Danni
RESULTS
1. Jimmie Johnson
12. Dale Jr.
24. Martin
26. Casey
30. David
40. Kurt (41LD)
42. Brian (DNF - ENGINE)
43. Michael (66LD)
This was truly one of the most agonizing and depressing races I've watched in the five years I've known NASCAR. In fact, it couldn't even be called a race. The tire problem that we were nervous about during practice became more of a story than either of us could have ever guessed.
The day started off on a sour note when Michael dove underneath Sam Hornish on Lap 5 and lost it. In his effort to save the car he drove right down into Paul Menard and wrecked both of them. Despite not being overly fond of Hornish or Menard, this one was all on Michael. To make things worse, the car was one of a new generation for MWR and because of the crash, no one got to see what they were capable of.
But really, future chaos probably would have marred that anyway. The first competition caution was scheduled for Lap 10, but because of the wreck they moved it to Lap 14. The #88 team decided to gamble and pit under the yellow, which didn't make me feel good at all. On Lap 10 they field went green. David hit the wall but was able to continue. Then Kurt spun and took out both himself and Kevin Harvick. Wow. What a day so far!
Junior stayed out when everyone else pitted despite a lot of green laps on his tires (a lot being 4). He led 7 laps and was out on the track for only one more before he had to pit under green for a flat. Surprise!
The next competition caution was Lap 30, making it a 12 lap run, but Juan Pablo Montoya blew a tire a lap prior. By this time, everyone was exasperated because it appeared that you could only run right around 10 laps before the tires came apart! The track was not rubbering up at all - the tires just turned to dust.
The race went green on Lap 35, with the next yellow set for Lap 47 - 12 laps. On Lap 47, Matt Kenseth's right rear tire exploded, ripping his entire quarter panel off.
A few laps before, Mark Martin, Sam Hornish and Carl Edwards also got flats.
Since only the rights were having problems, teams began taking just right sides for track position, including Brian. It seemed to work fine for some and horribly for others. But by now, I was so sick of the race that I didn't really care what happened, as long as everyone got home unharmed.
Competition cautions came out every ten laps or so for the remainder of the race. Some guys were saved from tires failures, while others were held back by not having enough time to pass others. It was so difficult to watch and so frustrating!
Brian was doing well until his engine dropped RPM and eventually blew up on the Lap 106 restart. I was proud of the way he handled it, though. He got up out of the groove and then just stopped to avoid tracking oil all around the track. Still, his contention for the Chase took a big hit. It was also on that restart that Jeff Burton hit a bird while going for the lead! I though it was a water bottle until they showed the replay! Poor bird!
Near the end, everyone started taking two tires so it was even hard to make up track position in the pits. The race for the win looked to be between Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards and Denny Hamlin. With the last 10-lap stint, Johnson got off pit road first and from there on the rest of the field never caught him. I'm sure Jimmie would have liked to seen a better race at Indy, but another Brickyard win for him must be sweet.
The finishing order is hard to judge. With so many issues, drivers and crews required more luck than ever. Some had it and some didn't, plain and simple. NASCAR and Goodyear did what they had to do to keep everyone safe. Goodyear is taking a lot of heat for it. While they are to blame, I hate that people are calling for their heads. When was the last time something like this happened? Very few would remember. I highly doubt Goodyear was delighted by the fiasco at one of the most prestigious races of the year and I'm sure they'll do everything in their power to prevent it from ever happening again.
On to Pocono! We'll be going on Friday (hotel expenses are just too much) and plan on thoroughly enjoying ourselves.
POINT STANDINGS
1. Kyle Busch
2. Dale Jr. -253
15. Brian -774 (-132 from the Chase)
17. Martin -858
18. Kurt -923
25. Casey -1137
27. David -1214
32. Michael -1407
1. Jimmie Johnson
12. Dale Jr.
24. Martin
26. Casey
30. David
40. Kurt (41LD)
42. Brian (DNF - ENGINE)
43. Michael (66LD)
This was truly one of the most agonizing and depressing races I've watched in the five years I've known NASCAR. In fact, it couldn't even be called a race. The tire problem that we were nervous about during practice became more of a story than either of us could have ever guessed.
The day started off on a sour note when Michael dove underneath Sam Hornish on Lap 5 and lost it. In his effort to save the car he drove right down into Paul Menard and wrecked both of them. Despite not being overly fond of Hornish or Menard, this one was all on Michael. To make things worse, the car was one of a new generation for MWR and because of the crash, no one got to see what they were capable of.
But really, future chaos probably would have marred that anyway. The first competition caution was scheduled for Lap 10, but because of the wreck they moved it to Lap 14. The #88 team decided to gamble and pit under the yellow, which didn't make me feel good at all. On Lap 10 they field went green. David hit the wall but was able to continue. Then Kurt spun and took out both himself and Kevin Harvick. Wow. What a day so far!
Junior stayed out when everyone else pitted despite a lot of green laps on his tires (a lot being 4). He led 7 laps and was out on the track for only one more before he had to pit under green for a flat. Surprise!
The next competition caution was Lap 30, making it a 12 lap run, but Juan Pablo Montoya blew a tire a lap prior. By this time, everyone was exasperated because it appeared that you could only run right around 10 laps before the tires came apart! The track was not rubbering up at all - the tires just turned to dust.
The race went green on Lap 35, with the next yellow set for Lap 47 - 12 laps. On Lap 47, Matt Kenseth's right rear tire exploded, ripping his entire quarter panel off.
A few laps before, Mark Martin, Sam Hornish and Carl Edwards also got flats.Since only the rights were having problems, teams began taking just right sides for track position, including Brian. It seemed to work fine for some and horribly for others. But by now, I was so sick of the race that I didn't really care what happened, as long as everyone got home unharmed.
Competition cautions came out every ten laps or so for the remainder of the race. Some guys were saved from tires failures, while others were held back by not having enough time to pass others. It was so difficult to watch and so frustrating!
Brian was doing well until his engine dropped RPM and eventually blew up on the Lap 106 restart. I was proud of the way he handled it, though. He got up out of the groove and then just stopped to avoid tracking oil all around the track. Still, his contention for the Chase took a big hit. It was also on that restart that Jeff Burton hit a bird while going for the lead! I though it was a water bottle until they showed the replay! Poor bird!
Near the end, everyone started taking two tires so it was even hard to make up track position in the pits. The race for the win looked to be between Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards and Denny Hamlin. With the last 10-lap stint, Johnson got off pit road first and from there on the rest of the field never caught him. I'm sure Jimmie would have liked to seen a better race at Indy, but another Brickyard win for him must be sweet.
The finishing order is hard to judge. With so many issues, drivers and crews required more luck than ever. Some had it and some didn't, plain and simple. NASCAR and Goodyear did what they had to do to keep everyone safe. Goodyear is taking a lot of heat for it. While they are to blame, I hate that people are calling for their heads. When was the last time something like this happened? Very few would remember. I highly doubt Goodyear was delighted by the fiasco at one of the most prestigious races of the year and I'm sure they'll do everything in their power to prevent it from ever happening again.
On to Pocono! We'll be going on Friday (hotel expenses are just too much) and plan on thoroughly enjoying ourselves.

POINT STANDINGS
1. Kyle Busch
2. Dale Jr. -253
15. Brian -774 (-132 from the Chase)
17. Martin -858
18. Kurt -923
25. Casey -1137
27. David -1214
32. Michael -1407

I got a kick out of that but I'm still a little nervous about the bigger tracks where horsepower is more important.
Mike Skinner did a great job practicing the car - as usual! I'm looking forward to a good race tonight for the #99 team.





From then on it was just survival. It was also during this yellow that Martin got nailed for speeding after mistakenly following leader Carl Edwards down pit road when he was supposed to stay out. Considering his finish, he raced his butt off the remainder of the night!
He went on a complete rant about how NASCAR needs to do something because Toyota has an advantage and makes twenty-two more horsepower than Chevrolet (he had a piece of paper telling him this - okay, now where did this paper come from I wonder?). Of course this riot against Toyota is created mainly by the #20 car and more specifically Kyle Busch winning six races already this season. I understand that it's frustrating, especially to the Nationwide teams that have a hard enough time competing against Cup-funded cars to begin with and now they have to deal with the best driver in NASCAR right now driving the best cars in NASCAR. However, it's completely unfair for Rusty to lump all the Toyotas together! If all the engines have
) and kept on sailing. No one could touch him!! It was wonderful and lovely and boy did I bask in the glow of seeing that little Aaron's Dream Machine out front!
The official reason for being out of the race was a driveshaft, but was that just an excuse for a start-and-park? Brandon is far too talented to have to put up with start-and-park organizations (I realize that a lot of teams do it to save up money to race again, since they don't have sponsorship) and equipment that fails twenty laps into the race. There is no race report up on his site or Specialty Racing's site so I have no idea what happened. This just wasn't what I'd hoped for being his first race in a long time...
). For a short time he methodically worked his way through traffic but Matt Kenseth was spun by Bobby Hamilton Jr. (both cars trying to stay ahead of David), bringing out the caution and giving David clear vision on the next restart.

Maybe this backup car is as good as his 500 car!
I like Kyle but that was ridiculous! NASCAR simply gave him a warning. I guess even if they had black-flagged him it wouldn't have helped David's team out. Once he went to the back (probably as a result of his old tires) and green flag pit stops cycled through, there was nothing the #99 team could do to get to the front.
It also helps in showcasing yourself to future rides.
So I have no idea what happened there.