Kenseth hoping past Charlotte success a harbinger of good fortune
for 600
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[May 26, 2018]
Matt Kenseth hoisted his very
first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup trophy at Charlotte Motor Speedway
following the 2000 Coca-Cola 600. It's been 18 years, a series
championship and 38 more wins since that time, but Kenseth is
hopeful the longtime good vibe at the track will be a positive sign
of things to come in Sunday night's running of the race.
Kenseth rejoined the Roush-Fenway Racing Ford team this month after
five seasons driving a Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. Kenseth, however,
was driving a Ford for NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2019 member Jack
Roush when he won at Charlotte all those years ago (once in the 600
and once in the Fall 500). He was hired by the team again this
season to help re-energize and refocus the storied organization.
The veteran is driving a part-time schedule, sharing time in the No.
6 Ford Fusion with Trevor Bayne. This weekend's start will be only
his second points race of the 2018 season. He started 35th and
finished 36th at Kansas Speedway two weeks ago. He won the pole for
last week's Monster Energy All-Star race at Charlotte and finished
14th in the non-points event.
"We're not very far into this year," Kenseth cautioned anyone
bringing too-lofty expectations to the 600 weekend.
"Kansas was a struggle the whole weekend. Last weekend was very
unique, running restrictor plates and all that stuff at Charlotte
and the All-Star format and stuff, so that was kind of different.
"I'm glad to be able to get on the track and get a full practice in
[at Charlotte]. ... I feel like we learned a couple things so far
and hopefully we can get qualified respectable and then get back to
work Saturday on race trim."
Kenseth's return has been a steep and immediate learning curve, back
in the driver's seat after an 11-week season-opening sabbatical. He
was immediately challenged with two radically different refreshers
in the 1.5-mile Kansas track and then the unique restrictor plate,
special format of the All-Star race.
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This week's 600-miler should give Kenseth (who qualified 17th for
the race) plenty of opportunity to find his groove and truly start
to work on the greater task he's accepted -- helping the Roush team
regain the prominence it had when Kenseth won a Cup championship.
"It's still pretty new and there's a lot of different things to try
to work through, at least, what I'd like to work through and just
trying to keep getting a better feel for it every week and kind of
try to give my opinions, for what their worth," Kenseth said. "What
I feel like we could do different and better and what we're doing
good. It's that type of thing."
The No. 6 team has only four top-five finishes in the last four
seasons and is eager to see if a change in the driver lineup can
boost the competitive flair. Kenseth comes into the race ranked
among the top five in all major statistical categories at Charlotte,
from average finish (13.577 -- fifth best) to driver rating (96.1 --
fourth best).
And in addition to his winning résumé here (two wins and two poles),
Kenseth also has victories at both of the next two tracks where he's
scheduled to compete - one win at Pocono and three wins at Michigan.
"I've had a lot of time to train the last six months, so I'm not
worried about the physical aspect of it," Kenseth said. "I'm more
worried about trying to keep up, get our cars a little faster so we
can first of all stay on the lead lap, second of all, hopefully
start moving forward and getting kind of in the mix and start to go
get forward."
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media
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