Story By: NASCAR – SPARTA, KY – A mile and a half track is coming at the perfect time for Martin Truex Jr.
After reeling off five consecutive top-six finishes, Truex has produced showings of 37th and 34th in his last two races. Still, he ranks second in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series standings, only 18 points behind Kyle Larson.
Leading the series with a 4.2 average finish at 1.5-mile tracks this season – including wins at Las Vegas and Kansas – Truex will try to triumph at 1.5-mile Kentucky Speedway in Saturday’s Quaker State 400 (7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN).
“We’ve hit an unlucky streak the past two weeks and that’s going to happen in a 36-race schedule,” Truex said. “But we’re feeling good about Kentucky. We sure like the mile-and-a-half tracks and I felt we had a good chance of winning there last year. But a controversial call for a pit road violation knocked us out of contention.”
NASCAR’s stage racing enhancements have treated Truex well. He leads the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series with 11 stage wins and 21 playoff points. Statistically, Truex has outperformed Larson this season. He paces the series in average running position (8.7), driver rating (109.1), laps led (963) and fastest laps (542).
In six career starts at Kentucky, Truex claims three top-10 finishes. He led 46 laps and finished 10th in last year’s race.
“I have some good runs at Kentucky Speedway,” said Truex, who has two wins, five top-five and 11 top-10 finishes this season. “Like any racetrack, you have to find the right balance for all four turns and Kentucky has some unique corners. But with our past history at the mile-and-a-half tracks I am confident that (Crew Chief) Cole (Pearn) and his engineering team will once again figure it out.”
Byron goes for third straight win
Going into the NASCAR XFINITY Series season, people knew William Byron could wheel a race car.
He dominated the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series with a Sunoco Rookie record seven wins last year.
Still, very few foresaw how quickly he’d adapt in his first season in the series where names are made. Byron has elevated his performance as the 2017 campaign hit its midway point with two consecutive victories and three straight top-two finishes.
The 19-year-old Charlotte, North Carolina, native will go for a third consecutive victory in Friday’s Alsco 300 at Kentucky Speedway (8 p.m. ET on NBCSN). Only seven drivers in NASCAR XFINITY Series history have won three straight races. Byron would become the first rookie to achieve the feat.
“I’ve been extremely blessed, you have to have good fortune to win these races,” Byron said. “The other thing is just the confidence that it brings when you do win. You go to the track and you know how to win, what it feels like in those end situations when you’re on the front row or whatever on a restart. Once you get that feeling in your mind and your team gets it, it kind of builds that momentum and you try to keep that as much as you can, you try to keep everything positive.”
Byron sits second in the NASCAR XFINITY Series standings, 59 points behind his JR Motorsports teammate Elliott Sadler, but ranks first with 11 playoff points.
“I’m really excited about Kentucky,” Byron said. “Knowing that it is a repave, we will have to approach it with a similar mindset that we had at Texas. We had a solid car there and I think we can do the same thing at Kentucky. Hopefully we can get another win and keep the momentum rolling.”
Nemechek tries for trifecta at Kentucky
Facing the prospect of missing races due to lack of sponsorship, John Hunter Nemechek went out and won the last two NASCAR Camping World Truck Series contests at Gateway and Iowa.
He’ll attempt to become the eighth driver in series history to win three consecutive races when he takes the track in Thursday’s Buckle Up In Your Truck 225 at Kentucky Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on FS1). The 20-year-old Chevrolet driver finished runner-up in the race last season.
Nemecheck, whose two wins tie Christopher Bell’s total for the series lead, sits eighth in the points standings, but his 11th playoff points are the second most on the circuit.
“I definitely think you’ll see guys run as hard as they can to try and pass each other,” Nemechek said. “I feel like you’ll see some bumper-to-bumper action and hopefully a lot of drafting and passing down the straightaway and guys giving room. I definitely think it’s going to be a good race.