Michigan Info

Another Steve

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Michigan International Speedway is a big, smooth track that offers lots of room for racing. For much of the race, the drivers are racing the track more than each other?they try to find the better line, then adjust, adjust, adjust to get that perfect set-up for the charge to the end. This often creates a race with few cautions that rewards those with the best fuel mileage in the final stretch.

At this point in the game, there is no sure way to predict 1) if there will be many cautions in the second half of the race or 2) who will have the best gas mileage. That makes things a little dicey for fantasy owners. Just two races ago at Lowe's Motor Speedway, many owners saw what could happen to their fantasy racing points when things boil down to fuel mileage. The one good thing, however, is it opens the door for the sleeper picks.

Favorites
Whether the race comes down to fuel mileage or not, it is hard to win if a driver is not in the right position. What better place to be than in the front? The Roush-Fenway Racing and Joe Gibbs Racing teams are the best at doing just that at Michigan and the sister two-mile, unrestricted intermediate California Speedway. However, no fantasy owner will want to count out any of the Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets given their current dominance.

Matt Kenseth rarely misses the setup on a two-mile unrestricted, intermediate speedway. For his career at Michigan, he rarely finishes outside the top 10 and he has two victories on this smooth track. His 13th in the rain-shortened 2006 Michigan 400 snapped a six-race top 10 streak there, but he rebounded to pick up the August victory and then also won the February race at California. Equally impressive, Kenseth has finished on the lead lap in all but a single event at Michigan, and to finish first, a driver must first finish.

When Tony Stewart finds the right rhythm at a track, he puts up great numbers. Such is the case at Michigan. It took him only three starts to earn his first win there, and entering Sunday's race, he has seven top-10s in his last nine tries. He picked up a third there in August after being wrecked in the June event. He picked up where he left off earlier this year with an eighth at California on a track that is very similar in layout.

Dark Horses
At a track like Michigan, the dark horses take on a whole new level of importance. On this course, mediocre cars can get out front late in the race by a variety of means. Sometimes it is courtesy of pit strategy and other times it is by fuel mileage, which helped Jeremy Mayfield get to victory lane in 2005. Last year, rain and a fast pit stop helped Reed Sorenson make a charge at the win, though he eventually settled for fifth.

Momentum can carry a driver a long way in the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. Over the last six races, few are hotter than Ryan Newman. He has two runner-up finishes in a row after sitting on the pole at both Dover International Speedway and Pocono Raceway. In addition, he earned a fourth at Darlington Speedway and top-10s at Richmond International Raceway and Talladega SuperSpeedway earlier this year. Newman has not had a top-10 at Michigan since he won two consecutive races there between 2003 and 2004, but he has four top-20s in his five most recent starts. He will get back into the top 10 there this week and if circumstances fall his way, he could be the surprising victor.

In just his first career start for Team Red Bull, Brian Vickers raced hard at California and earned a well-deserved top-10, which was the first for Toyota. While the No. 83 Camry is by no means a guaranteed contender anywhere, the team has gotten better in recent weeks. Vickers is more consistently making races these days and was fifth just last month in the 1.5-mile unrestricted, intermediate speedway of Lowe's Motor Speedway. He likely will make Sunday's field and has a shot to crack the top 10.

Avoidance
While Jack Roush definitely knows how to field solid entries at Michigan?three of the last five races have been won by a Roushketeer?some of his teams are questionable this week. With momentum meaning so much in the Nextel Cup Series, there are two of Roush's drivers who need to be left off the rosters.

Greg Biffle can give any fantasy owner five reasons to put him on the roster this week. He won there in both August 2004 and June 2005 and has since earned three consecutive top-10s. However, potential owners heard a similar story before he raced at California, a track he dominated in 2006. This year, he was mediocre at best and never led a lap. That inconsistency is what makes him a tough decision for Sunday's race. Unless his practice numbers indicate otherwise, leave him parked.

Jamie McMurray's team and his history of success at California will make him appealing to some fantasy owners. Keep in mind that he has only one career top-10 at Michigan, and he earned that fourth-place finish almost three years ago driving the No. 42 Dodge for Chip Ganassi Racing
 

Another Steve

Put Pete In
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The Irish Hills will be smiling on someone this week, but fantasy owners will have a tough time deciding on whom. Unlike tracks such as Bristol Motor Speedway or the restrictor-plate SuperSpeedways, Michigan International Speedway is not a wildcard track because of its "Big One" crashes. The racing is so smooth and wide that there are not that many wrecks in the course of an afternoon in Brooklyn. This week, fantasy owners will have to worry about which drivers have the best fuel mileage.

Michigan's set-up is both the beautiful and frustrating aspects of the racetrack. The best cars can get out front and stay there in Brooklyn without too much fear of being caught in a wreck. The problem is that there are few caution flags because the racing is so smooth. Those long green flag runs mean green flag pit stops and few cars on the lead lap. In the end, the best car and driver do not always win. The best part for owners is that a track like Michigan opens up the dark horse options.

Tier One
Matt Kenseth always bring his "A-game" to Michigan and California. He had his best run of the season at Fontana, earning his only win this year in convincing fashion in February. Accompanied with his first at Michigan last August, that gives him back-to-back wins on the two-mile unrestricted, intermediate speedways. He enters Brooklyn with seven top-10s in the last eight races there and he has never finished lower than 17th in the Irish Hills.

Tony Stewart will be a factor in Sunday's win. He will have some tough competition to get to victory lane, but he will be up to the challenge. "Smoke" won there in just his third career start and has accumulated 10 top-10s in his Michigan racing career. In his last five outings there, he has three top-fives and a ninth. He was eighth at California earlier this year and is currently on a hot streak with six finishes of eighth or better in the last eight races.

Carl Edwards will start 12th on Sunday, making him the best qualifier for Roush-Fenway Racing. So far in his career, he has great numbers on the two-mile unrestricted, intermediate speedways. In five starts in the Irish hills, he has four top-10s, three of which were inside the top five. At the sister track of California, his 21st in February was his only finish lower than sixth there. He has been hot lately with four consecutive top-20s.

Tier Two
Ryan Newman has back-to-back second-place finishes, which gives him a whole new level of confidence that he has not had in years. If he had a few more laps at Pocono Raceway, he likely would have gone to victory lane. Be that as it may, he is ready to crack open the bottle of champagne in the winner's circle. Newman won consecutive races at Michigan in August 2003 and June 2004, the latter of which was a fuel-mileage race, showing that he knows how to conserve gasoline. Since then, he has not had another top-10 there, but he does have four straight top-20s.

First-time winners are all the buzz lately after Martin Truex Jr. and Casey Mears have been to victory lane in the past month. That should give J.J. Yeley a little extra bounce in his step. While he did not finish better than 37th at Michigan last year, he does have three consecutive top-20s at the sister track of California, including an eighth in February 2006. Joe Gibbs Racing has a winning reputation to uphold at Michigan and Yeley is out to do just that after his pole-winning run on Friday.

Greg Biffle would appear to be a logical choice for Michigan. He has two wins and five consecutive top-10s there entering this weekend's race. The problem is that he has been very inconsistent for more than a year now. Week in and week out, Biffle goes to tracks with great numbers on his side. More times than not, he has disappointed his fantasy owners. That shows in his lone top-10 since April. Unless his practice numbers are outstanding, leave him parked this week.

Tier Three
Jeff Burton has never won at Michigan, but he has been consistent. Since 1996, there have only been three times when he failed to record a top-20 result. The only problem for fantasy owners is that he has not had a top-10 there since he was fourth in August 2002 and he has not yet picked up a top-10 at Michigan while driving the No. 31 Chevrolet. However, Burton was strong at California earlier this year and finished fourth in that race, so there is hope.

Tier Three is mostly a dark horse haven this week. There are few drivers who deserve the dreaded red flag status, but hardly any are true green flags. That being said, Joe Nemechek is someone fantasy owners will want to consider for Sunday. He is starting fifth, which is his best start so far in the No. 13 Chevrolet. In 2005, he piloted the No. 01 Chevrolet to two top-10s at Michigan and he ran well at California earlier this year. This season, he was a respectable 14th in Fontana.

Jamie McMurray has not been able to get things going his way in recent weeks. After his run of five top-10s in seven races from March 11 to April 29, he has not been able to earn another top-10 finish. His best run since that fifth at Talladega SuperSpeedway was a 16th a month ago at Darlington Speedway. It does not help matters that he is entering a track where he has just one top-10, and that was while driving the No. 42 Dodge.

Tier Four
Juan Montoya is well-suited for racing at Michigan. He has already proven that he can drive on an unrestricted, intermediate speedway?he was fifth at Atlanta Motor Speedway in March and eighth at Texas Motor Speedway in April?and he has experience on the two-mile sister track of California. Montoya has shown that he does well when he has room to race and can drive the car a little deeper into the turns, which is more like driving on the open-wheel circuit. That is what he can expect at Michigan, so fantasy owners can expect him to crack the top 20 by day's end.

Brian Vickers is not likely to visit victory lane this week, but he will make a bid for the top 10. After failing to make the Daytona 500 field, he picked up Toyota's first top-10 with a 10th at California the next race. Only last month, he reached another milestone for Toyota when he was fifth at Lowe's Motor Speedway. He has done well at Michigan in the past while driving for Hendrick Motorsports, with three consecutive top-20s there entering this weekend's race, and now he has the chance to do the same thing for Team Red Bull
 

Another Steve

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