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Jack Roush's teams rebound at Sonoma

Despite the uncertainty of Carl Edwards' status for 2015, Roush prefers to concentrate on the present

Race winner Carl Edwards, Roush Fenway Racing Ford with Jack Roush

Race winner Carl Edwards, Roush Fenway Racing Ford with Jack Roush

Action Sports Photography

SONOMA, Calif. – Jack Roush’s troops rallied around him at Sonoma Raceway on Sunday.

Following a performance that was nothing short of a spanking at Michigan International Speedway -- Jack Roush’s home track – Carl Edwards posted his second win of the season and Greg Biffle scored his first top 10 since Talladega on May 4. Edwards’ win was just the second for Roush on the 1.99-mile road course and his first since 1997 when Mark Martin won from the pole.

Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle
Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle

Photo by: Action Sports Photography

While racing is indeed cyclical, the results from MIS, where Roush teams have earned 13 of the company’s 135 career wins but had only one top 20 finish last Sunday, was indicative of the RFR’s struggles this season.

“This hasn’t been my best track for the Cup cars because we haven’t won as much, but I’ve won here several times with the road racing cars,” Roush said at Sonoma. “I won here 30 years ago with a Trans AM car – my first Trans Am victory. So we’ve had a lot of success here.

“The racing is all different. Speedway racing is different from road course racing, short tracks and mile-and-a-halves. It’s unexpected that we have struggled as much as we’ve had on the mile-and-a-half tracks but it’s also been a pleasant surprise that we’ve been as good as we’ve been at short tracks starting with Phoenix and going on to Bristol.

Carl Edwards celebrates
Carl Edwards celebrates

Photo by: Getty Images

“Racing is not all the same. The cars are not the same and the technology required to make the cars perform well is not the same at all the tracks. I think we’re just a tick away from getting our mile-and-a-half program back on course.

Roush claimed responsibility for the last minute and “ill-advised” decisions at Michigan which were a “conscious effort” between himself and RFR GM Robbie Reiser to “increase down force and minimize drag” on his three entries. Roush acknowledged “it was not right”.

Currently, Roush is still searching for Chip Bolin’s replacement. Motorsport.com first reported that RFR’s lead engineer was released on May 15. RFR’s lead simulation specialist Michael Tamm was in Sonoma this weekend and Edwards’ former crew chief Bob Osborne, who started Roush’s engineering department with Bolin in 1998, have both stepped up in the interim.

“We’re going to try to fill the slot with somebody that can add something,” Roush said. “Not just somebody that would be a replacement for anybody that might leave.”

As solid as Roush’s NASCAR tenure was during his first 20 years of Cup competition, the company keeps trying to recapture the consistency that made RFR a perennial contender.

Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Photo by: Action Sports Photography

Yet with the exception of Matt Kenseth, who won three races for the company in 2011 and 2012 prior to his move to Joe Gibbs Racing last year, no Roush driver has posted more than two wins in a season since Edwards’ blowout in 2008 when he won nine races. The following year neither he nor Biffle won a race at all.

In the first 16 races of 2014, the three Roush drivers have combined for two wins, seven top-five’s and 16 top 10 finishes. Edwards is currently sixth in the point standings, Biffle sits 15th and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. remains 27th.

And now, after Kenseth jumped ship for JGR after 2012, it appears that Edwards will follow the same path. Edwards has said repeatedly that his contract precludes him from discussing his plans beyond this year.

“I have a great group of people around me that are all focused on this year and winning the championship and I’m really grateful for that,” Edwards said. “That’s how I do my job. That’s how Jimmy (Fennig, crew chief) does his job. That’s how all of us do it.

“We’ve all talked about it but we’re not going to worry about it. We’re not going to worry about any of that stuff. We just want to go out and try to win this championship. It would be foolish to miss any opportunities based on something that (happens in the future). I think that’s the right way to do it.”

Race winner Carl Edwards, Roush Fenway Racing Ford
Race winner Carl Edwards, Roush Fenway Racing Ford

Photo by: Action Sports Photography

With the races counting down for Edwards and Roush, who once referred to the driver of the No. 99 Ford as “the future of Roush Fenway Racing”, was the win on Sunday bittersweet?

“No,” Roush said. “There’s nothing bittersweet about it. It was just sweet.

“We’re trying to win a championship this year and what happens in 2015 will be determined sometime later. I prepare for every race like it was the last race. I just keep trying.”

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