Sylvania 300 Race Preview

New Hampshire Motor Speedway Loudon -- 09/19/2010

Author: Jed Henson

Published: Thursday Sep 16 2010 5:33am

Read all of Jed Henson's articles here


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The NASCAR Sprint Cup series kicks off the Chase with a return to Loudon, N.H., this week for a run at New Hampshire Motor Speedway (NHMS). NHMS is an oval measuring roughly 1 mile in length with little banking in the turns. These specs place NHMS squarely in the short-flat track category, which includes Martinsville, Phoenix and Richmond. Handicappers therefore have a healthy amount of historical data to review this week, and lots of data generally improves race predictability.

In addition, NHMS is bigger than the congested, bumper-car tracks at Martinsville and Bristol, and smaller than the massive flat tracks (e.g., Michigan, Pocono, etc.) that tend to promote fuel-mileage tactics. Weather.com calls for morning showers on Friday, but consistent, warm, dry weather for the rest of the race weekend. And Jayski's Goodyear Tire Notes indicate the Sprint Cup cars will run the same tires this weekend as they did in New Hampshire earlier this season and both races last season, giving a final boost to predictability.

Add all these factors together, and I think race predictability is above average this week. Bettors can therefore consider somewhat tight betting lines.

Handicapping New Hampshire II
I examined the practice, qualifying and race data from all the 2010 races at New Hampshire, Martinsville, Phoenix and Richmond to produce historical rankings. Then I looked at the same data for just the New Hampshire race in June, and I merged those results with the historical rankings, thereby making the rankings much more New Hampshire-specific.

I tweaked those initial rankings with the results and impressions drawn from last week's race at Richmond (another short-flattie), the opinions of other online NASCAR handicappers and my own race-recap notes from the June New Hampshire race.

I came up with this top 11:

1. Jimmie Johnson
2. Clint Bowyer
3. Jeff Gordon
4. Kyle Busch
5. Ryan Newman
6. Kevin Harvick
7. Denny Hamlin
8. Juan Pablo Montoya
9. Jeff Burton
10. Tony Stewart
11. Kurt Busch

Jimmie Johnson is the clear favorite heading into practice and qualifying. He had the top car at New Hampshire in June (and won the race), he was pretty strong at Richmond last week and he's been strong on the short-flats in general this year. Plus, this weekend kicks off the Chase, and we all know how the 48 team tends to rise to the occasion in the Chase.

I think Clint Bowyer is the clear #2 car, but after Bowyer, the picture isn't too clear. I won't be surprised if there's movement in the #3–#11 spots following the preliminaries because those drivers are grouped pretty tightly in my numbers.

Stay tuned for my update following practice and qualifying.

Jed Henson publishes the blog NASCARPredict.com. He participates in the Nascapper forums and Free NASCAR Picks Monitor under the name Tucker19.

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