Sunday, February 27, 2011

Late Surge Helps Gordon Break 66-Race Drought

In Play Magazine

By Reid Spencer
Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service
Trevor Bayne saw the fairy-tale start to his season come to an
end when he hit the wall in Turn 1 on Lap 50 of the
SUBWAY Fresh Fit 500 at Phoenix International Raceway.
Credit: Chris Graythen/Getty Images for NASCAR
AVONDALE, Ariz.—Jeff Gordon didn’t just drive to end hunger Sunday—he drove to end a famine.

With a convincing victory in the Subway Fresh Fit 500 at Phoenix International Raceway, where he beat runner-up Kyle Busch to the checkered flag by 1.137 seconds, Gordon ended a 66-race winless streak dating to April 2009 at Texas.

The win was Gordon’s second at the one-mile flat track and the 83rd of his career, tying him with Cale Yarborough for fifth on the NASCAR Sprint Cup victory list.

He won for the first time in his second start with crew chief Alan Gustafson and in his second race under "Drive to end hunger" sponsorship, an initiative of AARP.

"Pinch me, man. Pinch me," Gordon said in mock disbelief, after killing his engine in an ill-fated burnout on the frontstretch.

Five-time defending Cup champion Jimmie Johnson finished third after starting 28th. Kevin Harvick came home fourth, a substantial improvement over his 42nd-place result in last week’s Daytona 500, and Ryan Newman claimed fifth.

Kasey Kahne, Tony Stewart, Kurt Busch, AJ Allmendinger and Dale Earnhardt Jr. completed the top 10.

In victory lane, Gordon was positively bubbly.

"God, it feels so amazing," the four-time Cup champion said. "I can’t tell you how amazing this feels. So thankful to (owner) Rick Hendrick, all that he does. It’s been a long time, I know. I’m going to savor this one so much, but I’ve got to say thanks to the fans.

"I mean not only the fans at home—I’ve been tweeting lately for the first time and all of the stuff that people have been saying, the motivation has been unbelievably inspiring. And then to see that crowd stick around to see my really lame burnout—because I stink at them—but they love that show. Man, we hope we can give them some more shows like that this year."

Taking the lead on Lap 304 of 312, Gordon prevented Busch from achieving the second weekend sweep of his career. Busch had won Friday’s Camping World Truck Series race and Saturday’s Nationwide Series event.
Polesitter Carl Edwards saw his chances to win the race come to an end early, when he
was involved in a five-car accident on Lap 59. Edwards finished 28th, 60 laps down.
Credit: Tom Pennington/Getty Images
On Sunday, however, he fell nine laps and one position short of matching the feat he accomplished at Bristol last August, when he became the first driver to win races in all three of NASCAR’s top national touring series at the same track on the same weekend.

"There’s always got to be the one car out there to ruin the whole weekend," Busch quipped. "Today it was the 24."

Gordon nosed to the inside of Busch’s No. 18 Toyota at the start-finish line and cleared him in Turn 1 to complete the winning pass.

"He was gaining on me really good, and I knew he was going to get to me eventually, and this place is so flat and it’s one groove that we all run the bottom," Busch said of the sequence where Gordon got to his bumper on Lap 304.
After passing Kyle Busch, Jeff Gordon pulled away to win
the SUBWAY Fresh Fit 500 by 1.137 seconds.
Credit: Tom Pennington/Getty Images
"He got so tucked up behind me in (Turns) 3 and 4, he got me loose, and I could not put the gas down," Busch said. "I mean, he was so far up underneath me that I could not go forward."

Busch, at least, could find some degree of consolation in taking over the lead in the series standings by three points over his brother, Kurt.

Gordon had to survive a number of early wrecks, including a 13-car pileup on the backstretch that blocked the track with crippled cars and stopped the action on Lap 67.

Jeff Gordon celebrates his SUBWAY Fresh Fit 500 at
Phoenix International Raceway.
The victory was the 83rd of his career, tying him with
Cale Yarborough for fifth on the all-time wins list.
Credit: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR

Slight contact between Matt Kenseth’s No. 17 Ford and Brian Vickers’ No. 83 Toyota cut Vickers’ left rear tire and ignited a wild wreck that damaged the cars of Clint Bowyer, Jeff Burton, Jamie McMurray, David Reutimann, Casey Mears, Travis Kvapil, David Gilliland, Bobby Labonte, Regan Smith, Andy Lally and Robby Gordon.

"We’re all better racecar drivers than this," a disgusted Bowyer said after the incident. "It’s pretty embarrassing, to be honest with you."
 
The wreck occurred eight laps after contact between Kyle Busch and the No. 99 Ford of polesitter Carl Edwards sent Edwards into the Turn 3 wall. Edwards, who entered the race with the points lead, was able to return to the race but finished 28th, 52 laps back.

"I’m not exactly sure what happened," Edwards said. "I’ll have to talk to Kyle about it. I thought at first he was just frustrated and he turned left to get back in line and he didn’t know I was there. But I watched the tape, and I think he really did get loose. He hit me hard, and I was left with nothing."

Busch acknowledged responsibility for the wreck, saying repeatedly he owed an apology to Edwards.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Rookie Trevor Bayne wins the Daytona 500

By Matt Harding
In Play Magazine

In a photo finish, Trevor Bayne won the 53rd running of the Daytona 500. The green flag, commencing the race, waved at 1:29 p.m. EST. In a tribute during Lap 3, fans stood and raised three fingers while observing a lap of silence in memory of Dale Earnhardt, who died at the Daytona 500 in 2001.
Credit: Brandon Goodman/Getty Images for NASCAR
 Honorary Grand Marshals Michael Bay, Josh Duhamel and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley
pose next to the No. 48 Wrecker from Transformers: Dark of the Moon.


Fast forwarding to Lap 107, many lead changes later, and after 29 laps of green flag racing, the eighth caution of the day came out. The No. 42 car spun, but driver Juan Pablo Montoya managed to keep it straight and drive it onto pit road. The entire field followed, pitting on the next lap under the yellow flag.
Credit: John Harrelson/Getty Images for NASCAR
Michael Waltrip and David Reutimann spin which brings out the fourth caution of the Daytona 500. The incident involved 14 cars on lap 30 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Fla.



Credit: Jamie Squire/Getty Images
Trevor Bayne and the No. 21 crew celebrates winning the 53rd Daytona 500
in the infield at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Fla.


Moving ahead to yellow flag no. 14, one of Kasey Kahne's tires went flat. With 16 to go, Darrell Waltrip, FOX Sports commentator and former driver said, "It's gonna get a little wild and crazy now."

He was absolutely correct; Newman was in the lead from the green flag being pushed by Hamlin, but Kurt Busch was right on their tails. Would they remain green until the finish? In typical Daytona 500 fashion, on Lap 197, the answer was no. Kurt Busch slammed into the back of Regan Smith, sending him into the wall and out of the race.

The green-white-checker flag waved on the final scheduled lap. However, another wreck resulted in another try at a green-white-checker.

With a record number of lead changes and cautions at the Daytona 500, rookie Trevor Bayne came away with the victory in a stunning finish. The 53rd running of the Daytona 500, the first on the brand-new racing surface at Daytona International Speedway, featured a track-record 74 lead changes and 22 leaders.


The lead-change record was especially noteworthy, considering the previous mark lasted more than three decades. The prior lead change mark was 60, set in the 1974 Daytona 500.
See full race results here.
Credit: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR
Trevor Bayne lifts the Harley J. Earl trophy with the No. 21 crew in victory lane after winning the 53rd Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Fla.

NASCAR season starts with a bang

By Matt Harding
In Play Magazine

The Daytona 500 -- America's Race -- is under way! The 53rd annual Daytona 500 is 200 laps of 2.5-mile track, as always; Dale Earnhardt Jr. is on the pole and NASCAR honored his father, Dale Sr. during lap #3, Senior's old car number. Dale Earnhardt Sr. was killed 10 years ago during an accident at the Daytona 500.

In Play! Magazine will have a wrap up after the race. Stay tuned and enjoy the race!

Read In Play! Magazine Here

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Englishman Towler Looks To Defend NASCAR iRacing.com Series World Championship

In Play Magazine

Official NASCAR Online Racing Series Opens Its Second Season

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (Feb. 15, 2011) – Following last year’s inaugural season of the first officially sanctioned online racing series, which saw the sport crown its first official European champion, NASCAR and iRacing are poised to launch the second season of the NASCAR iRacing.com Series Championship.

Today, February 15, online racing competition begins with the virtual race at Daytona International Speedway to launch the 18-race, 36-week season. Last season’s champion, Richard Towler of Hull, England, seeks to defend his title against 49 other top-rated drivers, including the top-20 finishers from last season and the top 30 from the 2010 NASCAR iRacing Pro Series.