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Johnny Benson has three top-10s in four starts at Michigan.

Notes: Momentum carries Benson home to Michigan

By Official Release
June 10, 2008
12:38 PM EDT
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Grand Rapids, Mich., native Johnny Benson rides a wave of momentum following his third-place finish in Friday's Sam's Town 400 at Texas Motor Speedway.

The past five races have produced a steady climb up the point chart from ninth to third.

Saturday's Cool City Customs 200 may be the spark that carries the 44-year-old Benson to the No. 1 position in the standings.

Benson got his first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series victory at Michigan International Speedway in 2006. He finished ninth last year -- his third top-10 performance in four visits to the 2-mile superspeedway.

"We are slowly moving up in the points and hopefully that will continue this weekend," Benson said. "We started the season out strong and then got into a string of bad luck, but it looks like this Tundra is back on track now."

Benson started the season with a pair of third-place finishes but slowly has been digging out of the hole created by a 30th in Atlanta and a 25th at Martinsville.

Historically speaking, Benson should be a solid favorite this week. Michigan has a pair of repeat winners. And Benson is the only driver to get his first Craftsman Truck win at MIS.

"I love going home to race at Michigan. It's always fun to race in front of my family and friends," he said. "Plus, MIS is just a great track to run on anyway."

1Number of races won from the pole (2007)
3Roush Fenway Racing's track-best win total
6Most top-10 finishes, by Dennis Setzer
13Most leaders (2005)
18Most lead changes (2004)
30Most finishers on the lead lap (2006)
154.004Fastest series race (July 26, 2003)

Hornaday wins in Texas; point lead changes fourth consecutive time
Have a good race, the elevator goes up.

Have a bad one and it's definitely a trip to the bargain basement.

And so it goes with the Craftsman Truck Series in 2008.

Ron Hornaday won Friday's Sam's Town 400 in his 11th try and finally checked off Texas Motor Speedway from his "to-do" list.

Hornaday now has won on all but one of the schedule's 1.5-mile speedways and can finish the job in September at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

It was an express ride down for Rick Crawford, who found the Lone Star State anything but hospitable.

Crawford, the point leader going in, fell all the way to sixth following a finish of 21st.

The race marked the fourth consecutive time the point lead has changed.

Kevin Harvick Inc., Ballew Motorsports top owner points
With more than a third of the season complete, the Craftsman Truck Series owner championship standings continue to shift (owner points).

Michigan

Fast Facts

What Cool City Customs 200
When 3:18 p.m. ET Saturday
TV SPEED, 2:30 p.m. ET
Radio MRN (Sirius Ch. 28), 3 p.m. ET

A week ago, Tom Mitchell's No. 14 team held the top spot. Mitchell's time in front, like that of his driver Crawford, was short-lived.

Kevin Harvick Inc. and Billy Ballew Motorsports bypassed both Mitchell and the No. 88 ThorSport Racing team to rank 1-2 entering Week 10 of the 2008 season.

Their lead, however, hardly is comfortable.

DeLana Harvick, with Hornaday in the seat, is 34 points ahead of Ballew's multiple-driver effort spearheaded by Busch, with Rhonda Thorson's Chevrolet, driven by Matt Crafton, 45 out.

Just 71 points separate KHI and Mitchell, who slipped all the way to seventh after Crawford's potential top-five performance was doomed by an accident caused by a cut tire.

KHI (first and sixth) and Bill Davis Racing (fourth and eighth) are the only teams boasting two trucks in the current top 10.

Michigan had immediate impact on Craftsman Trucks
It didn't take long for drivers from the state of Michigan to make an impact on the Craftsman Truck Series -- even though Michigan International Speedway didn't become part of the schedule until 1999.

Two competitors -- Butch Miller and Jack Sprague -- were in the field for the Feb. 5, 1995, series debut at Phoenix International Raceway.

Sprague finished sixth in an unsponsored Chevrolet with Miller's Jim Herrick-owned Ford seventh.

The rest, as they say, is history.

Later in the year, Miller edged Mike Skinner at Colorado National Speedway. His only series victory -- confirmed by rerunning CBS' videotape -- remains closest in series history at .001 seconds.

"My first question," said Miller, a partner in SS Green Light Racing, "was, 'Did I win?'"

Sprague, meanwhile, caught the eye of Rick Hendrick, who put him in a Budweiser-backed Chevrolet after the driver's original owner folded his operation.

Sprague, of course, has gone on to win three championships and 28 races. He returns to his home track this week fifth in points.

"It would mean so much for me to win at Michigan International Speedway," Sprague said. "I think it would bring things full circle; winning here locally when I first started and now being able to win at one of the highest levels of NASCAR competition would be pretty cool." (Continued)

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Craftsman Truck Series

Official Standings
Pos. +/- Driver Points Behind
1. +2 Ron Hornaday 1302 Leader
2. -- Matt Crafton 1257 -45
3. +2 Johnny Benson 1247 -55
4. -- Todd Bodine 1237 -65
5. +1 Jack Sprague 1231 -71
6. -5 Rick Crawford 1231 -71
7. -- Mike Skinner 1202 -100
8. +2 Chad McCumbee 1176 -126
9. -- Terry Cook 1164 -138
10. -2 David Starr 1145 -157
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