
MARTINSVILLE, Va. -- Eddie Wood slept in his own bed Friday night, and actually slept. He hadn't done either in a while.
"It's been a long week," he said.
Every team outside the top 35 in owner points faces pressure to make Nextel Cup events on speed. But when that team is the Wood Brothers, and that event is at Martinsville Speedway, the consequences become difficult to imagine. The Woods have been a fixture on this half-mile oval since 1953, when Eddie's father, Glen, brought a car from his hometown of Stuart, 30 miles down the road, and one of NASCAR's most enduring traditions was born.

With the pressure of making the show, Eddie Wood was relieved when his driver Ken Schrader qualified on time at Martinsville.
Martinsville without the Woods would be like Sonoma without the vineyards, Michigan without the traffic, Daytona without the beach. But that very possibility loomed after Ken Schrader suffered a pit penalty last week at Bristol and finished 28th, a result that dropped the 57-year-old team to 39th in owner points and placed it in jeopardy of missing a Martinsville race for the first time since Dwight Eisenhower was in the White House.
"You don't want to miss a show anywhere. If it's in Russia, you don't want to miss a show," said Eddie Wood, now co-owner of the team his father and uncle founded. "You're supposed be racing every Sunday, but being at home is nice. Now we're all racing out of Charlotte. But it's good to come home and be around what you're used to being around."
Especially after Schrader turned the fourth-fastest lap of Friday's qualifying session, easily locking the Wood Brothers' No. 21 car into the Goody's Cool Orange 500. Much has changed for this team in recent years, from the addition of partner Tad Geschickter -- the organization's formal name is Wood Brothers/JTG Racing -- to the transfer of racing operations from Stuart to metro Charlotte in 2003.
But its identity will be forever tied to this corner of Southern Virginia. The old shop that fielded cars for David Pearson, Cale Yarborough and A.J. Foyt still stands in Stuart. Wood's mother runs the museum, which stays open on Saturday during race weekends in Martinsville. There are even a few crewmen who work on transmissions, and transfer the pieces to the main shop in Harrisburg, N.C., around the corner from Lowe's Motor Speedway. (Continued)
| Pos. | Driver | Make | Speed | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Denny Hamlin | Chevrolet | 95.103 | 19.911 |
| 2. | Jamie McMurray | Ford | 94.955 | 19.942 |
| 3. | Jeff Gordon | Chevrolet | 94.851 | 19.964 |
| 4. | Ken Schrader | Ford | 94.623 | 20.012 |
| 5. | J.J. Yeley | Chevrolet | 94.562 | 20.025 |
| 6. | Kevin Harvick | Chevrolet | 94.548 | 20.028 |
| 7. | Tony Stewart | Chevrolet | 94.515 | 20.035 |
| 8. | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | Chevrolet | 94.482 | 20.042 |
| 9. | Carl Edwards | Ford | 94.406 | 20.058 |
| 10. | Johnny Sauter | Chevrolet | 94.378 | 20.064 |