Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

First half sets up three-car showdown

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Erik Jones created so much smoke during his burnout that he had trouble breathing afterward.

His first career Cup victory Saturday night at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway was a needed breath of fresh air in a sport that has failed to see a supposed bumper crop of young talent emerge as bona fide stars.

The 22-year-old Jones had his motorcoach wrapped in toilet paper as a prank and awoke to a steady string of congratula­tory tweets ranging from Kyle Busch to Dale Earnhardt Jr.

The feel-good, first-time victory gave the sport a vital bump as it capped the official first half of the season.

The question lingers: Is this a sign that perhaps the so-called “young guns” are poised to break through over the final 18 races, or was this just an aberration as Jones became the latest benefactor to survive the wild wrecks that litter Daytona?

When the smoke finally cleared around Jones’ No. 20 Toyota, this much was still clear — Busch, Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. remained the only three drivers in the rarefied air of legitimate championsh­ip contenders.

“How many more wins can they get, playoff points can they get?” asked Earnhardt, now an NBC broadcaste­r. “Will anybody get in there and join the conversati­on?”

Led by five wins each from Busch and Harvick, the trio have combined for 13 over the first 18 points races.

All three have been the class of the field.

All three are former Cup champions.

Asked whether Jones’ victory was a momentum-builder for the next generation, third-place finisher AJ Allmending­er cracked, “One of those three are going to win next week, so I don’t know.”

Jones — who joined Daytona 500 champion Austin Dillon as winners at the track this season who only led the final lap — has the talent and team to become a consistent winner. Joe Gibbs Racing thought so highly of his talent that it gave 2004 Cup champ Matt Kenseth the boot to make room for Jones.

“Regardless of who I’m replacing or where I’m driving, you want to win races, and you want to be a winner,” Jones said. “You don’t want to be riding around.”

It only seems like 35 other drivers have been riding around all season trying to play catch-up to Busch, Harvick and Truex. But the first step toward a title is making the playoffs.

With eight races left before the field is set, only eight drivers have clinched the automatic playoff spot earned with a win. Clint

Bowyer, Joey Logano, Dillon, Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch, Kyle Larson, Denny Hamlin, Aric Almirola, Ryan Blaney, Jimmie Johnson, Chase Elliott and Alex Bowman held the final eight spots Sunday — an order sure to become jumbled after next week’s race at Kentucky Speedway.

Here are some other things to watch for in the second half of the NASCAR season:

THE BIG 4?

Should Busch, Harvick and Truex advance to the championsh­ip finale at Homestead — and it’s certainly no lock all three qualify — who would join them as the fourth driver to race for the title?

Bowyer has two wins and has continued to enjoy a career rebirth at Stewart-Haas Racing. SHR has dominated

this season with Harvick, Bowyer and Kurt Busch regular contenders and Almirola — in his first season as Danica Patrick’s replacemen­t in the No. 10 Ford — has proven it was the driver and not the car that was the weak link in the top team in NASCAR.

Logano (one win) and Hamlin (winless) have come oh-so-close before to winning the title, and an Elliott championsh­ip would link today’s fans with the oldschool loyalists who loved rooting for his dad, “Awesome” Bill Elliott.

BLAME CHEVY

Remember 2007 when Chevrolets won 26 of 36 races?

Yeah, well, neither does Chevy in a short-term memory sport as it’s mired in its worst slump since the 1980s.

Chevrolet extended its winless streak to 17 races, its longest since a 31-race drought in 1981-82. Bowman’s pole and Dillon’s win at the Daytona 500 remain the lone highlight of the season.

The American manufactur­er replaced the maligned Chevrolet SS with the Camaro this year and it hasn’t mattered. Chevy won 13 consecutiv­e manufactur­er championsh­ips in the premier Cup Series between 2003 and 2015. But Toyota and Ford have clearly closed the gap.

It has to pain the company to see SHR zip into a new stratosphe­re after it dumped Chevy for Ford in 2017.

HENDRICK SLUMP

Chevy’s woes are intricatel­y connected to the winless season at Hendrick Motorsport­s. Sure, growing pains were expected as HMS had to replace retired stars Earnhardt and Jeff Gordon, and former Brickyard 400 champ Kasey Kahne over the past four years. But Elliott, Bowman and rookie William Byron are all not only winless this season, they’re 0 for their careers.

Not even Johnson, the seven-time NASCAR champion, has steadied the ship. He’s stuck in the longest losing streak of his career (39 races) and has just two topfives this season.

Lowe’s, one of the last remaining corporate giants in NASCAR, announced it was cutting ties with Johnson at the end of the season, and that guarantees a new sponsor on the hood of the No. 48 Chevy in 2019.

Johnson needs checkered flags and checks — pretty heady stuff for any driver, no matter the resume.

“That’s a story line in itself is how and when they’ll return to their past performanc­e and glory,” Earnhardt said.

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 ?? AP/NAM Y. HUH ?? Kyle Busch and his son, Brexton, greet fans before a NASCAR Cup Series race July 1 at Chicagolan­d Speedway in Joliet, Ill. Busch is among three drivers who have a legitimate shot at winning this year’s championsh­ip.
AP/NAM Y. HUH Kyle Busch and his son, Brexton, greet fans before a NASCAR Cup Series race July 1 at Chicagolan­d Speedway in Joliet, Ill. Busch is among three drivers who have a legitimate shot at winning this year’s championsh­ip.

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