It's possible Junior could fall out of the top 35 by the time race number six rolls around at Martinsville and we revert to this year's point standings. He's off to a poor start after Daytona and his engine problems in Fontana last week, but I don't think it's time to panic -- yet. He finished second last year in Las Vegas, third in the March race at Atlanta and fifth last spring at Bristol. So the series is heading to tracks where Earnhardt traditionally has done well. But if there is a stumble and the team isn't up to snuff by midseason, I have no doubts Rick Hendrick would change crew chiefs if he thought that was the best thing for the 88 to improve. As if the economy wasn't hurting NASCAR enough, can you imagine Earnhardt actually missing a race? I'm sure that if he's out of the top 35 after five races, NASCAR will come up with a rule stating that if you're the son of a former champion, you're locked into the race. However, I don't believe it will come to that. It's not as if the 88 car has been terrible; Earnhardt made some foolish mistakes at Daytona and a part failed at California. So it's not panic time just yet. That said, I was somewhat surprised Rick Hendrick didn't shake things up after Earnhardt went into a tailspin the second half of last season. I think Tony Eury Jr. is a fine crew chief. But he and Earnhardt haven't shown they can succeed with any type of consistency. I believe Earnhardt will have a new crew chief sooner rather than later. Community guest 'IHATELOUISVILLE' COMMUNITY GUEST 'IHATELOUISVILLE': I'd have to say the answer is yes. He could be in trouble if his track struggles continue. It seems whenever Junior starts to struggle, it lasts a while before he can pull out of it. Now, for the sake of NASCAR possibly changing the rules again for its favorite son, let's hope he stays in the top 35 and doesn't fall out and somehow miss a race or two. Coming up, he has Las Vegas, where he ran second last year, and Bristol where he's usually top-five material. So hopefully, he'll snap out of the slump. As far as getting a new crew chief, I would have to say no on that. Look at what happened to him in '05 when Tony Eury Jr. went to Michael Waltrip's team. From what I hear, June Bug can be a son of a b**** on the radio if his car is not right and I think Tony Jr. is the only one who can take it from him.
Plaid asks: Concerning NASCAR's top 35 rule, is five races too few, too many, or just the right amount to make the switch from last year's points to this year's points, or should they just go from the first race of the year?
I think using the first five races is a good enough gauge for the top 35 rule and fair to the teams who ran the series a year ago, although the offseason wheeling and dealing selling numbers has tainted the goal of the policy to be sure. But in theory letting the first five races determine who's in based on the previous season works for me. By the time five races are in the book, what happened last year shouldn't matter and reverting to this year's standings makes sense. That is, if you agree with the rule, which I still think should completely go away. Good question. I never really gave it much thought. It's definitely not too few. Six or more would be a bit much. Some might argue it's too many, but at worst I'd say the cutoff should be four races, which is really just a nominal change. You definitely can't go right from the first race of the year because Daytona is such a different monster and not a true indication of a team's potential to be competitive week in and week out. And I think that's why the switch extends to race five, to give major teams that may have succumbed to the "big one" a chance to work themselves back into the top 35.
Community guest 'IHATELOUISVILLE' COMMUNITY GUEST 'IHATELOUISVILLE': I think five is the correct amount to separate the top 35 teams from everybody else. Anything more I think would be unfair to the less financially stable teams and anything less would be too early to tell.
More impressive: Kyle Busch winning two races on the same day or Matt Kenseth winning the first two races of the season? Do you think Kenseth can make it three in a row this weekend?
Notes: Kenseth's struggles continue at Martinsville - Sprint Cup, NASCAR - CBSSports.com News, Rumors, Race Results, Standings
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Notes: Kenseth's struggles continue at Martinsville

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MARTINSVILLE, Va. -- Matt Kenseth won the first two races of the season, but it's been downhill ever since for the former champion, and Sunday's race only added to his decline.

Kenseth started 10th but dropped to 21st before the Goody's 500 was 10 laps old.

During pit stops after 42 laps, Kenseth's team was cited by NASCAR officials on pit road for losing control of one of the tires that had just been removed from his Ford.

NASCAR said it informed Kenseth's team that it was being penalized and sent to the tail end of the longest line on the restart, but Kenseth's team said it never got the message.

The miscommunication proved costly.

When Kenseth got back on the track and failed to heed the call to drop to the back, NASCAR black flagged him, forcing him to drive down pit road at the pit road speed of 30 miles per hour while the field zoomed by under a green flag, putting him a lap down when he returned.

He never recovered, finishing 23rd.

"The unfortunate thing is I wasn't clear the head official said we had to come in," Kenseth's crew chief, Drew Blickensderfer said. "I thought he was telling us, 'It was close. Make sure it doesn't happen again.' That type of thing, and it wasn't. It was, 'You messed up the rule,' so we've got to make sure we get our tires back. We can't have mistakes like that."

Kenseth has finished 43rd, 12th, 33rd and 23rd in the past four races, and he's fallen from leading the points to 12th, just seven ahead of No. 13 Jeff Burton.

Speed demon

Scott Speed thinks Kyle Busch owes him. Speed started 36th and led 12 laps early after the leaders pitted under caution, but was spun out by Busch and sustained damage.

He headed for the garage, crashed again later and finished 39th, 76 laps down.

"I'm sure Kyle is going to offer to buy me dinner since that's the second time this year that he's wrecked me," Speed said, laughing. "So, I'm looking forward to that."

The rookie hasn't finished better than 21st in six races and fell to 38th in points, but said he's encouraged by what his team has given him to drive, and less so by his bad luck.

"We had a great car before we got wrecked and we even had a great car after we got wrecked," he said. "We had a great car but were in the wrong place at the wrong time."

Leading the charge

Jeff Gordon led 147 laps at Martinsville Speedway on Sunday and moved into some rarified air in the process. He passed Fred Lorenzen for fifth on the list of laps led during his career on the 0.526-mile oval, now having paced 2,800.

The four guys ahead of him are Cale Yarborough with 3,851; Rusty Wallace with 3,632; Darrell Waltrip with 3,615; and Richard Petty with 2,964.

Edward's challenge

Despite a third-place finish here last fall, Martinsville has always been one of Carl Edwards' most challenging tracks, and he said this weekend that winning on the paper clip-shaped oval is one of his major goals for the 2009 season.

He'll have to try again in the fall.

Edwards was running third at the midpoint of the race, but when all the leaders headed to pit road under caution on lap 254, he lost eight spots, emerging in 11th. About 25 laps later, he blew a left rear tire, went two laps down and struggled the rest of the day.

He finished 26th, two laps down.

Lug nuts

  • Kasey Kahne and Matt Kenseth had rough starts. Kahne was sixth on the starting grid, but had faded to 19th after just 10 laps, while Kenseth dropped from 10th to 21st in the same period.
  • Michael Waltrip hit the wall on lap 21, bringing out the first caution.
  • Todd Bodine, Joe Nemechek and Dave Blaney started 39th or lower, and all three were in the garage before 100 laps had been run.
  • Aric Almirola blew four tires during the race and then spun out on lap 446. He finished 37th.
Copyright 2012 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
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