Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Turning Nothing Into Something



This time last year, Chase Elliot had no plans for the 2014 season after his primary sponsor, Aaron’s, had left. 2013 was Elliot’s introductory season into the premier series of NASCAR, running a handful of Camping World Truck Series races and even collecting a win. 
          In late December 2013, NAPA teamed up with JR Motorsports and Chase Elliot as the driver to run the No.9 fulltime in the Nationwide series for 2014. Many were excited to watch the talented Elliot take on some of NASCAR’s best, but few expected him to be a true contender. Early on Elliot showed his maturity and talent with strong solid finishes, and a statement victory at Texas. No one thought that the week after his first victory that Elliott would be in victory lane again at a track such as Darlington.
            Elliot was proving that he was going to be a contender for the Championship, and he didn’t disappoint. He took over the points lead after Chicagoland and never went back. The team never pushed the edge to be in victory lane each week. Elliott used his talents and maturity to do exactly what he needed to do: stay ahead and finish strong. Chase Elliot entered this previous Saturday’s race at Phoenix only needing to finish ahead of teammate Regan Smith to become the youngest champion in series history. He was able to lock in the championship by doing just that. At a mere eighteen years old, Elliot became a champion, when a year ago he didn’t even have plans for 2014.

-Stephen Appell

The Time Is Now



This weekend’s race at Homestead is the one that sixteen drivers pushed for, and only four achieved. This is the time for those four drivers to race the hardest they have in their career at a track they only see once a year. This race isn’t about who wins, but who finishes ahead of the other three drivers.
            Kevin Harvick, Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin, and Ryan Newman are the Championship  4 and one thing we will definitely have is a first time champion.  Homestead is a tough track because NASCAR drivers only get to race there once a year. Many teams took advantage of testing there just a few weeks ago to gain an advantage.  Three of the four drivers could use the extra practice, as Denny Hamlin has won here twice before and he is the only winner at Homestead in a Gen 6 car. But again, this race isn’t about who wins, but who finishes ahead.
            The best part about the new Chase format is this final race. Even with previous Chase formats, many times the champion had a “no worse than” position to win, meaning to win the championship a driver couldn’t finish any worse than 20th if the driver who was second place in points won the race. Now that this is no longer the case, each driver needs to finish the best he can, as long as that is just in front of the second driver or winning. Every lap you can lead or any car you can pass is going to help. Hamlin has the upper hand only because of his previous wins here, yet Harvick and Logano are two of the best drivers this season on intermediate tracks. And you can never count out Ryan Newman, who hasn’t been doing so well as of late, but he is one who can definitely surprise you. This is the race in which every fan will be on the edge of their seat until the checkered flag drops.
-Stephen Appell

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

The Perfect Storm

When the new Chase format was announced the hopes, were to create great drama and excitment; they have done just that. Through the first six races of the Chase, there was a Chase contender winning to advance to the next round. We are now entering the last race the eleminator round in the Chase and no drivers are locked in yet. This is the perfect storm.

Who would have thought that the Top Four in points entering the last race of the Eliminator 8 round would be Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin, Ryan Newman, and Jeff Gordon. Now Logano and Gordon were expected to be in high positions, but Hamlin and Newman are surprise contenders. Keselowski and Harvick still find themselves at the bottom of the standings after their tough weekend at Martinsville. The pressure is starting to grow within the storm, and it is getting to the drivers. This is what NASCAR wanted, and it is what they are getting.

With one race left and tempers flaring in a few of the past races we can expect that those same tempers will be present in Pheonix. Keselowski is still in the hot seat with many drivers such as Harvick, Gordon, and Kenseth, which could be an issue for him heading into Sunday's race. Keselowski or Harvick essentially need to win or have a lot of things go their way to advance. The same can be said for Kenseth and Carl Edwards, although this is one of Carl's best tracks. So, as we head into Pheonix, the last race of the Eliminator round, you can expect NASCAR's perfect storm to be at full strength. Do not expect this to be a calm weekend.