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Auto Racing Capsules: Smoke rises just in time to make championship push

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Tony Stewart went to Atlanta Motor Speedway mired in a 31-race winless streak and an afterthought, at best, on the list of championship contenders.

By the time he left the track early Monday morning he may very well have become the front-runner for the Sprint Cup Series title.

The streakiest driver in NASCAR knocked down his first win of the season late Sunday night with a dominating performance at Atlanta, and based on Stewart's own track record, he's got to be considered a credible contender. When Smoke gets hot — and he usually does every summer — he is very, very hard to beat.

He won three times in a nine-race span last season to move to the top of the points standings, won three of four in the middle of the 2007 season, and three of six in 2006 when he failed to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship.

Now Stewart rolls into Richmond International Raceway, site of Saturday night's "regular season finale," with nothing to lose. He can gamble and race hard for a win, and with it 10 more critical bonus points, and take a ton of momentum into the Sept. 19 Chase opener at New Hampshire.

It's a far different situation than last season, when Stewart built a monstrous lead in the points standings but cooled off considerably around the start of the Chase. He had four-straight finishes outside the top-10 heading into the Chase, and opened the 10-race title deciding format with a disappointing 14th-place finish.

"At this stage last year, we were pointing downhill," Stewart said, "and now we're pointing uphill."

That's a good thing for NASCAR, which needs Stewart to be competitive to keep interest piqued.

He's no Dale Earnhardt Jr. in terms of fan popularity, and his star isn't as bright as four-time champions Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon. But with his super-sized personality — and temper — he keeps things interesting and is one of the few drivers who can legitimately mix it up at every race track on the circuit.

It was interesting earlier this season to watch individual drivers take their turn dominating the series. First it was Johnson, winner of three of the first five races and back-to-back victories in June. Then Denny Hamlin reeled off five wins in 10 races, and Kevin Harvick put up a steady string of consistent finishes, along with three victories, to take command of the points standings.

But it all lacked the oomph that Stewart packs. Win, lose or crash trying, with Stewart in the mix, everything is amped up another level.

Of course, that slump he carried into the Chase last year followed him into this season and prevented Stewart from making much noise on or off the track. In fact, when he left Richmond three months ago, a lap down and with a noncompetitive 23rd-place finish, he fully admitted he and crew chief Darian Grubb were "in the Twilight Zone" when it came to their cars, their setups and their overall direction at Stewart-Haas Racing.

"We're confused," Stewart said a few days after Richmond. "Darian and I are both confused with what's going on and why it's going on."

It was much of the same the next week at Darlington, another 23rd-place finish and a lap down from the winner, but it's been game-on since late May as Stewart has steadily turned it around. Stewart has finished outside the top-10 only three times in the 14 races since Darlington, a span in which he criticized his fellow competitors for "idiotic" restarts after a third-place finish at Pocono and vowed to raise his game another level.

"For anybody that's looking for drama for the next couple races, start looking cause I can promise I'm going to start making the highlight reel the next couple weeks," Stewart said in June.

That's the kind of chutzpah NASCAR needs, and Stewart is capable of delivering on a regular basis. He's not nearly as polarizing as Kyle Busch, who brings a weekly diet of vim and vigor to each track.

But it could be said that Busch learned much of his behaviors from Stewart, who was NASCAR's resident Bad Boy when young Kyle was still in high school. And while Stewart can still be a cantankerous hothead, his delivery is far more refined than Busch, who makes more missteps than Stewart ever did in his early days of railing against the establishment.

With two titles already under his belt, the 2002 championship under the old points system and the second, in 2005, under the Chase format, Stewart could be the one driver capable of dethroning Johnson's run of four consecutive Cups. Although Harvick, Gordon, Busch, Hamlin and Carl Edwards are certainly capable contenders, all have questions marks spanning anything from equipment reliability, maturity, performance capabilities and past experience — all of which will be needed to beat Johnson during a final 10-week run.

If Grubb and Co. truly have Stewart back on the right track — and it sure looked that way after Stewart lead a race-high 176 laps and overcoming a series of poor restarts to hold off Edwards and Johnson at Atlanta — he just might very well be the guy who turns the heat up over the final three months.

Jenna Fryer covers auto racing for The Associated Press.

IndyCar

Franchitti not letting himself fixate on IRL title

HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) — Even while leading last weekend's race at Kentucky Speedway, Will Power found himself often consumed by one thought.

Where's the 10 car?

In IndyCar parlance, the 10 car means Dario Franchitti, and Power is thinking about him for good and understandable reasons. When it comes to deciding the Indy Racing League's yearlong championship, Franchitti has proven to be the king of end-of-season comebacks.

"Yep, you're very aware of what Dario's doing," Power said.

With good reason.

In 2007, with two races remaining, Franchitti trailed Scott Dixon by four points. After a one-year stint with stock cars, Franchitti returned to the IRL ranks in 2009 and trailed Ryan Briscoe by 25 points entering the season's last two events.

Both times, he made up the deficit and won the IRL title.

This year, Franchitti is in second with two stops left again, now 17 points behind Power. And given that Power hardly ever finishes ahead of Franchitti on ovals, the final two races of this season — at Japan on Sept. 19 (technically, it'll be Sept. 18 on race night in the United States), then the finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Oct. 2 — seem to set up well for the Scot once again.

"We know it's doable," Franchitti said Monday. "Every single person at Team Target knows it's doable, from Chip Ganassi right on down. People say things about it, but my focus is so tight on doing the job and what we have to do in order to win it, I don't even think about outside issues like that right now."

And not even a return to Homestead, where he saved fuel early and ended up winning the first caution-free race in IndyCar history to clinch the title to close last season, could disrupt that focus.

"Nothing that's gone before is going to make any difference," Franchitti said. "It doesn't matter what happened last week. It doesn't matter what happened last year. However we can do it, it's about getting to the finish line first. I've said it before — we can only control our stuff, what we do with the 10 car. Will and his team will take care of their stuff, and it's up to us to try to beat them."

Franchitti, Power, Dixon — who also remains mathematically in title consideration, though just barely — and Briscoe were at Homestead on Monday hoping to do some testing in advance of the finale. The session was postponed because of work being done to one of the track barriers.

If anything, the delay might have been another shot to Power's chances.

Power was the IRL's behemoth on road courses this year, piling up 412 points in the nine races that weren't on ovals — 105 more than Franchitti.

But in the races where it's nothing but left turns, everything goes right for Franchitti. He leads the IndyCar oval standings with 228 points in six events, while Power has managed just 140.

Motegi and Homestead are both 1½-mile ovals. Advantage, Franchitti, right?

Not everyone thinks so.

"Will's done a great job," Briscoe said of his Team Penske teammate. "He'll definitely finish in front of Dario."

Power led for nearly half of the 200-lap event in Kentucky last weekend, only to make some mistakes late and finish eighth.

"I've definitely got my confidence up on ovals," Power said. "Just got to put it all together one time — or two times."

The defending IndyCar king feels the same way.

"I'm looking forward to coming back here," Franchitti said, looking around the Homestead facility, "and let's see what happens."

-- Tim Reynolds

NHRA

Dixon wins 10th straight Top Fuel final

CLERMONT, Ind. (AP) — Larry Dixon kept his perfect final-round streak going Monday by racing to his 10th win of the season in Top Fuel at the NHRA's U.S. Nationals.

Dixon earned his fourth win at Indy and 58th of his career by outrunning Cory McClenathan. Dixon covered the O'Reilly Raceway Park at Indianapolis dragstrip in 3.837 seconds at 319.60 mph to hold off McClenathan, who trailed with a 3.870 at 319.82.

"Winning Indy is enough for me," said Dixon, who with the victory became the first driver in NHRA history to win 10 consecutive finals in a season without a loss. He increased his series lead to 46 over McClenathan as he works on a third world championship title. "Nothing against Atlanta or Phoenix, but I would trade them all in to win at Indy."

Ashley Force Hood (Funny Car), Greg Stanfield (Pro Stock) and LE Tonglet (Pro Stock Motorcycle) were winners in their respective categories at the NHRA Full Throttle Countdown to the Championship event, the first of six playoff races.

Force Hood claimed her first win of the season, second in a row at this event and fourth overall by outrunning her father, John Force, in the final round. She powered her Ford Mustang to a winning performance of 4.141 at 308.07 while her father's Mustang lost traction at mid-track and finished in 7.246 at 91.61.

Stanfield beat defending world champion Mike Edwards. Stanfield posted a 6.665 at 207.59 in a Pontiac GXP to hold off Edwards (6.627 at 208.75) and get his first win of the season and fourth of his career.

Tonglet captured his second win of the season and moved into second place in the playoff point standings, powering his Suzuki to a 6.869 at 195.22 to hold off top qualifier and national record-setter Andrew Hines (6.962 at 194.13).


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