Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Week 34 Preview: Texas

AAA Texas 500

Week 34


By Richard Tix

NASCAR heads to Texas for it's second race of the Eliminator round. This track might be a place for guys to make a move as it is a fast track. At the same time, if no teams have any bad luck this week they may all end up with quality finishes, leaving little wiggle room from last week to this week.

One thing is for sure, everyone on of the eight drivers left in the Chase will be pushing hard for that all important win to move them onto Miami. Only two automatic bids are up for grabs since Dale Jr stole a win from the Chasers last week at Martinsville.


(This is just a review of each drivers recent past performance, generally about 5-10 past races)

The Good
  • Matt Kenseth- 24 career starts at Texas and Kenseth has 17 top 10's. 13 of those 17 are top 5's and he also has two career wins. In his last 18 starts he has 15 top 10's (two 12th's) and 12 top 5's. That's a pretty nice run for Kenseth.
  • Jimmie Johnson- Just as impressive is JJ's 22 career starts. He has 16 top 10's, 10 top 5's, and 3 wins. Just in his last four races here he has 2 wins, not bad. 
  • Greg Biffle- In Biffles last 12 here he has 11 top 10's (the other was 12th). In that time 7 were top 5's and he also had a win in 2012. 
The Middle
  • Denny Hamlin- DH normally finishes very well at Texas, but in his last 6 starts he only has one top 10 here. However, just before that he had back to back wins at Texas. 
The Bad
  • Danica Partick- Sorry Danica, four starts and no top 20's do not help your chances of staying off this list. She hasn't finished outside 28th, but also hasn't finished better than 24th.
  • Marcus Ambrose- 12 starts and one top 10. I hate to see Ambrose on these list's on his way out of NASCAR. His last five starts at Texas hasn't yielded a single top 15.
  • Ricky Stenhouse Jr- Only 3 starts here, but he still makes the list with his girlfriend. That's because he only has one top 25 in those three starts and zero top 15's. This could just be a lack of power from his RFR cars, since it seems like the strong cars are always fast here, only time will tell as things even out in NASCAR over time.

More Texas Articles:


Tuesday, October 28, 2014

2014 Texas Motor Speedway Entry List

NASCAR Driver Entry List for Texas


By Richard Tix

The second race of the NASCAR Chase Eliminator Round, Texas Motor Speedway. List is from Jayski.com.




Monday, October 27, 2014

2014 Texas Schedule

AAA Texas 500


By Richard Tix

**All Times are Eastern**


Thursday October 30, 2014
  • 2-3 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice
  • 3:30-5 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice
Friday October 31, 2014
  • noon-12:50 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice- FOX Sports 1
  • 1-2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice- FOX Sports 1
  • 3:15 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying- FOX Sports 1
  • 4:30-6 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice- ESPN2
  • 6:45 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying- ESPN2 
  • 8:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series WinStar World Casino and Resort 350 (147 laps)- FOX Sports 1
Saturday November 1, 2014
  • 11-11:50 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice- FOX Sports 1
  • 12:15 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying- FOX Sports 2
  • 2-2:50 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice- FOX Sports 2
  • 3:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series O'Reily Auto Parts Challenge (200 laps)- ESPN2
Sunday November 2, 2014
  • 3 p.m. ET: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series AAA Texas 500 (334 laps)- ESPN

Pit Road Week 33: Martinsville

Weekly Review and Power Rankings

Week 33


By Richard Tix

After the Contender round NASCAR fans started to fire up. What do you expect when in the same week Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr drop out of Championship contention and Brad Keselowski moves on? 

But what I didn't expect was for some race fans to try and say they would not watch the remaining four races just because Jr didn't move on. To me, that's a crazy reason to not watch NASCAR. You could stop watching for many reason's other then because your driver isn't moving on.

Now, I get it, if your driver is left out of the final four races and you would rather watch the NFL most of Sunday, and maybe flip back to the race here and there, more power to ya, but to say it's all because Jr didn't move on? It isn't like he didn't have a fair shot. This year, or last years points format, wouldn't mean a difference, either way he wasn't winning the Championship. Heck, if you go to the old, old points system Gordon I believe has a firm grip over Joey Logano and then Dale.

What happened Sunday was the reason I thought it was crazy not to watch just because your driver dropped out. That's because yes, Dale Jr won his first race at Martinsville and win #4 on the 2014 season. On top of that reason, I think Dale Earnhardt Jr would call you crazy to just stop watching him race because he couldn't win a Championship. He still has 3 more races he can win in 2014! Its not like other sporting events where when your team is out of the playoffs they are no longer playing, no in racing everyone can still go out there and win that trophy. So, to all you fans of non Chasers, enjoy this time as it is a non pressure situation where your driver can shine.

The rest of us will just continue to grow grey hairs and yell at the people on TV who can't hear us, or am I the only one?


Pit Road Power Rankings Week 33 (Week 32)

  1. Joey Logano (LW-2)- JoLo had a good car on Sunday in which he held some laps, but down the stretch he just didn't have it. Again he had a fast car and finished 5th, he still looks to be a favorite to move on to Miami.
  2. Jeff Gordon (LW-6)- Gordon had one of the cars to beat on Sunday. He lead early and often, but a late caution came out that switched a lot of drivers strategies up. In the end Jr pulled away and Gordon couldn't lock down his spot to automatically move on.
  3. Ryan Newman (LW-3)- Newman has turned it on when he needed it. All season I raved about his consistency, but heck, I didn't actually expect him to have a shot at the last four. Well, after a third at Martinsville a few quality finishes might give him the shot he needs.
  4. Matt Kenseth (LW-5)- Kenseth got into it with Harvick early in the race and it ended up ruining the #4 teams day. However, Matt fought back and finished 6th (even though Happy wasn't too happy with him). 
  5. Denny Hamlin (LW-8)- Denny just keeps hanging around in this Chase. He has yet to post at op 5, but hasn't had any crippling finishes either. His 8th place finish on Sunday was the same way. He has left himself with a window of opportunity the next two races.
  6. Kevin Harvick (LW-1)- Harvick finishes 33rd and is a head of Carl? Yeah, and so is BK. A slow start by these too who have shown they can win (especially Harvick at Phoenix) is enough to edge Carl. Harvick and Kenseth tangled and Harvick got the short end on Sunday.
  7. Brad Keselowski (LW-4)- BK was running top 10 most of the day when something gave out in his rear axle. That ended his day for the most part and puts pressure back on him to find a win.
  8. Carl Edwards (LW-7)- Carl could get away with a 20th place finish in the first two rounds, but this round will be harder to get out of that hole. Texas will be a huge test and he will need a quality finish.
  9. Clint Bowyer (LW-NR)- Back to back top 10's for Bowyer and he gets the new Top Spot for Non Chaser's. 
  10. Kyle Busch (LW-10)- Kyle Busch still leads drivers in points who are not in the last 8. One bad luck wreck at Talladega is the only thing that separates him from a Ryan Newman or Denny Hamlin right now.
  11. Austin Dillon (LW-12)- Nothing amazing, but in Dillon's last 6 he has only finished outside the top 13 once. He also only has one top 10 in that span as well.
  12. Dale Earnhardt Jr (LW-NR)- Well the winner has to get a spot this week. Its tough taking all the drivers left out of the Chase and giving them 4 spots. 

That's it for this week on Pit Road. No one picked Dale Jr this week amazingly, but I also was a bit behind in sending out Tweets since I was at a buddies Wedding. As always, thanks for checking out NASCAR Behind the Wall. 

Thursday, October 23, 2014

NASCAR Sprint Cup Chase: Old and New


By Richard Tix

NASCAR's 2014 season is coming slowly to a close week by week. With that comes even more driver eliminations. With driver eliminations comes more fans speaking out louder (or for the first time) that they don't like this new Chase format. Is it because there driver isn't in it anymore? Is it because the Chase is truly unfair? Is it because a fan just doesn't like change? Is it a mix of reasons?

I wont be answering any of those questions, because we are all different. However, I have overheard many of people (or read tweets) about how fans think the Chase is unfair because one bad race means there driver no longer has a shot at the title. Or, eliminations take out there driver and there chances and the "old way" they would still have a chance, even after a bad race.

So, I started to look into a few of the past Champions just because I was curious, does a bad finish really take a driver out of it? Is it unfair? If a driver had a bad race before they would have 9 other races to make up for it, right?

After going back and forth on Twitter for awhile with a few fellow NASCAR fans I decided that 140 characters at a time (including twitter handles of a handful of followers) is not enough to get the stats out.

I am not here to change anyone's opinion. I already know, NASCAR fans are loyal and some of us really hate change (which is why its tough for some to keep following NASCAR's endless amount of change). But, I have been very open minded about this Chase from the very beginning (as you can read here in NASCAR's New Era). I gave it a chance, because NASCAR is in a corner where it has two totally different demographics and Target Markets. That is, its older and loyal fan base that has been around since before the boom in the 1990's and the new generation of NASCAR fans it is trying to pull in. The thing is, NASCAR needs both of these markets to thrive, and the markets are totally 180 degrees different from each other. Sure, some older fans match the market for the younger and vise versa, but in general its a tough spot for NASCAR to be in.

How do you grow the sport, while trying to keep the "golden years," "and the good ole years" group happy? I am not giving NASCAR a break, but this is no easy task. Yet, NASCAR is trying to please its fan base, it know's the sports needs us, and it know's the base has been growing concern. But, NASCAR created this Chase for us, the fans, because, well, they need us.

So on that statement, lets at least try and take an open mind into some stats I started to pull up on the old Chase and New Chase. I will not be going back to the non Chase days because I hate to break it to you, I don't see NASCAR going back to that anytime soon.


Old Chase Format (2004-2013)
Past Champion
#48
#2
#14
#48
#48
#48
#48
#48
#20
#97

Year
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
Race #
Finish
Chase Race 1
5
1
1
25
4
2
6
39
2
1
Chase Race 2
4
6
1
1
1
5
14
13
18
5
Chase Race 3
1
1
25
2
9
1
3
14
2
5
Chase Race 4
6
7
15
3
1
9
2
24
4
6
Chase Race 5
4
11
8
3
1
6
14
2
25
4
Chase Race 6
13
8
7
5
2
1
1
1
2
5
Chase Race 7
5
6
1
7
6
2
1
2
9
42
Chase Race 8
1
2
1
9
38
15
1
2
6
10
Chase Race 9
3
6
3
5
1
1
1
2
4
6
Chase Race 10
9
15
1
2
5
15
7
9
15
5
10 Race Avg.
5.1
6.3
6.3
6.2
6.8
5.7
5
10.8
8.7
8.9
Chase Win's
2
2
5
1
4
3
4
1
0
1
2.3

When I first looked back at the stats from the old Chase format I looked at the last three Champions. I noticed only once did they finish outside the top 15 (Smoke, Race 3 in 2011). Then I noticed only 5 times in those 300 combined Chase races did they finish outside the top 10. One finish was JJ (13th), one was BK (11th) and the other BK was a 15th at Miami when he just needed to stay clean. So, the Champion finished top 10 25 times in 30 races and only once finishing outside the top 15 (which was in a season which Smoke had 5 Chase wins). So, I started there and was intrigued, what did the other Champions Chase seasons look like?

19 times in 100 races (or for you math majors, only 19% of the time) has a Champion finished outside the top 10. If that doesn't tell you how one mistake would ruin your Chase chances in the old system I am not sure what does? Fans seem to think that now it is way more unfair to Chase drivers because they think a bad finish (or bad luck during just one race) will ruin there teams chances. When really, it always ruined there chances before. Heck, if you finished just two races outside the top 20 in a 10 race Chase you could count yourself out, and that could be because of a bad luck pit stop, a wreck at Talladega (ironic after this past round isn't it), or just running out of fuel. You could have had the best season every going up until that two race point and you were done for the next 6 races no matter what you did. Now, if you have bad luck you can bank on trying to win and see a new day.

One other part to note: In almost every season (except 2005) winning in the Chase was important. Only Smoke in 2005 didn't have a win and even counting that season the 10 Championship seasons included 2.3 wins during the 10 race Chase. With that all said, lets look at this years remaining eight drivers...


Eliminator Round Drivers
Chase Driver
#22
#4
#2
#24
#11
#31
#20
#99
Race #
Finish
Chase Race 1
4
5
1
2
6
15
10
20
Chase Race 2
1
3
7
26
37
18
21
17
Chase Race 3
4
13
2
1
12
8
5
11
Chase Race 4
1
12
36
14
7
6
13
5
Chase Race 5
4
1
16
2
9
7
19
8
Chase Race 6
11
9
1
26
18
5
2
21
6 Race Avg.
4.17
7.167
10.5
11.8
14.83
9.83
11.7
13.7
Chase Win's
2
1
2
1
0
0
0
0

Let's take a quick look at how the Chase drivers that will be in the Eliminator Round are doing so far under the new Chase Format. I did not look at any driver that missed the cut from last round because they have even more finishes outside the top 15 and 20 then these guys, meaning, even in a old Chase format they would be a very, very big long shot to win (pretty much counted out already, anyways). If this were the old Chase guys like Gordon, Hamlin, Kenseth, and Edwards would be all but out of the Chase picture anyways (according to the stats above in the Old Chase Format (2013-2004)). That would mean one of the faster cars of the season (Gordon) who if we take the "olden days" approach and say "well this Chase doesn't award the best overall driver for the entire season" would be out of the running.

Well, in this format he gets a break for having bad luck in the last 10 races, even though he had one heck of a regular season.

Looking between these two tables and it sure looks like Joey Logano would be the favorite. As he should be, the #22 has been one of the fastest most consistent drivers all year. BK, and Harvick also would have a shot according to stats from the old format since they both only have the two races outside the top 10.

The thing is, the Chase gets harder the further you go on, which it should. Who wants a Championship decided 5 races before the end of the season? And if you say "but the best driver in that season at least won the Championship." Yes, but most of the guys who had the most complete and fastest season's are still in the Chase (22, 4, 24, and 2). You can make a case for the #88 team, but they fell off a bit towards the end of the season, and there is no way under any Chase format they would have still been in it with some of there Chase finishes (the only way would have been a win).

Each round it becomes even more satisfying for teams, drivers, and fans when they move on. Just check out the emotions that are displayed week to week (which is something I personally love seeing). I know NASCAR is like no other sport, and that is a great thing which sets them apart. However, I do love the drama the elimination brings to each round. I also believe it will make a Championship that much more satisfying in the end whether you are a driver, a teammate, an owner, or just a fan.

Oh, and unless JJ or Gordon can get to 7 (or 8) I think it will be much harder to touch Dale Sr and the Kings record (which some of the fans that love the nostalgia of those old record will smile about).

This in no way needs to change your mind, in fact you may look at the same stats and see a totally different view out of them. Everything in life is about perspective. But, I figured NASCAR Behind the Wall could help pull some of those stats out of the books and get you thinking about the Chase and where NASCAR is heading (or should head).