I just thought I’d leave this here…

Viewing 15 posts - 301 through 315 (of 921 total)
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  • #8413
    jamesjames
    Keymaster

      #8414
      jamesjames
      Keymaster

        #8417
        jamesjames
        Keymaster

          #8427
          jamesjames
          Keymaster

            NASCAR’s Cup playoff system received one of its most iconic moments ever in the penultimate race of the 2022 season at Martinsville, as Ross Chastain used the wall to slingshot himself into the championship race.

            With one final turn to do in the 500-lap race, Chastain – in his first year as a bona fide Cup frontrunner with Justin Marks’ Trackhouse team that had acquired Ganassi’s Cup operation ahead of this year (and is co-owned by rapper Pitbull) – was set to miss out on a place in the ‘championship four’ at Phoenix, the traditional end-of-season Cup race in which four drivers go in level on points and whoever finishes ahead is crowned champion.

            Martinsville marked the final race of the third round of the four-stage Cup playoffs, with eight drivers remaining in the hunt and Penske’s Joey Logano having already ensured his Phoenix title shot courtesy of a win two weeks prior.

            Chastain – who has earned himself an aggressive and controversial on-track reputation within Cup – was second in the standings going in to Martinsville and thus on course to make the title race, with places in the final guaranteed to those winning in the third round but the remaining allocation determined on points.

            But Chastain’s race had been a struggle, and as Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin won two stages – leading at the mid-race cut-off laps that award points in NASCAR – and another Gibbs playoff driver in Christopher Bell was on course to pick up a win, Chastain found himself on the outside looking in.

            Having cleared Hendrick driver Chase Elliott, Chastain found himself in 10th, five places behind Hamlin but with the field relatively bunched up after a recent caution. But there was no conventional way of getting where he needed to be.

            So, coming into the final corner, Chastain did something absolutely ridiculous.

            “I’ve played a lot of NASCAR 2005 on the [Nintendo] Gamecube with Chad [younger brother and fellow racing driver] growing up, and you could get away with it,” he explained post-race. “And I never knew it could actually work.

            “I mean, I did that when I was eight years old. And I grabbed fifth gear, I just made the choice, and full committed.

            “Basically let go of the wheel, just hoped I wouldn’t catch the Turn 4 access gate or something crazy. But I was willing to do it.”

            To say it worked out would be an understatement. Chastain’s wall-ride of the final corner of Martinsville, a half-mile ‘paperclip’ short oval where the average speed is around 96mph in current Cup cars, propelled him to a new Cup track record, beating a laptime set by Logano eight years prior, in qualifying. As far as the 2022 race, it was the fastest lap by over a second – at a 20-second circuit.

            Much more importantly, it elevated him to as high as fifth, Chastain’s momentum just carrying him to the line ahead of Hamlin to add insult to injury for the eliminated veteran.

            ROSS CHASTAIN in CAR #1

            #8428
            jamesjames
            Keymaster

              More goose bumps.

              #8432
              jamesjames
              Keymaster

                #8440
                jamesjames
                Keymaster

                  #8455
                  ZizouZizou
                  Keymaster

                    #8468
                    BLAUGRANABLAUGRANA
                    Moderator

                      NASCAR’s Cup playoff system received one of its most iconic moments ever in the penultimate race of the 2022 season at Martinsville, as Ross Chastain used the wall to slingshot himself into the championship race.

                      With one final turn to do in the 500-lap race, Chastain – in his first year as a bona fide Cup frontrunner with Justin Marks’ Trackhouse team that had acquired Ganassi’s Cup operation ahead of this year (and is co-owned by rapper Pitbull) – was set to miss out on a place in the ‘championship four’ at Phoenix, the traditional end-of-season Cup race in which four drivers go in level on points and whoever finishes ahead is crowned champion.

                      Martinsville marked the final race of the third round of the four-stage Cup playoffs, with eight drivers remaining in the hunt and Penske’s Joey Logano having already ensured his Phoenix title shot courtesy of a win two weeks prior.

                      Chastain – who has earned himself an aggressive and controversial on-track reputation within Cup – was second in the standings going in to Martinsville and thus on course to make the title race, with places in the final guaranteed to those winning in the third round but the remaining allocation determined on points.

                      But Chastain’s race had been a struggle, and as Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin won two stages – leading at the mid-race cut-off laps that award points in NASCAR – and another Gibbs playoff driver in Christopher Bell was on course to pick up a win, Chastain found himself on the outside looking in.

                      Having cleared Hendrick driver Chase Elliott, Chastain found himself in 10th, five places behind Hamlin but with the field relatively bunched up after a recent caution. But there was no conventional way of getting where he needed to be.

                      So, coming into the final corner, Chastain did something absolutely ridiculous.

                      “I’ve played a lot of NASCAR 2005 on the [Nintendo] Gamecube with Chad [younger brother and fellow racing driver] growing up, and you could get away with it,” he explained post-race. “And I never knew it could actually work.

                      “I mean, I did that when I was eight years old. And I grabbed fifth gear, I just made the choice, and full committed.

                      “Basically let go of the wheel, just hoped I wouldn’t catch the Turn 4 access gate or something crazy. But I was willing to do it.”

                      To say it worked out would be an understatement. Chastain’s wall-ride of the final corner of Martinsville, a half-mile ‘paperclip’ short oval where the average speed is around 96mph in current Cup cars, propelled him to a new Cup track record, beating a laptime set by Logano eight years prior, in qualifying. As far as the 2022 race, it was the fastest lap by over a second – at a 20-second circuit.

                      Much more importantly, it elevated him to as high as fifth, Chastain’s momentum just carrying him to the line ahead of Hamlin to add insult to injury for the eliminated veteran.

                      ROSS CHASTAIN in CAR #1

                      I can see how this has inspired your FM tactics James.

                      More goose bumps.

                      LOVE this song. One year at Summer camp (no, not in the 1950s) the one kid we didn’t know going in had a cassette of it and we listened to it all week.

                      #8469
                      BLAUGRANABLAUGRANA
                      Moderator

                        #8482
                        jamesjames
                        Keymaster

                          #8483
                          jamesjames
                          Keymaster

                            I can see how this has inspired your FM tactics James.

                            actually, it was my tactics that inspired that move.

                            #8538
                            jamesjames
                            Keymaster

                              I took two airplane flights last week. Of course there was the emergency safety announcement done by the flight attendants prior to take off. One of the things mentioned was that the seat cushion can be used as a flotation device in the event of a water landing. For some reason it occurred to me that in the movie “Sully”, I didn’t recall any of the passengers that were evacuated onto the wings of the jet or onto the rubber rafts had taken their seat cushions with them. So I just took a look at the YouTube video from that part of the film, and sure enough, not a one of those passengers or the flight crew took a seat cushion with them even though they had just made a water landing. Some of the passengers even jumped into the water without seat cushions. But now I realize, the flights I was on never went over water. And I remember reading about a jet from the airline I was on that crashed off of California in the ocean, and there were no survivors. My wife asked me before we got on the flight, “do you like to fly?” I responded jokingly, “if God wanted us to fly, he would have given us wings”. I then said, “no I don’t like to fly, but of course I’ll do it if it’s necessary to get where I want to go.” Anyway, I’m thinking of researching the “Sully” crash to see if the seat cushion thing came up in the investigation because, wtf, when they landed in the water, didn’t any of the crew yell out, “hey, take your fucking seat cushions, ’cause you know, we just landed in the fucking water”.

                              • This reply was modified 3 years, 3 months ago by jamesjames.
                              #8571
                              jamesjames
                              Keymaster

                                #8582
                                jamesjames
                                Keymaster

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