Indianapolis Motor Speedway - Brickyard 400
Kurt Busch: 11th (started 6th)
- The team really struggled early with the car’s handling and Kurt dropped like a rock. Pit stops sent him to the back of the pack after a speeding penalty. Then, on a later stop while leaving, Kurt came out slightly ahead of Scott Wimmer and in the left lane. Everything was fine until Clint Bowyer shot out of his stall and forced Kurt to the right, where Scott’s front bumper was. Scott got shoved hard into the wall and peeled Kurt’s rear bumper cleanly off. Shame on the #07 crew for sending Clint out without checking traffic first! The #2 car had to come back in for repairs, but after that Kurt charged through the field.
- Kurt can now smell the sweet air of the Chase. He is 13th in points, only 13 markers away from Dale Jr.
Martin Truex Jr.: 12th (started 33rd)
- A horrible qualifying attempt turned into a good day for Martin and his team. However, it wasn’t easy getting there. First, he sped on pit road. A large wreck gave him some minor left-front damage and he went back down pit lane to get it repaired. But he ran the paddle at the end of pit lane and was held a lap! After some time, he got the free pass and clawed his way up the field. A hard day’s work!
- Martin remains 11th in points.
Brian Vickers: 21st (started 25th)
- The car was decent but a crappy alternator gave them electrical problems that distracted them from adjusting on the car. It wasn’t a bad finish considering the issues they had, but I’m sure the #83 Red Bull team would have liked a better day.
- Quotes:
“We continue to beat ourselves and that's one thing we have to fix. The car was okay, we were probably a top-15 car. We weren't great - we were okay. We think we lost an alternator and that pretty much ruined our day. It could have been wiring, it could have been a lot of issues, but it was an electrical failure. We had a total overhaul of the car during a pit stop around lap 47. We were just trying to get ahead of the car. We weren't handling nearly the way we needed to be, a nd we were obviously trying to fix the battery.”
- Brian still sits 39th in points and 40th in owner points.
Scott Wimmer: 31st (started 22nd)
- He was having a good day in the #33 Holiday Inn Chevy until that incident on pit road. It sucked and Scott got the worst of it.
Dale Earnhardt Jr.: 34th (started 4th)
- He had the best car in his career at this track and was very strong early, leading 33 laps. With under 30 to go and while running 5th, the engine blew up. A pulley broke on the front of the motor. Junior was happy with the way they ran, but not happy with the finish with the Chase looming.
- Quotes:
“Fabulous job by the Bud team all day long, all weekend long actually. We had a fast car; we just blew a motor. Probably had a bad part or something. We don't have that many failures. Really proud of DEI for everything they gave us the weekend. We had some good stuff. We were going to get us a top-five if not challenge for the win later in the race.”
- Junior is dangerously close to the cut-off now. He sits in 12th, only 13 points ahead of the 13th place driver, Kurt Busch.
Casey Mears: 35th (started 9th)
- The car wasn’t very good to begin with, but when Casey pitted, he sped and was sent to the back. As if it couldn’t have gotten worse, he dove into the turn too hard and slid up into Johnny Sauter. A sizable wreck ensued and sent Casey to the garage for a time.
- Quotes:
“I thought we were making good changes and making the car a little bit better. And I got behind Bobby Labonte to try to follow and pass the No. 70 (Johnny Sauter) and I was tucked up so close behind the No. 43 (Labonte) that when I went to go get on the brakes to make the corner, I just went straight. I ended up getting into the side of the No. 70. It was definitely my fault for getting into the No. 70 there and I hate that. It was a long race and I felt like we had a car that if we could have gotten it right we could have had a good finish.”
- This drops Casey down 2 spots to 19th in points.
David Reutimann: 38th (started 34th)
- They weren’t running well to begin with, but then the car dropped a cylinder and eventually the engine blew. Second week in a row. It’s so frustrating, but this is what happens when a team is new and the manufacturer is new.
- Quotes:
“Just a motor failure for the second week in a row. I don't know what we have going on there, but it's really disappointing. We don't know why, but they'll go back and take a look at it to try to figure out the problem. First it dropped a cylinder, and then it started blowing oil out of the exhaust. Our car was okay -- we seemed to go from one side to the other on handling, but we were going to be okay. I'm just really disappointed to end the day like this.”
- David gains a spot to 40th in points and stays 41st in owner points.
Other Notes:
- Tony Stewart just baffles me. At the end of the race, Kevin Harvick was leading but obviously fading. So what does Tony do? Instead of passing him cleanly, he dove in low into the corner and nailed Harvick in the left front, successfully disabling the car’s aero and royally pissing Harvick off. Tony went on to easily win the race while Harvick plummeted to 7th. During the cool down lap, Harvick barreled up to Tony’s right side and slammed him hard – not in a congratulatory manner, as some people and Harvick later said. I understood it, but I felt bad for Reed Sorenson, who was on Tony’s left side and had to swerve into the grass to avoid being hit. Greg Zippadelli, the #20’s crew chief, went on and on about how much Tony had matured. Little did he know that Tony would smirk while standing on the bricks and say on live television, “This one's for every one of those fans in the stands who pull for me every week and take all the bullshit from everybody else.” And yes, his niece and nephew were present when he said that. What a childish idiot! He said it on purpose and just plain didn’t care. He also didn’t look very appreciative of his second Brickyard win. Something is hugely wrong with him. Ironically, all the “bullshit” his fans have to deal with is just going to increase now with that stupid remark. If Tony really cares about his fans, he’d quit being such a jerk who seems to wallow in controversy. He is becoming an embarrassment to NASCAR.
- Jimmie Johnson’s tumultuous relationship with Indy continued. He got involved in the massive wreck with Scott Riggs and Jamie McMurray, but that wasn’t the end of it. The team made some nice-looking but unsteady repairs to the left front of the car. When Jimmie went back on the track and attempted to get his lap back, the tire blew and sent him hard into the wall. The impact broke something and the car burst into flames. Jimmie flew to the apron and leaped out, but not before his eyelashes were singed after the impact flipped his visor up. Very scary, but I’m glad he’s okay.
- DEI and Ginn Racing have merged, a move that sends Joe Nemechek, Sterling Marlin and Regan Smith to the gray world of a rideless driver. Mark Martin now drives for DEI with Aric Almirola (remember the Busch race at Milwaukee? I guess he did too!) as his protege. Paul Menard also wins, for he got the owner points of the #14 and is now locked in to the races. It’s a smart move for DEI, but despite Mark’s happy words about it, he certainly doesn’t look happy. It’ll be interesting how this all shakes out in the end.
- Terry Labonte was in the #55 NAPA Camry once again. He used the Championship Provisional to get in and ran rather poorly. With 10 laps to go, the engine blew up. Pretty dismal.