For the third year in a row Trevor Bayne will be honoring NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Mark Martin with one of its throwback paint schemes at Darlington Raceway next weekend. This time it is a paint scheme with a lot of significance to the organization and driver as it was the same one Martin drove to Roush Fenway's first victory in 1989.
The race was the AC Delco 500 on October 22, 1989 at North Carolina Speedway in Rockingham when Martin finally broke the barrier in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series after 57 races together. Martin would carry the paint scheme to that single win, 602 laps led and 28 top-ten finishes.
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
Back to Back Top-tens gives Trevor Bayne confidence going to Darlington
Trevor Bayne's 7th place finish at Bristol was his second consecutive top-10 |
While there are only two races remaining in the regular season before the playoffs begin, Bayne pretty much knows that he has to win at either Darlington or Richmond to get in. His team has began to carry more momentum over the past few weeks after getting a little bit of luck on their side, even after blowing a tire at Bristol and hitting the wall at Bristol. Bayne was able to rally back in the latter part of the event and get up to seventh before the checkered flag fell.
"Obviously, we need to win. That's what our goal is,"Trevor Bayne stated. "Seventh is great but we have to get (to victory lane). I'm really proud of these guys and the gains we're making.
"It's been a rough time through the summer but we're coming back now."
Bayne feels that the teams execution all around has been the difference in their performance the past few weeks.
"Just execution," Bayne said when asked what he thought was the key to the last two finishes. "I feel like the last month we had strategy, things went our way and we've gotten results from it. Here at Bristol, Roush Fenway always gives us good cars and we've had really good runs the last four or five races."
"Our Ford was fast at the end when it mattered. At one point we blew a tire, hit the fence. I thought we were going to get lucky and get back back on the lead lap. Got on the lead lap, got a caution, and put new tires on it and started passing cars.
"It's great to get back-to-back top-10s and it really gives us some momentum going forward toward these last two races before the playoffs begin."
Darlington itself has been pretty rough on Bayne the last two years. While running paint schemes in honor of Mark Martin, he's had two races with issues. In 2015 he had a tire issue that regulated him to a 35th place finish, and last year the engine let go in his No. 6 AdvoCare Ford Fusion that resulted in a 40th place finish. If Bayne can continue his improvement going to Darlington, the results should improve there as well.
Monday, August 14, 2017
Trevor Bayne scores first top-five since July of 2016 at Michigan
Bayne challenged late for a top-3 finish in the Pure Michigan 400 |
With the race restarting in over-time, Bayne would restart behind Larson on the outside line in the fifth position and gave the driver of the 42 car enough of a push to get around two Furniture Row Toyota's in the end. Bayne also made a daring move to get around Erik Jones and Matt for third and fourth before hitting a patch of oil dry in the turn 3 section of the track that sent him up the track but he would rally back around Austin Dillon for fifth place.
It was his only top-five finish of the season, in what has been a season filled with tough finishes for Trevor Bayne and his team. After the finish, Bayne moved up to 19th in the points standings but with just three races to go before the playoffs begin, it will take a victory for Bayne to get in.
Even if Trevor Bayne does not make it in, he's out to make a statement the remainder of the season with his team.
"We're still not in the Chase yet and we have to keep pushing and making our cars faster and for Ricky's sake, who's in the Chase," said Bayne after the race. "We have 13 races left with or without the Chase to go make a statement, win races and run well. It feels good to be in contention. We still aren't the fastest race car. We can't beat them on raw speed, but we can put ourselves close with fuel strategy, tire strategy and trying to be in the mix at the end. And that feels really good from what we're used to."
Bayne had a fast car in the first stage of the event as he was turning laps as quick as the race leaders and making gains on the top-10 pack of cars. After the end of the first stage the team made adjustments that didn't sit well with the car and Bayne began to fall back in the field. It would take until the final run of the final stage for Bayne to show up when crew chief Matt Puccia made the call to go to the end on fuel.
Once again it seemed like Indianapolis all over again when the caution flag came out on lap 185. Bayne's team took the chance with two tires and came out first in the pits, however, four cars remained on the track. With nine laps remaining in the race, Bayne seen himself back in the same position he was in at Indy, he was in fifth place and on older tires. Another caution fell on lap 195 that would red flag the event and Bayne would restart in 6th place behind Kyle Larson.
He would eventually give Larson the push to win the race and make the move through to get into the top-five.
"That's what we needed," said Bayne after the Michigan event. "Man, if it stayed green we had another shot like Indy to hold off that 78, but we had a caution at the wrong time. I got a great restart and pushed the 42 to the lead. I went for it in turn three and it didn't stick. It got massive loose and ended up fifth. Third and fifth, that's not a big difference. If I went home thinking I should have gone for it in three, I would be kicking my butt. But it's a great day for our team. We needed this to recover a little bit."
After being wrecked on the restart at Indianapolis, Bayne took the chance at Michigan and came home fifth.
"It's refreshing. We've had a tough couple of months not getting the results we thought that we deserved. Today, to get a result feels really good. We had fast car early on. We had fuel strategy at the end. Probably gonna have a shot to beat the 78 if it stayed green. Got a caution and I was like 'Oh man, here goes Indy again.' We had a good first restart. The second restart was even better. We were able to push the 42 up to the lead and getting into (turn 3) I tried to go for it from the top and hit the Speedy Dry, and got loose, and came home fifth. Cost us a couple spots. Man, when you're in that position you have to go for it. I wouldn't have slept good at night if I didn't stuff it in there and try something. It just didn't stick. It feels really good for our team."
Wednesday, August 2, 2017
Times have changed and fans are tired of cup drivers in lower divisions
I look at the NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule this season and the race winners and I only see six wins from drivers that are not full-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers on the win column and three came from William Byron.
You can be one of those fans that think that the sport is making one of its judgment calls, however, I think the officials needed to set even stiffer limitations to the regulars because the sport needs a change. Yeah I am one of those fans that think Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Kevin Harvick, and Kyle Larson have had enough play time in the two lower divisions and if you look at the drivers that have spoken up about this topic the most it has been Busch, Keselowski, Harvick and Larson. Why? It is because they are the ones that have ran the most races the past 4-5 seasons as a MENCS regular.
Fans keep bringing up how we didn't hear fans gripe about Mark Martin winning races in the 1990s, well I am going to take you back in time a little bit to Martin's winningest season that came in 1993. He ran a total of 14 races that season in the No. 60 Winn Dixie Ford for Roush, That season there was a 28 race schedule, and there was only 12 races won by cup regulars, 7 by Martin, 2 by Dale Earnhardt, 2 by Micheal Waltrip and 1 by Bill Elliott. Also the schedule had a bit of a different phase as well, as NASCAR raced at many more venues away from cup tracks like Hickory, Rougemont, Nazareth, Myrtle Beach, Milwaukee, and Indianapolis Raceway Park.
If the series went back to the direction it had years ago I don't believe you would see as many cup regulars in the races to begin with. However, the major venues took the course and took over the schedule and you no longer have races at these small venues anymore like we used to have on the schedule. Even Mark Martin himself sees that times are changing and that the need for a cup regulars in the series are not as serious as before.
"I don't really know where I stand on that," said Martin when asked about cup drivers competiting in the Xfinity Series.
"I was able to participate; I didn't run that many races," the Hall of Fame driver stated while unveiling a paint scheme that Clint Bowyer will driver at Darlington next month. "I ran 14 to 16 races a year for a number of years. But at the time it was important, I think, for the series to have Cup drivers do the series for a lot different reasons."
"It's a different day and age today," Martin stated. I like what's going on nowadays, I like the rule today and where they go with it from there I'm sure will work...The racing, the world, the hardware, everything has changed since the '90s. I'm ok with what they're doing and OK with where they're looking at heading to limit it even more."
Next season NASCAR will begin with heavier limits. Drivers will more than five years of experience in the Monster Energy Cup Series will now be limited to seven races in the NASCAR Xfinity Series down from a maximum of 10 races this year. Drivers with the same experience will also be restricted to a limit of 5 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series events, down from seven events this year.
The rules will also make it so the finales for both series are off limits to Cup regulars earning championship points in the Monster Energy Cup Series regardless of experience in the series. Additionally the Xfinity Series' Dash 4 Cash program four race stretch with bonus money will be off limits to any Monster Energy Series driver.
Many people are saying fans are sour about cup drivers, however, it hurts ratings when these guy's constantly wins races and he's winning events by 3-plus seconds over other drivers. So it became time for NASCAR to change these rules.
Last season, Trevor Bayne only ran one event that came at this weekend's weekend Zippo 200 at Watkins Glen. With the Roush Fenway program not running their Cup drivers like most teams, I don't see this effecting their program much.
The one thing I do believe that this could have helped possibly in the past. Had Chris Buescher, Bubba Wallace and Trevor Bayne won races without cup drivers in the field, possibly sponsors would have taken notice to them and they would still have rides with RFR with the exception of Bayne. I believe that not winning hurt Wallace finding sponsorship and on several occasions he might have had the field not been filled with cup veterans.
You can be one of those fans that think that the sport is making one of its judgment calls, however, I think the officials needed to set even stiffer limitations to the regulars because the sport needs a change. Yeah I am one of those fans that think Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Kevin Harvick, and Kyle Larson have had enough play time in the two lower divisions and if you look at the drivers that have spoken up about this topic the most it has been Busch, Keselowski, Harvick and Larson. Why? It is because they are the ones that have ran the most races the past 4-5 seasons as a MENCS regular.
Mark Martin was a regular in the winners circle in the 90s |
If the series went back to the direction it had years ago I don't believe you would see as many cup regulars in the races to begin with. However, the major venues took the course and took over the schedule and you no longer have races at these small venues anymore like we used to have on the schedule. Even Mark Martin himself sees that times are changing and that the need for a cup regulars in the series are not as serious as before.
"I don't really know where I stand on that," said Martin when asked about cup drivers competiting in the Xfinity Series.
"I was able to participate; I didn't run that many races," the Hall of Fame driver stated while unveiling a paint scheme that Clint Bowyer will driver at Darlington next month. "I ran 14 to 16 races a year for a number of years. But at the time it was important, I think, for the series to have Cup drivers do the series for a lot different reasons."
"It's a different day and age today," Martin stated. I like what's going on nowadays, I like the rule today and where they go with it from there I'm sure will work...The racing, the world, the hardware, everything has changed since the '90s. I'm ok with what they're doing and OK with where they're looking at heading to limit it even more."
Next season NASCAR will begin with heavier limits. Drivers will more than five years of experience in the Monster Energy Cup Series will now be limited to seven races in the NASCAR Xfinity Series down from a maximum of 10 races this year. Drivers with the same experience will also be restricted to a limit of 5 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series events, down from seven events this year.
The rules will also make it so the finales for both series are off limits to Cup regulars earning championship points in the Monster Energy Cup Series regardless of experience in the series. Additionally the Xfinity Series' Dash 4 Cash program four race stretch with bonus money will be off limits to any Monster Energy Series driver.
Many people are saying fans are sour about cup drivers, however, it hurts ratings when these guy's constantly wins races and he's winning events by 3-plus seconds over other drivers. So it became time for NASCAR to change these rules.
Last season, Trevor Bayne only ran one event that came at this weekend's weekend Zippo 200 at Watkins Glen. With the Roush Fenway program not running their Cup drivers like most teams, I don't see this effecting their program much.
The one thing I do believe that this could have helped possibly in the past. Had Chris Buescher, Bubba Wallace and Trevor Bayne won races without cup drivers in the field, possibly sponsors would have taken notice to them and they would still have rides with RFR with the exception of Bayne. I believe that not winning hurt Wallace finding sponsorship and on several occasions he might have had the field not been filled with cup veterans.
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