Dale Earnhardt Jr. dissatisfied with his fifth-place run at Pocono
Aug. 4, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LONG
POND, Pa.--Every top-five finish brings Dale Earnhardt Jr. a step
closer to a locked-in spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint
Cup, but the driver of the No. 88 Chevrolet SS didn’t seem particularly
happy with his fifth-place run in Sunday’s GoBowling.com 400 at Pocono
Raceway.\
Earnhardt
fought an annoying vibration in his car all weekend long but he
solidified his hold on fifth place in the Cup standings with
five races left before the Chase field is set at Richmond.
Still, "overjoyed" would not be an accurate description of Earnhardt’s mood when he climbed from his car after the race.
"We
changed every part in the car but the engine," Earnhardt said of the
efforts of crew chief Steve Letarte and the 88 crew to solve
the vibration issue. "I think we helped it a little bit today."
Earnhardt had qualified 25th with the same chassis he drove to a third-place finish at Pocono in June, but he gained track
position through clever pit strategy and kept it.
"I
felt good coming in here--thought we might win the race--but came up a
little short," Earnhardt said. "We changed (the car) a little
bit from the last time we were here to try and get it better. I don’t
think we did.
"But
I felt pretty good this weekend, real confident. But the weather set us
back (with the rain that washed out both Saturday practices),
and then all that vibration stuff… So we just had to shoot in the dark
(Sunday)."
IF IT WASN’T FOR BAD LUCK…
Trouble
continued to haunt Denny Hamlin, who started ninth at Pocono but
completed just 14 laps before his race ended with a hard crash
in Turn 3.
It was the fifth DNF (did not finish) for Hamlin this season and the third in the last five races, all because of accidents.
Well,
our car was a handful," said Hamlin, who missed four races earlier this
season after fracturing his first lumbar vertebra at Fontana,
Calif. "I tried to fight through it until that competition caution."
Instead, Hamlin
was the competition caution, originally scheduled for Lap 20 but superseded by Hamlin’s wreck on Lap 14.
"I
was getting run over from behind and just holding up traffic," Hamlin
said. "I just let off in the corner, and it just breaks loose.
It’s what we’ve been fighting really the last seven weeks or so--just
cannot get into the corners in our cars."
The
wreck was particularly galling to Hamlin, who won twice from the pole
at Pocono in his 2006 rookie season and added two more wins
at the Tricky Triangle thereafter.
"I
know how to drive this race track, and we have just not hit on what it
takes here these last couple of months to get our speed where
it needed to be," Hamlin said. "We were struggling again today."
SMOKE RISES FROM PENALTY
Tony
Stewart’s No. 14 Chevy was better than a ninth-place car. Then again,
the ninth-place finish wasn’t bad, given that Stewart was
relegated to the rear of the field for speeding on entry to pit road on
Lap 54.
From
that point, the race was an uphill fight for the three-time champion,
but Stewart credited crew chief Steve Addington with strategic
calls that helped regain track position.
"Good
strategy by the crew chief, because the driver screwed up today,"
Stewart said. "I got us the pit road speeding penalty that put
us back there."
Stewart was running sixth late in the race, but a pair of cautions in the last 11 laps cost him.
"Definitely
didn’t need the last two cautions," he said. "We were going to run
sixth or seventh there. If it went green, we would have
stayed there; instead we end up with a ninth."
Stewart remained 11th in the Cup standings with one victory, leaving him in the first of two provisional wild card positions.
"We had a solid day, and we’ve just got to keep clicking them off like this," Stewart said.
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