FOLLOW ON: Twitter Facebook RSS
Superstore
AUCTIONS
Autostock
Last year was a photo-finish between Kenseth and Johnson at LVMS. The numbers show we could see those two up front again.

Fantasy Preview: Vegas

By Dan Beaver, Special to NASCAR.COM
March 9, 2007
11:24 AM EST
type size: + -

Las Vegas Motor Speedway has undergone a major renovation since last year. In fact, the only thing remaining of the old facility is one building in the infield, which makes teams' notebooks useless. It is only fitting that this weekend will be a gamble for the race teams in a city that made its fortune with that particular vice.

Nextel Cup drivers were faced with a similar dilemma in 2003 when Homestead-Miami Speedway reconfigured their track for the third time in its brief history. The Florida track started its life as a rectangle, then became a true oval, and finally added progressive banking. The third time was indeed the charm for Homestead, and the competition on that track was immediately among the best in the series.

Las Vegas hopes the same thing will happen this week, as they have also added progressive banking to their double-doglegged oval. Nothing in racing is ever guaranteed, but the smart money is on this new surface doing exactly as planned. The fresh asphalt will make for lightning-quick times, while the progressive banking will ensure that the race doesn't devolve into a single-groove affair.

Strong Starts

Still, this is essentially a brand new track, and drivers who traditionally perform well on new courses should dominate your roster. Regardless of their record at Vegas, Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, and Kevin Harvick get a special mention because of their records in inaugural races.

Since New Hampshire was added to the schedule in Gordon's rookie season of 1993, he's always brought his "A" game to the new tracks, where everyone is equal. He finished seventh in that first race at Loudon and won the inaugural Brickyard 400 the following year. He has also recorded victories at California Speedway in 1997 and Kansas Speedway in 2001 when those tracks first hosted a Cup event. When Homestead was reconfigured in 2003, he finished fifth.

Stewart won the inaugural race at Homestead in 1999 when it was a flat replica of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and he also finished in the top 10 when the track added progressive banking in 2003. Tack on another top 10 in Kansas' first race, and he has one of the best records on new tracks among active competitors.

Harvick won the first race held at Chicagoland Speedway in 2001 and nearly duplicated that feat in 2003 when Homestead was reconfigured. He finished second to Bobby Labonte that day.

The Favorites

While the track is essentially new, the shape is the same as it ever was and fantasy owners looking for a little help in handicapping this race can find some hints in a driver's record on the similarly-configured, 1.5-mile tracks. The cream will continue to rise to the top, and lately on the unrestricted, intermediate speedways, that means the battle at the front of the pack will be between Matt Kenseth and Jimmie Johnson. These are the only winners the Vegas track has known in the past four years, and chances are good that will continue.

Last year, Johnson narrowly edged Kenseth at the line to win his second consecutive Vegas race. It was the third time in this track's brief history that winners stole back-to-back checkers, with Kenseth recording the feat in 2003 and 2004, while Jeff Burton won in 1999 and 2000. No one has yet won three in a row, but Johnson has last week's momentum from a third-place finish to push him forward. Other than a disappointing Daytona 500, Johnson has finished in the top 10 in his last eight attempts stretching back to the fall race on the similarly-configured Lowe's Motor Speedway, and all but two of those events have ended in first-, second-, or third-place finishes.

Kenseth has a little less momentum on his side overall, but that didn't keep him from dominating the Auto Club 500 at California. He swept both the Busch and Cup races, while never taking his team out of contention. He enters the UAW-Daimler Chrysler 400 without his crew chief Robbie Reiser for the third weekend in a four-race suspension, but that really shouldn't adversely affect him in Vegas, since it didn't in California. The Roush Fenway organization is deep in talent and Kenseth is virtually assured a top-five finish. (Continued)

Previous12Next

Fantasy Power Rankings

Cookie-cutter tracks, past three years
Pos. Driver Power Avg.
1. Jimmie Johnson 6.12
2. Tony Stewart 10.04
3. Greg Biffle 11.54
4. Matt Kenseth 11.59
5. Kasey Kahne 11.97
6. Jeff Gordon 12.60
7. Mark Martin 12.83
8. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 13.75
9. Carl Edwards 15.11
10. Clint Bowyer 15.88
11. David Reutimann 16.00
12. Denny Hamlin 16.11
13. Casey Mears 16.32
14. Jeff Burton 16.33
15. Kyle Busch 17.48
16. Kevin Harvick 17.68
17. Kurt Busch 18.29
18. Jon Wood 18.56
19. Martin Truex Jr. 18.68
20. David Ragan 19.63
21. Elliott Sadler 19.63
22. Jeremy Mayfield 20.16
23. J.J. Yeley 20.80
24. Aric Almirola 21.00
25. Bobby Labonte 21.23
26. Brian Vickers 21.28
27. Joe Nemechek 21.29
28. Ryan Newman 21.64
29. Scott Riggs 23.42
30. Jamie McMurray 23.59
31. Regan Smith 23.88
32. Reed Sorenson 23.89
33. Dale Jarrett 23.95
34. Ricky Rudd 24.40
35. Mike Bliss 25.69
36. David Gilliland 25.73
37. Sterling Marlin 26.30
38. Paul Menard 26.73
39. Robby Gordon 27.54
40. Michael Waltrip 27.82
41. Dave Blaney 27.92
42. Juan Montoya 28.00
43. David Stremme 29.27
44. Johnny Sauter 29.56
45. Jeff Green 29.81
46. Kyle Petty 30.15
47. Ken Schrader 30.93
48. Tony Raines 31.64
49. John Andretti 32.08
50. Ward Burton 33.10
51. Kevin Lepage 36.99
52. Kenny Wallace 37.07
53. A.J. Allmendinger 42.00

Remember To Check Out

All External sites will open in a new browser window. NASCAR.COM does not endorse external sites.
© 2001-2012 NASCAR | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
NASCAR.COM is part of Turner - SI Digital, part of the Turner Sports & Entertainment Digital Network.