Toyota teams leave engine woes behind
Mar. 10, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS
VEGAS, Nev.—In the first two races of the NASCAR Sprint Cup season,
reliability was a huge issue for the engines in the Toyotas of Joe Gibbs
Racing and Michael Waltrip
Racing.
Figuratively speaking, blown power plants in the Sprint Cup Camrys created more noise than a July 4 fireworks celebration.
Though
it might be too early to put those problems in the “solved” category,
Toyota Racing Development, which partners with Gibbs to produce the Cup
engines, had reason to
rejoice on Sunday. Matt Kenseth won the Kobalt Tools 400 at Las Vegas
Motor Speedway and Kyle Busch ran fourth—with the TRD engines lasting
the full 400 miles.
“We've
had a tough couple of weeks, as everybody knows, and so I really
appreciate our partner, Toyota,” team owner Joe Gibbs said after the
race. “In tough times, everybody
kind of bands together around our place, and we start fighting and we
worked our way out of some tough things.
“I felt
like today we had three good cars. Two of them were caught speeding on
pit road (Busch and Denny Hamlin). I think Denny got caught so late it
was hard for him to get
back on sync.”
Hamlin finished 15th, but the consolation prize was that his engine was running at full strength at the finish.
KENSETH FRUSTRATES KAHNE
Kasey Kahne thought he’d be able to get around Matt Kenseth when it counted—and why not?
After
all, Kahne led a race-high 114 laps on Sunday and earlier in the race
had made short work of the strong cars of Kyle Busch and Jimmie Johnson
when he caught them in traffic.
Kahne
had taken right-side tires on Lap 226, while Kenseth opted for track
position and took fuel only, beating the other lead-lap cars out of
pits. With fresher rubber, Kahne
was convinced he’d pass Kenseth eventually, but it didn’t happen, and
Kenseth celebrated his 41st birthday with a race win.
“I just
felt like I could have got there, the way the car handled throughout
the race and how I could turn down in the center of the corner and carry
a ton of speed doing it,”
Kahne said. “I felt really confident, that when I got to him I'd be
able to do that again like I had raced with Kyle and Jimmie earlier in
the race.
“And
when I got to Matt, I couldn't do it, so I was trying to brake in and
mess with anything that I could, lift early, lift late, try it all, and
just couldn't find a way
past him. He just did a really good job of keeping his momentum up,
keeping his speed. He was cutting across me off the corner. He just put
up a great battle and pulled it off on told tires.”
PASSING FANCY
NASCAR’s new Gen-6 Sprint Cup race car racked up some impressive statistics in Sunday’s race.
The
official race reports reads 22 lead changes among eight drivers, with
the 22 lead changes being the most at Las Vegas since 2007, the year
before the Gen-5 car (Car of
Tomorrow) was introduced at intermediate race tracks.
Beyond
those numbers, NASCAR’s loop data (stats measured at the 10 scoring
loops around the 1.5-mile track) showed a phenomenal 2,342 green-flag
passes throughout the race,
compared with 1,301 last year.
In
addition, there were 31 green-flag passes for the lead (including
intra-lap passes scored at loops other than the finish line), the most
since NASCAR started recording loop
data in 2005.
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