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East-West Notes: Harvick to run in Sunday's race (cont'd)
Logano Tops Speed Charts
Joey Logano was fastest in the one-hour practice Saturday with a lap of 23.957 seconds. Caisse was second at 23.972, followed by Eric Holmes at 24.111. Peyton Sellers was fourth at 24.233.
Ryan Foster, a development driver for Richard Childress Racing, was the top West Series driver at fifth in 24.242.
Logano was penalized in Friday's race for contact that spun Sellers. He made his way back up to the front in the final 10 laps when he and Brian Ickler spun battling for second. Logano, who won the first two Grand National Division races he entered, said he just has to put that whole race behind him.
Logano also said there's still room for improvement in Sunday's car, despite his quick time.
"It's not where it needs to be," Logano said. "It's tight at tight."
Sellers, for his part, was holding his breath after spinning Friday. The former NASCAR Whelen All-American Series champion only brought one car to the Midwest for the two races. Miraculously, nobody hit Sellers and he stayed off the wall.
"I just stayed in the throttle," Sellers said, "and tried to spin it out of the way."
He cautiously made his way back up the field to finish sixth -- and then was fourth fastest in Saturday's practice.
"We just threw some spring on it, put a new side skirt on it, took some camber out and here we are," Sellers said.
News and notes
Jeffrey Earnhardt is looking to rebound from a rough race Friday, where he finished 24th. He likes what he sees from Iowa.
"This place is super sweet," Earnhardt said. "They've gone all out to make this a super race track. I think they've done a really good job of doing it."
Earnhardt tested earlier in the month at one-mile New Hampshire International Speedway, but said his experience at Nashville in the GM Development program actually helped prepare him for what to expect at the .875-mile Iowa Speedway. Earnhardt was sixth fastest in practice.
Caisse, Earnhardt's teammate at Andy Santerre Motorsports, is running the same spec motor that he won the pole with last year at the Waterford (Conn.) Speedbowl.
"Speed-wise, we're close," Caisse said. "We just need to get a little more comfortable."
Entering the two-races-in-three-days marathon, Caisse's game-plan was to get what he could at Elko and then go for the win at Iowa. Caisse wound up winning at Elko. He insists that won't change his thinking.
"We've got the same mentality -- points racing," Caisse said. "If we've got the car to win here, we'll be there for it."
Scott Lynch, the 2003 West Series champion, will attempt to make his second start of the season. Lynch, who is running a limited schedule, won the series opener at Kyle, Texas on March 31. Like Harvick, he is not eligible for the past champions provisional because he did not run in a West Series race in 2006.
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