Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia

Stat analysis: Can Hendrick retake Daytona from Gibbs?

Hendrick Motorsports has been, bar none, the best team at Daytona in the recent Cup seasons – but a bruising 2016 500-mile opener saw Gibbs dominate instead. Can HMS bounce back?

Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Photo by: Action Sports Photography

Frontrow: polesitter Chase Elliott, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, second place Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Crash: Chase Elliott, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Crash: Dale Earnhardt Jr., Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Race winner Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota
Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Kyle Busch, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Martin Truex Jr., Furniture Row Racing Toyota
Race winner: Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Brad Keselowski, Team Penske Ford
Brad Keselowski, Team Penske Ford
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Start: Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch lead the field
Race winner Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick Motorsport Chevrolet celebrates
Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Race winner Jimmie Johnson celebrates
Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet leads
The car of Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Race winner Trevor Bayne, Wood Brothers Racing Ford celebrates
Trevor Bayne, Wood Brothers Racing Ford takes the checkered flag in front of Carl Edwards, Roush Fenway Racing Ford and David Gilliland, Front Row Motorsports Ford
Race winner Aric Almirola, Richard Petty Motorsports Ford
Joey Logano, Team Penske Ford leads
Kurt Busch, Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet
Jamie McMurray, Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, Kasey Kahne, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Casey Mears, Germain Racing Chevrolet, Matt DiBenedetto, BK Racing Toyota
Greg Biffle, Roush Fenway Racing Ford
Greg Biffle, Roush Fenway Racing Ford
Clint Bowyer, Hscott Motorsports Chevrolet, Greg Biffle, Roush Fenway Racing Ford
Clint Bowyer, HScott Motorsports Chevrolet
Paul Menard, Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, Clint Bowyer, Hscott Motorsports Chevrolet
Regan Smith, Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet
Danica Patrick, Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet, AJ Allmendinger, JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet, Kyle Larson, Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet

When we last spoke about Hendrick Motorsports, the stat-based conclusion suggested that its 13 races were not up to HMS usual lofty standards – something that contributed to only Jimmie Johnson having a 2016 win under his belt.

But there was optimism heading into Pocono and, clearly, for good reason – Chase Elliott and Dale Earnhardt Jr. both challenged for victory, though ultimately lost out to the track's best driver Kurt Busch, while Kasey Kahne brought home a decent sixth.

While Elliott at this point will surely make the playoffs, Earnhardt's 39th place at Michigan and Tony Stewart's Sonoma win, the latter effectively erasing one of the Chase spots available on points, mean that Daytona – a good HMS track – is where both Dale Jr. and Kahne must deliver.

Daytona, however, will be almost certainly be a tougher test than Pocono, mostly because the 500 already suggests another team will excel – Joe Gibbs Racing.

The case for JGR

Joe Gibbs Racing and its ally team Furniture Row Racing finished a nifty 1-2-3-5 in the 500, with only Matt Kenseth a distant 14th, having entered the last lap in the lead.

And the team's strong run was clearly no fluke, as evidenced by the driver ratings – which place more importance on average running position than anything else.

2016 Daytona 500 driver ratings

  Driver Team Manufacturer Grid AvgPos Fin Rating
1 Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Toyota 11 3 1 139.1
2 Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Toyota 4 3 3 117.2
3 Martin Truex, Jr. Furniture Row Toyota 28 4 2 114.4
4 Matt Kenseth Joe Gibbs Toyota 2 7 14 103.1
5 Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Chevrolet 9 13 4 100.4
6 Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Chevrolet 14 11 7 100
7 Joey Logano Penske Ford 5 11 6 96.5
8 Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas Chevrolet 8 11 10 94.3
9 Jamie McMurray Chip Ganassi Chevrolet 6 11 17 87.3
10 Ryan Blaney Wood Brothers Ford 7 12 19 82.5

That last characteristic might actually be problematic for a track like Daytona, where average position could be dependent on crash-avoidance tactics more than anything else, but the recent data allows to make a reasonable assumption that the fastest cars do indeed usually run up front.

While, in the other restrictor plate race of 2016 so far at Talladega, Penske's Brad Keselowski was undoubtedly best, Kenseth and Kyle Busch weren't far off, both leading plenty of laps and making up the top three in the driver ratings, despite Kenseth being collected in the usual Talladega happenings late on.

Even if the restrictor plate status quo has remained unchanged since that race, Keselowski is so very unlikely to be Gibbs' main headache this weekend, as he has more wins at Talladega than top 10 finishes at Daytona.

The case for Hendrick

Even despite how utterly wrong both of this season's plate races so far went for HMS, the fact Chase Elliott started both of them from pole merely hints the organisation should be Gibbs' main rival at Daytona, while recent history cements that as a pretty reasonable assumption.

After all, who is the best driver in terms of average ratings at the track in 2011-2015? Hi, Dale Earnhardt, Jr.

Who are drivers on that very same metric if, for everyone, you count out every abnormal race where the car went many laps down or didn't make the chequered flag? Hello there, Jimmie Johnson and Kasey Kahne (with Dale Jr. now in third place).

Add to that that all HMS cars in the 500 – aside from maybe Kahne, who ran a largely anonymous race but finished as the best of the quartet – seemed capable of winning, only for both Dale Jr. and Elliott to wreck and Johnson to be tagged with an uncontrolled tire penalty.

Current Hendrick, Gibbs and alliance drivers' Daytona ratings (2011-2015, ranked by best run)

Driver Current team Daytona Other tracks Diff. Daytona Max. Lead lap finishes 2016 D500
Jimmie Johnson Hendrick 85.6 104.5 -18.9 140.7 6/10 79.7
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Hendrick 101.5 94.0 +7.5 133.1 9/10 79.6
Matt Kenseth Gibbs 86.7 101.2 -14.5 133.0 5/10 103.1
Denny Hamlin Gibbs 96.7 91.5 +5.2 124.7 7/10 139.1
Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas 84.1 89.8 -5.7 120.8 5/9 94.3
Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas 74.7 103.0 -28.3 116.3 6/10 100.4
Danica Patrick Stewart-Haas 69.5 58.1 +11.4 113.4 4/7 50.9
Carl Edwards Gibbs 73.9 91.8 -17.9 108.8 6/10 78.6
Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row 77.8 88.8 -11.0 106.7 6/10 114.4
Kyle Busch Gibbs 87.9 101.2 -13.3 104.7 6/9 117.2
Kasey Kahne Hendrick 84.3 90.9 -6.6 104.5 3/10 81.5
Tony Stewart Stewart-Haas 63.6 81.8 -18.2 99.7 6/10 N/A

Now, by the metrics we've used previously, Daytona is flagged up as a strongly below-average track for the likes of Johnson, Kyle Busch, and Kenseth, but that might not be entirely accurate because of Daytona's sheer tendency to skew towards grid average because of the incessant, often unavoidable crashing.

Instead, perhaps, a better metric is some sort of combination of the maximum rating (i.e. how good a run the driver got together at Daytona recently) and the ability of stay out of trouble (a rate of lead lap finishes per start).

And those suggest that Hamlin (who, if the 2016 result was counted, would top this table my some margin), Dale Jr., Johnson and Kenseth are the names to look out for this weekend.

The case for anyone else

The cop-out answer to “Who can disrupt the expected Hendrick v. Gibbs fight and come out on top?” is “anyone”.

Unfortunately, it's probably the most accurate answer for Daytona – look, for instance, at Trevor Bayne's shock win in 2011 and then look at the rest of Bayne's runs at the track (plus one top-10, plus one top-20 and basically nothing else).

That isn't something you can really call, nor could you have called the rain delay win for Aric Almirola, who hasn't finished higher than 12th in his other Daytona starts.

But, assuming a more or less normal race, there are some names that stick out.

A big factor – aside from Gibbs alliance driver Truex – is Penske's Joey Logano, the winner of the 2015 Daytona 500 and a driver who genuinely seems to get along with the track – last year's torturous Coke Zero 400 run aside.

The other obvious option? Kurt Busch, who's been good not just at Daytona, but in the Coke Zero 400 specifically over the recent few years .

New Chase additions?

Most of NASCAR's current frontrunners have now checked into Victory Lane and the opportunities for any of the smaller teams to follow them through are running out – with Daytona and Watkins Glen the two obvious opportunities for a surprise result in the remainder of the regular season.

But at HMS, three of its four drivers are still winless, and if Elliott, Kahne and Dale Jr. work together, they'll be hard to beat for anyone but Gibbs.

A Gibbs win, however, is far from the worst-case scenario for the Hendrick trio. The real problem would be an outsider victory, because that would deal a reasonably heavy blow to Dale Jr.'s and especially Kahne's chances of points-racing into the Chase, especially after Tony Stewart all but booked a spot last weekend.

Other notables' Daytona stats

DriverCurrent teamDaytona Max. Rating (2011-2015)Lead Lap Finishes
(2011-2015)
D500 (2016)
Greg Biffle

Roush

126.2 8/10 57.2
Joey Logano Penske 125.3 8/10 96.5
Brad Keselowski Penske 117.1 5/10 81.2
Regan Smith Baldwin 116.5 4/6 68.1
Clint Bowyer

HScott

113.2 7/10 48.2
Jamie McMurray Ganassi 112.4 7/10 87.3
Aric Almirola Petty 111.4 4/8 80.1
Trevor Bayne Roush 108.2 4/10 54.3
Ryan Newman Childress 106.9 6/10 58.2
Paul Menard Childress 103.7 8/10 65.2
Casey Mears Germain 88.5 6/9 53.3
Austin Dillon Childress 87.7 4/5 76.5
Ricky Stenhouse Roush 84.5 6/7 59.0
Kyle Larson Ganassi 82.7 0/4 100.0
AJ Allmendinger JTG Daugherty 79.3 4/8 63.9

Could, perhaps, Clint Bowyer and Greg Biffle, two drivers with stellar Daytona records, completely rewrite what have been terrible campaigns so far in one fell swoop?

Well, probably not – Biffle's record in the 400-mile race has been abject misery since his debut win in 2003, while Bowyer was completely nowhere in the 500 earlier this year.

Could one of the more consistent Daytona runners – the likes of Paul Menard, Regan Smith, Ricky Stenhouse or Austin Dillon – put themselves in just the right spot to steal a shock win? Maybe, but it'd take a fair bit of chaos for that.

Finally, is it a chance to shine for Danica Patrick, now that all three of her teammates are almost certainly in the Chase? That one's a “definitely maybe”. She has reasonably strong at superspeedways – far quicker than most people who usually run alongside her on other tracks – but has struggled to avoid wrecks.

This list could really go on for a long, long time, because almost anyone can win at Daytona. But the odds are that, on Sunday, most won't even come close.

Be part of Motorsport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Goodyear changes Kentucky tire after blistering found
Next article Brian Scott leads Daytona practice, Kyle Busch crashes hard

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia