine field of disaster with regard to track safety—an issue which NASCAR often belabors with its yellow flags for minor debris…NASCAR must be less than happy with the presence of so many out-of-the-Chase racers in the Banking 500’s final Top 10. Six of the 10 spots were filled by non-Chasers, with only Johnson, Kahne, Gordon, and Kurt Busch making the list from those in the hunt…The Formula One world driver’s championship was settled at Sao Paulo in the Brazilian Grand Prix, as Brawn GP’s Jenson Button grabbed a fifth-place finish after starting 14th on the grid to claim his first world title in the prestigious series. The UK’s Button, in his 10th year in F1, had been the young driver of promise upon his debut in 2000, but a string of failures, misfortunes, and associations with poor-performing teams appeared to relegate him to the scrap heap of drivers doomed to never hoist the world championship trophy. The F1 season closes at the new Abu Dhabi layout in the United Arab Emirates in two weeks.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Pit strategy backfires on Biffle; Stewart takes Chase race at Kansas

Tony Stewart has another sweaty towel to auction off for charity after the Sprint Cup’s regular-season champion took his first Chase race Sunday in the Price Chopper 400 at Kansas Speedway and moved back into contention in the standings with seven races to go.

In what was clearly the best race of the Chase thus far, Cup fans thrilled to the explosive start by Dale Earnhardt Jr., who roared out to a three-second advantage after taking the lead from pole-sitter Mark Martin on Lap 12. Little E’s uncustomary post at the head of the field lasted for 41 laps, when he pitted from the lead on Lap 53. But as Junior fans have come to expect, Dame Misfortune again made her untimely entrance into the 88 car’s affairs. Earnhardt Jr. was black-flagged by NASCAR officials for failing to tighten a left rear wheel lug nut. The miscue dearly cost the race leader, who had to return to pit lane to rectify the issue. He reentered in 32nd position, one lap down and, effectively, was done for the day.

It looked to be Greg Biffle’s afternoon, when the 16 car took over the lead on the 72nd lap and began logging the day’s most laps led. But with 29 laps to go, Biffle crew chief Greg Erwin made the wrong call, electing to put on four fresh tires when everyone else went with two. Stewart then won the race off pit row, Biffle coming out fourth. The Roush-Fenway driver could never close the gap, as Stewart raced off into clean air. In fact, hard-charging Jeff Gordon came on to grab the second spot from Biffle with just 13 laps remaining.

ROADSIDE RANTS: After the opening 40 laps, NASCAR’s worst fear looked like it might possibly come true: Two non-Chasers were leading the Chase! But Chase order was rightfully restored by race’s end, as nine of the top ten finishers were all Chasers…With 20 laps to go at Kansas, Denny Hamlin dropped fully below the white line onto the apron to pass two cars, one of which subsequently re-passed him. On the next lap around, Hamlin repeated the maneuver. NASCAR has mandated that passing below white lines is legal; passing below double yellows (Daytona and Talladega) is not. I’m wondering why, during a Chase race of all things, passing below any line is allowed. It’s yet another example of NASCAR’s inconsistency with its own rules. I say either let them pass at any time at any track or ban passing below the line entirely. If you think about it, it’s kind of like letting a base runner in baseball run from first to third without having to touch second. Drivers down on the apron actually gain an unfair advantage because they’re shortening the distance around the track…In Formula One, Red Bull Racing’s Sebastian Vettel dominated the Japanese Grand Prix, whittling nine points off Jenson Button’s precarious grip on the championship standings. With two races to go, Button holds a 14-point lead over Brawn-Mercedes teammate Rubens Barrichello and tops Vettel by 16.

Alan Ross is the author of 32 books and a regular contributor to American Profile. E-mail: alanross_sports@yahoo.com© Sportland 2009

Saturday, October 3, 2009

The Chase is On

Isn’t that the No. 48 car pulling into Victory Lane? Un-huh. Must be The Chase. Three-time incumbent champion Jimmie Johnson sent a loud signal to his other eleven fellow Chasemates at Dover Downs Sunday that his quest for an unprecedented fourth straight Sprint Cup championship is indeed on.

Leading 271 out of the total 400 laps in the AAA 400, Johnson was never seriously headed, except for vacating his leader’s role after the first caution—one of those mandated “competition” yellows by NASCAR—when he exited pit lane in fifth place on Lap 30. It took him more than 100 laps, but Johnson eventually reasserted himself atop the field. Johnson is almost Pavlovian in his relationship with Sprint Cup’s postseason: Ring the bell for the final rounds and JJ is on it, this time the El Cajon hombre claimed his second win of the year at Dover International Speedway and fifth career victory there.

A devastating crash occurred early in the race, on Lap 31, when cars backed up in Turn 3. An accordion-like effect took its anger out on rookie Joey Logano, who flipped over seven times before finally coming to a halt. The race was red-flagged for 25 minutes. Logano was uninjured.

As they did one week ago in New Hampshire, both Mark Martin and Juan Pablo Montoya performed excellently, coming in second and fourth at Dover to their first- and third-place finishes at Loudon. The veteran Martin takes a 10-point lead into Round 3 of the Chase next Sunday at Kansas.

With 90 laps to go, out-of-it backmarker Reed Sorenson was logged at 230 laps behind the leader Johnson. You’d think, in the interest of better racing, especially in the postseason, that NASCAR would place a limit on the number of laps that a driver can fall behind before he is made to officially retire. Having out-of-contention racers tip-toeing around the track apron doesn’t bolster the image of the sport or the quality of competitiveness on the track.