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Bump & Grind

The focus is on Mexico this week

Bump & Grind
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So far this season, it seems Carl Edwards is the man to beat. He's won three races already.

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NASCAR.com
Richmond.com
Friday, April 18, 2008

With the Sprint Cup Series having a rare week off, all the attention this weekend is on the Nationwide Series as it heads to Mexico. Here's at look at the latest from NASCAR.com.

For the fourth consecutive year, the NASCAR Nationwide Series is racing iat the famed Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez road course in Mexico City. Sunday's Corona Mexico 200 Presented by Banamex features a variety of compelling storylines.

The NASCAR Nationwide Series may not have an all-star event like the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, but the Corona Mexico 200 has the makings of one. Open-wheel stars such as Adrian Fernandez, Michel Jourdain Jr., Scott Pruett, Boris Said, Patrick Carpentier, Sam Hornish Jr. and Max Papis dot the roster as do series regulars with solid road-course backgrounds like Marcos Ambrose, Brad Coleman and Colin Braun. Defending series champion Carl Edwards is entered as is defending NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday Jr.

Kyle Busch will run in Mexico City for the first time since 2006 when he finished seventh – and sparked a controversy. On Lap 52, hometown favorite Michel Jourdain Jr. was leading but contact from Busch sent Jourdain spinning and ended his chance for a win. Both are entered in this event and Busch comes in as the hottest driver in the series after two straight wins.

Although Scott Pruett doesn't have his foil as Jourdain does with Busch, he's still determined to make amends for last year's result. Pruett, who won the pole for the 2007 event and was leading with 10 laps to go, was bumped aside by sateammate Juan Pablo Montoya, who went on to win the race. Pruett finished fifth.

Mexico is shaping up to be a father-son outing for the Barretts. Stanton Barrett and his 64-year-old father Stan are entered in the event. Stan Barrett was the first man to exceed the speed of sound in a ground vehicle, reaching 739.666 mph in 1979. He started 19 races in NASCAR Sprint Cup competition from 1980-90 with two top-10 finishes. His son has more than 150 NNS career starts and has competed in two previous races in Mexico City. Both are accomplished stuntmen and are credited in some of Hollywood's top action movies.

Drivers from six countries are represented on the Corona Mexico 200 entry list – U.S., Mexico, Canada, Italy, Venezuela and Australia. Five Mexican drivers are entered led by Fernandez, Jourdain and 2006 NASCAR Camping World Series East Rookie of the Year Ruben Pardo; he was also the first Mexican-born driver to win a race in that series when he did so that same season.

Here's a look at the Sprint Cup Series so far this season:

Parity Personified

After eight races in this NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, six different drivers have won races, a clear indication of competitive balance.
It gets better, however.

In the last five races, there have been five different winners: Kyle Busch (Atlanta); Jeff Burton (Bristol); Denny Hamlin (Martinsville); Carl Edwards (Texas); Jimmie Johnson (Phoenix).

Daytona 500 winner Ryan Newman is this season's other winner.

Crucial 12-Week Stretch

The Sprint Cup Series schedule takes a break this week, but you can rest assure the series' teams won't. When racing resumes next week at Talladega Superspeedway, it will be the start of a crucial 12-week stretch of competition that will include two restrictor-plate races (Talladega and Daytona); the season's longest event, the Coca-Cola 600 (Lowe's Motor Speedway); the season's first road-course race (Infineon Raceway); and another round of short-track action (Richmond).

The 12-week stretch concludes with the July 12 night race at Chicagoland Speedway. That will be followed by the season's last off-week and then a visit to Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Closer To Points Lead

Dale Earnhardt Jr. is up to third in the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings – his highest position in the points since after the 34th race (Texas) of the 2006 season.

This, despite the fact that he has yet to win a race this season, his first as part of the Hendrick Motorsports organization.

Now comes Talladega on April 27, a track where Earnhardt has posted five of his 17 career victories in NASCAR Sprint Cup competition.

Gordon's Plight: Not As Bad As It Seems

Jeff Gordon is struggling but all things, after all, are relative. Gordon may be winless this season but he's still 13th in points, only eight behind 12th-place Ryan Newman.

And, like Earnhardt, Gordon excels at Talladega. He swept last season's two races there and has six victories overall at the 2.66-mile track – second all-time behind Dale Earnhardt's record of 10.

The Inevitable Breakthrough

It had to happen – and it did.

Jimmie Johnson specifically – and Hendrick Motorsports overall – got their first win of 2008 this past Saturday night at Phoenix. And so, somewhat suddenly, the two-time defending series champion is up to fourth in the points, 101 behind leader Jeff Burton.

Talladega bodes well for Johnson. He won the spring race there two seasons ago.

Learning Curve

David Ragan, amid his second full-time season for Roush Fenway Racing – where he replaced the legendary Mark Martin in the No. 6 Ford – is continuing his climb in NASCAR Sprint Cup racing. Coming out of Phoenix, he's up to 18th in the series standings.

Ragan was the runner-up last season for Raybestos Rookie of Year honors, behind Juan Pablo Montoya.

All of this is a far cry from his two-race debut late in the 2006 season when he was criticized by several fellow competitors for his relative lack of experience.

Now, he increasingly looks like a contender to make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup; he is only 81 points out of 12th place.

Bubble Report

Each week, the top 35 teams in car owner points are guaranteed starting spots. This week, the precious 35th and final guarantee goes to the No. 01 Chevrolet entry of Dale Earnhardt Inc., with Regan Smith the driver.

Below that sanctity, only 40 points separate the No. 01 from teams in positions 36-39.
In 36th, the No. 96 Toyota with J.J. Yeley driving is three points out of 35th. In 37th, the No. 22 Toyota with Dave Blaney driving is eight points out of 35th. In 38th, the No. 70 Chevrolet with Johnny Sauter driving is 12 points out. And in 39th, the No. 40 Dodge with last year's Indy 500 and IndyCar Series champion Dario Franchitti driving is 40 points out.

 


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