With top-35 rule gone, Joey Logano is focused on Daytona qualifying
Feb. 14, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- Don't think for a minute that NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
drivers haven't thought through the ramifications of the
new 2013 qualifying rules -- particularly as they apply to the Daytona
500.
NASCAR's
biggest mulligan, the rule that guaranteed starting spots in each race
to the top 35 cars in the owner standings, is gone this
year.
That alone will force such drivers as Joey Logano, who inherits a No. 22 Penske Racing Ford that's 21st in owner points,
to focus more on Sunday's qualifying session than he has in the past.
"Quite
a bit; quite a bit, for sure," Logano told the NASCAR Wire Service on
Thursday during NASCAR Media Day at Daytona International
Speedway. "We've got to go out there and qualify pretty good, to help
ourselves in case something dumb happens in the Duel and make sure we're
in."
After
time trials on Sunday determine the two front-row starting positions,
two Budweiser Duel 150-mile qualifying races on Thursday
will cement the first 32 drivers in the Daytona 500 field. The
second-through-sixth fastest cars from time trials that don't transfer
from the Duels occupy positions 33-36.
The
final seven spots are provisionals based on owner points, with position
43 going to the most recent past champion not otherwise
qualified, if needed.
So
Logano knows that, if he doesn't post a strong qualifying time, and a
handful of cars ahead of his in the owner standings fall victim
to major wrecks in either of the Duels and gobble up the provisionals,
he could miss the Daytona 500.
Compounding
the issue was a relative lack of speed in both Penske entries during
Preseason Thunder testing at Daytona in January. Accordingly,
Penske has invested in wind tunnel time and refinements to the building
process for its new Gen-6 Ford, all in a quest for added speed.
"We've
had the car in the tunnel working on that, trying make sure we can
qualify up towards the front," Logano said. "We've made a
lot of adjustments on our cars since the test down here. We need quite a
bit of speed.
"Obviously,
we've got a different car, because that one got destroyed (in a
pack-drafting wreck in January), but we planned on having
a different car anyway. We feel like there are some pretty big gains
there, but I'm sure everyone else is going to have some pretty big
gains, too. I just hope our gains are better than theirs, and we go out
there and run good."
With
the top-35 rule in effect, qualifying at restrictor-plate race tracks
used to be a formality. Under the current format, a fast
qualifying speed is an insurance policy against missing the race.
"Before,
we didn't really worry about qualifying," Logano acknowledged. "When we
came to superspeedways and didn't really qualify that
well, we were like, 'It doesn't matter -- we'll just go out there and
race.'
"It
does matter a little bit now, especially in my situation where the 22
car is in points. If the perfect storm was to brew, we could
be in trouble, so we've just got to be aware of the situation and
what's going on. So we're just dotting all our 'I's' and crossing all
our 'T's' and making sure nothing dumb happens."
REMARKABLE RESTRAINT
Impatience is a hallmark of most NASCAR drivers, whether it involves competing on the track or advancing their careers.
Nelson
Piquet Jr. is the exception. The 27-year-old Brazilian driver, the son
of three-time Formula One champion Nelson Piquet is quick
on the asphalt, but his career moves are remarkably deliberate and well
thought-out.
Piquet
doesn't believe he's ready for a Cup ride. In fact, he had reservations
about making the jump with Turner Scott Motorsports from
the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series to the NASCAR Nationwide Series
this year.
"A
lot of people don't think so, but I think I'm a down-to-earth guy,"
Piquet told the NASCAR Wire Service during Thursday's NASCAR
Media Day at Daytona. "I know where I should be, where my place is, and
I don't think my place is Cup right now. I'm sure I want to do a few
races here and there -- a road course, and start maybe doing an oval
here and there in the Cup series -- but I know
there's still a lot to learn."
Piquet's
plan was to run a third full season in the Truck Series, but a change
in his management and the addition of sponsorship accelerated
his progress.
Piquet
won four races in NASCAR divisions in 2012 (at Michigan and Las Vegas
in Trucks, at Road America in Nationwide and at Bristol
in K&N Pro East). Nevertheless, he had second thoughts about making
the move to Nationwide.
"We
had worked the whole year," Piquet said, "and when we decided, 'OK,
we're doing Trucks again next year,' around September or October,
we started planning everything for this year, building trucks and
getting ready -- even schedules and a testing plan, all kinds of things
-- because I really wanted to put my name out there and win the
championship and multiple races.
"But
the opportunity came up… It was hard for me, because, in a certain way,
I still felt like I had to maybe show something else. OK,
I won some races. One was a mileage race, one was a K&N and a
Nationwide, too, but I think I would have wanted to win four or five
races in a single year to say, 'Hey, OK, now I want to move up.'"
SHORT STROKES
Reporters
at Media Day gave Danica Patrick enough respite from questions about
her romance with fellow Cup rookie Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
to let her talk about her one-race Nationwide Series deal with Turner
Scott Motorsports. Patrick will drive the No. 34 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet
Camaro in the Feb. 23 DRIVE4COPD 300 at Daytona. As of now, that's her
only firm NNS commitment of the season…
Stenhouse
had several of the day's best one-liners. Responding to Cup champion
Brad Keselowski's contention that a Patrick-Stenhouse
breakup would be more interesting than a Patrick-Stenhouse
relationship, Stenhouse retorted, "Coming from a guy who never had a
girlfriend? I don't think so."
In
one respect, Stenhouse said, it doesn't matter whether he or Patrick
wins the Cup rookie-of-the-year title this year. "At least we
both get to go to the banquet," he said.
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