NASCAR will examine gates, fencing and car construction in aftermath of Daytona wreck
March 2, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE,
Ariz.—The relative strength of crossover gates and the construction of
the No. 32 Turner Motorsports Chevrolet driven by Kyle Larson are two
primary areas NASCAR
will examine in its continuing analysis of last Saturday's crash that
injured 28 spectators at Daytona International Speedway.
Larson's
car flew into the frontstretch fence at Daytona as part of a 13-car
wreck on the final lap of the Drive4COPD 300 Nationwide Series race.
Debris from the crash, including
a tire from Larson's car with the wheel assembly attached injured the
spectators, two critically.
In
updating reporters on the analysis of the wreck and the conditions of
those injured, Steve O'Donnell, NASCAR senior vice president of racing
operations, said all but two
had been released from Halifax Health Medical Center in Daytona.
"I
think you all heard from Halifax Health that (there are) two remaining
patients in the hospital, but we're optimistic on their release as
well," O'Donnell said Saturday
in the Phoenix International Raceway media center.
Larson's
car had remained in Daytona since the wreck but now is being
transported to NASCAR's research-and-development center in Concord, N.C.
for further examination.
"The 32
car and the parts have obviously been secured by NASCAR," O'Donnell
said. "Unlike other incidents where just a car and a driver was
involved, and we immediately bring
that car back to the R&D center, in this case that car remained in
Daytona.
"The
purpose of that was to allow the folks from Daytona and their experts to
take a look at the car, to see what, if anything, they could glean from
that investigation and
apply that to their initial thoughts looking at the fencing. The car's
in the process of being brought up to the R&D center."
O'Donnell
noted that most of the safety elements in the car did their job. Larson
walked away from the wreck, as did all other drivers involved.
"The
car, however, got up into the fence," O'Donnell said. "So our focus is
going to be, if the elements in the car did their job, now what do we
need to do in looking at the
impact to the fence, what happened when that car impacted with the
fence, with parts getting away."
NASCAR
will bring the race team to the R&D center to analyze and discuss
the construction of the car. Using video technology to reconstruct the
wreck, NASCAR will reassemble
and examine the car.
"We'll
go through each part of the car," O'Donnell said. "(We) want to look at
how everything held up that was in the car, the cockpit, the tethers.
There's been talk of 'Did
the tethers break apart or not?' They did not. However, when you look
at the car, obviously, the part that the car was tethered to sheared the
car...
"We've
tethered a number of different things, as we've learned, and added
things to the safety aspects of the car, but what do we need to do in
addition to that when we look
at this accident specifically."
NASCAR
also will enlist the services of outside experts, including Dr. Dean
Sicking, director of the Midwest roadside safety facility at the
University of Nebraska.
Long-time
car owners Rick Hendrick and Roger Penske both commented after the
wreck that they had never seen the front clip of a stock car sheared off
the way Larson's was.
O'Donnell said it was too early to draw conclusions, and said NASCAR
would pay particular attention to the crossover gate that took the brunt
of the impact with Larson's car.
"I can
tell you specific focus (will be) on the gate and placement of gates,
particularly as it pertains to Talladega (NASCAR's only other
restrictor-plate track)," O'Donnell
said. "But it's still early.
"That's
part of the process where we bring the team in and talk about car
construction, then bring our experts, Tom Gideon (NASCAR's director of
safety at the R&D center),
John Patalak (NASCAR's senior manager of safety engineering), to look
at that in tandem with the team and see what might have happened."
Fencing
at all racetracks also will be a focus, but the first emphasis will be
on Talladega, which will host Nationwide and Sprint Cup races May 4-5.
"Anything we can learn in the immediate future that can be applied to Talladega, we'll do that," O'Donnell said.
The
sanctioning body also will look at the wreck earlier in the Daytona
Nationwide race that sidelined Richard Petty Motorsports driver Michael
Annett, who underwent surgery
this week for a fractured and dislocated sternum.
Annett has been released from the hospital, but he is out of the No. 43 car indefinitely as he recuperates.
"(That's)
an injury we have not seen for some time now," O'Donnell said. "We're
going to look through that car ... That's something we have to take a
hard look at and make
sure things worked for Michael. Anything we can improve on we will."
NEW TIRE COMBINATION SUITS JEFF GORDON
Sprint
Cup drivers face a lot of unknowns at Phoenix, not the least of which
are the new Gen-6 cars and a new Goodyear tire featuring compound
changes on both sides of the
car designed to provide more grip.
As far as Jeff Gordon is concerned, the changes are positive.
"I was
very pleased with everything I felt out there," Gordon said. "I thought
the tire and the track conditions were not as edgy and unpredictable as
what we've seen in the
past here, which tells me that the pavement is aging, which is a good
thing.
"The
tire...luckily Goodyear came and did some testing here and found that
now we've lost a little grip in this track, and now we can soften this
tire up and maybe we can have
some falloff over a longer run. So, everything I think has come
together pretty nicely."
Goodyear
based its tire choice on a test last Oct. 23-24, with seven Cup drivers
participating: Jamie McMurray, Brad Keselowski, Denny Hamlin, Paul
Menard, Kurt Busch, Tony
Stewart and Carl Edwards.
SHORT STROKES
Kurt
Busch spent Saturday's first practice session getting his backup No. 78
Chevrolet SS up to speed. Busch wrecked his primary car on his second
qualifying lap Friday, when
a coolant systems part failure spewed water beneath his tires, causing
Busch to lose control of the car and hit the outside wall. By the end of
the first practice session, Busch had the backup car up to 17th on the
speed chart, but he'll have to start from
the rear Sunday because of the equipment change. ...
After
winning the pole on Friday, Mark Martin led both Cup practice sessions
on Saturday. A victory in Sunday's Subway Fresh Fit 500 would make
Martin, 54, the oldest driver
ever to win a race at NASCAR's top level. ...
Danica
Patrick spent both Saturday practices searching in vain for speed in her
No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevy. The Daytona 500 pole winner, who
qualified 40th Friday at
Phoenix, was 35th fastest in morning practice and 34th in Happy Hour.
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