Monday, April 23, 2012

KANSAS CITY, A FIRST TIME WIN, AND A VET IS STILL ON TRACK.

James Buescher won his first Camping World Truck Series race Saturday. The SFP 250 at Kansas Speedway was his 76th race, and has now logged his first Truck and Nationwide Series wins this year. The win is Turner Motorsports second win in a row, after Kasey Kahne won Rockingham last weekend. Buescher had 19 top five finishes in the Truck series before Saturday's win. The driver led 47 laps in the first half, and built a big lead in the second. After the race's final green flag stop, he had a 5.6 second lead over second place Timothy Peters. After the round of pit stops, during which the lead-pack teams tried a variety of strategies, Sprint Cup driver Brad Keselowski had a lead of about a second on Buescher. But Buescher who got four tires at his stop against Kes's two, passed him for the lead. With 5 laps left to go Buescher had a 3.3 second lead over Kes. The 22 year old has been doing well the last three weeks, placing 3rd. then 2nd. and now with a win. Peters maintained his Series lead, staying four points ahead of the surging Buescher. Rounding out the top five were Peters, Keslowski, Nelson Piquet Jr. and Todd Bodine.  

The temperatures were right for Denny Hamlin. The tires were wrong for Martin Truex Jr. That may sound very understated for winning the STP 400, but that is what happened. Hamlin led the final 32 laps at Kansas Speedway when his No.11 Toyota came to life with the sunshine for the first time on Sunday. Denny credited the slicker track in the midday heat aiding him with his second win this season. While Hamlin was surging, Truex's Toyota was slumping despite leading 173 of 267 laps, in a race only marred by three cautions for 18 laps. The No.56 car knew right away there was a problem, he struggled to keep his Camry beneath him while being stalked and passed by Hamlin. The cars ran similar speeds for the final 20 laps but Truex could not close the gap. Even when the cloud cover returned the 56 could not close the gap. The blame was set on the "terrible tires", the top five were, Truex Jr., Jimmie Johnson, Matt Kenseth, and Greg Biffle.

4 comments:

Zebster said...

I watched the Cup race, which was pretty boring. I hate these 1 1/2 mile tracks. Very well written, Jake.

dasnake said...

i think i know about your meaning of "boring", endless laps, and green flag pits, for me that is the love of racing. to win a race, the driver and the chief have to use their heads, their skills, and most of all the entire crew. now i'm not saying this doesn't happen when the cautions are out, but there is a lot of play room when it's a yellow. i know it's not the most popular statement because after bristol was over and the fans were going "nah" the drivers were going "yah". i'm going with the guys behind the wheel, let me race, let the chips fall where they may, give the fans a good race, but don't change a track just because there may be more yellows, i know yellow is for a lot of things, but most common is crashes, and with the amount of races i've watched and the amount of drivers i've seen hurt and killed, i don't mind if it appears boring i know it's not. the same goes for people who
"hate" baseball, they don't like the lag time, but wet themselves when a homerun is hit, to me a homerun is hohum, the real thrill is a triple, a double or triple play or most of all an inside the park homerun. i'm a yankees fan, but i do so love the small ball played in the nl, just my humble opinion.

Zebster said...

No, these tracks aren't competitive. One team hits the setup and goes out and leads a bunch of laps, like watching a damn merry-go-round. I could care less about the wrecks but I want to see them race for lead changes, etc. At least there's no aero push anymore when you try to pass but it's almost as bad. Give me Dover, M'ville, Darlington, etc.

dasnake said...

hey this weekend, richmond, then one of my faves, 'dega, then darlington nice few weeks coming up.