
To a man, NASCAR drivers will tell you that Darlington Raceway is either the single toughest track, or one of the toughest tracks on which they compete. The rough surface makes it impossible for a team to find a consistent setup on the car that will work as well at the end of a pit-stop cycle as it did at the beginning.
As soon as the tires go away, the responsibility is back on the driver's shoulders to find the optimum speed that walks that ragged edge between crashing and going fast. It's not as if a driver can search for another line to improve his handling. There is only one groove at Darlington, and it's about five feet on the other side of the retaining wall.
Several drivers have said that the Car of Tomorrow is actually more like the Car of Yesterday, and if that is true, fantasy owners may see the return of the Darlington stripe. For years the fastest way around the track was to lightly graze the wall. However, if they hit it too hard, the tow-out gets messed up, which means that even winning drivers flirt with disaster.
Last week, drivers learned that these COT cars are pretty sturdy after Juan Montoya backed into the wall and still posted fairly competitive laps. This week will test the sides of the car because after the door panels get worn down, the suspension and tire well is the next in line to take abuse. One way or the other, this is going to be about the most interesting COT race all season.
Not Too Tough
Last week, Jeff Gordon was a perfect example of how important momentum can be. The No. 24 team has struggled more at Richmond International Raceway than any other track on which the series competes and yet they were able to run in the top five all day. Now that Gordon has cleared his Richmond hurdle, he is going to keep dominating until his momentum winds down, and there is no reason to believe that will happen at Darlington.
From 1995 through 1998, the driver of the No. 24 once posted eight consecutive top-three finishes. He has won six times on this track and four times at North Carolina Motor Speedway -- another sandpaper-like track -- and one more victory is well within reach. Gordon crashed in back-to-back races at Darlington in 2003 and 2004, but he found his groove again in fall 2004 to finish third. Since then, he's been second in the last two races and is close to completing the deal.
The driver who won both of the last two races also has to be heavily favored. Greg Biffle has had a difficult time in 2007, but he nearly turned his fortune around last week before he was wrecked by Jeff Green. Drivers have a way of forgetting the hardship, however, and Biffle will focus his attention on how strong his run was before that mishap as well as his strength at Darlington. Last year in this race, he posted the best average running position of 2.4, spent the most laps among the field in the top five, and had a nearly perfect driver rating. If he cannot turn things around this week, then the rest of his season is a write-off.
Immediately prior to Biffle's ascendancy, Jimmie Johnson was the driver to beat. He swept Victory Lane in 2004 -- the last season this track hosted two events -- and he has finished outside the top 10 only once in eight career starts. Last year, Johnson, Gordon and Kyle Busch all finished in the top 10 and that was before the COT made Hendrick Motorsports the team to beat on a weekly basis. Don't be surprised if these three drivers run 1-2-3 again this week.
A Little Tougher
Darlington is not overly kind to traditional dark horses. While this is a driver's track, lightly funded teams are not usually to be found in the top 10 at the end of the day, and the long shots come as a type rather than individual drivers. Last year. Robby Gordon, Ken Schrader, Kyle Petty and Joe Nemechek all finished in the top 20. And even a cursory look at these men reveals a lot of gray hair. Experience counts at Darlington. The dark horses this week should come from among drivers with a lot of experience -- especially if they practice strong on Friday. (Continued)
| Pos. | Driver | Power Avg. |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Jimmie Johnson | 5.28 |
| 2. | Denny Hamlin | 7.40 |
| 3. | Greg Biffle | 7.71 |
| 4. | Ryan Newman | 7.86 |
| 5. | Kasey Kahne | 8.38 |
| 6. | Mark Martin | 9.59 |
| 7. | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | 10.00 |
| 8. | Jeff Gordon | 10.61 |
| 9. | Kyle Busch | 11.25 |
| 10. | Carl Edwards | 13.10 |
| 11. | Robby Gordon | 14.33 |
| 12. | Kurt Busch | 14.55 |
| 13. | Tony Stewart | 14.74 |
| 14. | Matt Kenseth | 15.19 |
| 15. | David Stremme | 17.00 |
| 16. | Elliott Sadler | 17.00 |
| 17. | Jamie McMurray | 17.21 |
| 18. | Clint Bowyer | 17.25 |
| 19. | Jeff Burton | 18.44 |
| 20. | Bobby Labonte | 20.26 |
| 21. | Ward Burton | 20.63 |
| 22. | Jeremy Mayfield | 21.06 |
| 23. | Dave Blaney | 21.86 |
| 24. | Joe Nemechek | 22.39 |
| 25. | Reed Sorenson | 22.50 |
| 26. | Sterling Marlin | 23.11 |
| 27. | Dale Jarrett | 24.44 |
| 28. | Ricky Rudd | 25.38 |
| 29. | Mike Bliss | 25.67 |
| 30. | Kevin Harvick | 25.78 |
| 31. | Ken Schrader | 27.88 |
| 32. | Brian Vickers | 29.00 |
| 33. | Martin Truex Jr. | 29.75 |
| 34. | Jeff Green | 30.22 |
| 35. | Kenny Wallace | 30.22 |
| 36. | John Andretti | 31.67 |
| 37. | Kyle Petty | 32.72 |
| 38. | J.J. Yeley | 33.75 |
| 39. | Michael Waltrip | 34.28 |
| 40. | Scott Riggs | 34.77 |
| 41. | Casey Mears | 35.06 |
| 42. | Johnny Sauter | 36.14 |
| 43. | Tony Raines | 38.10 |