RESULTS1. Kyle Busch
5. Martin
10. Kurt
18. Brian
19. Casey
22. Dale Jr.
33. David (1LD)
39. Michael (7LD)
After so much discussion about rain and rain tires, Sunday dawned at Watkins Glen sunny and pleasant, promising a good day of road racing. The drivers took advantage of the conditions - surprisingly, there were only four full cautions (but one red flag... more on that later).
Dale Jr. used his second place starting position to take the lead from Kyle Busch and head the field until Lap 29. Near the back of the pack, David was trying to get into a rhythm. As he was following AJ Allmendinger to make a pass on another car into Turn 1, he got in a little hot, locked up his wheels and spun off the track onto the concrete. Despite being disappointed, I was happy he didn't hit any other cars or the wall. He got back going, seven seconds behind the next driver. Though I'm sure he was hoping for a caution to catch back up, he didn't rely on it. Determination drove him back to the tail of the field. Go David! Hopefully he felt a bit better about himself when Pat Carpentier also dove into Turn 1 too hard several laps afterwards, but he turned himself as well as PJ Jones.
Green flag pit stops began, which unfortunately put David a lap down (and with the lack of yellows, trapped him there). Pretty much, when cars start pitting, all other cars are forced to pit because they lose so much time on the track. However, Dale Jr. waited much longer than everyone else and was one of the last cars to pull in. As a result, he dropped to 6th place. I thought they just made a mistake and it wouldn't happen again.
In the meantime, Martin was running very well and was pleased with his car. Kurt, Brian and Casey were also in the top-20. When Sam Hornish went off the track and scattered gravel onto the racing surface to bring out the caution on Lap 48, most of the field stayed out - in about ten laps, a pit stop would bring them into their fuel window for the remainder of the race. But it was during this yellow that Junior pitted again, allowing him to go further than his competitors. This strategy would be his undoing.
The race took a green trend again and as expected the cars that had to pit did so. To my unease, the #88 stretched it out again - he was 22 seconds in front of second place Kyle Busch! The comentators warned over and over again that it was risky to stay out when a caution could fall at any moment. As if to punish the team, Travis Kvapil took an off-road excursion through the gravel pit and dumped his souvenirs onto the track. The caution didn't come out immediately, giving a chance for Junior to pit, but he continued racing as the yellow waved. I was confused and frustrated - after pitting under the caution, he dropped all the way back to 31st! Win gone! Even the chance of a decent finish was over. I am certainly not one to bash Tony Jr. every time something doesn't go right with a call, but I wasn't all too satisfied with the way this turned out.
Green laps resumed until Ryan Newman, running 3rd, lost control into Turn 1. It stalled, rolling backward into the groove. NASCAR waited to see if he could get it refired, but with cars swerving to miss the #12 by inches, eventually they were forced to throw the caution. Watching the cars just barely get by made me wince - it would have hurt a lot to hit a stationary vehicle.
But that was nothing compared to what came next. After the next restart, with less than ten laps remaining, things got heated. Apparently David Gilliland and Michael McDowell had an issue on the backstretch (though no footage was ever shown, so the whole truth of that is questionable). On the exit on the last turn, McDowell got into the back of Gilliland and shoved him out of the way. On the frontstretch, with the #38 still outside of him, McDowell suddenly swung to the left and hit Gilliland's right front. This caused Gilliland to hit the wall head first and bounce back into the path of oncoming traffic on the narrowest part of the track near the entrance of pit road, right after a 90 degree turn. This was the perfect recipe for disaster. Cars flew in, unable to stop. Bobby Labonte hit the broadside #38 hard, ricocheting onto pit lane. Sam Hornish spun and hit the sand barrels protecting the sharp entrance of the outside pit wall in an explosion of grit and shattered plastic. Max Papis, an Italian road racers, slammed into the outside track wall driver's side. Also involved were Dave Blaney, Joe Nemechek, Reed Sorenson and of course, Michael Waltrip.

It was tense and scary until everyone got out of their cars, but Labonte appeared to be in a lot of pain and was taken to the hospital for observation (he was later released unharmed).
Because of the carnage, a lengthy red flag was ordered. It gave me enough time to study the replays and come to the conclusion that the crash was McDowell's fault. It even appears that he did in intentionally (that's what I think - he may not have). Why? Obviously, he whacked the #38 out of the way exiting the corner. If you watch the replay close enough, Gilliland remained high and straight, while the #00 turned to the left at an angle. Now, if McDowell simply didn't realize he was there, he probably would have gone straight into the wall. Instead, McDowell swooped left, made contact, then banked to the right, clipping the wall with his left rear. Just the odd physics alone implies that the whole move may have been planned by McDowell.
To clear Gilliland's name, as said above, he held his line entering the frontstretch. But the manner in which the #38 wrecked speaks for itself. If Gilliland had tried to hook the #00, why did
he end up nailing the wall with his front end? It doesn't make physical sense to even suggest Gilliland caused the mess... which is why I'm absolutely floored about what Michael Waltrip said on TWiN Monday night. At first, I thought he'd take full advantage of both McDowell and Gilliland stating post-race that the incident was just racing (personally, I think McDowell is lucky that Gilliland isn't a driver with a short fuse). But when he said, "Let me explain what happened," my heart dropped before he even uttered another word. He went on to say that Gilliland lost his temper and tried to hook McDowell!

I could barely believe what I was hearing. Not only was Michael going against what pretty much all the media and fans said and against what even his own driver said, to declare factually that Gilliland lost his cool and caused the crash was arrogant and downright ignorant. At first I was angry but now I'm just at a loss.

Gilliland went off on Michael during a radio show interview and now fans are emailing NAPA their disapproval. While most of the mail likely consists of immature mob mentality, it's not good exposure for NAPA when they just extended with Michael for next year. Hopefully this whole mess gone messier will blow over. It doesn't look good for McDowell either, because he's been replaced by Mike Skinner for the next three races. So... just more drama that MWR doesn't really need right now.

I really wish sometimes Michael would think before he speaks. It is not only him that his words affect anymore.
The race continued without major event until Kyle Busch took the checkers, an impressive feat considering that Tony Stewart was behind him. That #18 team can win on anything!
I was really struck with Martin's excellent finish and delighted with Kurt's 10th - after all his bad luck, the #2 crew deserved it! Brian and Casey did decently but I was upset with Dale Jr.'s final position. The strange pit strategy hurt. David was able to gain a handful of spots because of the crash (he barely got through it himself!). I know he's a good road racer - he just needs track time! With practice comes confidence and with confidence comes good results! The involvement with the wreck, however, put the #55 in a horrible spot in points. Now, with only 21 markers separating him from 36th, Michael needs a good finish to make a cushion again. I'm so afraid he'll be on the bubble now for the rest of the year. He ran very well at Michigan so it's probably one of the better tracks to go to next.
There won't be any races reports (at least for some time) for either Michigan or Bristol (

) because my sister and I are moving to Syracuse for college and we won't be getting cable until the 26th! Without NASCAR, we'll be forced to explore the city so hopefully we'll survive for the race at Fontana.
POINT STANDINGS1. Kyle Busch
4. Dale Jr. -269
16. Martin -835
17. Brian -836
18. Kurt -985
24. Casey -1184
27. David -1327
32. Michael -1572 (33rd in owner points +21 from 36th

)