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| Toyota Race Notes: Martinsville
03-31-2007 | TruckSeries.com Report
Today's win marks Mike Skinner's second win at Martinsville Speedway, his 22nd career NCTS win and his sixth win behind the wheel of the No. 5 Toyota Tundra for Bill Davis Racing. Skinner has earned three NCTS wins in a row; California Speedway, Atlanta Motor Speedway and Martinsville Speedway. It is Toyota's fourth consecutive win this year. Jack Sprague won the Daytona season-opener. Skinner is only the second driver in NCTS history to earn two wins at Martinsville. Winning crew chief, Jeff Hensley, is from nearby Ridgeway, Virginia. Today's win marks Toyota's 29th victory in NCTS competition. Three Toyota Tundras finished in the top-three today: Skinner (first), Todd Bodine (second), and Ted Musgrave (fifth). Skinner earned his first career pole award at Martinsville Speedway today and his 34th career NCTS pole. Skinner's lap also established a new track record for the NCTS at Martinsville. Toyota Tundras earned three of the top-five starting positions for today's race with Mike Skinner (first), Ted Musgrave (third), and Jack Sprague (fifth). Aaron Fike was the top-finishing rookie in today's race and earned his career-best NCTS finish in the seventh position. Fike was also the fastest rookie to qualify by earning an 11th place starting position in his career-first start at Martinsville Speedway. Tundra drivers hold six of the top-ten positions in NCTS points: Skinner (first), Bodine (second), Musgrave (fifth), Jack Sprague (sixth), Johnny Benson (eighth), and Fike (10th). Mike Skinner, No. 5 Toyota Tundra, Bill Davis Racing: Finished: 1st Have you ever had a race vehicle that was so dominant in your career? "You know that old 31 car at Atlanta a few years ago was this dominant, and we broke something with about 16 or 17 laps to go. But this is about as good as it gets right here. My spotter just kept telling me to be easy getting into that first turn. I said; 'That's where they're going to run into me.' If we could get two laps under our belt, then we could slow down and this thing would just go. You could get to the center of the corner and stomp the floor down and it would just stick. We went and tested at a little hideaway of mine and it was definitely a test worth going and doing." How did you feel about those late-race cautions? "I wasn't too happy with some of those guys. You're not going to win today so quit trying to take it from me. It worked out good. There are a bunch of other guys that if they would have been behind me, we wouldn't have won. But Todd Bodine was a gentleman and what goes around, comes around. He has shown a lot of professionalism, that's why he was the champion - because he was smart." Jeff Hensley, Crew Chief, No. 5 Toyota Tundra, Bill Davis Racing: "Mike is the biggest change in this deal. He's driving smart and not asking more of the truck that what it can do. We have a good truck at the end when it counts. This is probably the only race that we've had the best truck and won. We didn't have the best truck at California and we didn't have the best truck at Atlanta, but we managed to win with it. We were pretty dominating here and that's big. I went to high school about two miles from here, at Drewry Mason High School. I went to college at Patrick Henry Community College, which is about 15 miles north of here. It's just big." Todd Bodine, No. 30 Lumber Liquidators Toyota Tundra, Germain Racing: Finished: 2nd Ted Musgrave, No. 9 Team ASE Toyota Tundra, Germain Racing: Finished: 5th How much of an effect did the numerous cautions have on you today? "This was the worst I've ever seen for lap-down trucks on the inside -- it was absolutely death-defying. You could never get a run going because every caution breeds another caution. That was the tough thing because you couldn't get your rhythm going. Once you did finally beat and bang off of them, another caution would come out and we'd have to start all over again. I think I ran into the same guys 20 times in the last 80 laps and it was the same group of guys. It's a tough deal and it's Martinsville, but I'm just glad we only have to come here twice a year."
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