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Nashville's stand-alone offers plenty of excitement (cont'd)
In the Loop: Stout competition
Three-time reigning Nashville winner Carl Edwards isn't exactly the runaway favorite in this Saturday's Pepsi 300.
|   | Bowyer | Edwards |
|---|---|---|
| Driver Rating | 130.2 | 125.6 |
| Avg. Running Pos. | 3.9 | 5.1 |
| Laps / Top 15 | 1,083 | 1,072 |
| Fastest Laps Run | 153 | 210 |
Statistically, Clint Bowyer is a notch better than Edwards at the 1.33-mile concrete track in three important catergories: Driver Rating, Average Running Position and Laps in the Top 15. Edwards does lead Bowyer in a key speed category -- Fastest Laps Run. The defending series champion has 210 Fastest Laps Run in his five races at Nashville, compared to Bowyer's 153.
Bowyer has one win at Nashville, the second race there in 2005 -- a race Edwards did not run. Edwards has won three there, but only two when Bowyer was also running. His victory there last year was won without Bowyer in the field. He led a race-high 74 laps that event.
But other drivers have a chance of knocking Edwards off his pedestal. Scott Wimmer (No. 29 Chevrolet) has a solid chance to win his first race since 2003. Wimmer, who has three consecutive top-10 finishes at Nashville, has a Driver Rating of 118.7, an Average Running Position of 4.5 and 72 Fastest Laps Run in his two races there since 2005.
Also watch for Nashville native Bobby Hamilton Jr. to have a strong showing. Last season, he racked up finishes of ninth and 13th, notching some solid stats in the process.
In the two races in 2007, Hamilton had a Driver Rating of 94.0, an Average Running Position of 8.9 and 447 Laps in the Top 15, which was all but three of the total laps.
Series regular Steve Wallace (No. 66 Chevrolet) could also vie for his first victory. In his four Nashville races -- all top-15 finishes -- Wallace has a Driver Rating of 85.1, an Average Running Position of 13.0 and 684 Laps in the Top 15 (76 percent).
Television coverage
The Nationwide Series makes its first appearance of the season on ESPN with coverage beginning at 2 p.m. ET Saturday.
| Event | Day | Time | TV |
|---|---|---|---|
| Practice | Fri. | 2:30 p.m. | ESPN2 |
| Final Pract. | Sat. | 11 a.m.* | ESPN2 |
| Quals | Sat. | 11:05 a.m. | None |
| Race | Sat. | 2 p.m. | ESPN |
Allen Bestwick will host NASCAR Countdown with analysis by 1989 Cup Series champion Rusty Wallace and Brad Daugherty, a former winning team owner in the now-Nationwide and Truck series, in the ESPN pit studio.
ESPN2 airs live coverage of Friday's Nationwide Series practice at Nashville at 2:30 p.m. ET, and taped coverage of final practice airs at 11 a.m. ET Saturday.
Marty Reid will be the lead announcer, joined in the booth for analysis by Wallace and two-time Cup champion crew chief Andy Petree.
Jamie Little, Mike Massaro, Shannon Spake and Vince Welch will report from the pits, while two-time Cup Series champion crew chief Tim Brewer will be in the ESPN DISH Tech Center.
The race will be simulcast on ESPN Deportes, the domestic Spanish-language network.
Notes, etc.
The track surface and time of year will be factors on Saturday.
"Concrete tracks have a tendency to tighten a bit as they get rubbered in," series director Joe Balash said. "That makes it a little easier for drivers to turn the car because they don't have to anticipate how much the track will change or 'come to' them.
"The concrete is less susceptible to temperature changes; asphalt gets greasy and slick when its hot. But not so with concrete tracks, especially in the early spring where the outdoor temperature varies so much.
"Racers race for different things. That guitar is important to people. The uniqueness of that trophy is important," he said.
Phoenix Racing, Jay Robinson Racing and Rusty Wallace Racing have made driver changes that will be in effect at Nashville.
Tennessee's own Sterling Marlin will be in the No. 1 Chevrolet, replacing Johnny Sauter (read more).
Kenny Wallace will move to the No. 28 Chevrolet for the remainder of the season; Brian Keselowski had been manning that car (read more).
David Stremme is now in the No. 64 Chevrolet in place of Chase Austin.
The NASCAR Nationwide Series has its first open week of the season next week but teams will be busy Monday and Tuesday as the third test of the year takes place at Richmond International Raceway on March 24-25.
Dollar General, sponsor of the No. 32 Toyota of Denny Hamlin, is a Nashville-based company and is assisting the area Red Cross and other corporations with fund-raising to aid in relief efforts due to devestating tornadoes that hit the Nashville area and Middle Tennessee in early February. Dollar General pledged $100,000 toward the relief fund which was set to reach $500,000.