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  • Daytona 500 Preview

    Daytona 500 Preview
    By Micah Roberts
    VegasInsider.com

    As always with restrictor-plate races, Sunday’s Daytona 500 will be a crap shoot with up to 35 drivers having a legitimate shot at winning. After watching Denny Hamlin win Saturday’s Sprint Unlimited, it was apparent that the slight height increase on the spoiler give these cars a lot more stability.

    Last season, the cars were slipping all over the place as though they were on ice. Drivers got in line and stayed there which created dull racing. They were afraid to jump out of the line and pass, because they couldn’t pass, nor were they confident the car would stick. That appears to be fixed now which should provide a lot more passes and a lot more daring moves. It also means we could see more cautions with drivers having more confidence, but at the same time with the car handling so much better, they’ll have more control, so maybe not. The LVH has posted dozens of Daytona 500 propositions and they have a thought provoking number of 7.5 on the cautions.

    With so many candidates having the ability to win and so many variables that can wipe out your driver wagered on in an instant, I stress moderation when betting the race. At a race like Phoenix or Las Vegas, where the possible winners are dropped down to about 14 drivers and where the drivers hold their form better, a bettor has a much likelier chance of cashing tickets from all the hard work labored into finding the best betting candidates. The final practices in those races give a huge amount of detail that can narrow your selections even more. But at Daytona, practices mean little and betting driver matchups are almost impossible.

    But still, it is the Daytona 500, an American institution and it just wouldn’t be right if not throwing a few dollars on a couple drivers and rolling the dice. Crap shoot? Yes, but what a thrill it is. And because it is such a crap shoot, the sports books at least give you a fair shake on all the drivers. The LVH and William Hill sports books don’t have any driver listed under 10/1. You can get Jimmie Johnson, who won both Daytona races last season, at 12/1 when in three weeks at Las Vegas, he’ll be around 4/1 and bet down to 7/2.

    While the odds on all the heavyweights have been raised, the odds on the drivers that usually have 500/1 attached to them weekly, such as David Ragan, are lowered considerably just because they have a good chance of riding the draft wave to the checkered flag. Ragan, who has won both his career races on restrictor-plate tracks, is 75/1 to win Sunday.

    My best advice is to mix up the wagers a little bit. Take one or two of the favorites, take a driver in the middle at around 25/1, and go bold with Ragan or someone like him at 50/1 or higher, and then stagger the wager amounts based on who you think has the best chance of winning.

    Although I say practice means little, I still will be formulating my last set of opinions Thursday night when the Budweiser Duels run which will determine the starting lineup. Austin Dillon (25/1) and Martin Truex Jr. (30/1) are locked into the front already from qualifying, but everyone else will be battling for position, and for six drivers, if they don’t perform well, they go home. What I will be looking for is how each of the top drivers gets out and pass. Who has the giddy-up and who has figured out the best places to make the move.

    The team of Joe Gibbs Racing drivers should all have the equipment to shine as one of the best. Last season Matt Kenseth (10/1) led more laps than anyone in plate races, but didn’t get any of the four wins. He’s a two-time Daytona 500 winner and should be in a good position to be one of the drivers in the lead pack. The same goes for Hamlin (12/1) and Kyle Busch (10/1), both of whom have never won the Daytona 500.

    The Hendrick Motorsports cars proved to be strong in plate races last season, but I was a little concerned when I saw three of their engines sold to other teams blow up in qualifying. It doesn’t mean that much, but it is something that sticks in the back of my head and raises a caution flag.

    The Hendrick driver I can’t seem to get out of my mind in Dale Earnhardt Jr. (10/1). The guy has won only two races in six seasons with Hendrick and he hasn’t won a plate race since 2004, but there is this allure to him that I can’t shake and it doesn’t help that since he last won the Daytona 500 in 2004, his 12.9 average finish at Daytona a span of 20 races is the best among all drivers. His loyal followers also have the same problem I do, and will line up at the bet windows to have a ticket on him just for that chance to be a part of his victory if it does happen.

    The Stewart-Haas Racing program took a dive last season, but with Kevin Harvick (10/1) and Kurt Busch (18/1) added to the stables, they are quality candidates to win Sunday. Harvick is a two-time Daytona 500 winner and might be the best plate driver in the series. Busch might be the best plate driver never to win a plate race, but with teammates like Stewart and Harvick helping in the draft, he might be in store for his first win.

    The Richard Childress Racing drivers should all be fast and the great thing about them is that they have nice attractive odds attached to them. They were the most impressive during pre-season testing and also qualified well collectively. Ryan Newman (30/1) won the 2008 Daytona 500, thanks to a Kurt Busch push, and will have rookie Dillon welcome back No. 3 and Paul Menard (40/1) helping him out. Could a rookie actually win the Daytona 500? Trevor Bayne did in 2011 and paid out 125/1 at the betting counter.

    The Roush Racing drivers should all be competitive as well, along with Jamie McMurray (25/1) who has four career wins on restrictor-plate tracks, including the 2010 Daytona 500.

    It sounds like I like everyone, but that’s the point. No driver can be discounted and no one can make a legitimate argument against anyone winning the race. Even Danica Patrick (40/1) has a chance. So I’ll leave it at that and offer my five drivers that appeal to me the most. Enjoy the race.

    Top-5 Finish Prediction:

    1) #88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. (10/1)
    2) #4 Kevin Harvick (10/1)
    3) #1 Jamie McMurray (25/1)
    4) #11 Denny Hamlin (12/1)
    5) #41 Kurt Busch (18/1)

  • #2
    Re: Daytona 500 Preview

    Final 2014 Daytona 500 Driver Ratings Following All Practices
    By Micah Roberts

    RATING DRIVER ODDS SPRINT* DUELS* PRAC 3** PRAC 4**
    1. Matt Kenseth 10/1 10th 1st 16th 9th
    Two-time Daytona 500 winner; eighth or better in seven of nine Daytona point races prior to 2013.

    2. Kevin Harvick 10/1 5th 2nd 24th DNP
    2007 Daytona 500 winner, also won in summer 2010; has proved to be the new master of the draft.

    3. Denny Hamlin 10/1 1st 1st 17th 1st
    Four Daytona wins, but none during regular season. No driver ever won the triple (Unlimited, Duel, 500).

    4. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 10/1 9th 5th DNP 12th
    2004 Daytona 500 winner; last plate win was 2004 (Talladega); using new chassis (raced in Duel)

    5. Kyle Busch 12/1 3rd 21st 22nd 31st
    2008 summer race winner with 18.6 average finish in 18 career starts; too good not to win the 500 yet.

    6. Jeff Gordon 18/1 12th 2nd 33rd 14th
    NASCAR record 12 restrictor-plate race wins, six each at Daytona and Talladega; still has the knack.

    7. Ryan Newman 30/1 8th 10th DNP 34th
    2008 Daytona 500 winner; four top-5 finishes in 24 starts. Will be driving brand new RCR No. 31 chassis.

    8. Kurt Busch 22/1 14th 3rd 28th 36th
    Two-time Daytona 500 runner-up; using SHR chassis that ran as the No. 39 and twice finished fifth at Daytona

    9. Carl Edwards 20/1 13th 15th 27th 19th
    2011 Daytona 500 runner-up; finished ninth or better in seven of nine Daytona races from 2007-12

    10. Jamie McMurray 30/1 6th 11th 7th 37th
    2010 Daytona 500 winner; four of his seven career career Cup wins have come in restrictor-plate races.

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    • #3
      Re: Daytona 500 Preview

      Daytona 500 Post-Practice Betting Notes and Top-Rated Drivers
      By: Micah Roberts
      Sportingnews.com

      LAS VEGAS – In sports, you always read the cliché about a sub-.500 team that won its last game of the regular season and says it's "going to carry that momentum over into next season.” Most of the time, the carryover never really comes to fruition.

      But in Denny Hamlin’s case, he really is living the cliché -- maybe more than any driver in NASCAR history to utter those words. He’s on the verge of completing the Daytona triple winning the Sprint Unlimited, Budweiser Duel and Daytona 500 in the same year, something no driver has done since the track opened in 1959.

      Hamlin’s 2013 season couldn’t have gone worse. It was easily the most frustrating year of his stellar career. He missed races for the first time because of a back injury sustained during a wreck at California Speedway, and then his team struggled as the manufacturer started to use his car as a guinea pig in 2014 test mode. But in the final race of the season at Homestead, Hamlin got the good stuff and led five times for 72 laps to capture the checkers.

      At the time, it had to feel like the weight of the world lifted off his shoulders. He could finally exhale, as 2013 wouldn’t be the season where he didn’t win at least one race, something he had done in each of his eight seasons on the Cup circuit. It was also a time where “momentum” and “carryover” were appropriate terms. But this really is some crazy momentum, perhaps the new definition of it.

      Here in Las Vegas, the Hamlin fever has caught on a little bit for those looking to find the best number on what looks to be the best car, but the LVH Super Book still shows him as a winner for the house.

      “We’ve got Hamlin down to 10-to-1,” said Super Book manager Ed Salmons, who opened Hamlin at 15-to-1. “He looks great, but there’s so many different things that can happen in restrictor-plate racing that the best car doesn’t always win. Last year we saw this same thing happen, and they [Joe Gibbs Racing] didn’t win any of the plate races. In fact, a couple blew engines, and that‘s part of it. Anything can happen.”

      Kyle Busch and Kenseth both blew engines in last year's Daytona 500. Hamlin finished 11th. Busch, a native of Las Vegas, is set at 10 to-1 and is a driver that Salmons expected more out of. “I really thought because of Kyle’s driving style that he would have won a Daytona 500 by now.”

      Tony Stewart (12/1) has also never won a Daytona 500, and this will be his 16th career start, but Salmons doesn’t think Sunday will be his first victory. “I just don’t see it because he’s coming off the leg injury. I think he’ll slowly ease himself into a comfort zone, which may take a few weeks.”

      If Stewart is within the top 10 on the last two laps, his comfort zone could change in a hurry. The discomfort in his leg could be overtaken by the competitive rush he feels if he has a chance to win.

      Only 29 drivers participated in the final practice session Friday morning where Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (40/1) was fastest. Fourteen teams passed for fear of wrecking their primary car, but Salmons thinks they missed a golden opportunity despite the dangers.

      “I like what I heard Steve Letarte (No. 88 crew chief) talk about ’running Dale Jr. hard today because it was their only chance to prepare under the same conditions of race day,' and it’s a great point. The previous practices and racing [during speedweeks] was done at night, and there is no way everyone can have everything they need without practicing in the same climate.”

      Earnhardt Jr. (10/1), who finished 13th in the Friday session, is one of a few drivers the LVH is long on heading into the weekend, when most of the action will come. Jimmie Johnson and Paul Menard are others. “I don’t know what the Menard bet was all about,” Salmons said, half chuckling about the large wager on Menard at 60-to-1. But this is Daytona, and anything can happen.

      Earnhardt Jr. will be looking for his first Daytona 500 win since 2004. His 12.9 average finish since then is tops among all drivers, and it includes runner-up in three of the past four Daytona 500’s. He is our choice to win on Sunday, but factoring in recent Daytona history and what the Gibbs' cars have shown again, Kenseth, Hamlin and Busch also have to be considered favorites.

      Kevin Harvick (10/1), who won the 2007 Daytona 500, comes in as our second-rated driver out of pure respect for his game in restrictor-plate races. His week of runs driving a new car with Stewart-Haas Racing only enhanced his rating.

      Remember, up to 35 drivers have a legitimate shot to win Sunday, so there are really no bad selections. It's as about random as as it gets in NASCAR, and because of that, we say just roll the dice and see what happens. Best of all, NASCAR is finally back.

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