Monday, May 21, 2012
Mostly Sunny Mostly Sunny, 73° Weather Forecast

Jeff Wolf - Las Vegas Motor Sports
Jeff revs your engine with news and opinions on local and national motor sports scenes.

Read all of Jeff's columns.
View all blog entries
May 2012
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
« Apr    
  01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      
Kyle misses Chase by a whisker

Kyle Busch fell one spot short of qualifying for the Sprint Cup Chase for the championship despite being one of only two drivers to win a series-best four Cup races this season.

Mark Martin is the other four-time winner but made it in with a fourth-place finish Saturday in Richmond, Va., where Busch placed fifth. Brian Vickers finished seventh and passed Busch by eight points for the final Chase spot.

My column Friday will take a deeper look into the Chase and its format, but here are a few things to ponder until then: * No big rumblings about a four-time winner — Busch — not making it into the Chase, but I bet there would have been had Martin been left on the outside looking in.

* A great comeback year for Kurt Busch, who qualified seventh after missing the Chase a year ago. But he goes into the Chase with a lame duck crew chief; Pat Tryson will leave the team after the season to become crew chief for Martin Truex Jr., when Truex begins driving the No. 56 Toyota for Michael Waltrip Racing.

* What happened to Ford? The only one of three U.S. manufacturers not to seek government support for sagging car sales will have only two Fords — Roush Fenway’s Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle — in the Chase.

Even more shocking is Ford is tied with Dodge for last in the manufacturers’ standings. Chevrolet is first with 190 points (12 wins) followed by Toyota (154 points, nine wins), Dodge (114 points, three wins) and Ford (114 points, two wins.)

Ford’s Matt Kenseth, who did not make the Chase, started the season by winning the first two races, and a Ford hasn’t won since.

Takes it like a man

As disappointed as Kyle was after Saturday night’s race, he stood by his No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota and fielded questions from the media.

“It’s very, very frustrating,” he said. “I’m heartbroken, but the good Lord put me in this predicament for some reason and some day I’ll find out what it is. Right now, I’m not quite sure.

“We’ll take this and go the rest of the year and try to win some more races. We just need to work on our consistency. We picked up at some tracks that we needed to and we faltered at some tracks that we thought we were good at. Just wasn’t our year and wasn’t meant to be for some reason.”

Four wins with 10 left is a pretty good season. A few more wins can show the weakness in the Chase qualifying format that doesn’t do enough to reward race winners.

Gaughan gets new chiefs

Rusty Wallace Racing announced Monday that effective immediately Wes Ward (director of competition) and Dale Ferguson (lead engineer) will serve as co-crew chiefs for driver Brendan Gaughan’s Dodge in the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

Ward and Ferguson replace Brian Berry.

"This was a hard decision for us to make,” Rusty Wallace said. “Brian’s a good person and a good crew chief. There are just times when the communication between a driver and crew chief doesn't work out quite right, and this was one of them."

F1 might return to North America

Formula One is set to return to Montreal next year, according to The Associated Press.

The sport's governing body and Grand Prix F1 du Canada Inc. have settled a financial dispute that began last fall and led to the cancellation of the 2009 Canadian Grand Prix.

Montreal promoter Normand Legault says an announcement that Montreal is back on the F1 schedule is "forthcoming." He says he has no plans to be involved in staging future editions of the race.

 

Comments (1)

Registration Notice: The Review-Journal has implemented a new registration procedure that requires all existing and new accounts to validate and login using Facebook. Visit the Registration FAQ for more information.

Share your thoughts on this story.

Sign in or register to make a comment.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

1 Response to "Kyle misses Chase by a whisker"
The dictatorship known as NASCAR has, once again, shown that it is the only sport in which winning means virtually nothing. Mark and Kyle both had to go to the last race in spite of being the winningest drivers in the series. Mark made the chase, Kyle didn't. YET, three drivers in the chase didn't even get a win. Spports should be about winning, not "stroking" and being content with the top 10 every week. They need to reward a win with at least 30-40 points more than second place. IGetting rid of the Chase would also be welcome. If a driver gets hot and wins 10-12 races in year and runs away with the title, then so be it. He deserves it.
Written by: William.Dotterer on Thursday, Sep. 17, 2009 at 6:47 PM -- Report abuse
More Blogs