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NASCAR Busch Series News and Notes - Meijer 300
presented by Oreo
• Kentucky Known For
Jump-Starting Careers
• Montreal Testing Warms Up Canada
• In The Loop: Wallace On A Roll
• Joe Balash To Receive Key to Cincinnati
• Rookies: Ragan Still On Top; Coleman Looking For Success
Competitive Balance The Norm At
Kentucky Speedway
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (June 12, 2007)
– The only sure thing when the NASCAR Busch Series comes to Kentucky
Speedway is that you’ll be unsure about predicting a winner – or a Busch
Pole winner for that matter.
In the series' first six events at Kentucky Speedway, there has never been
a repeat winner or polesitter. Also, only once has a driver won from the
pole and that was Carl Edwards (No. 60 Scotts Ford) – the current series
points leader – in 2005.
Kentucky is a 1.5-mile oval that always seems to turn up a new talent
looking to advance to NASCAR’s premier series: NASCARE NEXTEL Cup.
Example: David Gilliland, who turned up in 2006 with an upset Kentucky win
and now finds himself driving for Robert Yates Racing.
Another series regular, Bobby Hamilton Jr. (No. 35 McDonalds Ford),
grabbed his first win of 2003 at Kentucky en route to his best overall
season as he finished fourth in the final series standings. Kyle Busch in
2004 racked up five wins, one at Kentucky, and went on to finish as the
series runner-up. In both drivers’ cases, they moved to NASCAR NEXTEL Cup
the following year.
NASCAR Busch Series Tests In Montreal
Two-time NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series champion
Terry Labonte – who also has 11 NASCAR Busch Series wins, four of those at
the Watkins Glen International road course – is participating in a one-day
test at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal today (June 12).
Labonte will drive the No. 21 Chevrolet of Richard Childress Racing and
similar to Jeff Burton’s test in Mexico City three years ago, also in RCR
equipment, will be on point for information to be shared among all teams
participating in the Aug. 4 event. Labonte, like Burton, was an
appropriate choice, since he’s not running in the event.
The test consisted of two sessions at the 2.709-mile road course located
on a man-made island on the St. Lawrence River.
Log on to NASCARMedia.com for further information.
In The Loop: Wallace On A Roll
A snowball effect may be in the works for
Steve Wallace (No. 66 HomeLife Community Dodge).
Wallace won the Busch Pole last week in Nashville and scored his best
finish of the year – 12th. This weekend, Wallace returns to the site of
his best career NASCAR Busch Series victory – Kentucky Speedway. A string
of success seems possible, if not likely.
Wallace finished 11th at Kentucky last year, and Kentucky has a history of
making careers (see David Gilliland, 2006). That could happen for the
19-year-old this weekend, as he racked up impressive numbers last year at
this race.
Last year, Wallace had a Driver Rating of 99.1 (ninth-best) and an Average
Running Position of 9.235 (sixth-best). He also had 30 Quality Passes –
passes of cars in the top 15 under green – which was tied for the
four-highest number and just three off Kevin Harvick’s total of 33.
NASCAR Busch Series standings leader Carl Edwards, who his coming off his
fourth win of the season, will attempt to become the first repeat winner
at Kentucky this weekend. Edwards has had a love-hate relationship with
Kentucky over the past two years – he’s won and finished 36th in his past
two visits.
In his 2005 win, though, Edwards dominated. He scored a perfect Driver
Rating of 150.0, had a Average Running Position of 2.055, ran the fastest
lap 75 times and led 150 of 200 laps, a series-best Driver Rating of 128.4
and an Average Running Position of 4.434.
J.J. Yeley is another double-duty driver who will run both the NASCAR
NEXTEL Cup Series race in Michigan and the Busch Series race at Kentucky.
If past history is any indication, the trip to Kentucky could be a
worthwhile trek. In two Kentucky races, Yeley has an average Driver Rating
of 117.6 (which is best of any driver who has ran each of the last two
races there), an Average Running Position of 6.380 and 28 Fastest Laps
Run.
NBS ETC.
- Joe Balash Gets The Key:
On Thursday Kentucky Speedway will be presenting “Racing to the Square”
in downtown Cincinnati at Fountain Square. The presentation will go from
11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.
At 12:30 p.m. Joe Balash, NASCAR Busch series director, will present the
Green Flag to the Mayor of Cincinnati Mark Mallory. Mallory is the
Honorary Starter for the Meijer 300 presented by Oreo. In return, Mayor
Mallory will present the Key to the City to Joe Balash. ESPN’s Marty
Reid will be the emcee of the event. In addition, there will be a couple
haulers on the square, showcars and interactive games.
Balash is in his fourth year as the NASCAR Busch Series Director. Balash
is from Hobart, Ind., and receiving this award from the city of
Cincinnati being so close to home is a big honor.
“I don’t know how many of these awards are given out, but it is a great
honor to receive the Key to the City,” said Balash. “It really shows how
far the popularity level of the NASCAR Busch Series has come.” He goes
on to say, “It is an award I will always remember.”
- Double-Duty Drivers:
Another stand-alone this weekend where double-duty drivers will have
subs for practice and qualifying. Seven drivers are scheduled to sub at
Kentucky this weekend. Matt McCall will sub for standings leader Carl
Edwards, while Auggie Vidovich does the same for Edwards’ teammate David
Ragan; Chad Blount for Dave Blaney (No. 10 Camping World Toyota); Chad
Chaffin for J.J. Yeley (No. 1 Miccosukee Resort Chevrolet) and Casey
Atwood for Greg Biffle. Two drivers will be filling in for the whole
weekend; Kertus Davis and Cale Gale will be subbing in the No. 77 Dollar
General Chevrolet and No. 33 Camping World Chevrolet, respectively.
- Huffman Makes His First
Appearance: J.R. Motorsports’ Shane Huffman (No. 88 NAVY
Chevrolet) will make his first ever start at Kentucky Speedway. He heads
into this weekend with two top-10 finishes looking to be the next fresh
face to win at Kentucky and keep the streak alive of never having a
repeat winner. Though he has a big challenge ahead of him, he has raced
on several 1.5-mile tracks, notching a ninth place at Las Vegas this
past March.
- Bires Replaces Wood At Kentucky:
Wood Brothers/JTG Racing announced June 5th that developmental driver
Kelly Bires, driver of the team’s No. 21 Ford in NASCAR Craftsman Truck
Series competition, will stand in for Jon Wood in the No. 47
Clorox/American Red Cross Ford this weekend at Kentucky. Bires
(pronounced BY–ers) is a 22-year old native of Mauston, Wis., who has
started six races in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series this season, five
for Wood Bros./JTG Racing. He posted his career-best finish (10th) at
Atlanta earlier this year.
Prior to Dover, Wood had started 83 consecutive races in the NASCAR
Busch Series dating back to 2004, his first full season in the series.
He was 22nd in the point standings with one top-10 finish this season –
10th at Mexico City in March – prior to Dover.
The Director’s Take: Nashville
WHAT TO WATCH FOR AT
NASHVILLE: THOUGHTS FROM JOE BALASH, NASCAR BUSCH SERIES DIRECTOR
Kentucky Speedway, like most 1.5-mile
tracks, is a track where finding the best balance in the car to make the
car turn is key.
Most teams will be trying to optimize a "Coil Bind" set-up. This is where
the front spring is fully compressed. It makes the car look like it is
riding on the front bumper. With this set-up, the nose seals to the track
giving the best aerodynamic advantage to the team that can use their
shocks to hold the car down the best.
This set-up also helps the car rotate in the corner so the car turns. The
last part of the equation is how the driver uses his brakes to "set" the
car down on the spring. They do not want it to slam; it must be a smooth
compression of the spring.
Rookie Spotlight: Ragan At Top
Of Leader Board
• Ragan Answers The Call:
David Ragan (No. 6 AAA Ford) came back in impressive fashion this
weekend by grabbing the Raybestos Rookie of the Race award and re-taking
the lead in the Raybestos Rookie of the Year standings after finishing
seventh in Nashville. Marcos Ambrose (No. 59 Kingsford Ford) finds
himself back in second after catching Ragan last weekend to tie-up the
points lead. This season, Ragan has posted five top-20 finishes
including one top five at the season opener in Daytona Beach.
• Coleman Knows Kentucky: Brad Coleman (No. 18
Carino’s Italian Grill Chevrolet) will be making his first start at
Kentucky in the NASCAR Busch Series, but this won’t be the first time
the rookie driver has taken on the 1.5-mile track. Last year in the ARCA
RE/MAX Series Coleman won at Kentucky defending the lead from eight-time
ARCA Series champion Frank Kimmel. After he won he got out of his car
(below) and did his signature “‘Brad Coleman Bow.”
2007 NASCAR BUSCH SERIES
RAYBESTOS ROOKIE OF THE YEAR
STANDINGS
Driver
Points
1. David Ragan 154
2. Marcos Ambrose 147
3. Juan Pablo Montoya 137
4. Kyle Krisiloff 129
5. Brad Keselowski 87
6. Brad Coleman 50
7. Justin Diercks 44
8. Robert Richardson Jr. 38
9. Sam Hornish Jr. 35
10. Bobby Santos 13
11. Alex Garcia 6
ESPN/ABC
ESPN2 will feature NASCAR Busch Series
racing live Saturday, June 16, from Kentucky Speedway as the series makes
its only appearance of 2007 at the 1.5-mile track located near Cincinnati.
The telecast begins with NASCAR Countdown at 8 p.m. ET, and the 300-mile
race starts at 8:30 p.m.
Rusty Wallace, the 1989 NASCAR Cup Series champion and ESPN’s lead auto
racing analyst, and anchor announcer Marty Reid will call the race from
the booth. Pit reporters will be Dave Burns, Jamie Little, Shannon Spake
and Vince Welch. Mike Massaro will host NASCAR Countdown at Kentucky,
joined in the ESPN Pit Studio by analyst Brad Daugherty. Tim Brewer will
be at the ESPN Chevy Cutaway Car.
In addition to the Busch Series race telecast on ESPN2, ESPN’s signature
broadband service, ESPN360.com, will deliver a live online simulcast of
Busch Series events in June, ESPN360.com’s most explosive month of
coverage yet, with up to 102 live events. A Spanish-language version of
the race will be televised on ESPN Deportes, ESPN’s domestic
Spanish-language network.
2007 At-A-Glance: NASCAR Busch
Series Leaders After 15 Of 35 Races:
Traditional Statistics:
Driver points – Edwards (2460)
Victories – Edwards (4)
Races led -- Edwards (11)
Laps led – Ky. Busch (536)
Top-five finishes – Edwards (11)
Top-10 finishes – Edwards (13)
Owner points – Roush (No. 60) - (2,460)
Money Won – Edwards ($654,900)
Miles led – Ky. Busch (766.03)
Busch Poles – Hamlin (3)
Closing in on Top 10 – Biffle 10th (1,513 pts) Ambrose (-5), Leffler (-31)
Consecutive Weeks in Top 10 – Blaney, Edwards, Harvick (15)
Loop Data Statistics:
Driver Rating – Edwards
(116.6)
Average Running Position – Edwards (6.892)
Fastest Laps Run – Ky. Busch (252 fastest laps)
Quality Passes – Edwards (634)
Laps In Top 15 – Edwards (2,590 of a possible 2,814)
Ford On A Charge For
Manufacturers’ Lead
Carl Edwards’ series-leading fourth win of
the season has helped Ford close the gap on Chevrolet in the Bill France
Performance Cup standings as the series heads to Kentucky this weekend.
In the last couple of weeks, Ford has been climbing back into contention
for the lead with the Roush Fenway Racing teammates Matt Kenseth (No. 17
Arby’s Ford) and Edwards blazing the path. Chevrolet still holds on to the
lead by nine points with a series-high seven wins.
Dodge is still ahead of Toyota in third place, but Jason Leffler’s (No. 38
Great Clips Toyota) third-place finish at Nashville helped Toyota chip
away at the nine points that separate the two.
Manufacturers' Championship
2007 Point Standings
Chevy 109
Ford 100
Dodge 65
Toyota 56
Up Next: AT&T 250 At The
Milwaukee Mile
The NASCAR Busch Series travels to The
Milwaukee Mile next week for the AT&T 250.
Last year, Paul Menard (No. 11 Menard’s Chevrolet) captured his first
series win at his hometown track The Milwaukee Mile. Menard went on to
finish the season with seven top-fives and 16 top-10s.
Aric Almirola (No. 20 Rockwell Automation Chevrolet) subbing for Denny
Hamlin put the No. 20 on the Pole last June. Hamlin then drove to a
second-place finish.
The action kicks off on June 23 at The Milwaukee Mile. NASCAR Busch Series
practice, qualifying and the race are all on Saturday. The garage opens at
7:30 a.m. and practice starts at 9 a.m.
2007 Point Standings
Pos. Driver Points
1 Edwards 2,460
2 Harvick 1,798
3 Blaney 1,715
4 Reutimann 1,649
5 Smith ,633
6 Kenseth 1,591
7 Hamilton 1,574
8 Ragan 1,571
9 Bowyer 1,529
10 Biffle 1,513
The Race: Meijer 300 presented by Oreo
The Place: Kentucky Speedway
The Date: June 16, 20071
The Time: 8:30 p.m. (ET)
TV: ESPN2, 8:00 p.m. (ET)
Track Layout: 1.5-mile oval
Race Purse: $1,441,056
2006 Winner: David Gilliland
2006 Pole: Denny Hamlin
Schedule:
Friday–Practice, 5-6 p.m.
Rookie Practice, 6:15-6:45 p.m.
Final Practice, 7-8 p.m.
Saturday–Qualifying, 5:10 p.m.
Track Contact: Tim Bray, (859) 647-4309;
tbray@kentuckyspeedway.com
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