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Coca-Cola 600 MARTIN, NO. 6 AAA TEAM TURN IN SOLID PERFORMANCE AT COCA-COLA 600; FINISH FOURTH Top-five finish advances Martin to third in point standings, as all five Roush cars finish top-10 at 600 “If we can take this and put her in the chase and keep getting better as we go, then we’ll have a solid shot at going for this championship.” CONCORD, N.C. Sound strategy, patience, complete focus and a fast race car were the ingredients used by Mark Martin and the No. 6 AAA Race team for Sunday night’s Coca-Cola 600. The result was a rock solid fourth-place finish in the longest race of the NASCAR Nextel Cup season. Martin joined all five of his Roush Racing teammates inside the top-10 and his second top-five finish of the season moved him up one spot to third in the Nextel Cup point standings. Martin passed Roush teammate Matt Kenseth in a daring pass on the final lap of the 400-lap race for the fourth position after moving into the top five for the remainder of the race on lap 367. “It was a good, solid run by the AAA Fusion,” said Martin. “The team was the best we’ve been on pit road all year. I think we can take this and build on it going down the road. If we can take this and put her in the chase and keep getting better as we go, then we’ll have a solid shot at going for this championship.” “We were off at the beginning and off at the two-third mark, and then we got a lot better again late. It’s a 600-mile race and we didn’t forget it. Pat Tryson and the team did a great job with the car and the strategy. The pit stops were just awesome tonight and the strategy was great. It was a good solid effort by the team and we’ll take this and build on it going into Dover next week.” Martin started the race 21st after an early draw limited his qualifying effort on Thursday afternoon. Working with a new surface and a new tire, Martin struggled with a loose car early on, dropping back to 29th place by lap 11. Martin reported that the car’s handling had come around by lap 17, and Martin began to move back through the field. By lap 32 when the race’s first caution was issued after Tony Stewart blew a tire and crashed into the wall, Martin was back up to 23rd position. The team came down pit road for four tires and fuel and returned in 19th position after a stop of 14.083-seconds. Martin had dropped back to 21st position when the No. 12 car spun out causing caution number two and the team came into the pits four fuel only and a chassis adjustment. The move took Martin up to 17th position when the field returned to green on lap 52. With strategy at a premium, the team took four tires under caution on lap 67 and two tires under caution on lap 92. The two tire strategy on the fourth stop moved Martin to third position when the field went green on lap 96. By this time Martin radioed the team that the car ‘would be great.’ Martin moved to second on lap 99 and briefly took the lead on lap 110, before settling back into second place where he was running when caution was called for the fifth time on lap 112. The team once again opted for fuel only and a quick chassis adjustment resumed the lead out of the pits on lap 113. Martin would hold the lead until coming down pit road after caution number six on lap 130. This time the team took four tires and fuel in a fast stop of 13.5-seconds. As other teams were on different cycles, Martin went back out in 13th position as green flag racing resumed on lap 134. Martin moved back to 11th place before the car’s handling tightened up. Carl Edwards spun out soon after causing the yellow flag to be waved for the seventh-time of the evening. This time the team again took fuel only and loosened up the car’s handling with a wedge adjustment. The strategy again paid off, and Martin restarted in fourth position when the field went green on lap 145. Martin was able to maintain his top-five position. The team opted for two tires under caution on lap 160, and Martin moved up to second when the field went green on lap 162. The car’s reaction to the two fresh tires was to become loose, as Martin had a difficult time ‘holding on’, dropping back to fifth by lap 181 before the handling began to ‘come around.’ Martin passed teammate Greg Biffle for fourth on lap 187 and Kenseth for third on lap 197. However the team ran into a stroke of bad luck when they came into pit under green on lap 198, just seconds before caution was issued. Martin was able to keep going down pit road and maintain position on the lead lap, but he would drop back to 12th, before coming into the pits on lap 203. The No. 6 AAA Ford Fusion was still running in 12th position when caution number 10 was called on lap 234. This time the team again went with a two-tire strategy, taking right sides. Martin moved back up to fourth place when green flag racing resumed. The car again reacted ‘loose’ to the two fresh tires and Martin fell back to as far a seventh position. He was running in sixth when the team came in for a green-flag stop on lap 289 and he held onto sixth by the time the field had cycled through its stops. With the car a ‘touch tight’, Martin was running in seventh when the team came into pit under caution on lap 305 to again take fuel only. He returned in third when the field went green on lap 309. The team took fuel only again under caution on lap 317, regaining the lead out of the pits. The Ford Fusion was tight on the older tires and Martin eventually settled back into fourth place on lap 322. The handling got even tighter, as Martin fell back to sixth on lap 341, where he was running when the team came in for its last stop under green on lap 360. Caution was called for the 14th and final time of the race two laps later on lap 362, and Martin stayed out and moved up to fifth place when green flag racing resumed for the final time with 33 laps remaining. Martin spent the remainder of the race closing in on Kenseth’s No. 17 Ford Fusion, finally over taking his teammate with a bold high-pass on the final lap that saw Martin use every bit of his driving ability to hang onto the car and the top-five finish. The start on Sunday was Martin’s 650th career Cup start, and the finish was his 229th career top-five. It was Martin’s seventh top-10 of the season and his 11th top-15 in 12 starts. It also marked his 17th top-five finish at Lowe’s Motor Speedway. Martin is now 209 points behind first place and 100 points out of second, as the team moved into Dover International Speedway where he has four wins, 19 top-fives and 24 top-10’s. Martin has scored four straight top-five finishes at Dover, including a win in the spring race in 2004. |
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