Sunday, March 6, 2011

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly -- 2011 Kobalt Tools 400

This week the Crappafoni Pictures crew is in Sin City for this week's The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, served buffet-style with any kind of food you want to eat, and any kind of beverage you want to drink. Gamblers especially welcome.

THE GOOD

Carl Edwards: this is his third win in the last five races, dating back to last season. (He was also second at Daytona and had the car to beat at Phoenix, but was in the wrong place at the wrong time.) As such, he gets first billing. He was stout, and was up front pretty much the whole race. (He was second in laps led.) He's looking more and more like the Edwards of 2008, when he was ripping off wins in bunches.

Tony Stewart: Smoke led the most laps in the race (163), but when he took four tires on the final pit stop, he lost his track position. But what was his ultimate undoing was a speeding penalty on pit road. He tipped his hand too early in the race when he took two tires to gain track position; the rest of the field saw that it worked and later on Stewart was cooked. He did real well in finishing second. Stewart felt that he gave the race away. I disagree. Edwards was too strong for the field.

Juan Pablo Montoya: he was unusually strong (by Vegas standards). LVMS has been a graveyard for the Colombian driver; usually this is one of his worst tracks. Not today. He was strong throughout, even leading seven laps en route to his third place finish. He's a legitimate threat to make the Chase this year IF he's consistent. An oval win is coming in the not too distant future. (Perhaps at Bristol?)

Marcos Ambrose: "Kangaroo Meat" (as Kevin Harvick nicknamed him when Ambrose broke into NASCAR) took advantage of a strong qualifying effort (2nd) and ran up front most of the race. Looks like the decision to drive for Richard Petty is paying off. Good job Marcos! Hope we see you in this category more often!

Ryan Newman: back to back top 5s! He followed up his fifth place effort in the desert with another fifth place finish in Sin City. Props also go out to his pit crew for consistently fast pit stops and more often than not gaining ground through pit stops.

Brian Vickers: in his third race back from battling blood clots and missing most of last year, he scores a top 10 finish, and has shown no ill effects from surgery last year to repair a hole in his heart and the medication he took for the clots. Good job Brian!

Sub-Good: Paul Menard, for running the fastest lap of the race, 176.039 MPH.

Honorable Mention: Dale Earnhardt Jr, Denny Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr, and Kurt Busch.

THE BAD

Greg Biffle: or more specifically, his pit crew. On more than one occasion, the gas man didn't put enough gas in the tank. Biff had to return the first time because it was under caution, and the second time it was during a green flag pit stop that cost him THREE LAPS. I'm sure that had one of the RFR cars been out of the race, Greg Erwin would have swapped crews a la Chad Knaus. Better to get the kinks out now rather than near the Chase. Biffle had a car that was capable of winning the race, but he had a ten cent pit crew, at least for today.

The race itself: BORING. Long green flag runs on a mile and a half track do not make for good racing. The Fox crew had to describe it somehow. The next guy that can comment with excitement on watching paint dry will be the first. That's how the racing was--like watching paint dry. Can we just have two 1.5 mile tracks, Charlotte and Atlanta, and either blow the rest of them up or shutter them?

Landon Cassill: he was the first start and parker. He was the unfortunate soul that drew the short stick at the Start and Parkers' meeting in the Todd Bodine Meeting Room. At least he went longer than the typical start and parker--he went 33 laps!!

THE UGLY

The race itself: see above.

Those are my nominees for the race. Feel free to come in and comment.

9 comments:

tezgm99 said...

most impressive oval race by Marcos I've seen. Usually when he starts up front he goes backwards and when he does finish well, he's basically got no car left since he's had to use it all up getting there....so to wind up 3 seconds behind with the last run going 60 odd laps was a mighty effort :)

who do you reckon will nab an oval win first, Jon; Juan or Marcos?

Gene Haddock said...

I would give a bad to Goodyear. They had blowouts all weekend long.

jon_464 said...

Tez, great question!! While I think JPM has been more consistent on ovals, I wouldn't be surprised if Marcos gets that first win sooner. I could see him getting that win on a short track or at the Big Egg aka Darlington. Marcos was running up front pretty much all race long. The #9 was strong from the time it was unloaded until Carl Edwards took the checkered flag.

Gene, bad oversight on my part. There were several instances where the right front blew. Wonder if Smoke's going to rant about it?

RA6AN said...

In one of my small windows of awakeness, I wondered the same about who was around to replace the Biff's gas man.

klvalus said...

Well I missed it and the dang DVR didnt tape it so I am piecing together what actually happened in the race...

I would guess Biff's gas man may be struggling to get the can to lock in to the gas tank - its actually a two step process now and if you dont keep it held perfectly it stops gas flowing...

Dwindy1 said...

Kudos to all in the top five except Smoke who once again got smoked on his pit strategy. The early RSO change left him no option at the end and it literally killed his chances when the four tires took 13.7 seconds while Edwards just took right sides and was out in 5 seconds less time... How many feet does 5 seconds equate to at 190 mph? Got my handy dandy calculator right here..... Just over a quarter of a mile! WTG Tony! (I'd much rather have seen TS in VL than CE doin' back flips!

Kristen, Biffle's gas can dude was having trouble wrestling with the can (80 lbs.?). After the early trouble FOX put a camera in Biffle's pit to focus on that poor guy and on a can switch he missed the receiver on the car seemingly not able to lift the can. By the time he hit the receiver Biffle went hammer down and it jerked the can right out of the guy's hands... Not a good scene and I'll bet the guy's long gone...

Wholeheartedly agree with Gene on "Badyear"... I think at least five drivers smacked the wall hard when their right fronts blew (including Jeff Gordon and hometown boy Kyle)...

Thanks jon!

jon_464 said...

And to compound Biffle's crew problems, he ran out of gas during a round of green flag pit stops, costing him three laps. I bet Biff's gas man is WALKING home right about now!

Brent said...

Ryan Newman has been the glue holding my fantasy team together the past two weeks, and for that I am grateful.

It is unusual that this year's and last year's Vegas races have been boring. I remember how exciting they used to be. And this race isn't as bad as it gets either... just wait until we have to endure two Kansas races this season instead of one.

jon_464 said...

Brent, PLEASE don't remind me! I'm still mad at NASCAR for taking ONE Atlanta race away. (The spring race, where this year it's the 10th anniversary of Kevin Harvick's first Cup win in just his third start.) And they add ANOTHER race for Kansas?? They should have added Darlington instead and moved it's May date to Labor Day weekend and named it the Southern 500! The new Darlington dates would be the first Saturday in May and Sunday afternoon/evening right before Labor Day. Then they added Kentucky! I'm in the minority, I'm sure, when I say NASCAR should have left Kentucky as a stand-alone track for the Nationwide Series.