SHR shakeup aimed in part at helping the No. 41 team win now
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MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Stewart-Haas Racing competition director Greg Zipadelli said Friday that crew chief changes for two of the team’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams are designed to foster chemistry and build relationships. The long-term hope is that the meshed personalities translate to better results for Kurt Busch and Danica Patrick, starting next week and continuing into 2015.
“We’re just basically looking to try to get both teams to be a little more consistent,” Zipadelli said at Martinsville Speedway, just before opening Sprint Cup practice. “They’ve had speed throughout the year, but haven’t necessarily put the whole season together in all the races to the level that we expect from them.”
Stewart-Haas announced earlier in the week that Daniel Knost would shift from the No. 41 team with Busch over to work with Patrick and the No. 10 Chevrolet operation. Tony Gibson, who revealed last weekend that he had re-signed with SHR for the “extended future,” will work with Busch. The changes go into effect next weekend at Texas Motor Speedway, after this Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 (1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).
In terms of making the personalities work, Zipadelli lauded Knost’s analytical engineering side as a solid fit with Patrick while playing up Gibson’s old-school sensibilities as a match for Busch.
“I think long-term it’s the right thing,” Zipadelli said of the new pairing for the No. 10 team. “There might be a step back while they learn each other and they grow, but long-term — a full year, two years from now — I think their personalities between Daniel and Danica will work together much better, and I think at the same time, the same thing will happen on the 41 car. That’s a team that we have to get going immediately. There isn’t a whole lot of time for growth.
“We know Kurt is in the prime of his career and he can win races at every race track we go to, so we’ve got to give him that and we’ve got to give Danica the ability to continue to grow and continue to build a relationship with somebody because she plans on being here a while.”
Knost, in his first year as a crew chief at the NASCAR national series level, and Busch enjoyed some success, winning in the series’ most recent trip to Martinsville to lock up a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason. But consistency has been difficult to come by for the No. 41 bunch, which languished in 20th place or worse in the standings for the bulk of the season.
Knost has experience working with Patrick, but in the role of an engineer instead of crew chief during her first 10-race foray into the sport’s big leagues in 2012. He said he’ll take the lessons from his first 33 races with Busch onto the next phase of his career.
“The biggest things we’ve learning is just dealing with people, dealing with pressure and having to make decisions when you’re not fully informed,” Knost said Friday after Coors Light Pole Qualifying. “Certainly, Kurt’s really talented and he’s got maybe a different feel in the car than maybe some of the other drivers I’ve worked with, so I’ve kind of learned some tricks from that and I’ve also learned that each driver’s got their own individual keys and you have to figure out how to make those keys work for them to be successful.”
Though Patrick had built a firm relationship with Gibson over the last two years, she seemed open to a change, saying “everybody is looking for some magic” in creating new chemistry.
“Really nice guy, very smart and he is definitely a lot like the kind of engineers — and in fact in IndyCar it was called an engineer instead of a crew chief — that I was used to dealing with,” Patrick said. “We have gotten along anyway regardless of whether he has been on my car or not. I’m definitely open-minded and looking forward to the opportunity to see how it will go with him.”
For the end of this season and starting anew in 2015, Busch will have the veteran Gibson calling the shots. Gibson’s easy-going nature and occasional “tough love” worked well for Patrick. With the often irascible Busch behind the wheel, Gibson’s deft touch could be tested when radio communications become heated.
“I mean that’s just one of those things that comes along with Kurt,” Zipadelli said. “I mean, (Gibson)’s dealt with Mark Martin, Dale Earnhardt Jr. back in the day, Michael Waltrip, so I think he’s heard it all. You let it go in one ear and out the other. I think because of his experience and the time he’s been in the sport, he’ll be able to handle that a little bit better.”
The 49-year-old Gibson was his trademark self after qualifying at Martinsville, describing the outlook for the new driver-owner combination as, “We’re looking forward to it, dude.” But even as he enters his next chapter with Stewart-Haas, he said he was proud of the progress he’d made with Patrick, who entered stock-car racing as a virtual newbie with her primary background in open-wheel competition.
“Anything you do, no matter who’s driving it, anytime you make progress, you sit back and look at what got you there, what did you do better that got her there, because when you can take a driver with no experience and come in and take them from running 35th every week and make them where they can run in the top 20, top 15, something got you there,” Gibson said. “We’re going to go back and look, and the things we did to help her, maybe we can pick four or five of those things out and apply them to Kurt’s driving style and make it better.
“At least we know as a team, we have good race cars and solid pit stops, so we combine that with a really good championship driver, we should be in good shape.”
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