Kyle Busch Weekend Sweep Repeat?
Kyle Busch swept the weekend last August at Bristol winning all three races at the track in a single weekend. He visited victory lane in the Trucks, NNS, and Cup Series. Kyle has 4 Cup wins, and 6 top 2 finishes in the last 9 races at Bristol, and the only two other drivers to have wins in all 3 series there (not in the same weekend of course) are Carl Edwards and Mark Martin.

BRISTOL CUP SERIES STARTING LINEUP

All time Bristol Wins List
As Bristol heads into their 50th season of racing, lets take a look at the all-time wins list at that track, which is essentially a look at NASCAR history. 8 of the top 9 are champions, and 5 are either Hall of Famers, inductees or nominees. Darrell Waltrip heads up the list with 12 wins, Dale Earnhardt with 9, Rusty Wallace & Cal Yarborough also with 9, Kurt Busch & Jeff Gordon have 5, Bobby Allison & Kyle Busch each have 4.

Wood Brothers Last Bristol Win
The Wood Brothers are heading into this weekend looking at an anniversary of their own. Besides their recent Daytona 500 win, Bristol is the site of their last win, making it almost to the 10 year mark. Elliott Sadler went to victory lane at Bristol in 2001.

TRACK STATS | BRISTOL
It’s the coliseum of auto racing, a stadium wrapped around a 1/2 mile oval and 160,000 plus screaming fans
Banking/Turns 1-4: up to 30 º
Banking/Straights: 10 º
Length/Frontstretch: 650 ft.
Length/Backstretch: 650 ft.
Miles/laps: 266.5 miles, 500 laps
Last years pole sitter: Joey Logano
Last years winner: Jimmie Johnson

1 99 Carl Edwards Scotts Ford
2 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford
3 78 Regan Smith Furniture Row Racing Chevrolet
4 27 Paul Menard CertainTeed / Menards Chevrolet
5 6 David Ragan UPS Ford
6 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s / Kobalt Tools Chevrolet
7 24 Jeff Gordon Pepsi MAX Chevrolet
8 56 Martin Truex Jr. NAPA Auto Parts Toyota
9 5 Mark Martin GoDaddy.com Chevrolet
10 4 Kasey Kahne Red Bull Toyota
11 17 Matt Kenseth Crown Royal Black Ford
12 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota
13 14 Tony Stewart Office Depot / Mobil 1 Chevrolet
14 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWALT Ford
15 29 Kevin Harvick Budweiser Chevrolet

PODCAST: BRISTOL PREVIEW
16 47 Bobby Labonte Bush’s Baked Beans Toyota
17 31 Jeff Burton Caterpillar Chevrolet
18 20 Joey Logano The Home Depot Toyota
19 21 Trevor Bayne(i) Motorcraft / Quick Lane Ford
20 22 Kurt Busch Shell / Pennzoil Dodge
21 39 Ryan Newman Tornados Chevrolet
22 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard / AMP Energy Chevrolet
23 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Dodge
24 1 Jamie McMurray Bass Pro Shops / Tracker Boats Chevrolet
25 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Express Toyota
26 00 David Reutimann Aaron’s Toyota
27 33 Clint Bowyer BB&T Chevrolet
28 43 A J Allmendinger Best Buy Ford
29 34 David Gilliland TMone / Taco Bell Ford
30 83 Brian Vickers Red Bull Toyota
31 09 Bill Elliott Thank a Teacher / Security Benefits Chevrolet
32 60 Landon Cassill(i) Big Red Toyota
33 7 Robby Gordon Speed Energy / Food City Dodge
34 87 Joe Nemechek(i) NEMCO Motorsports Toyota
35 38 Travis Kvapil(i) Long John Silver’s Ford
36 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Target Chevrolet
37 36 Dave Blaney Accell Construction Chevrolet
38 46 J J Yeley Red Line Chevrolet
39 66 Michael McDowell HP Racing LLC Toyota
40 92 Dennis Setzer K-Automotive Dodge
41 37 Tony Raines Front Row Motorsports Ford
42 71 Andy Lally # Eco-Fuel Saver Chevrolet
43 13 Casey Mears GEICO Toyota

SHOW #148 – We return after the off week to discuss the Trucks at Darlington, Cup and NNS at Bristol this weekend, and we hear from Jimmie Johnson, Kurt Busch, and Kasey Kahne. Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Paul Northrop

LISTEN HERE (About 48 mins)

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CREDITS:
Hosts: Kerry Murphey & Paul Northrop
Production: Kerry Murphey
Music: Radium Sound
Voice Over: Thomas Moog

Transcript: Jamie McMurray and Scott Dixon Swap Rides For Tours of Barber Motorsports Park and Talladega Superspeedway

TALLADEGA, Ala. – The worlds of NASCAR and IndyCar came together at Talladega Superspeedway and Barber Motorsports Park today. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Jamie McMurray slid behind the wheel of Scott Dixon’s 09 Target Honda IndyCar at Barber, and Dixon took McMurray’s No. 1 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet for some hot laps at Talladega.

Dixon, on what he told McMurray about Barber: This is one of our toughest circuits, just because it’s very narrow. It’s quite cold today. There’s a bunch of elevation. Elevation’s a bit of a pain when you can’t see the corners. Jamie’s very accomplished, and has raced many different types of cars. I think the toughest part of an IndyCar is the first couple of laps, in terms of getting up to speed on cold tires.

McMurray, on whether he was going to take it easy at Barber: For me, it’s all about the experience. It’s not about going out and seeing how hard I can drive it, or exactly what the limits are.

McMurray, about getting the chance to drive an IndyCar: When I drove for Chip Ganassi from 2002 to 2005, honestly I don’t think I even saw an IndyCar. Never had the opportunity. When I came back here, I told Chip that if there was ever a chance, I’d really like to drive one of those somewhere. I didn’t really expect all the media and everyone else to be here on my adventure. I was more wanting to go spend half a day with the team somewhere and really get to test, and see what it’s like. But this is a really cool opportunity for me.

Dixon, on how fast an IndyCar could go at Talladega: In this configuration, with the big wings, you’d probably do 170 to 180. But with speedway wings, you’d probably do about 230. Maybe even more than that. Maybe 240 or more.

McMurray, on the car-swapping opportunity: I think it’s cool that the racetracks came together and were able to let us help promote those races and make it fun for us. For me, getting to drive this is a great opportunity. It’s a lot of money to come and do something like this, so it worked out well that they were already here testing. For Chip to bring his car down to Talladega and let Scott drive it, it’s hard to put those two together, because it costs so much money.

Dixon, on the possibility of becoming a Sprint Cup driver: Well, there’s no $5 million prize in NASCAR, so no, I’m not going. (Laughing.) Obviously, I’m intrigued by it. Sprint Cup is a massive sport, and has a huge following. I think the thing that’s most intriguing, as you’ve seen by the people who have tried to make the transition or have made the transition, it’s 43 cars that are very, very tight and very, very close. I think the tough part for me would be actually doing the 36 races a year. That’s a lot of travel.

McMurray, after running at Barber: The Cup cars slide around a lot, and for me, I think that’s probably where the speed is that I didn’t have in this race car. Knowing the threshold of, if it breaks loose, how much you can hang on to it.

The acceleration of that car was way more than I expected, because the horsepower is less than the Cup cars. I thought that the acceleration would be a fair bit less. But that was really fun to drive. I couldn’t believe how quickly the car took off.

I never really pushed it very hard in the corners to get the feel of how much grip it has, for fear that I’d lose my other job if I happened to run off. It’s crazy at the amount of grip that car has.

McMurray, after spinning out at Barber: It was the slowest corner on the track, and I was just trying to go a little quicker. The car wanted to spin the tires really badly right there, and I probably didn’t give it enough time to get the tires warmed up enough. If I had to choose somewhere to spin out there, that was a really good selection, because it didn’t cost anything.

McMurray, on the difficulties of driving an IndyCar: I thought the hardest part was just being in the open, and being exposed without a windshield. But that didn’t bother me at all. I actually enjoyed being out in the open and not having to look through a visor and a windshield. The hardest adjustment was just knowing how hard you can push, and what the limits are of sliding the car. When we run Watkins Glen or Sonoma, the whole race is about sliding around the corners. After spinning out at about 30 mph over there, I was really timid to push the car any harder in the fast corners.

I’m just glad they called me in, because I kept picking up about two seconds a lap. At some point that ends, and you end up dropping a wheel off the track. But I couldn’t believe how much more comfortable I got in the car.

The sensation of speed was more in acceleration and braking. The cornering did not feel that much faster, even though it was. The car had so much grip and so much control that when you’re going around a corner 30 miles per hour faster than you could in a Cup car, I didn’t sense the speed there.

Dixon, after running at Talladega: It was cool. The whole “sitting with a cover over you,” and the seating position, and all the other things that were different in the car, the way the wheel is and how massive it is, all that was fun. This place is massive. I spoke before about how Indy is large as well, but I think the sheer size of this and how it’s spread out, when you go out there, you feel really lonely by yourself. It would have been nice to maybe have a few other cars out here and maybe take the restrictor plate off and see the full power of these kinds of cars on a track like this. I really enjoyed it. It was definitely an eye-opener. It was something I’d love to have a go at again.

Dixon, on getting in and out of a stock car: They’re pretty hard to get in and out of. I will say that. I thought ours would be more difficult, but you just come from the top and slide in. Here, you’ve got to go ‘Dukes of Hazzard’ style and slide through the window.

Dixon, on what was the hardest part of running at Talladega: Going out on the track and running at speed wasn’t the most difficult part, because that’s not the style of racing that they do at Talladega. It’s all about the drafting and the pushing. I’d love to have had a go out there with some other people. Maybe do the tandem thing, and stuff that we’ve been watching in the Cup races.

On having more respect for Cup drivers: I’ve always had a ton of respect for the Cup drivers and what they do. As you can see, nobody steps into that series and sets it on fire. They’re very accomplished guys…In IndyCar, you have teammates and you sit down after every practice and go over data and try to work out where you can improve. To be honest, no data and teammates you don’t get to see a lot because it’s so divided would make the learning curve tough.

Racers Continue To Make History As Bristol Celebrates 50th Anniversary
This season marks the 50th anniversary of Bristol Motor Speedway, a track at which the sport has generated heaps of history – and storylines.

The all-time Bristol wins leader list is practically a one-stop shop for NASCAR history in itself. Eight of the top nine are all series champions, and five of those are either NASCAR Hall of Famers, inductees or nominees. The top nine: Darrell Waltrip (12), Dale Earnhardt (9), Rusty Wallace (9), Cale Yarborough (9), Kurt Busch (5), Jeff Gordon (5), David Pearson (5), Bobby Allison (4) and Kyle Busch (4).

Wood Brothers Bristol Return Sparks Fond Memories
The return to Victory Lane for the legendary Wood Brothers at the Daytona 500 coincides with the 10-year anniversary of it last win before 2011: at Bristol in 2001, with Elliott Sadler.

A couple of Wood Brothers storylines mesh together this weekend. There’s the anniversary on the heels of the Daytona 500 win. But there’s also its driver returning to his hometown track. Trevor Bayne, a Knoxville, Tenn. native returns home to race for the first time since his win in The Great American Race.

2011 Features Some Interesting Comebacks and Slow Starts
Statistically speaking, some drivers are having starkly different seasons this year compared to last.

Some of that might have to do with a wrinkle in the schedule. Last season opened with races at Daytona, Auto Club Speedway and Las Vegas. This season opened with Daytona, Phoenix and Las Vegas.

Still, it’s interesting to see the peaks and valleys. For instance…

Stewart-Haas Racing is having the biggest comeback start. Ryan Newman has had the biggest Driver Rating jump after three races. After three events in 2010, his Driver Rating was 66.1. Currently, Newman has a rating of 101.5, a jump of 35.4 points – the largest gain in the series. Second is Tony Stewart, who improved 30.3 points – from 88.1 in 2010 to a series-best 118.4 now.

The biggest drops are all members of the 2010 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. The biggest drop is Kevin Harvick, who had a Driver Rating of 116.4 after three races last year. He now has a 73.4, a drop of 43 points. Jimmie Johnson dropped 36.7 points, from 113.0 last year to 76.3 after the first three races this season.