Johnson seeks record-tying fifth
Brickyard win
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[July 03, 2020]
No matter when a visit to the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway falls on the NASCAR Cup Series schedule,
there is always a lot on the line and a lot to deliver -- for both
NASCAR competitors and the sport's fanbase.
After spending much of the past half-decade as site of the series'
regular-season finale, the historic 2.5-mile venue is now home to
NASCAR's Independence Day weekend slate featuring Sunday's Big
Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 Powered by Big Machine Records (4 p.m. ET
on NBC, IMS Radio Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
The motivation to kiss auto racing's most famous yard of bricks --
as the Brickyard 400 winner traditionally does -- remains a high
priority for all the drivers. However, only five current drivers
have sealed their race work with that treasured kiss -- four-time
winner Jimmie Johnson (2006, '08, '09 and '12), two-time winners
Kyle Busch (2015 and '16) and Kevin Harvick (2003 and '19) and Ryan
Newman (2013) and Brad Keselowski (2018).
Johnson, Busch, Harvick and Newman hold the distinction of being the
race's only four drivers to win from the pole position.
For defending race winner Harvick, who earned both his Indianapolis
victories from the pole position, this event remains one of the
toughest competitions of the year -- no matter when it falls on the
schedule. The driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford takes a
hefty 52-point edge over Team Penske's Ryan Blaney into Sunday's
race. And he's fresh off one of the most dominant Brickyard
performances, leading 118 of 160 laps en route to his win in 2019.
Harvick said he expects this year's race under unusual circumstance
-- a one-day show with no practice because of COVID-19 health
precautions -- to work in the veterans' favor, especially at a
difficult track such as Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
"You can't sit too far out on a limb and try a bunch of things like
you would in practice on a normal race weekend," Harvick said. "The
other piece of that is you don't have a bunch of people studying
what you do with all the SMT data to try to copy it and drive their
car and set their car up like what you are doing because the race is
over by the time all that happens.
"It has been very unique and it has been something that plays well
for our team to just show up and race because I think for the most
part that experience is helping us get to where we need to be
quicker."
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Interestingly, many of the 2020 season's best are among those
drivers looking to celebrate in Indianapolis' Victory Lane for a
first time. Eight of the top 10 drivers in the series driver
standings -- Blaney, Chase Elliott, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano,
Martin Truex Jr., Alex Bowman, Aric Almirola and Kurt Busch -- have
never won a NASCAR Cup Series race at Indianapolis.
Among those, Logano has been closest. The driver of the No. 22 Team
Penske Ford has a pair of runner-up finishes and was second to
Harvick last year. He has seven top-10 finishes in 11 starts at
Indy.
Hamlin, the season's only four-time race winner, has eight top-10
finishes in 14 Indianapolis starts, including a career-best finish
of third, three times in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.
Elliott, on the other hand, who leads all drivers with five stage
wins in 2020, has only one top-10 finish in five NASCAR Cup Series
starts at the Brickyard. His best showing was a ninth-place finish
last year, and he has yet to lead a lap.
"I've really struggled at Indy," acknowledged Elliott, who drives
the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.
"We've just been trying to get better there. It has just
consistently been a huge challenge for me every year. My excitement
level probably isn't as high as some others about going to Indy, but
that's just because of how hard it has been.
"I would love to get over the hump. I think it would be such a cool
place to run well and have success at. We are looking forward to
giving it our best show this weekend."
His Hendrick Motorsports teammate Johnson shares that optimistic
sentiment. The seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion will be
retiring from full-time competition at the end of the season and is
looking for his first win since 2017. Should Johnson win on Sunday,
he would tie his former Hendrick teammate Jeff Gordon for most
NASCAR wins (five) all-time at the historic track. He's had only two
top-10 finishes since his last win in 2012 at Indianapolis and goes
into the race highly motivated.
"Winning this race is one of the proudest I have been in my career,"
said Johnson, driver of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.
"There is so much effort that goes into the event back at the (race)
shop. It's high priority when you look at the race schedule. It's a
ring race. When I drive in there and see the pagoda, I get the
goosebumps."
INDIANAPOLIS ROAD COURSE TO CHALLENGE XFINITY SERIES
Saturday's Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard (3 p.m. ET on NBC, IMS
Radio Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will be the NASCAR Xfinity
Series debut on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway's 2.439-mile road
course. The Xfinity race will be the second event of a doubleheader
Saturday with the NTT IndyCar Series scheduled to run at noon ET.
It is a highly anticipated new venture for series drivers, who
welcome the challenge of road-course racing at one of the world's
most famous ovals. Unlike the NASCAR Cup Series, which will show up
and race on Sunday, the Xfinity Series is being given a pair of
50-minute practice sessions because of the change in race course.
[to top of second column] |
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For Xfinity Series standings leader and Indiana native Chase
Briscoe, it's a "home" race and the timing couldn't be better. The
driver of the No. 98 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford arrives back home in
Indiana fresh off a series-best fourth victory scored last week at
Pocono Raceway. And he leads the series points standings by three
points over JR Motorsports driver Noah Gragson in what's been a
robustly competitive season to date.
Briscoe has a pair of top-10 finishes in two starts on the
traditional Indianapolis 2.5-mile oval the series used previously,
and he is optimistic about his chances on the road course, too. His
very first Xfinity Series victory came on a road course at another
famous oval -- Charlotte Motor Speedway -- where he earned his
inaugural Xfinity Series race win in 2018. Last season, Briscoe
raced to top-10 finishes at all four road course venues -- at
Watkins Glen International, Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Road America
and the Charlotte ROVAL.
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A victory in Saturday's race at Briscoe's most-revered track stands
to not only extend his points advantage but also represent a big
sentimental accomplishment.
"I don't know what it is about Indiana, but I feel like everybody
from Indiana has a special pride about being from Indiana," said
Briscoe, whose team owner Tony Stewart is as famous a racing Hoosier
as there is.
"I'm not sure if it's like that for other states, but there is
something about us Hoosiers where we want to see other Hoosiers do
well. There's just a lot of pride in being from Indiana and trying
to win for Indiana, and obviously, it's even bigger when we go to
Indianapolis Motor Speedway. There is something about a Hoosier at
Indianapolis Motor Speedway."
One of Briscoe's most fierce competitors is another driver with a
long family history at Indianapolis Motor Speedway -- Austin Cindric.
The driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford is the son of Tim Cindric,
longtime team president of the Indy 500's winningest organization,
Team Penske.
Not only does Cindric understand and share in the sentimental value
of the hallowed Indianapolis track, but he's been good at the
Brickyard, and both his career Xfinity Series victories have come on
road courses (Watkins Glen and Mid-Ohio in 2019). Last year,
Cindric's worst finish on the schedule's four road course races was
third place on the Charlotte ROVAL. He is definitely considered a
master on this venue, and beyond that, he comes to Indianapolis
feeling especially motivated as he still looks for his first win of
the 2020 season.
Cindric is ranked fourth in the championship standings, 46 points
behind Briscoe. He is one of three drivers among the top eight still
looking for that first trip to Victory Lane. Another with high hopes
headed to Indianapolis is veteran Justin Allgaier, a road-course
winner and also a past champion on Indianapolis' oval track. He sits
a distant seventh in points -- 113 points behind Briscoe -- but
leads the series in stage wins (five) and is second only to teammate
Gragson in laps led (344-317) among the series regulars.
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NASCAR Cup Series
Next Race: Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 Powered by Big Machine
Records
The Place: Indianapolis Motor Speedway
The Date: Sunday, July 5
The Time: 4 p.m. ET
TV: NBC, 3:30 p.m. ET
Radio: Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Distance: 400 miles (160 laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 50),
Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 100), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 160)
2019 Race Winner: Kevin Harvick
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Next Race: Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard
The Place: Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course
The Date: Saturday, July 4
The Time: 3 p.m. ET
TV: NBC, 2 p.m. ET
Radio: Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Distance: 151.22 miles (62 Laps); Stage 1 (Ends on Lap 20),
Stage 2 (Ends on Lap 40), Final Stage (Ends on Lap 62)
--By Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
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