Roush Racing enters season thinking big



Greg Biffle and Carl Edwards have the potential to be better than last year.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- Greg Biffle and Carl Edwards have little room for improvement.
Biffle won five of the first 15 races last year, added another victory at the season finale in Homestead and finished second in the Nextel Cup championship. Edwards picked up four wins, capping each of them with trademark backflips, and was third in the points.
What will NASCAR's newest stars do for encores?
"We should be a bunch better than we were last season, and if that's the case, then we're going to be really, really good," Edwards said.
The Roush Racing teammates begin this season -- starting Sunday at the Daytona 500 -- as two of the favorites to win it all.
"It's hard not to be overconfident because they say, 'Well, you had such a great year last year. What do you expect this year?"' Biffle said. "Gosh, if I did the same thing I did last year I'd be ecstatic. Certainly, I'd like to win the championship, but if I had to replay last year, I don't know that I'd do a thing different."
Well, there is one thing he would like to change.
20th at Texas
Biffle was 20th at Texas Motor Speedway in November because of a loose wheel, a finish that essentially ruined his chance at the title with two races remaining.
Biffle had one of the strongest cars at Texas. He started seventh and quickly moved into the lead. He was ahead by several car lengths when one of the rear wheels started coming loose, forcing him to make a green-flag pit stop.
He fell a lap down and battled the rest of the day to rejoin the leaders. It happened too late, and Biffle lost 47 points in one race to eventual series champ Tony Stewart.
Making his day bittersweet was that teammates Edwards, Mark Martin and Matt Kenseth swept the top three spots. His fourth Roush teammate, Kurt Busch, was 10th.
"I think about it a lot," said Biffle, who finished 35 points behind Stewart in the final standings. "You can go back and count a whole bunch of races. ... but Texas is more of a clear-cut, down-to-the-wire deal. That replays a lot."
Biffle spent part of the offseason reliving what could have been, even while he tried to relax at his mountain home and in his shop. He said the bad memories probably won't cease until the green flag drops Sunday at the "Great American Race."
What will he think about then?
"About winning and what it's going to take to win and how we're gonna win," he said. "I think with that mind-set and that attitude and working hard toward that goal, it puts you as one of the front-runners."
Edwards, too
Edwards should be included in the front-runner group, too.
Unlike Biffle, who is the only driver in NASCAR history to win championships in the Busch series and the Craftsman truck series, Edwards came out of nowhere to find fame in 2005.
Last week at media day, Edwards sat down at a round table and quickly found himself surrounded by tape recorders, microphones and cameras. He looked around, paused for a few seconds and then recalled how different things were a year ago.
"I sat over there for 15 minutes and a couple guys came by and that's about it," Edwards said. "There's a lot more attention now."
Edwards had 18 top-10 finishes last year and joined Biffle at the forefront of the Roush team. He carried his success on the track in 2005 into the offseason.
He did a commercial with his mother, got a walk-on role in the movie "The Disciple," and filmed a small speaking part in an episode of the Fox television show "24." He also has been in several photo shoots.
"It's fun. It's definitely different," Edwards said. "The only frustrating part about anything that's gone on is that I don't have the time to talk to everybody I want to talk to or return everybody's phone call.
"It's hard to make everybody happy. I'm trying to remember that all I can do is do my job the best I can. Other than that, it's spectacular. You get to do all these things. It's a dream. It's unreal. I feel like I've lived two completely different lives."
Was virtual unknown
Edwards began last season as a virtual unknown, driving in the Busch Series for the first time and in the Cup Series for a second year. But after performing backflips after each victory -- he won nine races in all -- he quickly became a fan favorite.
But now, like Biffle, he realizes the next goal has to be winning a championship.
"I don't want to get any sort of illusion that things could be easier or we're just going to back into [the championship], because that's not how it's going to go," Edwards said. "There's such a small difference from the guys who are really fast and the guys who are 11th.
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