NASCAR 2011 season thread

That would be because these guys have the intelligence to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time, unlike your average F1 driver who can barely say anything other than "for sure" :D

Going to have to hold my hand up here - looks like my prediction for the winner might not come true....
 
Well, well, well....I hope it wasn't just me watching that, 'cause you all missed an absolute blinder if so.

The big stories:

1) Jeff Gordon snaps a 66 race losing streak to win. In doing so, he now ties with Cale Yarborough for 5th in the all-time winners list with 83 victories to his name.
2) A 13 car wreck on lap 67 brought out the red flag for a while, with the track completely blocked. Some good cars and potential winners got their day turned to worms at that point.
3) Not long before that wreck, Carl Edwards had his day pretty much ended when Kyle Busch got loose and knocked him to the inside of the track. Carl's car got some pretty heavy front-end damage when he slammed into a rough patch of earth and grass, and he nearly ended up cramming Jeff Gordon into the outside wall as well on his way back up the track. To be fair to Kyle (and even I have to be fair to him occasionally!), after the race he held up his hands and apologised repeatedly for it even though it wasn't even really his fault. Just one of those things that happens when you race close with each other on a track like this.
4) Talking of the track....they started ripping it up right after the race had finished for the repaving and reprofiling work. The first race on the new Phoenix will be in the Chase this November, coming right near the end of the season. Going to add another curveball to the Chase, and some people aren't completely in love with the idea of repaving the track. Really hope this place isn't spoiled by what they do with it.
 
Week three, and we're off to Vegas!

Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Las Vegas
NV


trackbg.jpg


Completed : 1996
Distance : 1.5 miles
Shape : D-shaped oval
Banking : 20° turns, 9° frontstretch, 9° backstretch
Frontstretch : 2,275 feet
Backstretch : 1,572 feet
Seating : 142,000

Just a few miles north of The Strip, Las Vegas Motor Speedway sits like a diamond in the desert. One of the most complete racing complexes in the world, its 1,600 acres include road courses, a three-eighths mile oval, a dirt track and a state-of-the-art drag racing facility.

At its heart, however, is the 1.5-mile Las Vegas Motor Speedway, home of a 400-mile race in the Cup Series, as well as Nationwide and Truck series events.

Construction of the $200 million complex began in 1995. Nearly 2,000 tons of concrete were originally used to build more than 100,000 seats. Shortly after Speedway Motorsports Inc. bought the track in 1998, it announced plans to add 22,000 seats in the Dale Earnhardt Tower overlooking the frontstretch.

The first NASCAR race held at Las Vegas Motor Speedway was a Truck Series event in 1996. The Nationwide Series held a race there in 1997, and a year later the Cup Series made its first visit with Mark Martin picking up the victory in 1998.

Construction of the Richard Petty Terrace in Turn 1 was completed in 2006, allowing fans a shot at 14,000 additional tickets and pushing the track's seating capacity to nearly 150,000.

Additionally, the track saw several major changes in 2006, as the entire surface as reconfigured with progressive banking installed, as well as fan-friendly features in the infield and moving pit road closer to the straightaway

The trucks aren't racing this weekend, so all you get is the Nationwide race on Saturday and the Cup guys on Sunday. 3pm ET on both days (8pm our time). Seems that Jimmie Johnson is the favourite for the Cup race according to the bookies, he'll definitely be looking for a good run this weekend to start piling some points on.
 
Provisional results.

Not the winner I was hoping for necessarily, but the Braindead Moron™ did deserve it. Pity for Smoke, losing another race on strategy when he had more than enough speed to win it. At least he joins Kurt Busch at the top of the standings, a bit of a consolation.

Decent runs for Montoya and Ambrose, won't be long now before one of them wins on an oval. And thanks to the SAFER barriers, which stepped in and protected Jeff Gordon and David Gilliland when they lost their right front tyres - two guys who a few years back would have been pretty badly banged up (or worse). For all their relative unsophistication in places, these stock cars do a fantastic job of keeping the drivers safe in conjunction with the barrier modifications made in recent years. The FIA could learn a few things from NASCAR about how you improve safety without ruining the show.
 
No Cup or Nationwide action this weekend, but the Trucks are racing later today. And it's at probably my favourite track in NASCAR. It's time for The Lady In Black, the one that's too tough to tame. It's time for Darlington.

Darlington Raceway
Darlington
SC


trackbg.jpg


Completed : 1950
Distance : 1.366 miles
Shape : Oval
Banking : 25° Turns 1-2, 23° Turns 3-4, 6° frontstretch, 6° backstretch
Frontstretch : 1,229 feet
Backstretch : 1,229 feet
Seating : 63,000

In the fall of 1949, when a crisp breeze toyed with the loose soil of an old cotton field on the west side of rural Darlington, S.C., Harold Brasington saw more than just dirt dancing around that patch of land.

Brasington, a local businessman, had a lofty vision that most of his peers dismissed as utterly ridiculous. His friends laughed at him when he returned home from the 1933 Indianapolis 500 and mentioned the idea of little Darlington having a paved superspeedway, a place to hold big-time stock car events.

They nearly committed him when he told them he was going to build it. Nevertheless, believing that Bill France's fledgling NASCAR just might catch on, Brasington set out in the fall of 1949 to shape a 1.25-mile speedway on land that had once produced peanuts and cotton.

To the chagrin of family and friends, Brasington and his crew toiled for a year. Brasington himself often manned the controls of bulldozers and grading equipment. His plan called for a true oval, but the racetrack's design had to be changed in order to satisfy the landowner, who did not want his nearby minnow pond disturbed. The west end of the track (Turns 3 and 4) was narrowed to accommodate the fishing hole, creating Darlington's distinctive egg-shaped design.

The first race was scheduled for Labor Day 1950. Brasington expected no more than 10,000 fans, but the crowd of more than 25,000 showed up.
Californian Johnny Mantz drove to victory that day in the first Southern 500. The race took more than six hours to complete. Still, it set a precedent for a series that would grow to be one of the largest spectator sports in the country.

Mantz started dead last in the field of 75 racers, many of whom had never raced on asphalt, but roared to the checkered flag averaging a blistering 76 mph. Over the next 50 years, names like Baker, Flock, Thomas, Pearson, Yarborough, Petty and Earnhardt became commonplace in Victory Lane.

Today the Darlington Raceway is known as the track "Too Tough to Tame" and "The Lady in Black."

It is still remembered as the original superspeedway and as one of the pillars of the NASCAR establishment. There is no other sporting facility in the world more steeped in history and tradition than Darlington Raceway, which has aged gracefully over the years but retained its feisty charm.

Still, nobody loves the challenging track more than the drivers. "You never forget your first love," said seven-time Cup champion Dale Earnhardt, "whether it's a high school sweetheart, a faithful old hunting dog or a fickle racetrack in South Carolina with a contrary disposition.

"And, if you happen to be a racecar driver there's no victory so sweet, so memorable as whipping Darlington Raceway."

The track "Too Tough to Tame" continues to keep pace with the booming NASCAR world, adding lights for a night race in 2005 and expanded seating in 2006. But even more, it's standing as a monument to the drivers and loyal fans who sowed the seeds of stock car racing 50 years ago.
Darlington is a crew chief's nightmare. Setup around here is invariably a compromise, dictated by the two very different ends of the track. The racing groove (i.e. the fastest way around) is pretty narrow, so overtaking usually results in a bit of contact :)

Race coverage starts at around 5pm ET (10pm here), streams from the usual place. Don't believe anyone broadcasts the Trucks on TV in this country.
 
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