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Nationwide Series News & Notes - Talladega
Starring Role: Mobile’s Cale Gale Gets Big Start At Home Track
Cale Gale (No. 33 Camping World Chevrolet) comes to Talladega Superspeedway as the lone driver for Kevin Harvick Inc., a team owned by the two-time series champion and his wife, DeLana.
Normally at a companion event, Harvick is behind the wheel of one of the team’s two cars in the NASCAR Nationwide Series race. Only twice this season has Gale competed with Harvick.
But at Talladega, it’s the 23-year-old Mobile, Ala., native all by his lonesome.
Driving for the team that won this race last year.
With its second car in the runner-up position.
In front of his home crowd.
“Obviously I do put a little added pressure on myself since I am from Alabama,” Gale said.
“The last person from Alabama to win at Talladega was Davey Allison, so to be in good equipment and have a shot is pretty cool.
“KHI won this race last year with Bobby (Labonte) and Tony (Stewart) finished second.
“That’s more pressure on me because we’re returning with only one car this time.”
Gale is scheduled to compete in 14 races for KHI this season, sharing time with his boss and also with defending NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., to gain knowledge and experience.
He’s run three races thus far and his last outing was a successful one. He finished a career-best eighth at Nashville Superspeedway in March.
“This is the same car Kevin ran at Daytona (finishing 21st) and since then, (we’ve) worked hard to improve (it) before heading back to the superspeedways,” Gale said. “The main thing is to stay in line, hang in the draft and hopefully have a shot at the end of the day.”
The Versatile One: Busch Latest To Take Aim At Ard’s Record
He’s been pretty successful in his follow-up work since winning three weeks ago at Texas Motor Speedway.
Since that victory, Busch has posted two more wins — at Phoenix International Raceway and last Sunday at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez.
Not only has Busch — who is in the top 10 in the standings in each of NASCAR’s national series — won three in a row for the first time since Ryan Newman in 2005, but he’s shown his talent and versatility off the same way Newman did.
Like Newman, Busch accumulated his wins on totally different tracks — the intermediate and racy venue at Texas; the one-mile short track at Phoenix and the winding road course in Mexico City.
He has two top fives in four series races at Talladega, but was 39th last year after an early accident.
The only series driver to win four races in succession is Sam Ard. The two-time series champion did so in 1983.
Three of Ard’s four consecutive wins were on short tracks while one was an intermediate-track victory.
Three Degrees Of Dale Jr. At Talladega
His father, Dale Earnhardt Sr., won at Talladega in series competition 10 years before his son. Martin Truex Jr., like Earnhardt Jr. a two-time series champion, is the all-time series wins leader at the track with three—all in succession (2004-06). Those came with Chance 2 Motorsports, the team co-owned by Earnhardt Jr. and Teresa Earnhardt.
His current connection is his own JR Motorsports team, led by driver Brad Keselowski (No. 88 U.S NAVY Chevrolet). Keselowski comes to Talladega sixth in the standings, the highest-ranked NASCAR Nationwide Series-only driver in the top 10.
Ambrose, Wallace Back In The Groove?
Marcos Ambrose (No. 59 Kingsford Ford) collected a runner-up finish, not a surprise for the veteran of road-course racing. More surprising was the career-best result for the Aussie, his first top 10 since last year’s season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway (10th).
Steve Wallace (No. 66 Atreus Homes & Communities Chevrolet) was due for his breakthrough top-10 finish but few figured it would be on a road course in his 61st start.
Wallace finished 10th in Mexico and moved to 14th in the rankings, tying his career-best standing. He was 26th at Talladega in 2007.
Ambrose, who finished eighth in the final standings last year, had understandably lofty goals for 2008, but it’s been his JTG Racing teammate, Kelly Bires (No. 47 Clorox Ford), who’s been the leader for the organization.
Bires is 10th in the standings and will make his track debut at Talladega. Ambrose was 25th at last year’s race.
Bowyer, Edwards Engaged In Battle
This is the closest the drivers in first and second have been since 2001 when Greg Biffle (No. 16 CitiFinancial Ford) led Kevin Harvick by three points after nine races.
In The Loop: Bowyer, Edwards Close In Points, Stats At Talladega
Edwards tightened the gap with a fourth-place finish at Mexico City last weekend, closing to within nine points of the series-leading Bowyer.
Now comes the unpredictable nature of Talladega, where Bowyer has performed well in the NASCAR Nationwide Series (as opposed to his 30.2 average finish in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series). Bowyer finished fifth there in 2006 and 13th the last time the series raced at Talladega in 2007. Over the last three races, Bowyer has a Driver Rating of 93.8, an Average Running Position of 10.5 and has run 70.9% of the Laps in the Top 15.
Edwards, though solid with two consecutive 10th-place runs at Talladega, hasn’t been as statistically strong as Bowyer. In his NASCAR Nationwide Series career at Talladega, Edwards has a Driver Rating of 87.4, an Average Running Position of 14.8 and has run 67.5% of the Laps in the Top 15.
Also watch for a strong run by David Ragan (No. 6 Discount Tire Ford), who sits fifth in the standings. In his only series start at Talladega, Ragan scored a fourth-place finish, had a Driver Rating of 100.1, an Average Running Position of 10.8 and ran 66.7% of the Laps in the Top 15.
Of the NASCAR Nationwide Series regulars, watch for a solid run from David Stremme (No. 64 Atreus Homes & Communities Chevrolet), who returns to the track for the first time since 2005. He finished fourth in that race, earned a Driver Rating of 89.1 and an Average Running Position of 12.5.
NNS Etc.
Coleman had three top fives and five top 10s in 17 starts last year, but has only one top 10 in his first nine races this season.
Bliss began the season with Fitz Motorsports but moved to Phoenix Racing during the season’s first open week. He had two top 10s for Fitz and after a 24th-place finish at Texas in his first race in the No. 1. Since then he has posted back-to-back top 10s.
In three career series starts at Talladega, Bliss has two — what else? — top 10s.
But with two top-10s in three starts this season, Leicht was extended to at least four races with the addition of Talladega.
He’ll drive the chassis that has produced one win (Kevin Harvick — Daytona) and a top-10 (Harvick — Talladega) on superspeedways since 2007.
However, Leicht’s two-race average finish at Talladega is 29.5.
Raybestos Rookie Of The Year Standings
Bill France Performance Cup Standings
Chevy is the series leader in wins there with 12, including the last five consecutive victories.
2008 Manufacturers' Championship Point Standings
Up Next: Lipton TEA 250 at Richmond International Raceway
Clint Bowyer is the defending winner of the May 2 event and hometown favorite Denny Hamlin is the defending pole winner. Hamlin has yet to win at his home track in NASCAR national series competition.
FAST FACTS
2008 Standings:
Schedule:Thursday–Practice 3-4:45 p.m.; Final Practice 5-6 p.m.; Friday–Qualifying, 4:05 p.m. (Impound)
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