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Dave Rodman
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BackLittle track down the street outdid IMS on performance (cont'd)

There's no denying the aura and historical legacy surrounding IMS. The racing action -- because by the barest definition, that's what it is, even if that action gets further graded, like on a scale from 1 to 10 -- even holds a lot of drama.

But is it scintillating? Like on a scale that we saw at ORP? Not even close.

I got a note during the week of the race from a woman who had witnessed the previous year's Brickyard 400. She said words to the effect of, "just wait until you see the people who won't be there ..."

Getty Images

Comeback victory

Carl Edwards passed Kyle Busch with 22 laps to go Saturday night at O'Reilly Raceway Park and went on to win the Nationwide Series Kroger 200.

Well, I was kinda shocked at how empty the lower stands were along the length of the frontstretch. And those stands on the outside at the Turn 3 end of the backstretch reminded me of Atlanta Motor Speedway at its worst. Otherwise, in what's been a rough year of attendance across the board, I thought the Brickyard had a good crowd.

And just to show you that the quality of the show isn't the bottom line, the stands at ORP were far from overflowing, also.

But if you ask me, Sunday's "show" was no better, no worse than a year ago. It was just different. People paid their money, they took their chances by coming -- or watching -- and they got a show. The drama was of a different variety, but it wasn't provided by the racing.

If you ended up raving about anything at the end of Sunday's race -- and I doubt many people did other than questioning an obviously open-and-shut speeding penalty -- it wasn't the racing.

The biggest irony was that in the end, the same guy won on a day when the racing scaled out to about a 2 or 3 on that scale of 1 to 10. That didn't happen at ORP, where the action was easily an 8 or a 9.

Next year, the choice on where to go should be easy.

Racing as it should have been

On the Brickyard 400's last lap, the top three finishers had the three fastest laps registered on NASCAR.COM's Live Leaderboard application, and in that order. But what was the sad thing? The fourth-fastest final lap of the 38 cars running at the finish was by Juan Montoya, who ruined his chance at history by making a mistake and speeding on pit road in the race's fastest car, on his final pit stop. On a day when passing was virtually impossible, there was nothing he could do about the mistake after it knocked him back to 12th in the running order.

Finishing business?

While Nationwide Series point leader Kyle Busch and Carl Edwards have no choice but to travel from the East Coast to Iowa between Thursday and Saturday to compete in the inaugural Nationwide race at Iowa Speedway, Kevin Harvick is apparently looking to make up for a missed opportunity in Iowa's inaugural season two years ago.

"I had the opportunity to run in the NASCAR Camping World East/West race in 2007 -- we had a great car for most of the race, but lost a cylinder late, which caused us to finish second [to Joey Logano]," Harvick said. "However, that opportunity has given our team a good feel of what this track has to offer."

From KHI's perspective, the best thing it offers is another chance for development driver Cale Gale to get back on track and practice and qualify the car on Friday and Saturday before Harvick can get there. Harvick will do the initial practice on Thursday.

Autostock

Wins: Thru Indy/ORP
  2008 2009
Cup Series 7 3
Nationwide 5 6
Truck Series 2 2

Kyle Busch Victory Watch

Busch offered perhaps the most insightful look into where he, his career and his Joe Gibbs Racing team are at, as the Indianapolis weekend got underway on Friday afternoon. The most unfortunate aspect of his weekend, in which he threatened to win in both the Nationwide and Truck series races, is that he ended up short in all three series.

But the way he dealt with the shortfalls makes it possible he can still eclipse his 2008 record total of 21 wins (8 Cup, 10 Nationwide, 3 Truck).

This weekend creates a daunting mid-country hop between Pocono and Iowa for the inaugural Nationwide event. He's now at 11 down and 11 to go. His 2008 win total at this point was 15, so it'll be interesting to see where the positive steps he's made in his reaction to adversity leads, particularly as he tries to rebound from falling out of a qualified Chase for the Sprint Cup position.

The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer.

The End

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Also

Nationwide Series

Standings
Pos. +/- Driver Points Behind
1. -- Kyle Busch 3296 Leader
2. -- Carl Edwards 3104 -192
3. -- Brad Keselowski 2904 -392
4. -- Jason Leffler 2790 -506
5. -- Joey Logano 2395 -901
6. +1 Justin Allgaier 2370 -926
7. -1 Mike Bliss 2353 -943
8. -- Steve Wallace 2311 -985
9. +1 Brendan Gaughan 2277 -1019
10. -1 Jason Keller 2244 -1052

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