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See where your favorite driver will line up on pit road
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Coors Light Pole Award winner Jamie McMurray earned first pick of pit stall, and the No. 1 team chose the No. 1 stall at the exit of pit road for the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 (Sunday, 1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Martinsville Speedway.
Two Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers qualified behind him — Joey Logano and Matt Kenseth. McMurray will share the front row with Logano, who also will pit right next to the pole-sitter in stall No. 2. Meanwhile, Kenseth’s team selected the 11th pit stall, the first box with an opening on pit road.
Fourth-fastest in qualifying, Tony Stewart will pit across the opening from Kenseth in stall No. 10.
The remaining six Chase participants will pit in the following stalls:
Jeff Gordon, Pit stall No. 6
Denny Hamlin, Pit stall No. 8
Carl Edwards, Pit stall No. 13
Brad Keselowski, Pit stall No. 18
Ryan Newman, Pit stall No. 26
Kevin Harvick, Pit stall No. 32
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See the order the trucks will go off in for qualifying (Sat., 10:15 a.m. ET, FS1)
| # | Car | Driver | Team |
|
1 |
99 |
Bryan Silas |
Bell Trucks America Inc. Chevrolet |
|
2 |
07 |
BJ McLeod |
RaceTrac Chevrolet |
|
3 |
05 |
Zaxby’s Toyota |
|
|
4 |
35 |
Peyton Sellers |
Danville Toyota Toyota |
|
5 |
00 |
Haas Automation Chevrolet |
|
|
6 |
51 |
Erik Jones |
ToyotaCare Toyota |
|
7 |
21 |
Joey Coulter |
Allegiant Travel Chevrolet |
|
8 |
02 |
Randco/Young’s Building System Chevrolet |
|
|
9 |
23 |
Amwins Group Inc. Chevrolet |
|
|
10 |
10 |
Jennifer Jo Cobb |
Driven2Honor.org RAM |
|
11 |
92 |
BTS Tire/Goodyear Fleet HQ/Wynns For |
|
|
12 |
0 |
Chevrolet |
|
|
13 |
98 |
Johnny Sauter |
Smokey Mountain/Curb Records Toyota |
|
14 |
33 |
Russell/Grupo Friopecas Chevrolet |
|
|
15 |
20 |
Gemini Southern/Krispy Kreme Chevrolet |
|
|
16 |
50 |
TJ Bell |
Dedicated to Electrical Linemen Chevrolet |
|
17 |
77 |
German Quiroga |
Otterbox Toyota |
|
18 |
88 |
Matt Crafton |
Ideal Door/Menards Toyota |
|
19 |
75 |
Food Country USA/Gain Flings/Lopez Wealth Mgmt. Chevrolet |
|
|
20 |
74 |
Vydox Chevrolet |
|
|
21 |
87 |
* Charles Buchanan Jr. |
Spring Drug Ford |
|
22 |
8 |
John H. Nemechek |
SWM Toyota |
|
23 |
6 |
Norm Benning |
Tom Corbett for PA Governor Chevrolet |
|
24 |
34 |
Darrell Wallace Jr. |
2015 NASCAR HOF Inductee Wendell Scott Toyota |
|
25 |
15 |
* Mason Mingus # |
811 Call Before You Dig Chevrolet |
|
26 |
86 |
Willmar Concrete Pumping Chevrolet |
|
|
27 |
82 |
Haugeberg Farms/PSI/Performance Auto Ford |
|
|
28 |
93 |
Sure-Step Chevrolet |
|
|
29 |
31 |
Heater.com Chevrolet |
|
|
30 |
13 |
Jeb Burton |
Estes/Carolina Nut Company Toyota |
|
31 |
80 |
Clayton Signs Inc. Ford |
|
|
32 |
63 |
Justin Jennings |
Papa Murphy’s/Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet |
|
33 |
17 |
Timothy Peters |
Red Horse Racing Toyota |
|
34 |
29 |
Ryan Blaney |
Cooper Standard Ford |
|
35 |
9 |
Brennan Newberry |
Qore-24 Chevrolet |
|
36 |
19 |
Broken Bow Records Ford |
|
|
37 |
08 |
Camden Murphy |
Ronald McDonald House Charities Chevrolet |
|
38 |
32 |
Alex Guenette |
Motos Illimitees Chevrolet |
* Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series
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Four-time champ Jeff Gordon leads opening session
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Sprint Cup Series Practice 1 | Get results
Hendrick Motorsports driver Jeff Gordon led opening Sprint Cup Series practice on Friday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway.
Gordon, the defending race-winner, will look to pick up his second victory of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and advance from the Eliminator Round to Homestead-Miami Speedway‘s Championship Round race on Nov. 16.
The four-time 2014 winner led the way with a best speed of 99.250 mph, achieved on the 32nd of 36 total laps around the 0.526-mile circuit. Gordon was trailed by a pair of Chase drivers in Joey Logano (99.198) and Denny Hamlin (99.141). Jamie McMurray was fourth at 99.115, while last week’s winner at Talladega, Brad Keselowski, rounded out the top five with a speed of 99.069.
Kurt Busch, who won the race earlier this season at Martinsville and will soon be swapping crew chiefs with teammate Danica Patrick, was 22nd at 98.170. Patrick, meanwhile, was 16th with a speed of 98.328.
In the opening minutes of the practice, Justin Allgaier spun his No. 51 Chevrolet for the session’s only caution period. Jamie McMurray also brushed the wall lightly, but incurred minimal damage and no caution was thrown.
Qualifying for Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 (1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) is at 4:40 p.m. ET (FS1) on Friday, while a pair of practices will run Saturday at 9 a.m. and noon ET (both on FS1).
Camping World Truck Series Practice 1 | Get Results
Brad Keselowski Racing driver Ryan Blaney topped opening Camping World Truck Series practice on Friday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway.
Blaney — who will participate in all three NASCAR national series this month — paced the 50-minute session with a best speed of 95.184 mph, achieved on the third of 10 laps around the 0.526-mile circuit. Chevrolet driver Gray Gaulding nearly matched Blaney’s speed, falling 0.001 seconds off his pace at 95.180 mph.
Brandon Jones (95.122), Austin Hill (95.084) and Johnny Sauter (94.913) rounded out the top five, with spring Martinsville winner and points leader Matt Crafton pulling in seventh at 94.704.
Defending race-winner Darrell Wallace Jr. was 16th in the practice, running a best speed of 94.111.
Camden Murphy forced a caution early in the practice with a mechanical issue.
Camping World Truck Series Practice 2 | Get Results
Defending race-winner Darrell Wallace Jr. led the way in final Camping World Truck Series practice on Friday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway.
Wallace, who picked up the first win of his national series career in this race last year, paced the session with a top speed of 95.888 mph. His Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate Erik Jones was just off the pace at 95.801 mph, good for third place.
Series points leader and spring Martinsville winner Matt Crafton was second with a speed of 95.869. Cole Custer (95.690) and Timothy Peters (95.651) rounded out the top five.
Ryan Blaney, who led the opening session, fell to 18th in the final run-through, turning his eighth and final lap at a 94.157 clip.
Late in the session, Charles Buchanan Jr. spun to bring out a caution. He placed 36th. The caution gave the track crew a chance to clean up fluid leaking from the No. 08 of Camden Murphy.
The Kroger 200 is Saturday at 1:30 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1.
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See the order the cars will go off in on Friday (4:40 p.m. ET, FS1)
RELATED: Follow your picks in the Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota
| # | Car | Driver | Team |
| 1 | 26 | Cole Whitt # | Uponor Plumbing Systems Toyota |
| 2 | 10 | Danica Patrick | GoDaddy Breast Cancer Awareness Chevrolet |
| 3 | 66 | Mike Wallace(i) | Testoril Toyota |
| 4 | 4 | Kevin Harvick | Outback Steakhouse Chevrolet |
| 5 | 42 | Kyle Larson # | Target Chevrolet |
| 6 | 98 | Josh Wise | Phil Parsons Racing Chevrolet |
| 7 | 51 | Justin Allgaier # | Auto-Owners Insurance Chevrolet |
| 8 | 36 | Reed Sorenson | Zing Zang Chevrolet |
| 9 | 1 | Jamie McMurray | McDonald’s Chevrolet |
| 10 | 34 | David Ragan | Wendell Scott HOF Tribute Ford |
| 11 | 44 | Timmy Hill | Phoenix Warehouse Chevrolet |
| 12 | 23 | Alex Bowman # | DipYourCar.com Toyota |
| 13 | 22 | Joey Logano | Shell Pennzoil Ford |
| 14 | 3 | Austin Dillon # | Dow Chevrolet |
| 15 | 15 | Clint Bowyer | AAA Insurance Toyota |
| 16 | 41 | Kurt Busch | Haas Automation Chevrolet |
| 17 | 48 | Jimmie Johnson | Lowe’s Chevrolet |
| 18 | 33 | Travis Kvapil | Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet |
| 19 | 16 | Greg Biffle | 3M Ford |
| 20 | 31 | Ryan Newman | Quicken Loans Chevrolet |
| 21 | 83 | JJ Yeley(i) | DipYourCar.com Toyota |
| 22 | 32 | Kyle Fowler(i) | corvetteparts.net Ford |
| 23 | 18 | Kyle Busch | M&M’s Halloween Toyota |
| 24 | 88 | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | National Guard Chevrolet |
| 25 | 7 | Michael Annett # | Allstate Peterbuilt Group Chevrolet |
| 26 | 5 | Kasey Kahne | Great Clips Chevrolet |
| 27 | 99 | Carl Edwards | Ford EcoBoost Ford |
| 28 | 20 | Matt Kenseth | Dollar General Toyota |
| 29 | 11 | Denny Hamlin | FedEx Freight Toyota |
| 30 | 55 | Brian Vickers | Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota |
| 31 | 27 | Paul Menard | Richmond/Menards Chevrolet |
| 32 | 40 | Landon Cassill(i) | Newtown Building Supplies Chevrolet |
| 33 | 14 | Tony Stewart | Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet |
| 34 | 43 | Aric Almirola | Smithfield Ford |
| 35 | 38 | David Gilliland | A&W All American Food Ford |
| 36 | 9 | Marcos Ambrose | Stanley Ford |
| 37 | 13 | Casey Mears | GEICO Chevrolet |
| 38 | 93 | Clay Rogers | Burger King Toyota |
| 39 | 47 | AJ Allmendinger | Clorox Chevrolet |
| 40 | 2 | Brad Keselowski | Alliance Truck Parts Ford |
| 41 | 78 | Martin Truex Jr. | Furniture Row Chevrolet |
| 42 | 24 | Jeff Gordon | Drive To End Hunger Chevrolet |
| 43 | 17 | Ricky Stenhouse Jr. | Roush Fenway Racing Pit for a Pair Ford |
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Driver uses Twitter to help recover from his early Chase exit
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MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Twitter wasn’t even a twinkle in Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s eye before the season started, but since joining the social media outlet in Victory Lane after his Daytona 500 win in February, it’s become an indispensible hand on the pulse of his nation of fans.
After his title hopes for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs ended last week at Talladega, Earnhardt told NASCAR.com that the pulse is as strong as ever and it’s helping him focus on closing out 2014 with a flourish.
"My fans have never really lashed out or shown displeasure at me. They’ve always been supportive even when they should’ve been lashing out at me and hard on me, but they’ve always had my back," Earnhardt said Friday from Martinsville Speedway. "That definitely makes all this a lot easier, knowing that you’ve got a lot of people still believing in you, happy with what we did this year and can think positively like that, because that’s how you’ve got to be. I spent a lot of years just taking a bad run and letting it fester in the back of your mind for days and days, and it leads on into the next weekend.
"I’ll say this: Being on Twitter is a lot of things, but I get a real good understanding of where the fan base is through that interaction," said the Hendrick Motorsports driver. "One thing that surprised me about it is it helps me, the support that I get through that single application single-handedly helps me rebound emotionally, and that’s so important to be able to put something behind you and move on to the next goal or next target. I was never good at really getting through something like that emotionally and getting onto the next thing and being focused, sharp and ready to go.
"If I’m out there racing, the fan reaction is the end result. It’s the win or the loss."
Earnhardt’s year of promise met its match in the new-look Chase’s Contender Round, where his three races were fraught with pitfalls — a tire-related crash at Kansas, a broken shifter and deficit at Charlotte and a late-race wreck at Talladega. In seemingly a blink, the three-win season was without its ultimate crowning goal.
Still, Earnhardt was matter-of-fact in addressing his Hendrick Motorsports No. 88 crew on the cool-down lap at Talladega, saying he had four trophies left to attain down the season’s home stretch. Combined with the fan support, the new objective has helped to soothe any heartache and stoke hopes of carrying momentum into 2015.
"I had heard all season long that they believed that this was the year, this was it, we’re going to be in it all the way to the end, and to have fallen so short of our goal, I anticipated everyone to be very disappointed," said Earnhardt, who gave his fans a midweek pep talk in his Dirty Mo Radio podcast this week. "Obviously there was some disappointment, but we’ve got some things to look forward to, still some racing left that they can cheer for and enjoy. We have some changes getting made in the offseason that they can get excited about and anticipate."
Being relegated to the outside of the Chase picture, Earnhardt now has a new perspective on which drivers might make up the final four for the Sprint Cup Championship on Nov. 16 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. His rooting interests stay close to home, as he has thrown his support behind Hendrick teammate Jeff Gordon‘s quest for a fifth title in NASCAR’s top series.
Still, he’s not ruling out any underdog candidates, which could prompt more interest in what’s been a compelling revamped Chase format thus far.
"I think there’s a couple of guys that will sneak in. I think there will be a couple of usual suspects that you would expect," Earnhardt said. "I believe the Penske cars will be there at Homestead. I hope that Jeff’s there; I want Jeff to win the championship for Hendrick. I want to win all the races but definitely want to do all we can to help Jeff, but I also believe that someone will sneak in there and that will be a positive for the sport because this Chase provides that ability.
"Among a lot of things, it’s working as designed to bring a lot of attention and awareness to each of these races. It’s really brought a lot of storylines and great publicity, but also, when it comes down to who those four are, it’ll say a lot about how important this Chase has been and will become throughout the next several years."
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Roush Fenway Racing driver returns after failing to qualify at ‘Dega
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MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Ricky Stenhouse Jr. watched last weekend’s race at Talladega Superspeedway from his motorcoach, one day after failing to make the starting field for the first time in his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career. It was a sour pill to swallow, but the 27-year-old driver was quick to note that he’s bounced back from adversity in the past.
He also learned that his girlfriend, fellow driver Danica Patrick, was quick to go to bat for him, pleading his case and railing against tweaks to the qualifying procedure that made him a Sunday spectator.
One weekend removed from the qualifying gaffe, Stenhouse was buoyant after the first Sprint Cup practice Friday at Martinsville Speedway, eager to put the miss behind him and push toward improved performance in 2015. If nothing else, with 43 cars showing up for 43 spots in the field at Martinsville Speedway, he’ll have a better vantage point behind the wheel of his Roush Fenway Racing No. 17 Ford.
"Having to watch the race is never any fun, but it’s part of it," Stenhouse said. "Sometimes you don’t make races. I never thought we wouldn’t miss a race here, but everything worked out perfectly and we did. Everything aligned and a worst-case scenario happened for us and we wouldn’t let it happen again, that’s for sure. … We learned from it and thankfully we don’t have to worry about it this week. That’s a positive."
The confusion surrounding the multicar Coors Light Pole Qualifying at restrictor-plate tracks Talladega and Daytona was compounded last Saturday by the waiting game with teams trying to time their qualifying attempts to the best aerodynamic advantage. Ultimately, time was not on Stenhouse’s side.
"We’re not thinking about making it in the race. Knowing we needed to make it in the race, we would have gone to the middle of the pack to run a lap good enough to make it in, and that’d be it," he said. "We were trying to make it to the next round, because that’s what we get paid to do — try to get poles. I thought rolling off last, we’ll get the biggest draft and easily make it to the next round and have no problem. Then my spotter’s telling me you need to kind of hurry up. He told me halfway down the back straightaway, you’re going to have to hustle to get around here."
After Jeff Gordon‘s car slowed his momentum, Stenhouse crossed under the start-finish line just after the black and red flags were unfurled, leaving him among those bitten. But so were several other Chase-eligible drivers, who snapped up the remaining provisional berths based on the team owner points standings, leaving Stenhouse and Co. as spectators.
"Now, being where we are in points is not where we want to be, but heck, 10 positions up in points still wouldn’t have got us in the race," said Stenhouse, who was 27th in the driver standings entering Talladega. "It would still be tough to have that perfect scenario work out again, but we’ll be better in points next year and hopefully won’t run into any situations again like that.
Stenhouse ran an extra lap after flashing under the black and red flags, just in case there was an error in timing and scoring. But as he inched back toward pit road, it became more and more evident among the No. 17 camp that the team would be left out.
That prompted Patrick to action, as she marched up to NASCAR officials to speak her mind — not just on her boyfriend’s behalf, but as a general protest to the unconventional qualifying system.
"I was really pissed off after qualifying," Patrick said. "I went to the NASCAR hauler and said ‘what the … is this? Is that what we were trying to accomplish?’ Part of it was because it was Ricky and part of it was, that could’ve just as easily been me, and I know how important those races are to me and my team, but then also my sponsors and the people who invest into those events, especially the speedways, the big ones, all of them. These are all very big races, all four of those, in particular the Daytona 500.
"And so I was fighting for not having someone who wasn’t deserving in that situation."
The qualifying lockout left Stenhouse in a tricky position regarding what to do next, but instead of going home, he remained to fulfill sponsorship obligations and stay as a TV viewer with a strong rooting interest.
With the laps winding down and Patrick leading, she looked like as good a pick as any to secure a surprise breakthrough win. If so, Stenhouse said he would have been front and center in Victory Lane but stopped short of watching the race from atop the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 10 pit box.
"All those guys like me. They would have let over there, but I figured it would be best to watch it from the bus," Stenhouse said. "Had some pizza. A Coca-Cola. Just chilled out."
Stenhouse has already had hard lessons in his tenure with car owner Jack Roush. He failed to qualifying for a NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Nashville during his rookie season of 2010; that and a flurry of crashes in the first half of the year led to a two-race benching and shop duty back at Roush Fenway headquarters.
The rest of the story is that Stenhouse recovered to win Nationwide Series championships the next two seasons, graduating to NASCAR’s premier division the following year. While he hasn’t enjoyed this most recent dose of misfortune, he’s hoping the difficult lessons eventually pay similar dividends.
"I learn real quick of things to do and not to do," Stenhouse said. "Sitting there watching races, especially long Cup races, makes you sit there and think about everything you need to do, whether it be get more focused and help the guys at the shop on our team more to figure out what we need to do to make our Fords fast again like they need to be. Spent some time with my guys about already looking ahead to next year at the things we need to do differently so we’re not in the circumstances we are (in) right now in terms of being further back in points and not running as well.
"We’re already looking to 2015 and making sure we’re not this far back in the garage."
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SHR shakeup aimed in part at helping the No. 41 team win now
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MORE: Danica doesn’t fear change
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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Danica trades playful barbs in a sometimes lighthearted media session
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MORE: SHR expects personalities to mesh better
MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Hot dogs and hairstyles were among the many talking points for Danica Patrick in a wide-ranging, 20-plus minute interview with reporters on Friday that was at times serious, but often playfully sardonic.
Perhaps her mood was light on the heels of a race at Talladega that, despite a 19th-place finish, saw her leading and poised to battle Jimmie Johnson for the victory when a late caution fell.
Or maybe it was being back at Martinsville, a track where Patrick had one of her best NASCAR showings with a 12th-place effort in her first attempt at the 0.526-mile paper-clip oval in the spring of 2013.
"I have a lot of fond memories of my first race here in Martinsville," she said. "I had to start in the back for an engine change, and I spun and I was two laps down … but then I got ’em back and finished (12th), so I had an awesome first race here."
And she thinks she knows why. Egged on by Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Patrick — a self-professed health nut — tried one of Martinsville’s famous hot dogs before that race.
She hasn’t had one since, but plans to change that.
"I just walked by the concession stand and said ‘I’ll be back for a hot dog (Saturday),’ " Patrick said. "I don’t want to risk eating it on race day. I’m not sure if that’s a good idea. They don’t look like regular hot dogs, but maybe that’s because they don’t have the regular effect of a hot dog. Maybe they help you in the race car."
And so it went, with Danica peppering one-liners, jabs and a healthy dose of humor into her answers. Often, she was introspective and informative before turning the tables.
That was the case when she was discussing her impending crew chief swap with Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kurt Busch.
"I’m very open-minded and I’m not scared of change, and I definitely am someone that believes you can’t know if something can be better unless you try it," she said of "I’m ready for the challenge and the change and the possibility of it being better than what it is."
"I am afraid of changing my hairstyle, though," she said after a pause. "I have never done that."
In other words, don’t expect Danica to show up to the track with a bob anytime soon.
She even needled a reporter when answering a question about whether or not she’s comfortable being a role model.
"Sorry," she said after moving on. "I’m always hard on the young ones."
The next question, asked seconds later: "We were just talking to Ricky (Stenhouse Jr.) out there …"
"Speaking of a young one," Patrick, 32, dead-panned, before breaking into a grin at the mention of her 27-year-old boyfriend.
Then she delivered an impassioned answer about the No. 17 missing the race last week at Talladega.
"I enjoyed being in here," she quipped when her session was done.
If Patrick eats a hot dog, then maybe she’ll return to the media center after Sunday’s race.
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Six-time champ: ‘I have no plans or desire to make a change’
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MARTINSVILLE, Va. — There will eventually come a time when crew chief Chad Knaus is not calling the shots for Jimmie Johnson. The driver knows that day is coming, but don’t expect him to be the one making the call.
Acknowledging that the pair won’t be together forever, Johnson reiterated his commitment to Knaus on Friday morning at Martinsville Speedway, site of this weekend’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race — and the No. 48 team’s best track on the circuit.
"That day is out there," Johnson said. "I think that a crew chief’s life span is much shorter than a driver’s. They live in dog years and drivers can carry on much longer. I’ve been accused of being loyal to a fault in the past, but that’s me.
"But I have no plans or desire to make a change. When Chad decides he’s had enough of being the guy on the box, it’ll be his decision to step down. As far as I’m concerned, we’ve made it 13 years with this thing, and I want to see it go as long as it can. … This is really more of a timeframe when Chad says someday, ‘I’ve put in my time here as crew chief, and I need to slow down a little bit.’ "
The two are perhaps the most well-known crew chief-driver duo in the garage, and they certainly are the most successful. Knaus was hired as Johnson’s crew chief in the driver’s first full-time season at Hendrick Motorsports (2002), and he’s been on top of the box ever since, save for four races in both 2006 and 2007.
Knaus’ 67 career wins are the most among active crew chiefs, those wild Victory Lane celebrations serving as a foil to the often brusque manner in which the 43-year-old conducts his business.
Another grandfather clock trophy — they already have eight of them — is at stake for the two this weekend, but a bigger trophy is already out of play. The No. 48 team finds itself this weekend in the foreign position of being at Johnson’s best statistical track while no longer in contention for this year’s championship.
Johnson was one of four drivers eliminated from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup following the Contender Round, his push for a seventh title finished just past the halfway point of the postseason.
While Johnson has three wins this year, it came in a four-race stretch before the summer, and the postseason dominance we’ve seen from the No. 48 camp didn’t materialize this time. A 40th-place result at Kansas in the Contender Round opener resulted in a win-or-bust mentality for the group, yet it only yielded finishes of 17th at Charlotte and 24th last week at Talladega.
The Charlotte race was particularly frustrating, as evidenced by Johnson and Knaus bickering over the radio in a moment of chatter that was picked up and broadcast on ABC.
"We’re honest with each other and know each other well enough to work through the bad times when it’s tough," Johnson said. "It might not be pretty, and you may have heard things on the radio that got your attention, but we’re like family. And we can fight like family. We can call each other out on that stuff."
Being ousted from the postseason, the best Johnson can finish is fifth in the final standings. He’s only finished worse than fifth once in his career, a sixth-place effort in 2011 that ended his run of five consecutive series championships.
"I can say that leaving Kansas and Charlotte … that was when I came to grips with not being a championship contender," Johnson said. "… It wasn’t fun leaving Kansas or Charlotte. It was relatively dark and not a lot of sunlight floating around. …
"I truly believe that those moments make you stronger and make you dig deeper. It’s great medicine for the 48. I don’t want to be in this position. But it’s great medicine to sit and watch this championship unfold. It’s going to motivate me, Chad and the team — all of us on the 48 team. We’ll come back next year and be ready to roll."
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