Saturday Watkins Glen Notebook
Will Tony Stewart’s accident have a chilling effect on outside racing?
Aug. 10, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
WATKINS
GLEN, N.Y.—Tony Stewart’s broken bones have sparked intense debate
about the wisdom of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers indulging
in extracurricular racing.
Stewart
broke the tibia and fibula in his right leg during a Sprint Car
accident Monday night in Iowa. After two surgeries, Stewart
is recuperating in a North Carolina hospital and is sidelined
indefinitely from his primary ride in Stewart-Haas Racing’s No. 14
Chevrolet SS.
The
accident almost certainly will cost Stewart a spot in the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup and deprive him of the opportunity to
battle for a fourth championship in the series. Conceivably, it could
cost him the rest of the season.
Though
much has been written that is critical of Stewart’s frequent racing
outside the Cup series, consensus among racers in the NASCAR
garage has been overwhelmingly supportive of the driver nicknamed
"Smoke."
Jimmie Johnson, a five-time Cup champion, expressed the prevailing opinion Friday at Watkins Glen.
"I
look at the coverage and opinions that are flying around, and it’s
troubled me some to see people giving him a hard time about his
decisions to race other vehicles," Johnson said. "We always praise him
for his contributions to the motorsports world and his ability to drive
and race anything and to own all these different types of vehicles.
"And
then you look at the race tracks that he owns and his involvement with.
The guy has done so much for our sport, and of course we
don’t want to see him injured, but I’ve been disappointed that people
have given him a hard time over it."
Ultimately,
though, Stewart’s accident may give major sponsors more reason to try
to restrict drivers from engaging in outside racing
that could sideline them from their primary responsibilities.
"It
might," Johnson acknowledged. "You have an opportunity to evaluate
after you go through a situation like this and
I’ll be interested, like all, to see what Tony’s sponsors say and then
clearly, (Stewart-Haas co-owner) Gene Haas’s opinion on it all. But
again, they knew the risks going into it on the front side.
"So,
I wouldn’t expect a huge change and I really hope there wouldn’t be. On
my side, my sponsor (Lowe’s) has been
very supportive of other series that I’ve wanted to race, and it’s
really been my decision to not race other events; just family time and
to be around and to experience that stuff and not be racing all the
time."
Johnson believes any shift in the attitude toward extracurricular racing may be confined to Stewart’s specific situation.
"I
don’t think it’s going to change the environment for other drivers and
sponsors, because we have an approval process
that we’ve always had to go through," Johnson said. "I mean, this
doesn’t open up something new that hasn’t been discussed or thought
about amongst driver/owner contracts or driver/sponsor contracts.
"Any
time we want to run another vehicle, we have to go through the process
and get approval. So I don’t think it’s
going to change that. Tony’s role might change a little bit. I hope it
doesn’t, again. But that would be really just their team looking at it."
COMFORT LEVEL
Marcos Ambrose is at home on a road course. There’s no argument there. All six of his NASCAR victories—two in Sprint
Cup and four in Nationwide—have come on road courses, five of them at Watkins Glen.
On Sunday, Ambrose will try for his third straight Cup win at the Glen—as the pole winner. To establish his credentials
in the full range of NASCAR racing, however, Ambrose must prove he can win on oval tracks, and that’s been more problematic.
"It’s
a question we talk about a lot, that I can come to a road course and
generally run top-10 every time we come,
yet we go to ovals and we’re more hit-and-miss," Ambrose said. "The
only way I can actually square that away in my mind is that, when you go
oval racing, the setups of the cars are obviously very, very
important. When you go road racing, it’s more about just
getting the car even and not doing anything crazy.
"For
me, I know when the car is sort of not feeling right (on a road course)
that I can get it close, and then I’ll
just do the rest. When I go oval racing, the cars are so twisted and
contorted with their setups that if you miss it by a half-pound of tire
pressure or 20 pounds of spring rate – or something like that – you can
have a terrible day."
With an extensive background in V8 Supercars in his native Australia, Ambrose knows the precise feel he wants to have
in a road course car.
"For
me, when you go road racing, it’s not so much about setting the car up
to the very edge,’ he said. "It’s more
about just making it easy to drive, and then I’ll do the rest. So I
guess that gives me some confidence, because I’ve been to these tracks
several times and run well. I know what I need to feel and so I’m able
to get there quickly, probably quicker than most."
ATTACKING ATTITUDE
Jeff Gordon was quick to cite another reason for Ambrose’s prowess at road racing.
"What
makes him so good, not to mention his road racing experience over the
years, is his aggressiveness," Gordon said. "He’s
just so aggressive. While I think sometimes that holds him back on the
ovals, it pays off big time here. That’s going to be tough to beat."
Gordon also likes Ambrose’s chances of a three-peat at Watkins Glen, a higher-speed venue than Sonoma, the more technical
of the two road courses on the Sprint Cup circuit.
"I
think it was interesting, because we were at Sonoma and he doesn’t do
as well at Sonoma as he does here because
this track, it loves aggressiveness," Gordon said. "Sonoma does not
like aggressiveness. I think you’re going to see him be extremely fast
this weekend. He was fast at Sonoma, but just the fall-off was pretty
big there where here that’s not the case.
"I think he’s going to be very, very difficult to beat."
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