Friday, May 3, 2013

CS&T/AllsportsAmerica Friday Sports News Update and What's your take? 05/03/2013.

Chicago Sports & Travel, Inc./AllsportsAmerica
 
 Sports Quote of the Day:
 
"In the playoffs, will beats skill." ~ Kevin Constantine, NHL San Jose Sharks Coach
 
 How 'bout them Chicago Blackhawks? Wild-Blackhawks Preview.

By JAY COHEN
 
The Minnesota Wild got a terrific effort from Josh Harding in a tough spot. Ryan Suter helped Minnesota keep Chicago's high-powered attack in check, and the Wild still lost Game 1 to the Blackhawks.

The problem for Minnesota is the same one Chicago presented all season long to the rest of the NHL, and it could become even more important as the series moves forward.

The Blackhawks are so deep that it's tough to keep track of everyone.

Take the overtime goal in Tuesday night's playoff opener, which went to Chicago's third line. Or the ice time on the score sheet, which showed a pretty even distribution for the Blackhawks compared to an astounding 41 minutes for Suter and 34 for fellow Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin.


''Every shift's critical, and it's important that you hold up your end of the bargain,'' Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said Wednesday. ''Your depth's going to get challenged and I think we found out all year it was one of the strengths of our team.

 
This year, in the playoffs, I don't think that's changed at all, maybe it would even be that much more important.''

Minnesota's depth was challenged when goalie Niklas Backstrom was scratched with a leg injury after he hurt himself while reaching for a puck as he warmed up for Game 1. Harding, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis diagnosis last summer and played in just five games this season, responded with 35 saves.

''To not expect to play and halfway through warm-ups you find you have to play, to flip that switch, that's a tough thing,'' Suter said. ''I thought he did great. That's a lot of pressure on a guy to come in and perform, and he did. Hopefully, he continues to have great success like he had.''

Backstrom and right wing Jason Pominville are day to day, according to coach Mike Yeo. Pominville missed the last two games of the regular season after he was elbowed in the chin by Dustin Brown of the Los Angeles Kings.

That means Harding could be in the net again for Game 2 on Friday night at the United Center, a week after he replaced an ineffective Backstrom and allowed three goals himself in a 6-1 loss to Edmonton that nearly cost the Wild a playoff spot.


''I was anxious for a lot of reasons to see him have a chance to bounce back,'' Yeo said. ''He was thrown into a tough situation in that Edmonton game and if you know Josh, he's a competitor and I'm sure he was looking for an opportunity to get back in there, too. Obviously he wasn't expecting it to happen like that. You've got confidence in the guys that are in your room.''

The Blackhawks rolled to an NHL-best 36-7-5 record this season, winning the Presidents' Trophy for the first time in 32 years and raising the expectations for a second championship in four years. Nine players had at least 20 points, helping Chicago to 149 goals - second only to high-scoring Pittsburgh.


Beyond Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa, Patrick Sharp, rookie Brandon Saad and speedy Viktor Stalberg are all capable scorers. Bryan Bickell and Dave Bolland came up with a handful of big plays this year. Defensemen Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook and Niklas Hjalmarsson can contribute on both sides of the ice.

Thanks to all that depth, Chicago kept winning even when injuries popped and forced Quenneville to shuffle the lines a bit. Bolland and goalie Ray Emery, who have been out with lower body injuries, could practice on Thursday, but Quenneville was uncertain about their availability for Game 2.

From the stars to the role players, the Blackhawks have received contributions up and down the roster this season. And they think it could make a difference as the series wears on against the Wild.

''That's supposed to be one of those advantages we have as a team, that if the game goes late like it did last night, that we still have a lot of energy,'' Toews said. ''We still have a lot of legs and we can keep going and rely on whoever it is to score that overtime goal. It doesn't really matter who gets the job done. We'll find ways to wear teams down.''

The overtime goal in Game 1 went to Bickell, who went to his backhand to slide the puck between Harding's legs for the score. Defenseman Johnny Oduya helped set up the winning play with a long pass to Stalberg, who found Bickell in the middle of the ice.

That was the very end of Minnesota's first playoff appearance in five years, but the Wild remain confident.


''What if we score the overtime winner? What's the story today?'' Yeo said. ''Are they saying what a great job that our top line did and how their top line needs to find more, because 5-on-5 they didn't have much either. And that's one important thing to remember. The difference in the game was we scored one 5-on-5 goal, and they scored one 5-on-5 goal, and they got one power play (goal) and we didn't.''
 
 
Redskins Name Change Won’t Come Anytime Soon. Please read this article and let us know, What's your take? Is the name offensive, should it be changed?


  Redskins Name Change Won’t Come Anytime Soon
 
The Washington Redskins are at battle again over whether the team name should be changed, but it doesn’t look like a resolution will come anytime soon.
 
Washington Councilman David Grosso says the time has come to make a decision regarding the team’s name, owing to its “racist and derogatory” meaning.

“We have to change it, and I’m calling on [owner] Dan Snyder and the NFL to step up and do the right thing,” Grosso said.

Grosso has even come up with a replacement idea: the Washington Redtails, after the Tuskegee Airmen.

“You can still sing the song and everything,” Grosso said. “Hail … to the … Redtails.”

Grosso has drafted a resolution, which he plans to unveil soon and states that “Washington’s name has been dishonored by association with the word ‘Redskins’. Because it is well known in America and in nations afar that American Indians have experienced utmost suffering and disrespect over the years.”

The Redskins’ name has actually been under review by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board since 2006, when a group of Native Americans filed a case claiming the term “redskin” was disparaging to American Indians. Before that, the team went through a 17-year long case brought before the Supreme Court over the name that they ultimately won, so even if Grosso manages to convince the right people that things have to change, it could take years to be put into effect.

Coincidentally, a Pennsylvania school board was implored recently by a woman with Native American ancestry to change the name of their school team from the Redskins, as well. Donna Boyle says the board has shunted her case to the side before, but the time has come for change.

“I don’t understand the promotion of a racial slur,” she charged. “It may not seem important to you but it is to those across the country who have Native-American blood in their veins. The school district will survive a mascot change.”

Substitute teacher Donald Gallagher agrees with Boyle and spoke to the board on her behalf regarding the change.

“You not only harm youngsters the public trusts in your care–reason enough to end the old mascot policies–but this dispute also damages the reputation of your community,” he said. What's your take?

NBA-Highlights from Thursday's NBA playoff games.

Reuters
 
Warriors 92, Nuggets 88

Stephen Curry scored 14 of his 22 points in a decisive third quarter and Andrew Bogut collected 14 points, 21 rebounds and four blocks as hosts Golden State survived a late surge and held off Denver to win the Western Conference playoff series 4-2.

Draymond Green scored six of his 16 points during a key stretch in the fourth quarter and added 10 rebounds off the bench for the Warriors, who won their first playoff series since 2007 and will take on the No. 2 seed San Antonio Spurs in the conference semifinals.

Andre Iguodala recorded 24 points, nine rebounds and six assists and Ty Lawson scored 17 for the Nuggets. Wilson Chandler added 11 points but missed two shots from inside four feet with 12 seconds left that would have tied the game.

Denver used a 16-2 burst in the fourth quarter to trim an 18-point deficit down to 82-78 with 4:13 to play. Curry's scoop shot in the lane pushed it out to 88-79 with 2:10 left, but five turnovers in the final 1:37 and some poor offensive execution allowed the Nuggets a chance to take the lead in the final seconds.

Denver controlled the offensive glass and forced 10 turnovers in the first half but only managed to take a 42-40 lead into the break. Curry went 1-for-7 from the floor in the half as Bogut kept Golden State in the game.

Curry came alive in third quarter to help the Warriors take control. The sharpshooter knocked down two free throws to tie it and then hit three pointers on back-to-back possessions to cap a 10-0 burst and put Golden State on top for good.
- - - -

Nets 95, Bulls 92

Joe Johnson, Brook Lopez and Deron Williams scored 17 points apiece as visiting Brooklyn outlasted Chicago to even the best-of-seven Eastern Conference series at three games apiece.

Williams added 11 assists and Gerald Wallace chipped in 15 points as Brooklyn forced a Game 7 on its home floor on Saturday.

Marco Belinelli had 22 points and seven assists and Nate Robinson scored 18 points for Chicago, who were without starters Luol Deng (illness) and Kirk Hinrich (calf).


Jimmy Butler scored 17 points, Joakim Noah had 14 points and 15 rebounds and Carlos Boozer had 14 points and 13 boards for the Bulls.

The Nets had an 83-75 edge after a basket by Kris Humphries with 8:11 remaining before Chicago rallied to pull within 93-92 on a basket by Nazr Mohammed with 25.2 seconds left.

Andray Blatche hit two of four free throws to give Brooklyn a three-point lead and Noah tied up Williams with 3.6 seconds left but the Nets won the tip and Johnson ran out the clock.  

(Editing by Benjamin Everill)


NBA-Highlights from Wednesday's NBA playoff games.

Reuters

Rockets 107, Thunder 100

James Harden scored 31 points and was 7-for-9 from three-point range to lead Houston to a scintillating win in Oklahoma City to cut the Thunder's lead to 3-2 in the best-of-seven Western Conference series.

Omer Asik had 21 points and 11 rebounds as the eighth-seeded Rockets made 14 three-pointers while winning their second successive game. Game Six is on Friday in Houston.

Kevin Durant scored 36 points but was shut out in the final quarter. The top-seeded Thunder badly missed point guard Russell Westbrook, who suffered a season-ending knee injury in Game Two.

Struggling to slow Harden and Houston's perimeter attack, the Thunder employed a strategy of fouling Asik repeatedly during a 2-1/2-minute stretch of the fourth quarter.

Asik went 9-of-14 during the stretch to foil the strategy and help the Rockets to a 107-94 lead with 1:39 to go.
- - - -

Pacers 106, Hawks 83

David West scored 24 points and Paul George collected 21 and 10 rebounds as Indiana took a 3-2 lead over Atlanta in the best-of-seven series.

George Hill had 15 points and 10 assists and Roy Hibbert scored 18 for the Pacers, who have gone 3-0 at home in the series but will travel back to Atlanta for Game Six on Friday.

Josh Smith battled through foul trouble and ended up with 14 points as the Hawks shot 33.3 percent and struggled to maintain their composure in a physical battle.

Smith picked up two personal fouls and a technical within a minute in the third period before heading to the bench with the Hawks trailing by 11.

The Pacers pushed the lead to 68-48 before settling for an 81-67 lead heading into the fourth.
- - - -

Celtics 92, Knicks 86

Jeff Green scored 18 points and Kevin Garnett added 16 and 18 rebounds as Boston staved off elimination from the playoffs for a second successive game.

Brandon Bass and Jason Terry both scored 17 points while Paul Pierce added 16 as the Celtics cut New York's series lead to 3-2. Game Six of the best-of-seven series will be played in Boston on Friday.

Carmelo Anthony scored 22 points and Raymond Felton added 21 for the cold-shooting Knicks, who scored the first 11 points of the game before Boston eventually surged to a 45-39 halftime lead.

They Celtics led 88-76 with 2:24 to play before New York gave the home fans hope when Smith's three-pointer capped a 7-0 spurt and cut the deficit to five with 65 seconds left.

Garnett, however, answered with a jumper and two free throws to ensure victory.

(Editing by Jahmal Corner)

Cubs chairman threatens to move team from Wrigley. 

By JASON KEYSER (Associated Press)

The owner of the Chicago Cubs threatened to move the team out of Wrigley Field for the first time publicly if his plans for a big, new video screen are blocked, saying Wednesday he needs new advertising revenue to help bankroll a $500 million renovation of the storied ballpark.

Cubs Chairman Tom Ricketts until now had said nothing as dire, despite months of contentious negotiations over how to keep everyone happy in sprucing up the 99-year-old stadium in the heart of Wrigleyville on Chicago's North Side.

''The fact is that if we don't have the ability to generate revenue in our own outfield, we'll have to take a look at moving - no question,'' Ricketts told reporters after outlining renovation plans to Chicago business leaders.

He added that he remains committed to working out a deal and it is difficult to imagine the Cubs playing anywhere else. But the fight over the Friendly Confines boils down to money and, of course, something unusual - it's the Cubs, after all.
 

 

By far the thorniest issue is the plan for a 6,000-square-foot video screen over left field, a common feature in many major league ballparks. The difference is that Wrigley Field - the second oldest ballpark in Major League Baseball behind Fenway Park in Boston - is surrounded by privately owned clubs with rooftop bleachers whose owners object to any changes that could block their bird's-eye views into the stadium.

The rooftop businesses have been left out of discussions on the proposed upgrade, but they feel they should have a seat at the bargaining table because they have a contract in which they share 17 percent of their revenue with the Cubs. Legal action is a possibility.


Ricketts presented an architectural rendering of the video screen during his speech to the City Club of Chicago and insisted that the team's own studies have shown it would have minimal, if any, impact on the views. He described the sign as ''midsize'' compared with those at other stadiums, though it is nearly three times as large as the scoreboard currently atop the centerfield bleachers. Another smaller sign with the name of a sponsor is planned for right field.


He said without such signage, the team was losing out on $20 million a year in ad revenue - essential for helping fund the extensive renovations without dipping into taxpayer funds.


''All we really need is to be able to run our business like a business and not a museum,'' Ricketts told the audience.

Ricketts said the team formally filed its full renovation proposal with the city of Chicago on Wednesday. The plan must get approval from city planners and the City Council. There will also be public hearings.

The overall plan calls for more night games, a 175-room boutique hotel across the street, a new clubhouse and upgrades for fans. The proposal also calls for an open-air plaza and an office building with retail space.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel and the alderman whose ward includes Wrigley Field, Tom Tunney, support the overall plan. The mayor's office has already agreed that the outfield signs can be installed, but there has been no agreement on size or design.


If the deal wins approval, Ricketts said work could begin after this season ends and be completed over the next five years. Theo Epstein, Cubs president of baseball operations, said Wednesday that he hopes the public approval process moves quickly so renovation work, especially upgrades to the clubhouse, starts soon.

 ''If it drags on too long, it's going to be unrealistic to get it done this winter,'' Epstein said before the team's game against the San Diego Padres. ''Then we're probably looking at opening day 2015 for the renovated clubhouse.''


One of the rooftop owners, Beth Murphy, told reporters after listening to Ricketts' speech that it was the first time she'd seen any drawings of the screen and that she and other owners would have a lot of vetting to do before determining if the proposal works.


''It looked big to me and it looked like it blocked out the neighborhood,'' Murphy said.

The rooftop owners have previously threatened legal action, and Murphy said she was confident their contract would hold up and protect their businesses.

Commenting on the possibility that Ricketts might really take the team elsewhere, Murphy said doing so would not be ''a wise business decision.''

''The reason the Cubs are such a tourist destination ... is because it's a ballpark in a neighborhood,'' Murphy said. ''I don't think a new ballpark in a parking lot is interesting and that's why other ballparks don't have the tourism that Wrigley Field does.''


If Ricketts is serious about leaving, he already has a suitor. Several weeks ago, the mayor of nearby Rosemont said that the village near O'Hare International Airport has a 25-acre chunk of land that the Cubs could have for free if they wanted to build a replica of Wrigley Field there. While Mayor Bradley Stephens said the idea of the Cubs leaving Wrigley was the longest of long shots, he wanted to make sure that if the Cubs did decide to leave they knew about the offer.

 

Cubs fans said they doubted Ricketts would move the team and that he most likely raised the prospect out of frustration with the negotiations.

''I'm surprised it's taken him this long to snap,'' said Rick Kaempfer, who created the fan blog www.justonebadcentury.com.


He said he shared those frustrations and wished the rooftop owners would back off and allow Ricketts to run the club as he sees fit.

''I think we should trust this organization because they have shown over time that they take the history of Wrigley Field seriously and so far nothing they have done has diminished it, in my opinion,'' he said.
 
Deer antler spray gets a pass, so now what?

By Eric Adelson

Oh deer.
 
Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the forest, there's breaking news in the deer antler spray saga that began more than two years ago and reached a fever pitch at this year's Super Bowl.

This week, the World Anti-Doping Authority, which provides the list of banned substances that most sports leagues follow, announced that deer antler spray is not in violation of its rules. Deer antler spray, you may remember, was at the center of a media frenzy that engulfed Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis in the week leading up to Super Bowl XLVII. Sparked by a Sports Illustrated story published during Super Bowl Media Week, Lewis found himself at the center of a "controversy" for allegedly using a product that contained a banned growth hormone, IGF-1.



Mitch Ross speaks about The Ultimate Spray at Super Bowl XLVII. (Getty Images)

But after determining that "The Ultimate Spray," the deer-antler product Lewis allegedly took, contains only "small amounts" of IGF-1, WADA announced it is not considered prohibited.

The athlete immediately impacted by the determination is golfer Vijay Singh, who had been sanctioned by the PGA Tour after he admitted using the spray in the same Sports Illustrated story. Upon WADA's determination, the PGA retracted its punishment of Singh.

"We're talking about a determination that was made by scientists at WADA that relate to the consumption through deer antler spray of a technically violative substance, IGF -1," PGA commissioner Tim Finchem explained this week. "But in looking at it, the scientists concluded it resulted in infinitesimal amounts actually being taken into the recipient's body."

The bigger question in the wake of WADA's decision is what this means for athletes and use of the spray going forward.

Yes, they can use it in the sense that WADA no longer prohibits it, and those athletes who feel it helps them can proceed. (An unnamed pro golfer told Jason Sobel of The Golf Channel, "I'm going on it as soon as I get home.")

But there remains a risk in that WADA still has IGF-1 on its banned list.

An email to WADA was not immediately returned, however Gary Wadler, former chair of the committee that determines WADA's banned list, told Yahoo! Sports, "Growth factors are a very significant issue in performance enhancement."

So it's sprayer beware. Use of "The Ultimate Spray," a product sold by a former bodybuilder named Mitch Ross, will likely not trigger a positive test, though use of IGF-1 is still not permissible. Much like speeding on the highway, IGF-1 is not permitted … but you can probably get away with it to a point.

"We ban and test for substances, not products," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said in an email to Yahoo! Sports. "IGF-1 is on our banned substance list; same as it is on WADAs."

Confusing? Definitely.

The bottom line, though, is that more athletes will likely take their chances with the spray, even though it's still not clear how well it works, or even if it works at all. Athletes are always looking for an edge of any sort, and here's one WADA has cleared. The hard truth is that even if the spray was loaded with IGF-1, there's no widely accepted urine test for it anyway.

"There is only a blood test for IGF-1" Aiello said, "and the [player's] union has refused for two years to begin testing for growth hormone as it agreed to do in the new CBA."

And here's the major problem with both IGF-1 and HGH: We still don't know who's using because we still don't have blood testing in pro leagues like the NFL. On Tuesday, Tyler Dunne of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel quoted an anonymous NFL player who said HGH use in the NFL is "like clockwork."

"Not tested and it's easy to get," the player said. "Nowadays, dude? In 2013? (Expletive] yeah. I'm just being real."

Ross has always dreamed of finding an alternative to steroids (hence the name of his company: Sports With Alternatives To Steroids, a.k.a. SWATS). When his spray became the focal point of a controversy leading up to Super Bowl XLVII, Ross flew to New Orleans to hold an impromptu press conference to "clear the air." Now he feels the WADA decision has lifted a cloud that's enshrouded him since the Sports Illustrated story came out and Lewis distanced himself from SWATS in the days thereafter.

On Wednesday, Ross said he felt "vindicated." He also said he's working with two new clients: Evander Holyfield and Mike Tyson. His website has videos of both boxing legends talking about the benefits of SWATS products, including the deer antler spray.

"If it didn't work," Ross said of his spray, "wouldn't it just go away?"

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Horse racing-Post positions for 2013 Kentucky Derby.

Reuters; (Compiled by Julian Linden; editing by Frank Pingue)

Post position for Saturday's 139th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs after Wednesday's draw (listed as barrier, HORSE, jockey, trainer).

  1. BLACK ONYX, Joe Bravo, Kelly Breen
  2. OXBOW, Gary Stevens, D. Wayne Lukas
  3. REVOLUTIONARY, Calvin Borel, Todd Pletcher
  4. GOLDEN SOUL, Robby Albarado, Dallas Stewart
  5. NORMANDY INVASION, Javier Castellano, Chad Brown
  6. MYLUTE, Rosie Napravnik, Tom Amoss
  7. GIANT FINISH, Jose Espinoza, Tony Dutrow
  8. GOLDENCENTS, Kevin Krigger, Doug O'Neill
  9. OVERANALYZE, Rafael Bejarano, Todd Pletcher
10. PALACE MALICE, Mike Smith, Todd Pletcher
11. LINES OF BATTLE, Ryan Moore, Aidan O'Brien
12. ITSMYLUCKYDAY, Elvis Trujillo, Edward Plesa
13. FALLING SKY, Luis Saez, John Terranova
14. VERRAZANO, John Velazquez, Todd Pletcher
15. CHARMING KITTEN, Edgar Prado, Todd Pletcher
16. ORB, Joel Rosario, Shug McGaughey
17. WILL TAKE CHARGE, Jon Court, D. Wayne Lukas
18. FRAC DADDY, Victor Lebron, Ken McPeek
19. JAVA'S WAR, Julien Leparoux, Ken McPeek
20. VYJACK, Garrett Gomez, Rudy Rodriguez

Horse racing-Odds for 2013 Kentucky Derby.

Reuters; (Compiled by Julian Linden in New York; Editing by Frank Pingue)

Latest odds for the 2013 Kentucky Derby, to be run at Churchill Downs on Saturday: 

7-2 Orb 
4-1 Verrazano  
5-1 Goldencents     
10-1 Revolutionary 
12-1 Normandy Invasion 
15-1 Mylute
15-1 Overanalyze
15-1 Itsmyluckyday
15-1 Java's War
15-1 Vyjack 
20-1 Palace Malice
20-1 Charming Kitten
20-1 Will Take Charge 
30-1 Oxbow
30-1 Lines of Battle 
50-1 Black Onyx
50-1 Golden Soul
50-1 Giant Finish
50-1 Falling Sky
50-1 Frac Daddy  

It should be noted that the odds are subject to change 

NASCAR Driver Capsules. Capsules for the top 20 drivers in the Sprint Cup stands, plus five additional drivers of note.

The Sports Xchange; By Jerry Bonkowski and Bob Moore

48 JIMMIE JOHNSON, Chevrolet

Team: Hendrick Motorsports

WHERE HE STANDS: Jimmie Johnson remained in first place for the fourth straight week after Richmond. He leads second-ranked Carl Edwards by 43 points and third-ranked Dale Earnhardt Jr. by 46 points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 22 career starts, 2 wins, 5 top-5s, 9 top-10s, 1 pole. Best career finish: first in spring 2006 and spring 2011. Finished 35th in the spring race last year (engine problems), and was 17th there in the fall.

LOOKING AHEAD: Johnson continues to have the best car in the Cup series and is among the favorites to win again at Talladega this Sunday. Talladega also holds good memories for crew chief Chad Knaus, who early in his career worked as a fabricator and mechanic for Stanley Smith Motorsports in Chelsea, Ala., in 1991. Here's Knaus's thoughts: "I honestly love going to Talladega. It's a great racetrack and one I remember from my childhood. I used to come here with Stanley Smith years and years and years ago, and we would focus so much effort into this racetrack. Superspeedway racing is probably what got me my start in motorsports, so I really do look forward to coming back to Talladega."

LOOKING BACK: Johnson typically does well at Richmond, but just didn't have the right car this past Saturday, settling for a 12th-place finish.

ETC.: Johnson has completed 93.6 percent (3,906) of the 4,172 total laps contested in 22 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 10.2 and average finish is 17.7. He has a career-high eight DNFs there.


99 CARL EDWARDS, Ford

Team: Roush Fenway Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: Carl Edwards climbed four spots, from sixth to second place, after Richmond. He trails points leader Jimmie Johnson by 43 points and is three points ahead of a third-ranked tie between Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 17 career starts, 0 wins, 1 top-fives, 4 top-10s, 0 poles. Best career finish: Fifth in fall 2005. Finished 31st in last year's spring race and was 36th in the fall race there.

LOOKING AHEAD: Without question, Talladega has been one of Edwards' worst tracks on the Sprint Cup circuit. But there's cause for optimism in this Sunday's Aaron's 499 because Edwards is in second place in the standings and has lots of momentum. The key is to stay out of trouble there. Here are his thoughts on Sunday's race: "We'd love to get our first superspeedway win as a team. (Crew chief) Jimmy Fennig was able to win two of these speedway races with Matt Kenseth last year, so I feel like I have the best guy on the box that I could have. We've got a fast race car, our mission is to be there on the last lap in position to win. ... As long as we don't wreck five cars like we did in Daytona I think it will be a success. We want to come out of there in a good spot in points, second is nice and we don't want to fall any lower than that."

LOOKING BACK: Edwards had a strong outing at Richmond, finishing sixth and allowing him to climb four positions in the standings, to second place.

ETC.: Edwards has completed just 88.4 percent (2,858) of the 3,232 total laps contested in 17 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 14.9 and average finish is 21.8. He has five DNFs there.


88 DALE EARNHARDT JR., Chevrolet

Team: Hendrick Motorsports

WHERE HE STANDS: Dale Earnhardt Jr. moved up two positions after Richmond and into a tie for third place with Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kasey Kahne. The pair trail points leader Jimmie Johnson by 46 points, are three points behind second-ranked Carl Edwards and lead fifth-ranked Clint Bowyer by seven points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 26 career starts, 5 wins, 9 top-fives, 13 top-10s and 0 poles. Best career finish: First in fall 2001, spring 2002, fall 2002, spring 2003 and fall 2004. Finished ninth in the spring race there last year, and was 20th in the fall race.

LOOKING AHEAD: Earnhardt returns to the same place where he suffered a concussion on the final lap of last fall's race. The concussion knocked him out of the next two races and ended his hopes for a strong overall finish in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. Talladega is by far Earnhardt's most successful track with five career Cup wins there, but remember that he hasn't won there in nine seasons. It's time to do so again. Here are his thoughts on Sunday's race: "Talladega is a lottery because the guy who wins has done something right and earned it. You just really don't have quite as much control over your own destiny here as you do at other racetracks. And I think that will always be the case. But some guys are making it work. Somebody's going to win the race, and I want to be that guy."

LOOKING BACK: You have to give Earnhardt credit. He kept fighting his car and the track at Richmond, yet when it counted the most, he managed to finish with a 10th-place showing. Not bad for a night that could have been worse.

ETC.: Earnhardt has completed 92.3 percent (4,546) of the 4,924 total laps contested in 26 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 15.6 and average finish is 15.0. He has five DNFs there.


5 KASEY KAHNE, Chevrolet

Team: Hendrick Motorsports

WHERE HE STANDS: Kasey Kahne fell one spot after Richmond and into a third-place tie with teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. The pair trail points leader Jimmie Johnson by 46 points, are three points behind second-ranked Carl Edwards and lead fifth-ranked Clint Bowyer by seven points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 18 career starts, 0 wins, 3 top-five, 4 top-10s, 1 pole. Best career finish: Second in fall 2006 and second in fall 2009. Finished fourth in last year's spring race, and was 12th in the fall race there (including winning the pole).

LOOKING AHEAD: Even with winning the pole last fall, Talladega has not been very hospitable to Kahne over his Sprint Cup career. He's hoping to change that this Sunday. Here are his thoughts: "I race. That's all I really want to do is race cars. I've been able to my whole life, and I enjoy it. I love every bit of it. To be able to think about racing each week, whether we're doing appearances or testing or whatever it may be during the week and then you get to go and race a Sprint Cup car on Saturday or Sunday from here until the end of November, I'm loving what's going on."

LOOKING BACK: After finishing runner-up the week before at Kansas, Kahne struggled to a 21st-place finish Saturday night at Richmond.

ETC.: Kahne has completed just 87.9 percent (3,006) of the 3,420 total laps contested in 18 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 23.6 and average finish is 20.3. He has two DNFs there.


15 CLINT BOWYER, Toyota

Team: Michael Waltrip Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: Clint Bowyer climbed four spots, from ninth to fifth after Richmond. He is 53 points behind series leader Jimmie Johnson, trails the third-ranked tie of Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne by seven points and leads sixth-ranked Brad Keselowski by six points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 14 career starts, 2 wins, 4 top-fives, 7 top-10s, 0 poles. Best career finish: First in fall 2010 and fall 2011. Finished sixth in last year's spring race and was 23rd in the fall race there.

LOOKING AHEAD: Bowyer would love to earn his first restrictor plate win at Talladega this Sunday. Here are his thoughts about racing there: "Talladega is like rolling the dice at a craps table - how do you do it, when you do it - are you going to get on a roll? I mean, that's exactly the way it is. Everybody has a shot at winning. Everybody has the same dice. You just have to have a lucky roll, lucky push and just get up there. That's really what it's come down to."

LOOKING BACK: Bowyer had a very strong run and finish at Richmond, finishing runner-up to winner Kevin Harvick. It was Bowyer's second top-five showing in a week, having ending up fifth at Kansas.

ETC.: Bowyer has completed just 84.4 percent (2,245) of the 2,660 total laps contested in 14 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 18.7 and average finish is 16.1. He has three DNFs there.


2 BRAD KESELOWSKI, Ford

Team: Penske Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: Brad Keselowski continued his downward spiral in the standings at Richmond. After three weeks in second place, he fell one position to third after Kansas and three spots after Saturday's race at Richmond, dropping to sixth place. He trails points leader Jimmie Johnson by 59 points, fifth-ranked Clint Bowyer by six points and leads seventh-ranked Kyle Busch by six points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 8 career starts, 2 wins, 3 top-fives, 6 top-10s and 0 poles. Best career finish: First in spring 2009 and spring 2012. Finished first in this race last year and was seventh in the fall race there.

LOOKING AHEAD: Some drivers never figure out Talladega, but that's not the case with Keselowski, who has won there twice already in his career, including his first-ever Cup race there back in 2009. Even more, he has top-10 finishes in six of his eight starts there. Look for another strong finish this Sunday. Here's his thoughts on the race: "You really have to pay attention to how the race unfolds at Talladega. There are times when you need to be patient. There are times when you need to keep your head about you and race smart. But you are going to have to be aggressive at the end. Those are three elements of restrictor-plate racing that I work on throughout the race."

LOOKING BACK: Keselowski had a terrible showing at Richmond, finishing 33rd, including hitting the wall that cost him a few laps. He needs a big bounce back this Sunday.

ETC.: Keselowski has completed an impressive 97.0 percent (1,480) of the 1,526 total laps contested in eight career starts at Talladega. His average start is 18.9 and average finish is an impressive 12.2. He has one DNF there.


18 KYLE BUSCH, Toyota

Team: Joe Gibbs Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: After climbing 15 positions in the previous four races, Kyle Busch took a nose dive from second to seventh after Kansas, the same position he remains in after Richmond. He trails points leader Jimmie Johnson by 65 points, is points behind sixth-ranked Brad Keselowski and leads eighth-ranked Greg Biffle by six points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 16 career starts, 1 wins, 3 top-five, 4 top-10s, 0 poles. Best career finish: First in spring 2008. Finished second in last year's spring race, and was third in the fall race.

LOOKING AHEAD: Busch is looking to give himself a belated 28th birthday present (his birthday is May 2), but he knows a good finish at Talladega isn't easy: "The key there is to somehow stay out of trouble. You pretty much stay around the bottom since there is a lot of grip there, and you can pretty much run wide open every single lap. Everyone can run up on top of each other. When you get single file at the bottom, sometimes it's hard to get a lane on the outside with enough good cars to get something going. It can be frustrating at times because of that. It also seems to still put on a good race each time we go there. If you can be a contender and stay in line on the bottom, you can make it a pretty easy and safe race. Normally, guys are not content doing that, so that's when it starts to get crazy."

LOOKING BACK: Busch started out strong at Richmond and ultimately led 40 laps of the 406-lap event. But he struggled in the second half of the race and dropped like a rock to an eventual and disappointing 24th-place finish.

ETC.: Busch has completed 89.9 percent (2,736) of the 3,044 total laps contested in 16 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 20.9 and average finish is 22.1. He has a career-high five DNFs there.


16 GREG BIFFLE, Ford

Team: Roush Fenway Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: Greg Biffle dropped the most of anyone in the top-10 after Richmond, falling four positions, from fourth to eighth. He trails series leader Jimmie Johnson by 71 points (after being just 47 points behind heading into Richmond), is six points behind seventh-ranked Kyle Busch and leads the ninth-ranked tie between Paul Menard and Kevin Harvick by one point each.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 20 career starts, 0 wins, 2 top-fives, 5 top-10s and 0 poles. Best career finish: Fourth in fall 2009. Finished fifth in the spring race last year and was sixth in the fall race there.

LOOKING AHEAD: Biffle has struggled at Talladega throughout his Sprint Cup career. Every time he goes there, he hopes to change his run of bad luck. Maybe that will finally happen Sunday. Here are his thoughts about the race: "I'm really looking forward to Talladega. We've been working really hard on our restrictor-plate program. We did a tire test for Goodyear at Daytona and so we think we learned a little bit of speed secrets. You never know what will happen at Talladega. It's a lot wider racetrack and we are probably going to be three or four wide. For sure it will be an exciting finish."

LOOKING BACK: Biffle had arguably his worst performance of the season at Richmond, finishing 36th. After wrecking, he ultimately finished 15 laps off the lead lap.

ETC.: Biffle has completed 93.3 percent (3,542) of the 3,796 total laps contested in 20 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 16.3 and average finish is 19.0. He has a career-high five DNFs there.


27 PAUL MENARD, Chevrolet

Team: Richard Childress Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: Paul Menard moved up one spot to a tie for ninth place in the standings with Richmond winner and Richard Childress Racing teammate Kevin Harvick. The pair are 72 points behind series leader Jimmie Johnson, trails eighth-ranked Greg Biffle by one point and leads 11th-ranked Aric Almirola by 13 points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 13 career starts, 0 wins, 1 top-fives, 1 top-10s, 0 poles. Best career finish: Second in fall 2008. Finished 17th in last year's spring race and was 28th in the fall race there.

LOOKING AHEAD: Menard goes from one of his worst tracks (Richmond) to yet another poor track for him (Talladega). Of his five DNFs there, four have been due to being caught up in one of Talladega's infamous "Big Ones." Here are his thoughts for this Sunday's race: "Going into Talladega, there is always an unknown factor. We need to make sure we stay out of trouble and bring home the CertainTeed/Menards Chevrolet SS in one piece at the end of the day. With the Gen-6 car it's going to be hard to make moves and passes at Talladega. We're going to have to be a little more creative with strategy and how we work the race. I'm going to have to be more patient, because you can't just pull out and pass with the new car like you used to be able to do. Our goal this weekend is to continue to complete laps and be consistent. If we can do that and be there at the end I think we'll be in good shape."

LOOKING BACK: For one of the first times this season, Menard was not the highest-finishing driver in the Richard Childress Racing stable (teammate Kevin Harvick won) at Richmond. Still, he didn't have that bad of a night, finishing 13th.

ETC.: Menard has completed 83.1 percent (2,053) of the 2,472 total laps contested in 13 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 19.8 and his average finish is 22.5. He has five DNFs there.


29 KEVIN HARVICK, Chevrolet

Team: Richard Childress Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: Kevin Harvick moved up two spots, from 11th to a tie for ninth with Paul Menard after Richmond. Harvick and Menard both trail points leader Jimmie Johnson by 72 points, are one point behind eighth-ranked Greg Biffle and lead 11th-ranked Aric Almirola by 13 points.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 24 career starts, 1 win, 6 top-five, 10 top-10s, 1 pole. Best career finish: First in spring 2009. Finished 25th in last year's spring race, and was 11th in the fall race there.

LOOKING AHEAD: Harvick has become quite the proficient driver at Talladega. He has developed a knack for not getting into trouble in most races - in other words, he avoids many of the multi-car big wrecks that invariably occur there. Here are his thoughts about Sunday's race: "I like restrictor-plate racing, but our luck hasn't been that great lately on that style track. Last season, we thought we were going to have a chance to win coming to the checkers during the second races of the season at Daytona and Talladega, but we wound up coming in on a wrecker. We just haven't gotten the finishes we thought we would at those tracks, even though we've had good runs. We're coming off a win at Richmond, so I'm hoping we can carry that momentum into the race this weekend."

LOOKING BEHIND: Harvick led just three laps at Richmond, including the most important one, the final lap, as he won his first race of 2013 (and first win since Phoenix last fall).

ETC.: Harvick has completed 97.8 percent (4,446) of the 4,548 total laps contested in 24 career starts at Talladega. His average start is 22.0 and his average finish is 15.4. He has one DNF there.


43 ARIC ALMIROLA, Ford

Team: Richard Petty Motorsports

WHERE HE STANDS: 11th, 13 points out of the top 10. Gained one spot last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Still looking for his first top-10 finish. In six starts, his best finish is 12th.

LOOKING AHEAD: Almirola believes "Talladega is a bit of a crapshoot. You go in knowing you have a one in 43 chance of winning the race, but also have a one in 43 chance of ending up on your roof and done for the day. We're right in the thick of it for a Chase position. Although some think it's still early for that, but every race is important. Right now, we're taking advantage of all of them."

LOOKING BACK: Almirola rallied in the final half of the race to finish eighth at Richmond for his third straight top-10 finish, a career best. "That was incredible," said Almirola. "Great day by our guys who never gave up. That is what it takes in this series. At one point we were almost a lap down. We were in big trouble and Todd Parrott (crew chief) made so many adjustments and kept making it better and better and better. There at the end we were a solid top-seven car and I'm really proud of the whole team."

ETC.: Crew chief Todd Parrott is "very proud of the season we've put together so far. If we keep putting ourselves in position for top-10s and keep improving, we'll start posting top-five's and really be in contention to win each week. That's our goal. Talladega is difficult because you really don't know what you are going to get until the last few laps. We just have to give Aric a fast car and try to be in the right place at the right time at the end."


1 JAMIE MCMURRAY, Chevrolet

Team: Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates

WHERE HE STANDS: 12th, 26 points out of the top 10. Lost two spots to fall out of the top 10.

TALLADEGA RECORD: One win and six top-10 finishes including five top-five's in 21 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: McMurray said, "Finishing good at Talladega seems to always be just a matter of luck. You have to be in the right place at the right time. The last race there we led more laps than anyone and ended up 34th at the finish after getting wrecked with about five laps to go. If we can come out of Talladega with a good finish for our McDonald's team, I will feel real good about the next several races and where we are in the point's picture. I know we will have a good car this weekend, we just need to have good luck along the way."

LOOKING BACK: McMurray gambled and lost at Richmond. He elected not to pit during the last caution flag of the race and was second at the start of the green-white-checkered flag finish. But he quickly got pushed out of the groove and fell all the way to 26th. "We took a chance at the end and it didn't work out," said McMurray in the understatement of the week. "We were just never able to stay consistent tonight. I am really happy for our teammate (Juan Pablo Montoya) and all of the guys on the Target team," added McMurray. Montoya finished fourth.

ETC.: When it comes to the 2014 season and whether or not he has a contract with Ganassi, McMurray is quick to say, "I don't really have a comment on anything for next year. I'm focused on what we're doing now. I've really tried hard not to talk about the length of my contract or when you resign one. I feel like the media takes a lot of that and runs with it and seems to use imagination to make more than what is fact."


20 MATT KENSETH, Toyota

Team: Joe Gibbs Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 13th, 30 points out of the top 10. Gained one spot.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Won the fall race after finishing third in the spring event.

LOOKING AHEAD: Kenseth said, "The key to success at the superspeedways is always to have a fast car. We had a really great car to start off the year in the Daytona 500, and led a lot of laps, so I feel really good heading into Talladega this weekend. There haven't been any rules changes since Daytona so I think it's going to be a track position race."

LOOKING BACK: After winning his second straight pole position for the first time in his career, Kenseth led three times for 140 laps. But his car wasn't as strong in the second half of the race as he ended the night in seventh place. "It was up and down," said Kenseth. "In the beginning, we were real strong and in the middle of the race we probably had a fifth to sixth-place car or something like that. That last restart, just being on the outside and the 78 (Kurt Busch) drove up through there and knocked my whole side off and put me in the marbles. If he's going to run you all over and clobber you, he's got to expect something back. I thought that (pushing him out of the way on the last lap) was pretty mild."

ETC.: Car owner Joe Gibbs understands his team must be penalized for its engine infraction at Kansas. But he is appealing the "severity of the penalties." The appeal will be heard May 8. Kenseth also believes "the penalties are grossly unfair. I think its borderline shameful." The penalty that bothers Kenseth the most is the one that says Gibbs cannot earn any car owner points for six races. "Certainly to crush Joe Gibbs like that and say they can't win an owner's championship with the 20 car, I just can't wrap my arms around that," adds Kenseth. "It just blows me away."


24 JEFF GORDON, Chevrolet

Team: Hendrick Motorsports

WHERE HE STANDS: 14th, 36 points out of the top 10. Gained one spot last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Finished second in the fall 2012 race. Has six wins and 19 top-10 finishes including 15 top-five's in 40 starts. Has won the pole for the last two spring races.

LOOKING AHEAD: Gordon is the all-time leader in restrictor-plate victories with 12. But he is still "very anxious" about this weekend and the second restrictor-plate race of the year. "In Daytona, I feel like we learned a lot about being patient and picking and choosing our moments to try to makes passes," said Gordon. "The unknown is with this bigger, wider track (Talladega), are we going to be able to complete those passes that we weren't able to earlier this year at Daytona?"

LOOKING BACK: Gordon finished 11th at Richmond. "Those last two laps were crazy, with different strategies - some guys staying out, some taking two tires while some of us took four - it was just three and four-wide and do whatever you can to make the pass," said Gordon. "We missed the set-up early, but we made good changes and fought hard to get the finish we did."

ETC.: Gordon doesn't feel the strict penalties handed down by NASCAR against Matt Kenseth and his team will have an effect on the performance of the 20 team. "The thing is that Matt and his team, they are a rock solid team," said Gordon. "They have been showing it this whole year and continue to. To me, whatever happened this past week is not going to affect how those guys perform going forward."


56 MARTIN TRUEX, JR., Toyota

Team: Michael Waltrip Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 15th, 40 points out of the top 10. Lost two spots last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Four top-10 finishes in 16 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Truex knows this is an important weekend in his bid to qualify for the Chase for the Championship again in 2013. "We've got to stay out of trouble and get a good finish," said Truex. "That is hard to do at Talladega. There is so much luck involved. I know we'll have a good car; we just need to avoid all the trouble and get us a solid finish. If we can do that, I'll think we'll be in good shape (in his bid to make the Chase)."

LOOKING BACK: Truex was running second with 55 laps to go when he was clipped by Kurt Busch and sent spinning to end any hopes Truex had of a top-10 finish. Instead, he ended the night in 17th place. "He (Busch) had me hooked on the straightaway and was kind of driving me down the straightaway a little bit and I had no intention of cutting down on him going into (turn) three, but he had me jacked up the whole way. When he let off, my car got on the left rear and went straight and then I got up in the marbles and then I just had to spin it out. He didn't need to do that. It's a shame to get where we were and get spun. I'll remember if we get in that position again what I'll do to Kurt."

ETC.: Truex believes all three MWR cars "will be fast at Talladega. Both Michael (Waltrip) and Clint (Bowyer) know what it takes to win there. Maybe this time it will be my turn (to drive into victory lane). It sure would be nice if we could hook up together and stay up front all day."


39 RYAN NEWMAN, Chevrolet

Team: Stewart-Haas Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 16th, 42 points out of the top 10. Gained one spot last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Finished ninth in the race last fall. Overall has eight top-10 finishes including four top-five's in 22 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Newman said, "I wouldn't say I dread coming to Talladega. It's not my favorite race track, but I don't say I dread it. I love driving a race car, even at Talladega. I think the difference is there's more potential to get involved in something out of your making there, and that's frustrating to me. But that's not just me. Everyone hopes they can avoid the big crash there."

LOOKING BACK: Newman battled an ill-handling race car all night as he finished 15th at Richmond. "It was a long, challenging night," said Newman. "We didn't hit on what we needed to with our Outback Steakhouse Chevrolet," said Newman. "Matt Borland (crew chief) and the guys kept working on it all night, and we made some improvements on it, but we never got it where we needed it to be."

ETC.: When asked what it takes to get a good finish at Talladega, Newman smiled as he said, "I wish I knew the answer to that. We've been on the short end of the stick at Talladega for the past few years. To be successful at Talladega, you've got to keep yourself in the hunt so you can be there at the end. If you have a good car, you can stay toward the front all day. If you don't, you have to put yourself in a position that will allow you to be in the best possible position at the end. It's as simple, or as complex, as that."


22 JOEY LOGANO, Ford

Team: Penske Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 17th, 43 points out of the top 10. Gained three spots last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Four top-10 finishes in eight starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: When it comes to restrictor-plate racing, "some people really like it and some people don't," said Logano. "That's just part of the nature of restrictor-plate racing. I really enjoy it and I feel like I've become adaptable to it since I started (five years ago). The worst part about it is that you only control part of your own destiny. When you are out there racing in a pack, your day can be ruined by someone else's mistake. We've all had it happen to us."

LOOKING BACK: Logano rallied in the final 100 laps to finish third at Richmond. "It wasn't pretty, that's for sure," said Logano. "It looked like at the beginning of the race we were going to finish 20th. We were going backwards, but (crew chief) Todd Gordon made some good adjustments and got some speed back in the car. We put four tires on it (during the late-race caution) and got in the right lane on that restart and I think that's what meant a lot. To take a race that was going like that and be able to change it over and come home third, I couldn't be more proud of these Shell/Pennzoil guys."

ETC.: Logano feels the new Gen-6 car has made "the style of plate racing that we have become accustomed to different. It ended up being a lot faster to stay in line and work on timing to make your moves (at Daytona). It will be interesting to see if it's the same way this weekend at Talladega. We have our ideas as to how the race will play out, but we will just have to wait and see."


17 RICKY STENHOUSE, JR., Ford

Team: Roush Fenway Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 18th, 47 points out of the top 10.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Will be making his Sprint Cup debut. Finished third in last year's Nationwide race.

LOOKING AHEAD: Stenhouse said, "We had a decent run at Daytona (12th) at the start of the year so I feel that will carry on to Talladega. We had a really good Daytona tire test (several weeks ago) and learned some things that we feel will be valuable at Talladega. Our team feels confident going into this weekend but we just need a little luck on our side."

LOOKING BACK: Stenhouse finished 16th at Richmond. "We were either really loose or really tight on every run," said Stenhouse. "I think we took big swings at the set-up on every pit stop but nothing really helped so we will take a look at it when we get back to the shop and see why that was. But all in all, it was a good day for the 17 Zest team."

ETC.: Stenhouse feels "you can be cocky and still be respectful to everybody else at the same time. I feel confident in my ability and confident in the ability of our race teams. I think you have to have confidence to be a little cocky. You have to be respectful at the same time though. That is a tough thing to balance."


31 JEFF BURTON, Chevrolet

Team: Richard Childress Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 19th, 53 points out of the top 10. Gained four spots last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Finished tenth in both 2012 races. Finished second in the fall race of 2011 so he is looking for his fourth straight top-10 finish. Overall has 16 top-10 finishes in 38 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Burton said, "It will be interesting to see what is going to happen at Talladega. The Daytona 500 was very much a single-file race and there is a good chance that drivers will be more aggressive at Talladega. That was the calmest Daytona 500 I've ever been a part of and I don't anticipate seeing that at Talladega. Single-file racing is boring in the car and boring to watch, so I think the drivers will mix it up more this weekend."

LOOKING BACK: Burton was running seventh when the yellow flag was waved with three laps to go. He decided not to pit as the top six all headed to pit road for tires. Burton was now the leader. But he was no match for the cars on new tires as he ended the evening in fifth place. "The caution came out and what the heck, we might as well try something," said Burton. "Obviously new tires were a lot better. But it was worth a shot. We were going to maybe finish sixth without the caution so to pick up a spot with it (the gamble) was well worth it. I thought Kevin (Harvick, his teammate and the guy who passed him for the lead) and I both got better at the end of the race."

ETC.: When asked the difference between Talladega and Daytona, Burton replied, "Talladega feels bigger and wider. It feels much longer than just the .16-mile difference that it is from Daytona. The corners are a lot wider. You don't quite get the sensation leaving the straightaway and going into the corner with the banking. The one oddity is the bottom groove through the tri-oval is a different banking than the rest of the race track."


78 KURT BUSCH, Chevrolet

Team: Furniture Row Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 20th, 55 points out of the top 10. Gained two spots last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: 13 top-10 finishes in 24 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Busch is another driver who believes "the restrictor-plate races turn in to more of a crap shoot. You see if your number is going to come up and be the lucky guy at the end of the day. You have to stay patient all day, stay out of trouble and be on the lucky side of things - it's a tough combination to line up and get exactly right."

LOOKING BACK: Busch led once for 36 laps and was a major player for most of the evening. But he was involved in a number of controversial moments late in the race. First, he clipped Martin Truex, Jr., as they battled for second place, sending Truex spinning. During the final two laps of the race, Busch tangled with Tony Stewart and Matt Kenseth with the confrontation continuing on the so-called cool down lap after the checkered flag. Busch ended the night in ninth place.

ETC.: After a yelling match with Tony Stewart near their haulers, Busch said, "I don't know what the 14 (Stewart) was upset about. I got hit from behind. I got hit every which-way. So did he." As for his dispute with Kenseth, Busch said, "Kenseth moved us out of the way at the end, so that's why I was upset with him. But hey, it was a free-for-all at the end. For us, this was a solid run with our Furniture Row car. We were there. We were top five all night. So all in all, it was a great night for us to be in the top five, run up front and lead some laps."


55 MARK MARTIN, Toyota

Team: Michael Waltrip Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 21st, 64 points out of the top 10. Lost five spots last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Martin will not run this week. Michael Waltrip will handle the driving duties. Waltrip has one win and 15 top-10 finishes in 53 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Waltrip is really looking forward to racing at Talladega. "Every time I go to Talladega I just have a lot of confidence because of all the success I have had there before. I have been able to win there and I came pretty close to winning there last year. It's awesome going to a track that you know you have a chance to win."

LOOKING BACK: Martin was running in the top 10 with 62 laps remaining when he got clipped by Kasey Kahne to trigger a three-car accident. The damage was too severe for Martin to continue as he finished 38th. "We worked on this car all night, we were competitive and I think we were getting it better and better as the race went on," said Martin. "Would have liked to have been in the mix there at the end."

ETC.: Waltrip will be a fan favorite this week because he is driving the "Alabama National Championship" Toyota. "It's going to be really fun to race the Alabama National Championship car this weekend," said Waltrip. "There are a lot of passionate fans in that part of the world that love Alabama football and NASCAR. I really look forward to representing all the Alabama fans this weekend in Talladega."


14 TONY STEWART, Chevrolet

Team: Stewart-Haas Racing

WHERE HE STANDS: 22nd, 64 points out of the top 10. Lost one spot last week. This is the lowest Stewart has ever been in the standings at this point in the season.

TALLADEGA RECORD: One win and 13 top-10 finishes including nine top-five's in 28 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Stewart said, "Well, I'm not any happier about it (restrictor-plate racing) than I've always been, but we've had a lot of success at restrictor-plate tracks, especially Talladega. We've run in the top-two there a gazillion times. I'm glad we're halfway decent at it, but it's still always frustrating when you have to rely on what everybody else does. It's what you do along with somebody else who decides that they're going to follow you and help you. That's the part that frustrates you as a driver."

LOOKING BACK: Stewart's frustrations continued Saturday night at Richmond. He was fifth on the final restart but got knocked out of the groove by Kurt Busch and ended the evening in 18th place. "He (Busch) just rammed right into us there at the end," said an angry Stewart. "It hadn't been a great weekend, but we had made some adjustments and were actually going to leave here with a decent finish until everything that happened at the end."

ETC.: Earlier in the Richmond race, Stewart took full blame for an accident that involved five-time champion Jimmie Johnson. Stewart got real loose while racing Johnson for a spot in the top 10. The two tangled with both cars spinning. They were each able to continue with Stewart telling his crew "that was all my fault. Have someone run down to the 48 (Johnson) camp and tell them I'm sorry."


9 MARCOS AMBROSE, Ford

Team: Richard Petty Motorsports

WHERE HE STANDS: 23rd, 76 points out of the top 10. Lost four spots last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Only one top-10 finish in eight starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Ambrose said, "We were bit by bad luck again last week, but hopefully all that is behind now. We're ready for some good luck, and Talladega is a place where you need it. Anything can happen at these superspeedway races. We've just got to be in the right place at the right time and stay out of trouble."

LOOKING BACK: Ambrose was running just outside the top 10 when he suffered engine failure. As a result, he ended the night in 42nd place. "This is so disappointing for us," said Ambrose. "We've had fantastic power from Ford Racing and Roush Yates Engines so we can't complain. It's just the racing gods aren't on our side this year. We were fast tonight and ran in and around the top 10. Our luck has to change."

ETC.: Crew chief Drew Blickensderfer feels it is very important "for us to keep our heads up and know that we deserve and can get top-10 finishes. We had a good car last weekend and another problem out of our control. We'll have a good car this weekend (at Talladega). We just need to be there at the end."


42 JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, Chevrolet

Team: Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates

WHERE HE STANDS: 24th, 88 points out of the top 10. Gained three spots last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Three top-five finishes in 12 starts.

LOOKING AHEAD: Montoya said, "When you come out of turn four on the last lap, you forget who was your friend. Talladega is a place where you have to be loyal to people until you get to the tri-oval. At that point, it's every man for himself. It's always been that way."

LOOKING BACK: Montoya had led for 67 straight laps and was only three laps from winning his first oval-track race in NASCAR when the yellow flag was waved after Brian Vickers crashed in turn four. Naturally, Montoya was "pissed off." But he quickly realized he needed to pit for tires to keep his victory hopes alive. But it was not to be as he finished fourth. "We restarted (for the green-white-checkered flag finish) on the outside and we were screwed," said Montoya. "It was a no-brainer to pit and take tires. What hurt us is we restarted on the outside and when you restart on the outside and people (ahead of him) have got really bad tires, everything backs up. When you are on the outside, you have nowhere to go. When you are on the inside, you can jump to the inside of those guys. We had a great car. The guys did an amazing job. It is just the luck of the draw."

ETC.: To call the year a disaster might be too strong a statement, but Montoya was struggling mightily before the Richmond raced. In the first eight races, he had five finishes of 26th or worse. He had only one finish - 12th - better than 19th. Everything that could go wrong had gone wrong. And that is why he had a smile on his face after the Richmond race despite seeing that elusive oval-track win disappear with only three laps remaining. "Everyone on the Depend Chevy this week did an amazing job," said Montoya. "We had a great car. Same as last week, we had a great car." But two loose wheels left him in 27th place. "The pit crew redeemed themselves tonight," added Montoya. "They did a great job all day, no mistakes. This is what we needed. We needed to come out of here with a good finish."


10 DANICA PATRICK, Chevrolet

Team: Stewart-Haas Racing

WHERE SHE STANDS: 26th, 102 points out of the top 10. Lost one spot last week.

TALLADEGA RECORD: Finished 13th in the spring race a year ago.

LOOKING AHEAD: Patrick is really looking forward to Talladega after winning the pole for the Daytona 500, running in the top five for most of the race and becoming the first woman to lead a lap at Daytona. "I feel like I've learned some lessons from Daytona about the draft," said Patrick. "There are a lot of people that have a good chance of winning Talladega. I'm hopeful we are one of them at the end of the race. But, we won't know until the end of the race."

LOOKING BACK: It was another long, long evening for Patrick as she finished a disappointing 29th at Richmond. "We were just so tight in the center of the corner," said Patrick. "We just couldn't loosen the car up enough to make the center work the way we needed to. Tony Gibson (crew chief) and the Go Daddy guys threw a lot at it, but we just couldn't get the center quite right."

ETC.: Patrick said she really enjoyed appearing on "The Colbert Report" a couple of weeks ago. "I think it is a great show," said Patrick. "It is really funny. I love his (Stephen Colbert) sense of humor. That was the first time I have been on his show. I was excited. He's a cool guy. When we got done, he came back and said good job, that was fun, sorry I went a little bit long, but I was having a good time. That's a very nice thing for him to say. I had a good time. I felt like he went kind of easy on me. It's always fun to do those kinds of things that are a little different and outside the box."

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