Team communication, avoiding wrecks helped
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MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Danica Patrick‘s up-and-down Sunday at Martinsville Speedway pushed her unhappiness over the team radio to the level of what she called "a general disaster." The end result, though, was an encouraging day and a top-10 finish worth the early adversity.
Disaster relief lifted Patrick to a seventh-place finish in Sunday’s STP 500, placing her just one spot away from her NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career-best of sixth, notched last August at Atlanta Motor Speedway. It also marked her career-best finish on a short track, easily eclipsing the 12th place she posted in her first trip to the .526-mile bullring.
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Top premier short-track finishes by a female driver
| Pos. | Driver | Track | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5th | Sara Christian | Heidelberg | 1949 |
| 6th | Sara Christian | Langhorne | 1949 |
| 6th | Janet Guthrie | Bristol | 1977 |
| 7th | Danica Patrick* | Martinsville | 2015 |
*Patrick ties Guthrie for most career top-10 finishes by a female driver (5)
The result also reversed the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 10 Chevrolet team’s trend of starting well and fading over the course of the race. Once she and crew chief Daniel Knost got on the same page, Patrick slipped into the top 10 — by Lap 395 in the 500-lap race — and clipped off positions over the final three green-flag runs to the checkered flag.
"The middle of the race was where we started improving, so I think this is a step in the right direction of a better trend of our communication and what we’re doing, and we still learned out there," Patrick said. "At one point in time I said that that change didn’t — the changes didn’t work, and I was like, I think maybe we should go this direction, and after the stop I said, ‘did you take that change out of the right-front that I asked for?’ And he said no, and I said, ‘when I say it’s not better, take it all out.’ You dial yourself out very fast in these cars.
"We’re still learning, but it wasn’t too big of a problem, and once we got that out, that’s actually our best run, I think, was that one."
In true Martinsville fashion, the close-quarters layout led to some rough-and-tumble moments, especially when she stayed out on older tires, restarting second on the 101st lap.
"We just weren’t very good to start," Patrick said. "We took a chance and stayed out on a yellow, and we were front row, and I bet I looked like an idiot out there. I spun the wheels on the start and hung on a little bit, but then ended up going backwards in a hurry."
Despite the momentary retreat, Patrick held her ground. She also avoided Paul Menard‘s spinning car in the 367th lap, swerving wide to keep her momentum rolling. Despite her car enduring the customary short-track bumps and bruises, Patrick emerged bent but not broken.
"It’s all a matter of luck, too," Patrick said of avoiding Menard. "I could have got drilled from the back and hit into the car. I could have swerved to the right and had somebody clip my right rear and spun, somebody could have been out there. Crashes are about observing where you’re at and making a good decision about where to go, but they’re also about luck. I got lucky that there was nothing in my way to get around that one. That would have probably wrecked my day."
Knost, in his first full season as Patrick’s crew chief, also had some positive Martinsville history on his side. In this race last season, he called the shots for Kurt Busch‘s come-from-behind victory in the SHR No. 41, something Knost said helped carry over for Patrick on Sunday.
"I would say very similar. They’re a little bit different driver and so you’ve got to make things to fit their style, but in general, I’ve seen things work with Kurt, Ryan (Newman), Tony Stewart … I mean, there’s just certain things that seem to work at Martinsville," Knost said.
"This track evolves a lot through the weekend and through the race, and I think if you have a plan of a way to attack it, you kind of know which sequence you want to do things in, and it hopefully works out, and it did today."
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