NASCAR notebook: Sonoma holds fond memories for Truex
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[June 23, 2018]
Martin Truex Jr.'s 2013 victory
at Sonoma Raceway holds a special place among the 17 wins the
reigning Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion has accumulated
since his full-time debut in 2006.
Coming to California that year, Truex had been winless since his
maiden Cup victory at Dover in 2007, a drought that had reached 218
races.
"A long time, very long -- don't remind me," said Truex, a featured
guest at a Sonoma Raceway luncheon on Thursday in San Francisco. "It
was one of those weekends where everything just felt right. We had a
good practice. We had, I felt like, a really good setup for the
race."
Truex finished 8.133 seconds ahead of runner-up Jeff Gordon,
exceeding the 7.355-second margin of victory in his inaugural win at
Dover six years earlier. Gordon and third- through sixth-place
finishers Carl Edwards, Kurt Busch, Clint Bowyer and Kasey Kahne all
have at least one Sonoma triumph on their respective resumes.
Obviously, Truex beat the best to score his second win.
"We ran third early on in the race for a while and had some pit
strategy work out a little bit in our favor," Truex said. "We were
able to get the lead and then just managed the gap and the tires and
really were able to drive away on long runs.
"That was awesome. We had a couple of late-race restarts where some
guys that were really good there back then -- (Juan Pablo) Montoya,
I think, was running second for a while ... but we were able to
drive away and control the race.
"I remember how awesome it felt, how amazing it was, because it had
been so long, and I'd been working so hard to try to get back to
Victory Lane. Our team at that time (Michael Waltrip Racing) had
been so close to winning so many times. It seemed like every time,
somebody would just pull the rug out from under us."
As it turned out, that victory represented the pinnacle of Truex's
career at MWR. He wouldn't win again until 2015 at Pocono, after he
had moved to Furniture Row Racing, the team he led to the 2017
title.
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NASCAR Cup
Series driver Martin Truex Jr. (78) during practice for the
FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway. Mandatory
Credit: Mike DiNovo-USA TODAY Sports
DENNY HAMLIN EXPECTS STRONG SHOWING IN NEXT 10 WEEKS
Denny Hamlin's No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota hasn't had the speed
this season to match the Stewart-Haas Racing Fords, but Hamlin
expects that to change as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup season winds
toward the Playoffs.
It's not that Hamlin hasn't been consistently fast this year. After
all, he has six top-five finishes in 15 races and currently is
eighth in the series standings. But Hamlin hasn't had the
race-winning speed to match the Stewart-Haas cars -- or teammate
Kyle Busch, for that matter.
"I think, at worst any weekend, we've been an eighth-place car and
at best, we've been a second- or third-place car," said Hamlin, who
was second fastest to Stewart-Haas driver Kurt Busch in Friday's
final practice at Sonoma Raceway. "Certainly, the results I don't
think show the speed we actually do have.
"I'm pretty confident the second half of the year we're going to be
pretty strong. I feel like we've really made gains over the last
month or so. I'd like to get inside the top five in points before
the end of the regular season and win a couple races -- that's a
goal that we have that is achievable in the next 10 weeks or so."
--By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level
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