Coke Zero 400

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Coke Zero 400


This Saturday night the NASCAR Sprint Cup series goes under the lights for restrictor-plate racing at high speeds in Daytona for the Coke Zero 400. There have been a few other sponsors other the years, but the summer Daytona race will always remain the Firecracker 400.

While spending a holiday weekend with family and friends celebrating the United States Independence and Freedom, there isn?t anything much more of an American tradition than turning on a stock car race from Daytona.

This Fourth of July, Daytona will be celebrating the 25th anniversary of Richard Petty?s last and final win of his career, win number 200, a nice round even number that stands out among all others drivers in the history of NASCAR. On that day in 1984, NASCAR royalty and ?The King? were cheered by the thousands of followers. That day also marked the first time an acting U.S. President visited a NASCAR race.


Ronald Reagan was on a re-election campaign and thought it might be a good idea to see if they could win some NASCAR dads over, a republican trademark that continues to this day.

The way Richard Petty sees it, this event marked a major stepping stone to where NASCAR is today in mainstream America.

?I always figure that we went upstairs, and we?re still going upstairs,? Petty said of NASCAR.

?You know, we got the president of the United States on the sports page, and the president of the United States got us on the front page. So it was a pretty good tradeoff.?

The favorite to win this week?s race is Kyle Busch, who won this race last year. Ever since joining Joe Gibbs racing in his Toyota, no one has been better than Kyle Busch at Daytona. We could be discussing how he?s won three in a row there, but has had trouble in each of the last two Daytona 500?s.

Last season in the Daytona 500, while Busch and teammate Tony Stewart were jostling for late positioning and battling for what seemed to be their race to win, Ryan Newman and his teammate Kurt Busch worked together pushing Newman to the win. This season in the Daytona 500, Kyle Busch led the most laps and was cruising to what looked to be a well deserved win for the Las Vegan, but then some thing got in the way. A lapped car driven by Dale Earnhardt Jr. got over-aggressive on the re-start causing a giant wreck up front where many of the leaders, including Busch, had their day finished.

This week?s race may not have that type of pile up on a restart, at least caused by a lapped car, because of the new double file restarts which puts the leaders side by side up front. We?ll still have some aggression early on, but consequences are much more damaging for a leader than a lapped car which is taken into consideration before making a move like Junior did in February.

Speaking of Junior, this could be a race where he gets himself going in the right direction after getting a new crew chief. So far, the new marriage hasn?t reaped any rewards yet, but things looked encouraging last week at New Hampshire as Junior was competitive for a change running in the top-10 frequently in that race.

In this race last season, Junior led the most laps before finishing eighth. He has two wins all time at Daytona to go along with his five restrictor plate wins at Talladega. His first win at Daytona came in this race in 2001. It was Junior?s first win following his father?s passing and was on the same track where he died. It was a one the great moments in NASCAR and solidified Junior?s fan base to a plateau that no one may ever get to.

Junior?s other Daytona win came in the 500 in February of 2004. I remember the race vividly because I watched most of it stuck on the concourse by the beer stand. Another President winning favor of NASCAR dads made the visit that day. George W. Bush and a brigade of about 30 black Chevy Tahoe?s came rolling up through the concourse and everyone had to freeze as he was going to the television booth.

The race had just started and I was in line again for another Ice Cold Bud Light when all these Tahoe?s pinned me in and we were told not to move. We couldn?t go to our seats or anything as sharp shooters dressed in black SWAT gear peered through the cracks of the windows in the cars. It wasn?t all bad; I mean I had beer I could I buy, a monitor to watch the race in front of me, and I could still hear the cars, and smell the fuel and burnt rubber from the track.

Luckily I didn?t have to go to the restroom until they left. Unluckily, however, is that GW didn?t even flip me a drink ticket or a sawbuck for the inconvenience. He could have bought me a beer, right?

In the last two Daytona 500?s we saw a lot of different occurrences than we have from the past. Generally, Chevy has had the dominant teams in restrictor plate racing led by Hendrick, DEI, Childress, and Joe Gibbs when they drove Chevy?s. They weren?t a lot of intruders to the Chevy bow-tie part in plate races over the last 8 seasons. That all changed last year when Newman won in a Dodge with only one Chevy making the top-10.

This year, Matt Kenseth won in a Ford and only two Chevy?s cracked the top-10. Four Dodges, three of which run for Richard Petty made the top-10 also. Couple all that with Kyle Busch having the most dominant car in a Toyota, and it?s clear to see that Chevy is no longer a serious player in the restrictor plate race any more. Some of the best in plate racing, like Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson, haven?t even cracked the top-10 at Daytona in their last three starts. Johnson hasn?t even sniffed a top-20 in that span. The best Chevy team right now may be the Childress drivers, who are struggling everywhere else currently.

Despite the lack of Chevy success recently in plate races other than Brad Keselowski at 100/1 odds winning at Talladega, I?ll go with the fan favorite this week in Dale Jr and hope that he gets things back on track. He finished 2nd at Talladega and saw enough of him in that race to believe between his desire, struggles, and legacy on the line, he?ll show up for a big performance.

No President this week, however. Though a great sports fan, he sticks to football and basketball and hasn?t warmed up to NASCAR yet. Maybe in 2012 he?ll make a visit on the campaign trail.

TOP 5 Finish Prediction:

1) #88 Dale Earnhardt Jr (8/1)
2) #2 Kurt Busch (12/1)
3) #18 Kyle Busch (5/1)
4) #14 Tony Stewart (8/1)
5) #29 Kevin Harvick (20/1)
 

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Odds and Ends - Daytona

Odds and Ends - Daytona

Odds and Ends - Daytona

Daytona International Speedway

History

Groundbreaking for Daytona International Speedway was on Nov. 25, 1957. The soil underneath the banked corners was dug from the infield of the track and the hole filled with water. It is now known as Lake Lloyd.
The first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Daytona was a 100-mile qualifying race for the Daytona 500 on Feb. 20, 1959.
The first NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Daytona was held on Feb. 13, 1982.
Richard Petty won his 200th career race on July 4, 1984 at Daytona.
Lights were installed in the spring of 1998. However, the race was delayed until October that year due to thick smoke from wildfires. The second Daytona race has been held under the lights ever since.
The first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Daytona was held on Feb. 18, 2000.





Notebook

There have been 124 NASCAR Sprint Cup points races at Daytona International Speedway since the track hosted its first race in 1959: 51 have been 500 miles, 46 were 400 miles and four 250 miles. There were also 23 qualifier races that were points races (one in 1959; two from 1960-1971).
Fireball Roberts won the inaugural pole at Daytona.
Bob Welborn won the first race at Daytona, a 100-mile qualifying race for Daytona International Speedway.
Lee Petty won the inaugural Daytona 500 on Feb. 22, 1959.
Fireball Roberts won the first 400-mile race at Daytona, the 1963 Firecracker 400.
52 drivers have posted poles at Daytona; 19 have more than one.
Cale Yarborough leads all drivers with 12 poles at Daytona.
Bill Elliott leads all active drivers with five poles at Daytona.
54 drivers have won at Daytona; 24 have won more than once.
Richard Petty leads all drivers in victories at Daytona, with 10.
Jeff Gordon has six victories at Daytona, more than any other active driver.
The Wood Brothers have won 14 races at Daytona, more than any other car owner.
Fifteen full-length races at Daytona have been won from the pole. Thirteen have been won from the second starting position ? a total of 28 race winners from the front row.
A driver has swept both races at Daytona only four times, most recently by Bobby Allison in 1982.
Matt Kenseth won this season?s Daytona 500 from 39th, the deepest in the field that a Daytona race winner has started.
Other than qualifying races, there have been four Daytona races run caution-free: 1959 spring, 1959 summer; 1960 summer; 1961 spring; 1961 summer and 1962 spring.

NASCAR in Florida

There have been 160 NASCAR Sprint Cup races in Florida.
154 drivers in NASCAR?s three national series (all-time) have their home state recorded as Florida.
There have been nine race winners from Florida in NASCAR?s three national series
 

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Driver Highlights - Daytona

Driver Highlights - Daytona

Driver Highlights - Daytona


Note: All driver statistics that follow are from Daytona International Speedway. The Loop Data statistics ? Driver Rating, Average Running Position, etc. ? in this release, however, cover the last eight races at Daytona. NASCAR?s scoring loops began collecting data for statistical purposes in 2005.
Clint Bowyer (No. 33 Cheerios Chevrolet)


One top five, five top 10s
Average finish of 11.1
Average Running Position of 15.8, 11th-best
Driver Rating of 87.0, ninth-best
Average Green Flag Speed of 185.098 mph, 11th-fastest
Kurt Busch (No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge)


Eight top fives, nine top 10s
Average finish of 17.9
Average Running Position of 15.5, ninth-best
Driver Rating of 90.8, seventh-best
1,006 Laps in the Top 15 (62.8%), eighth-most
1,014 Quality Passes, eighth-most





Kyle Busch (No. 18 M&M's Toyota)


One win, four top fives, four top 10s
Average finish of 18.4
Average Running Position of 11.7, third-best
Driver Rating of 100.1, second-best
Series-high 1,203 Laps in the Top 15 (75.1%)
1,108 Quality Passes, fourth-most
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (No. 88 AMP Energy Drink/National Guard Chevrolet)


Two wins, six top fives, 11 top 10s
Average finish of 14.3
Average Running Position of 13.6, fifth-best
Driver Rating of 91.9, fifth-best
46 Fastest Laps Run, third-most
Average Green Flag Speed of 185.118 mph, 10th-fastest
1,091 Laps in the Top 15 (68.1%), sixth-most
1,031 Quality Passes, seventh-most
Jeff Gordon (No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet)


Six wins, 11 top fives, 17 top 10s; three poles
Average finish of 15.1
Average Running Position of 11.6, second-best
Driver Rating of 95.6, third-best
34 Fastest Laps Run, 10th-most
Average Green Flag Speed of 185.238 mph, second-fastest
1,126 Laps in the Top 15 (70.3%), fourth-most
1,014 Quality Passes, eighth-most
Jimmie Johnson (No. 48 Lowe's Chevrolet)


One win, five top fives, eight top 10s; two poles
Average finish of 15.0
Series-best Average Running Position of 11.0
Driver Rating of 91.8, sixth-best
1,553 Green Flag Passes, 10th-most
Average Green Flag Speed of 185.201 mph, fifth-fastest
1,172 Laps in the Top 15 (73.2%), second-most
1,131 Quality Passes, second-most
Matt Kenseth (No. 17 Carhartt Ford)


One win, three top fives, eight top 10s
Average finish of 18.4
Average Running Position of 14.1, sixth-best
Driver Rating of 95.1, fourth-best
47 Fastest Laps Run, second-most
Average Green Flag Speed of 185.203 mph, fourth-fastest
1,128 Laps in the Top 15 (70.4%), third-most
Series-high 1,167 Quality Passes
Mark Martin (No. 5 Kellogg's/CARQUEST Chevrolet)


Nine top fives, 17 top 10s; one pole
Average finish of 17.7
Average Running Position of 15.8, 10th-best
Driver Rating of 85.7, 10th-best
1,003 Laps in the Top 15 (62.6%), ninth-most
976 Quality Passes, 11th-most
Ryan Newman (No. 39 U.S. Army Chevrolet)


One win, two top fives, three top 10s
Average finish of 21.0
Average Running Position of 15.4, eighth-best
Driver Rating of 89.1, eighth-best
37 Fastest Laps Run, eighth-most
1,595 Green Flag Passes, eighth-most
Average Green Flag Speed of 185.212 mph, third-fastest
1,026 Laps in the Top 15 (64.0%), seventh-most
1,077 Quality Passes, fifth-most
Tony Stewart (No. 14 Old Spice/Office Depot Chevrolet)


Two wins, six top fives, 11 top 10s; one pole
Average finish of 17.2
Average Running Position of 12.8, fourth-best
Series-best Driver Rating of 104.4
46 Fastest Laps Run, third-most
Average Green Flag Speed of 185.134 mph, eighth-fastest
1,119 Laps in the Top 15 (69.9%), fifth-most
 

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Weber won't call last 2 races on TNT

Weber won't call last 2 races on TNT

Weber won't call last 2 races on TNT
July 1, 2009


ATLANTA (AP) -Play-by-play announcer Bill Weber will not call the last two races of TNT's NASCAR coverage.



Weber wasn't in the booth for last weekend's race from New Hampshire Motor Speedway. TNT said Wednesday that Ralph Sheheen will again take his spot, working The Coke Zero 400 in Daytona and the LifeLock.com 400 from Chicagoland.

TNT did not give a reason for Weber's absence. In a statement Sunday about the New Hampshire race, the network said: ``As this is a private issue, it's the policy of the company not to discuss personal matters involving our employees.''
 

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McMurray optimistic despite slump

McMurray optimistic despite slump

McMurray optimistic despite slump
July 1, 2009


Jamie McMurray could hardly wait to get the 2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup season going.





After all, he closed out last year with five top-10 finishes in the last six races, including three straight third-place runs to end the season.

But after a 33rd-place showing in the No. 26 Roush Fenway Racing Ford at New Hampshire on Sunday, McMurray finds himself a disappointing 22nd in the season standings. Heading into Saturday's race at Daytona - where the last of his two Cup wins came in July 2007 - McMurray has just three top-10s this year with his best finish a seventh-place at Richmond.

``At the beginning of the season, we probably ran a little bit better than what we are right now,'' McMurray said. ``We ended last year with those three third-place finishes and started the year off qualifying really well, and we actually raced real well, (but) had flat tires, a transmission break and other stuff.

``We haven't run that bad, we just haven't been stellar. And some of that has been circumstantial. I believe we've had a little bit better car than where we've finished.''

Teammates Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle and Matt Kenseth are all among the top 12 and appear headed for berths in the Chase for the championship, while McMurray and David Ragan, 30th in the points, continue to struggle.

McMurray said any problems he and Ragan have are not from a lack of team communication.

``They share everything,'' he said. ``Anything that any engineer, crew chief or driver wants from another team is there. It's just that it doesn't always work for you.

``I feel like Matt and I share the most. If we have a weekend where we've tried a lot of things and it hasn't worked and Matt has a different setup, I would feel very confident putting that in. And Matt is the same way towards me.

But Kenseth, who started the year with victories at Daytona and California, is 10th in the points and McMurray is all but out of the race for the Chase.

``Our cars still drive pretty good, but it's just that it's so much closer this year than what it was even was last year,'' McMurray said. ``And I think by our team not qualifying as well as it has, that's hurt us a little bit. But it doesn't take much to make your car better.

``I don't think that we need to reinvent the wheel. I think it's just fine-tuning. Racing goes in spurts. Last year when we were qualifying so well and we were finishing in the top three the last few races, we didn't do anything different than we did the rest of the season or what we're doing right now. It's just the cautions kind of fell your way and you just kind of hit on something each weekend.''

McMurray is hoping that type of magic will happen again, and soon.

Roush Fenway has to cut down to four Cup cars next season to meet NASCAR's rules and McMurray knows he could be the odd man out.

But after spending most of the 2005 season - his last year with Chip Ganassi's team - dealing with the rumor mill, McMurray is keeping his future plans to himself.

``In 2005, I was like, 'This is great, everybody is talking about me,' I found out there's no advantage of being involved in all of that,'' he said. ``There's nothing to be gained by that.''

Whatever happens, McMurray insists he is enjoying racing more than ever at 33.

``Honestly, I probably enjoy racing now more than I ever have,'' he said. ``I don't know that I've become a better driver. But with experience, you make wiser decisions and you learn certain things about racetracks. And I enjoy the stuff off the track, like sponsor appearances and talking with fans, more than I did when I first got into this.''

One reason he is enjoying himself, despite the lack of results, is being back together with crew chief Donnie Wingo, who joined the team over the winter.

``That transition's been effortless and Donnie's fit right in,'' McMurray said. ``I worked with him for four years at Ganassi. As long as when the day's over, you feel like the engineer and the crew chief did everything that they could, that's satisfactory. Sometimes, you get the result and sometimes you don't.''

With just nine races remaining before the start of the Chase, McMurray - 316 points behind 12th-place Juan Pablo Montoya - knows his chances of making NASCAR's postseason aren't very good. But he's trying to stay optimistic.

``I really feel like this is the best team I've ever been with,'' he said. ``We have a really, really solid group of guys and I think that anything is possible.

``If you finish in the top five, the amount of points you accumulate, it's incredible. I don't think until you're mathematically eliminated, you never give up.''
 

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Daytona & NASCAR fireworks go hand-in-hand

Daytona & NASCAR fireworks go hand-in-hand

Daytona & NASCAR fireworks go hand-in-hand

It?s grown a reputation by different names than the Coke Zero 400, but Saturday night?s NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona is always one of the best on the yearly schedule. Formerly known as both the Firecracker 400 and the Pepsi 400, this race is how NASCAR honors Independence Day weekend, and it is well-recognized for fireworks both on and off the track. The combination of night racing, superspeedway action at the circuit?s most famous track, and holiday pageantry make the Coke Zero 400 ?must-see TV? and one of NASCAR?s most prestigious events. On top of all that, seven different winners have won the last seven races at Daytona, making Saturday a wide-open event.

To illustrate just how anything is possible at Daytona, the leading driver in terms of career average finish at Daytona is 17.3, by Dale Earnhardt, Jr., easily the highest benchmark of any track on the circuit. Furthermore, of the actives for Saturday, 16 come in with an average finish between 17.3-25.0. Therefore, it would indicate that the luck tends to even out. Twelve entrants own a Daytona win, led by Gordon?s six. Next closest is three by Michael Waltrip. Going back just a few years to the 2006 Daytona 500, as mentioned earlier, there have been seven different winners. Clint Bowyer?s 11.1 average top the circuit, as does Kyle Busch?s 234 laps led during that span. Kyle & brother Kurt also pace the field with four Top 5?s each.

I personally have attended this race three times in my near-decade long fandom of NASCAR. I?m telling you that very few sporting events can match the atmosphere like the Daytona summer race. Not only that, but the racing is breathtaking as well. Restrictor plate racing is a sight to see, and winning at Daytona is a coveted feat for any driver. Thus the action on the track is intense and competitive. The current odds reflect that, as only four drivers are listed in single-digits, led by Kyle Busch & Tony Stewart, each at 6-1. Busch is the defending champion of this race, and Stewart is the last driver to win twice in Daytona. The other top contenders according to oddsmakers are Jeff Gordon, at 8-1, and Earnhardt, Jr. at 17-2. Gordon is a 6-time Daytona winner, and Junior gets the love from oddsmakers at plate tracks every time, regardless of how he is running.

A number of other drivers would have to be given strong consideration however. Among them, Kurt Busch & Jimmie Johnson, both at 10-1, are the most likely to be running up front for most of the race. Matt Kenseth (16-1) & Ryan Newman (20-1), the last two Daytona 500 winners are also expected to compete with the best on Saturday. Finally, Carl Edwards, the runner up in this race a year ago, finally seems to be gaining the confidence it takes to not only run up front at Daytona, but to be there when it matters most, at the end.

Plate racing is a unique skill that some drivers have mastered while others have not. Even some of the series? less-renowned drivers look forward to these events as a chance to shine. Among those worthy of betting consideration are Brian Vickers (25-1), Jamie McMurray (35-1), David Ragan (40-1), and Michael Waltrip (125-1). Each has demonstrated the ability to run up front at this fantastic facility in recent years.

Some of the regular strongholds who seem to struggle at plate tracks like Daytona are Denny Hamlin (14-1), Juan Montoya (22-1), and Greg Biffle (33-1). Of the three, Biffle owns the best average finish since ?06 at 23.7, and when combined they own not a single Top 5 Daytona finish in 19 starts during that span.

The point standings saw only very small changes last week at New Hampshire, despite the unusual rain-shortened finish that left Joey Logano as the winner. For Logano, it was his first career win, but in truth, he was far from deserving. When looking at the current standings, only four drivers in the Top 14 changed a spot last week with Hamlin and Kyle Busch moving up, and Newman and Biffle falling back one. However, the race for 10th through 14th tightened up dramatically, and now the drivers in those five spots are separated by just 17 points. With the Coke Zero 400 marking the official halfway point of the 2009 season, there are just nine races left until the Chase. None of the drivers in those five spots can afford a bad run. Unfortunately for them, at plate tracks like Daytona & Talladega, that is all too often out of their control.

There are a few things that are important to success at Daytona. Foremost is the ability to draft, while horsepower, and good aerodynamics run a close 2nd and 3rd. Aggressive drivers and rookies tend to be shunned out of the draft by the veterans. If this happens on the race?s last lap, a driver can fall as many as 15 spots in finishing position. The best plate drivers know how and when to make their move. One thing that isn?t all that important at Daytona, or plate tracks in general nowadays, is qualifying. As evidence, Kenseth started 39th here in February. The chance for making up spots quickly is great. However, that said, it is good to demonstrate some horsepower in qualifying and practice. The lineup will be set on Friday at 4:10 PM ET.

It should be a colorful, exciting, and patriotic event as always, as the Sprint Cup Series runs its 18th race of the season, reaching the halfway point. The Green Flag is set to drop on Saturday at 8:10 PM ET on Saturday night.
 
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