Friday Sonoma Notebook
Kurt Busch hopes for “gentlemen’s agreement’ in Sonoma qualifying
June 21, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
SONOMA,
Calif.—The new road course qualifying format for Sunday’s Toyota Save
Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway throws variables into the equation the NASCAR
Sprint Cup drivers haven’t
had to consider in the past.
With
cars qualifying in groups, rather than a single car for a single lap,
will the fastest cars be able to get a clean run around the 1.99-mile
track? Kurt Busch believes
the Cup drivers will have an understanding during the qualifying laps.
“When
we qualify, everybody that’s going to be in that fast group—and
hopefully I’ll be in that group—we’ll just do one lap, and we’re all
going to pull off after the finish
line right behind the grandstands in Turn 1,” Busch told the NASCAR
Wire Service.
“You
don’t have to go the rest of the track and mosey around. You can get off
the track quickly. You want to go out behind a guy that going to know
to use his mirror and respect
the guys behind him after he’s done his lap.”
Busch
got his wish. With a lap in the first practice session at 93.430 mph,
fourth behind Marcos Ambrose’s 94.049, Busch will qualify in the final
group, with qualifying order
set by practice speeds. All else being equal, the pole for Sunday’s
race should come from the final group.
That
wasn’t the case last year during Busch’s debut at Road America in a
Nationwide Series race. Because he was commuting between Sonoma and
Elkhart Lake, Wis., Busch’s first
track time at Road America was during qualifying, and the group-based
format for time trials—already in place in the Nationwide Series—hurt
him.
“I was
on my third lap trying to post a lap, because it was my first trip to
Road America,” Busch said. “I didn’t even practice at Road America last
year. I just went there
to qualify and to race, so I’m using qualifying as a practice session,
and a couple of guys were in my way in the Carousel. It wasn’t their
fault, but I needed that track time to get the lap time.”
With
his momentum broken, Busch qualified 22nd. At Sonoma, however, he
expects the Cup drivers to be more cognizant of fellow drivers.
“The
Cup guys seem to yield to each other a little more easily, with the
knowledge of where they are on the track and still somebody trying to
post a lap,” said Busch, who
finished third at Sonoma last year in the No. 51 Phoenix Racing
Chevrolet. “The guys I had trouble with at Road America were rookies.”
That doesn’t mean there aren’t potential complications.
If a
driver makes a mistake on his first lap, he or she has the option of
trying a second or even a third, time permitting. Each group will have
five minutes to complete qualifying,
starting with the green flag to the first car in the group.
“If you
make a mistake, it gives you a second chance,” Ambrose said. “In the
original one-lap format, if you made a mistake and you lost a second,
you could lose 20 spots on
the starting grid. With this format, if you make a mistake, you’ve got a
second lap to make amends.
“You
may not get the pole, and you may not go as fast as you could have on
the first lap, but you’re still going to minimize the position loss.
You’ve probably get a little
more indicative lineup of cars based off their speed, because last year
there was a bit of randomness, if you made a mistake.”
BEST PRACTICES
There
was a real sense of urgency in Friday’s first Cup practice, as drivers
vied to be part of the final qualifying group on Saturday afternoon.
Marcos Ambrose ran 12 laps
during the session and posted the fastest speed (94.049 mph) on his
12th lap.
With
the five quickest drivers in first practice comprising the final
qualifying group, that group (No. 8) will include Ambrose, Juan Pablo
Montoya (93.890 mph), Casey Mears
(93.535 mph), Kurt Busch (93.430 mph) and Jamie McMurray (93.421 mph).
Group
No. 7 includes Greg Biffle, Brad Keselowski, defending race winner Clint
Bowyer, Martin Truex Jr. and Joey Logano. Series leader Jimmie Johnson,
who spun during practice,
will lead group No. 4 to the green flag.
UNCOMFORTABLE FEEL
Danica
Patrick thought the combination of seven IndyCar starts at Sonoma and
solid performances in NASCAR Nationwide Series road course races would
help her in the NASCAR Sprint
Cup car Friday.
Instead, she fought an unruly No. 10 Chevrolet throughout practice.
“I had
hoped that being here before would have made it a little better for me
out there, but it just didn’t,” Patrick told reporters Friday between
practices. “The car just
didn’t feel very good. It just feels like it’s all over the place—it’s
loose, it’s tight, it’s loose, it’s tight.
“It just doesn’t feel very settled, so I feel that we still have a lot of work to do.”
Patrick
was 31st fastest in opening practice, which puts her sixth in group No.
3 for Saturday’s time trials, right behind her nemesis, Jacques
Villeneuve, who dumped Patrick
out of a top-five finish at Road America last year.
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