
ELKO, Minn. -- Matt Kobyluck has been fast this season. But the NASCAR Grand National Division veteran has been around long enough to not be overly concerned that "fast" hasn't translated into the results he'd hoped for.
In his ninth full season in the series, Kobyluck hasn't continued any of the momentum he ended last year with after winning the 2006 Toyota All-Star Showdown.
When he opened 2007 in the West Series race at Phoenix International Raceway, Kobyluck had a top-five day ended on Lap 38 when he cut a tire and slammed the wall. He finished 36th.
Kobyluck endured similar misfortune in the Busch East opener at Greenville-Pickens Speedway in South Carolina. He qualified fourth and was running in the top five when a pair of lapped cars spun in front of him. Kobyluck was collected in the mess, and wound up hitting the wall, which caused heavy damage. Although he continued in the race, he finished two laps down and in 21st.
"In racing, you don't always get what you think you deserve," said Kobyluck, who hopes Friday night's race at Elko (Minn.) Speedway will get him back on track. "You have to turn it around somewhere.
"From a performance perspective, I'm optimistic when I go to the race track because we're performing well."
Elko marks the first time the two Grand National Series -- the West Series and the Busch East Series -- will run in the same race with points at stake. In the past, the two series have met only in the postseason Toyota All-Star Showdown. Kobyluck finished second in the 2004 and '05 Showdowns before winning last year.
He's also confident because the 3/8-mile track at Elko has been compared to the Lake Erie Speedway the Busch East ran at last year. Kobyluck qualified second in that event and finished sixth.
"It looks like it has an outside groove, and with the added banking it has, there should be some good side-by-side racing," Kobyluck said of Elko. "We always ran well at Lake Erie."
David Talks Game Plan
With the West Series having already completed three of its 13 events, this weekend provides an opportunity for points leader Mike David to take a big step toward his first championship.
David, who was the series runner-up last year, leads second-place Tim Woods III by 70 and third-place Jason Bowles by 101.
Will that alter his strategy at a bullring like Elko?
"It will when you get into the race," David said. "I don't qualify well, so we're just going to have to try to get what we can get early and the strategy will change as the race unfolds."
David has another motive to keep his nose clean.
"I always try not to tear it up anyway," David said, "because I have to fix it." (Continued)