Michigan showcases NASCAR's young talent
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[June 06, 2018]
By Holly Cain
NASCAR Wire Service
Reigning Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
champion Martin Truex Jr.'s win at Pocono Raceway last week provided
a glimpse at how the 2018 title chase could shape up.
Truex won his second race of the season and is the only driver other
than five-time winner Kevin Harvick and four-time winner Kyle Busch
with more than one win. And those two sure-bet title chasers were
right on Truex' No. 78 Furniture Row Racing Toyota's bumper --
finishing third and fourth, respectively.
Just behind Truex, however, was 24-year old Kyle Larson, who notched
his third runner-up finish of the season and fourth consecutive
top-10.
Many left Pocono with good reason to feel the race may have been a
preview of what to expect in the Homestead-Miami season finale that
crowns a champion.
"I'm good with it," the Chip Ganassi Racing driver Larson said
smiling on Sunday. "Let's do it. I don't know, I think three out of
the four have definitely been the best. I think I would say me. I
mean, I'm the only one that doesn't have a win in the front four.
But yeah, I mean, the 2 (Brad Keselowski), the 12 (Ryan Blaney)
yeah, I don't know. I think that three of those guys are definitely
head over heels better than the rest of us, but I think from fourth
to sixth or seventh best car, it's pretty close."
As the series begins stock car's Summer Solstice, it's compelling
and telling to see how the young drivers such as Larson have
historically done at this week's 2-mile Michigan Speedway.
Certainly the veterans such as Busch, Harvick and Truex quickly
reminded everyone they are repeat championship-worthy, but this
week's Michigan venue, in particular, has recently been a track
where the young stars have earned headlines and earned respect.
Larson isn't just the defending race winner, he has actually won
three straight at Michigan, including this week's race from the pole
position last June. Five of his eight starts at the track are top-10
finishes, four of the eight are top-three results.
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Michigan has proven itself a mecca of late for NASCAR's rising young
Cup talent.
Consider this. In the June, 2017 Michigan race, Larson won, Elliott
(then 20-years old), finished second , Joey Logano (then 26) was
third and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (then 28) was eighth.
In the August, 2017 Michigan race, Larson won again, Erik Jones (21
years-old) was third, Chris Buescher (then 24) was sixth, Austin
Dillon (then 27) was seventh and then 20-year old Elliott was
eighth. Half of the top-10 was under the age of 28.
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Logano, 28, has two wins and three pole positions at Michigan and
has finished out of the top-10 only ONCE since 2012.
Jones, 21, finished 13th and third in his two starts at his home
state venue - leading five laps in the late summer Michigan race.
Elliott, 22, who finished 10th at Pocono on Sunday, actually had an
amazing string of second-place finishes in his first four starts at
Michigan. He was eighth in the late summer race there in 2017. And
as he is prone to do, the young talent shares so much of that credit
with his crew chief on the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet,
Alan Gustafson.
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"He has won races there," Elliott said of Gustafson before last
year's Michigan race. "He has a good feel for the racetrack. We ran
well there the first race and I really think because we ran well, we
went back and worked harder to try to run better.
"I think a lot of times when you have a good run at a racetrack,
especially with the way the Michigan dates are - they are so close
together - you could think you could just go back with the same
thing and run well. Where in reality, I think that is a good way to
get behind and I think he did a good job of staying up on things and
making sure we improved and didn't just stay the same."
Larson had a win (at Fontana, Calif.) and five runner-up finishes
before his June Michigan masterpiece - from pole position to race
trophy - last year and seems to be carrying that same momentum with
a runner-up this past weekend.
Of course, Busch, Harvick and Truex may have something to say about
the Michigan "young guns" recent trend considering their own early
2018 season dominance. But there's no denying this track certainly
has given plenty of hard-earned optimism and enthusiasm to NASCAR's
newest Generation-Fast.
"I'm excited to go there off of three wins in a row," Larson said.
"You know, for whatever reason, we've been fast there. We actually
weren't that fast the last one we had, but we were able to have some
good restarts at the end.
"Hopefully we can go and have our car as competitive as it was the
first two times and try and get a fourth win."
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