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McMurray Making Roush, Truex Look Bad
Jul 27th, 2010 by Journo

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And in turn making Chip Ganassi, Johnny Morris and Kevin Manion look pretty good.

Since returning to his old home at Ganassi Jamie McMurray looks like a new man. Just past the halfway point of the season he has won (or almost won) the three most prestigious events on the NASCAR schedule. McMurray’s got two wins, three poles, six top-fives, seven top-tens, and has led 228 laps (the most of any year in his career). Despite three DNF’s, and some bad luck, McMurray is having one of the best years of his career.

The same can’t be said for the guy McMurray replaced.

Martin Truex Jr. was folded into the Ganassi organization at the beginning of last season, and quickly established his desire to be somewhere else. By July of ’09 he had announced his intended move to Michael Waltrip Racing.

Truex, with very similar equipment and team personnel to McMurray (same engines, same crew chief, though some differing chassis) was lackluster at best last season. In the same year his teammate made the Chase, Truex was only able to take three poles, one top-five and six top-tens. He finished 23rd in the points. This season he’s running just slightly better with an average finish of 19.3.

And how about Jack Roush? He gets rid of McMurray and the kid starts winning. In fact, McMurray started winning before he left Roush – he has the most recent Roush and Ford Cup Series win.

At this moment Roush has three drivers in the Chase, and one 24th in the points (McMurray is 16th). I’m not saying Roush should have gotten rid of David Ragan, but it’s gotta stink to see McMurray over winning big races while they struggle to get over their performance hump.

All the above about Roush said, I don’t think you’ll hear too many arguments that McMurray’s move to Roush wasn’t for the best – on the same token, not too many are saying right now his move away from Roush (as if he had a choice) was bad.

One guy who was a Jamie McMurray skeptic coming into this season was sporting goods mogul Johnny Morris (CEO of Bass Pro Shops). It took some convincing to get Morris to go along with the plan – and let’s be honest, outdoorsman is not the first word that comes to mind when you think of Jamie McMurray.

Though maybe not the best ambassador of the brand off the track, McMurray has shown he has what it takes to represent Bass Pro Shops on track. If you saw victory lane on Sunday, you saw Morris is a skeptic no more. He has even taken Chip Ganassi and McMurray out hunting (I’ll bet that was interesting).

You never know how things are going to turn out. That is a fact of life. And the story of Jamie McMurray and Earnhardt Ganassi Racing are a prime example of that. Just ask Ty Norris.

“I don’t think the stability to be able to compete against the Hendricks and the Roushes and the Gibbses has been (at Earnhardt Ganassi) because it has been something different for six months, and fortunately for him, we offered (Martin Truex Jr.) a safe haven” – Ty Norris – July, 2009

My how things change.

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Chip Ganassi Makes More Racing History at Indianapolis
Jul 26th, 2010 by Motorsports FanHouse

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Holly Cainby Holly Cain

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SPEEDWAY, Ind. -- Soaked in champagne and still grinning from ear to ear, NASCAR team owner Chip Ganassi was walking over to a Corvette convertible for his second victory lap around Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the last two months when Tony Stewart stopped him in his tracks.

They shook hands, shared a laugh and Stewart, NASCAR's only owner-driver, patted Ganassi on the back, offering his congratulations.

"That was a moment between car owners,'' Sunday's fifth-place finisher Stewart said with a smile and a nod. "Can I appreciate what he's done here? Oh yeah.''

What he's done is make history as the first team owner in auto racing history to win the Daytona 500, Indianapolis 500 and NASCAR's Brickyard 400 at Indy in the same season. But it came with a twist.

One of Ganassi's drivers, Juan Pablo Montoya, dominated practice, qualifying and most of the early race until crashing with 15 laps to go Sunday while his other driver, Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray beat Kevin Harvick on the ensuing re-start, held off the field for 11 laps and ultimately delivered the triumph to Ganassi instead.

In all, Ganassi drivers led a race-best 102 of the event's 160 laps, but McMurray's 16 laps out front (including five earlier in the day) is the second fewest ever for a winner. Not that it matters.

"To win all those (races) in one year is remarkable,'' Harvick said of Ganassi's organization. "It will probably never happen again.''

Chip Ganassi Makes More Racing History at Indianapolis originally appeared on Motorsports FanHouse on Sun, 25 Jul 2010 20:19:00 EST . Please see our terms for use of feeds.

 

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Jamie McMurray Wins Brickyard 400
Jul 25th, 2010 by FanHouse Staff

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Jamie McMurray's crew gave him only two tires on his final pit stop, but that turned out to be the key to victory in the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Sunday.

McMurray was able to use his outside position to get past leader Kevin Harvick on the final restart with just a few laps to go.

"It's unbelievable," McMurray said in victory lane. "We didn't have the best car. But we made the right call with two tires. It's unreal right now. It was a really good day."

Harvick was second, followed by Greg Biffle, Clint Bowyer and Tony Stewart. Jeff Burton was sixth, followed by Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch, Joey Logano and Kurt Busch.

The victory gave the Daytona 500 winner his first victory in NASCAR's biggest race of the summer, and gave car owner Chip Ganassi an unprecedented triple crown, with victories in the Daytona 500, the Indy 500 and now the Brickyard 400 in 2010. Ganassi is the first car owner to win both of Indy's big races in the same year.

"How about Chip winning the 500 and both of them?" McMurray said.

 

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David Reutimann Scores Second Career Victory at Chicagoland
Jul 11th, 2010 by Geoffrey Miller

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JOLIET, Ill. -- Battling a car during a final run that handled the worst it had the entire race, David Reutimann finally earned the right to do a burnout after a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.

"It was probably the lamest burnout I've ever seen at a race track," Reutimann said, grinning in victory lane. "We earned this one, nobody gave it to us and that feels really good."

Reutimann won Saturday night's LifeLock.com 400 at Chicagoland Speedway for his second career win in his 118th start. Carl Edwards was second, Jeff Gordon third, Clint Bowyer fourth and Jamie McMurray fifth.

 

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Jamie McMurray Speeds to Chicago Pole
Jul 10th, 2010 by Geoffrey Miller

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JOLIET, Ill. - Jamie McMurray had quite a hectic day, but even before it finished he was a celebrating a small, but worthy, victory.

The 2010 Daytona winner scored his third pole of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Season Friday evening at Chicagoland Speedway, giving him the prime starting position for Saturday night's LifeLock.com 400.

The pole was the sixth of McMurray's career, and follows top starting spots he won at Auto Club Speedway and Darlington Raceway this season.

In between practicing and qualifying his Earnhardt-Ganassi Racing Sprint Cup car, McMurray was also preparing for Friday night's Nationwide Series race at the same track. In that race, his qualifying fortunes were not nearly as good, as he started 37th.

McMurray's average speed -- 183.542 mph -- was just a bit quicker than the pair of champions in second and third.

 

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Kurt Busch Holds off Jamie McMurray to Win the Coca-Cola 600
May 31st, 2010 by Bob Zeller

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CONCORD, N.C. -- Kurt Busch won Sunday's Coca-Cola 600 by almost one second over Jamie McMurray, giving car owner Roger Penske a victory at Charlotte Motor Speedway after McMurray's owner, Chip Ganassi, beat Penske in the Indianapolis 500.

Kyle Busch was third, followed by Mark Martin and David Reutimann.

"Everything went our way tonight, everything went our way," Busch shouted on his radio after taking the checkered flag.

Ganassi, who saw his IndyCar driver Dario Franchitti win the Indy 500 earlier in the day, was on hand to see McMurray give Busch a spirited battle for the victory in Charlotte.

"It was a great race," Ganassi said. "Jamie did a great job. My old buddy Penske beat me tonight."

 

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Spotter’s Stand: Denny Hamlin Discovers Racing Is Good Rehab
May 10th, 2010 by Geoffrey Miller

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Denny Hamlin is doing wonders for the reputation and future of knee surgery for NASCAR drivers, should any of them ever need it.

Granted, the Southern 500 winner's ACL injury at his left knee isn't exactly a common one for guys who race cars for a living, but there are a few who like to cross train in other sports and their number is growing as fitness becomes more of a necessity for drivers.

That being said, I think it's safe to say we can officially stop pondering how much the surgery and its rehabilitation process is affecting Hamlin -- given the fact that he's now won more times (two) with the surgery than without (one) in 2010.

In fact, Hamlin said he considered the race itself to be one big rehab session.

"It really is pretty much like a physical therapy session in there with the cars that vibrate, you kind of have a little bit of vibration right there on the steering column, so I rest my leg against it -- it kind of acts as a stim. It feels good after races. It's during the week that I'm laying around that it gets all stiff."

-- On that same token, Hamlin's team insisted after Saturday night's race that they are somewhat surprised to be dominating in such a fashion as of late because their focus at the shop has shifted to being as strong as possible during the late-season Chase races.

That's an art that Jimmie Johnson has perfected in the last four seasons, and a goal that Jeff Gordon's team has set for 2010. All of it means one thing for race fans: we could be setting up for one dandy of a championship battle.

 

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Jamie McMurray Sets Track Record to Win Darlington Pole
May 7th, 2010 by FanHouse Newswire

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DARLINGTON, S.C.(AP) -- Jamie McMurray couldn't help smiling after setting a track record Friday at Darlington Raceway to lead qualifying for Saturday night's Southern 500.

Turned out, he was one of the few to leave the track happy.

McMurray made it around the 1.366-mile egg-shaped superspeedway at 180.370 mph to surpass Matt Kenseth's record run from a year ago.

Jeff Gordon was second fastest at 180.323 mph and Brian Vickers was third at 179.987 for the Sprint Cup event.

McMurray came out relatively unblemished on a day when racers spun out and hit the walls in practice and qualifying. Dale Earnhardt Jr. needed a backup car after wrecking on the second lap of practice.

Kyle Busch, the winner at Richmond last week, tagged the wall during his qualifying run, drawing cheers from fans in the stands at Darlington. He'll start 39th.

 

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Kyle Busch Wins Pole at Richmond
May 1st, 2010 by FanHouse Newswire

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RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- Kyle Busch won the pole for Saturday night's NASCAR race at Richmond International Raceway with a fast lap at 127.077 mph.

The Joe Gibbs Racing driver turned the lap as the 19th of 47 cars attempting to qualify, easily beating David Reutimann(126.618) for the top spot.

The pole, just the sixth Busch has earned in 196 starts in NASCAR's premier series, gave him his choice of pit stalls as he defends his victory in this race a year ago.

"It's nice to sit on the pole every once in a while," Busch said of his first pole position since March 2009 in Las Vegas. "I only get the opportunity maybe once a year."

Busch, who swept both races here a year ago, also won the pole for Friday night's Nationwide Series race on the 0.75-mile oval, giving him a good start to the weekend.

 

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Should They Stay Or Should They Go
Feb 19th, 2010 by Journo

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Bass Pro Shops and Kasey Kahne don’t seemingly have a lot in common, but with the season now in full swing the two are about to have a very similar decision to make: do they stay where they’re at or look for greener pastures elsewhere.

It’s well known Kahne and Bass Pro are in contract years, and given the tension they’ve had with their respective organizations in the past their futures might seem clear; but with recent success and transition both could make surprise moves.

For Bass Pro the transition from DEI to EGR was less than a happy one. It was quite apparent last year that they weren’t putting much into their long standing deal. Even worse, when Martin Truex Jr. left, EGR had to do a lot of convincing to get the company to sign off on Jamie McMurray.

In just a matter of a couple of months though Bass Pro went from skepticism of their new driver, to celebrating with him in victory lane at the Daytona 500. As a sponsor do you stick with the current iteration of a team you’ve been with for years or go elsewhere? Arguably McMurray isn’t the best representative of the company, but if he continues to perform is there any reason for them to move on?

For Kasey Kahne the decision to leave Richard Petty Motorsports is equally murky. He joined Evernham Motorsports in 2004 and in that time racked up 11 wins, including two last year. Since 2004 though, the organization has gone through two mergers and all but lost Ray Evernham’s guidance.

In September, Kahne was among those publicly and privately questioning who was in charge at RPM.

“There are not a lot of answers out there right now. I don’t know if it’s because we’re in the middle of a lot of things, we just don’t have a person in that position. I think Robbie Loomis is supposedly going to be that guy, but I don’t think that he is yet. Is it Foster? You can’t get anything out of Foster. So it’s hard to say who that is, and I think that’s because we’re in a lot of different things right now. But when you’re in things, you still need to keep your team and your guys, your company behind you knowing what’s going on, and we don’t have that. Hopefully, we’ll get it soon. The sooner we get that, the better everybody will be.”

Since that time though Kahne seems like a guy much happier with and much more sure of his situation. That said as one of the sport’s most popular and talented drivers, does he stick with a team that needs him more than he needs them? If Kahne enters free agency he’s sure to be the hottest driver on the market. He’ll likely be able to write his own ticket.

Certainly continued success is going to be important for all parties involved to consider staying where they’re at, but if that does happen is there a reason to move on? And how much success do Kahne and McMurray need to have?

No matter what happens from here on out, I think both have to consider the options available to them. Either one may choose to stay where they’re at, but with plenty of teams looking for sponsors and the likelihood of any number of available seats, Kahne and Bass Pro would be crazy to not see who’s interested.

So what do you think? Will Kahne and Bass Pro stay put? What will it take for their respective teams to keep them? If they do move on where do you think they’ll they go?

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