NASCAR’s Chase winner needs mental toughness

  • By Jenna Fryer Associated Press
  • Monday, September 15, 2008 4:41pm
  • SportsSports

LOUDON, N.H. — The winner of the Chase for the championship will need fast cars, flawless pit stops and solid strategy. He’ll also need a strong dose of mental toughness.

Based on Sunday’s opening round of the 10-race sprint to the title, Greg Biffle has the confidence to make a run at the championship. Kyle Busch and Dale Earnhardt Jr.? Well, those two title favorites have a lot to prove.

Biffle, a long shot to claim his first Sprint Cup title, left New Hampshire International Speedway with a surprise victory. His bravado seeped through his words, particularly when he described the winning move on two-time defending champion Jimmie Johnson.

“I don’t want to brag,” he said, “but it was a textbook pass.”

Seeded ninth in the standings and riding a 33-race winless streak one week ago, “The Biff” heads to Round 2 of the Chase ranked third in the points and certain he’ll be a player in how this title is decided.

It’s not so clear, anymore, whether Busch or Earnhardt can climb back into the mix. And it has nothing to do with their cars, and everything to do with their mental state.

Busch had a rough first Chase race, starting from the pole but sinking quickly to the back of the field when a bolt broke on his sway bar. It was all Busch could do to keep his car off the wall as he struggled to make it to a lap 35 competition caution that gave his team a chance to diagnose the problem.

Repairs and a procedural penalty dropped Busch two laps off the pace, and a later accident ensured a long, miserable day for the regular-season points leader. He finished a mortifying 34th, and that cozy lead he’d taken into the Chase — he was the top seed, with as much as an 80-point cushion over most of the contenders — instantly evaporated.

Busch is now eighth in the standings and trails co-leaders Johnson and Carl Edwards by a head-banging 74 points.

“It’s unbelievable how fast you can fall,” Biffle said.

It is indeed, and it’s unknown how Busch will handle the adversity.

He’s not faced much of it this season, reeling off a series-high eight Cup wins and adding another 10 in the Nationwide and Trucks Series. It gave him a swagger and air of invincibility not lost on others.

But how he felt following Sunday’s debacle is unknown. He didn’t stick around to take questions, behavior many deemed unprofessional for a future champion.

Busch isn’t fragile, but at 23 years old he’s still learning the appropriate way to deal with the ups and downs of big-time sports. Letting one bad race fester will certainly sink his title hopes, so it’s critical that Busch rebound from this by the time he moves on to Dover International Speedway this weekend.

His former boss thinks Busch will bounce back.

“Kyle is mature enough to handle it,” Rick Hendrick said. “He’s going to drive the wheels off of it at Dover. I don’t think this is going to hurt him at all. It just might make him more of a bulldog.”

Hendrick knows a thing or two about driver psyche, particularly after counseling Earnhardt through portions of Sunday’s race.

Earnhardt drove to the front about midway through and seemed to set to contend. But when a bad set of tires cost him track position, Earnhardt appeared to unravel on his radio. Hendrick quickly took the mic to settle his driver.

“You got a bad set of tires. It happens,” Hendrick said. “You can do this. Talk to everybody about what the car is doing. We can make the right adjustments.”

An irritated Earnhardt wasn’t convinced.

“Take it out on those guys in front of you,” Hendrick advised.

Earnhardt wound up in fifth place, leaving him tied for fourth in the standings, 50 points behind the leaders. But it wasn’t the win he wanted, and when he felt victory slipping away he almost let it defeat the entire effort.

“Once I’m on the ledge, it’s hard to get me off of it,” Earnhardt said. “I don’t know if even Rick’s got what it takes to do that. I just said what I had to say to appease him, make him think I was calm.

“I like getting riled up. It motivates me. I drive better when I’m ticked off, and racing usually ticks you off.”

Hendrick doesn’t necessarily subscribe to that theory, and he wants Earnhardt calm in the heat of the moment.

“If you let things get to you, you will not win this Chase,” Hendrick said. “It’s just like a basketball game. Guys lead, lead, lead and then choke. You can’t choke. That’s what I’m trying to get them not to do.”

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Sports

Tulalip Heritage’s JJ Gray makes a layup during the winner-to-state playoff game against Muckleshoot Tribal School on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025 in Marysville, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Tulalip Heritage boys roll Lobos

JJ Gray nearly had a quadruple-double as the Hawks blow past Lopez Island on Thursday.

Marysville Pilchuck boys slip past Getchell

The Tomahawks take down the Chargers with a late pin on Thursday night.

Glacier Peak, Shorecrest win multi-team meets

Prep boys swimming roundup for Thursday, Jan. 22: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To… Continue reading

Kamiak boys survive Lake Stevens in overtime thriller

Aaron Pierre scored nine points in overtime as the Knights outlasted the Vikings on Wednesday night.

Edmonds-Woodway, Mariner girls sweep meets

The Warriors and Marauders leave little double at multi-team meets on Wednesday.

Archbishop Murphy’s Brooke Blachly drives to the hoop during the game against Edmonds-Woodway on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026 in Edmonds, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Brooke Blachly spurs Archbishop Murphy girls past Edmonds-Woodway

The senior scores 45 points as the Wildcats strengthen grip atop Wesco South 3A/2A on Tuesday.

Vote for The Herald’s Prep Athlete of the Week for Jan. 11-17

The Athlete of the Week nominees for Dec. Jan. 11-17. Voting closes… Continue reading

Sam Darnold (14) practices on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026 at the Virginia Mason Athletic Center in Renton, Washington. (Photo courtesy of Rod Mar / Seattle Seahawks)
Sam Darnold vows to ‘let it rip’ in NFC title game

A strained oblique keeps the Seahawks quarterback limited in practice.

Everett AquaSox manager Ryan Scott plays catch behind the batting cage during practice Tuesday, April 2, 2024, at Funko Field in Everett, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Ryan Scott returns to manage 2026 Everett AquaSox

Per M’s source, 2025 AquaSox manager Zach Vincej will serve as coordinator in M’s farm system.

Stanwood’s Stella Berrett tries to take a shot during the game against Arlington on Dec. 3, 2025 in Arlington, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Stanwood girls dominate third frame in blowout win

The Spartans hold Everett scoreless in an 18-0 third quarter to earn a league win on Tuesday.

Mariner and Jackson boys each notch five pins

The Marauders and Timberwolves trade bouts in Tuesday thriller.

Winter prep sports roundup teaser.
Lake Stevens boys swim dominates three-team meet

The Vikings claim 10 events to outpace Marysville squads on Tuesday.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.