Thursday Notebook
Dale Earnhardt Jr. on Richmond: Media and fans can connect the dots
Sept. 12, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CHICAGO -- Accessibility has always been a hallmark of NASCAR racing.
Unlike
what is said privately in dugouts, huddles and locker rooms,
communications between drivers, crew chiefs, spotters and car owners
are available in real time and in replay to fans, media and NASCAR
officials alike.
That,
says Dale Earnhardt Jr., is why it's easy to reconstruct Saturday's
late-race events at Richmond, specifically those that led
to a devastating penalty levied against Michael Waltrip Racing and
Martin Truex Jr.'s ouster from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
"I
think those spotters and those crew chiefs and those drivers -- some
drivers -- don't realize in the heat of the moment exactly how
accessible all this information is," Earnhardt said Thursday during
Chase Media Day at the Navy Pier. "That's another thing, as much as
NASCAR's judgment, I think will be a deterrent.
"No
matter how much you think you can camouflage this or pull these smoke
and mirrors, the media and the fans can connect the dots."
Earnhardt
also suggested that data mapping, made possible by NASCAR's switch to
Electronic Fuel Injection last year, could provide insight
into Clint Bowyer's spin with seven laps left in Saturday's race, the
incident that set in motion MWR's manipulation of the outcome.
Bowyer's
spin off Turn 4 deprived Ryan Newman of a probable victory and elevated
Truex into a Wild Card position -- before NASCAR's
penalty cost him the Chase spot. During his media avaibility Thursday,
Bowyer continued to dodge questions about whether the spin was
intentional.
"If
we needed to know what happened, there's so much technology, you'd be
able to figure it out yourself," Earnhardt said. "We have
all this data. You can look at how he drove the car through the corner a
hundred times and watch his brake and throttle and watch it that lap
and see what you think.
"We
don't have to get the pitchforks out and go after Clint Bowyer. I'm
just saying, if you wanted to know what happened, it would be
pretty easy to figure that out without needing Clint to admit to what
he did."
LOGANO: "I DESERVE TO BE IN THE CHASE"
Despite
controversy that surfaced Wednesday involving the No. 22 Penske Racing
Ford team of Joey Logano and the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports
Ford of David Gilliland, Logano was adamant that he deserves his place
in the Chase -- because he earned it.
"We've
got one win and eight top fives and 14 top-10 finishes," Logano told
reporters Thursday during Chase Media Day interviews at
the Navy Pier. "If you look at those numbers, that is every bit of the
top three or four that have happened this season.
"I don't feel bad about being in the Chase at all. We deserve to be in it, if you look at those numbers."
In
a story originally reported by FoxSports1, radio chatter from the No.
38 team suggested a deal between Front Row and Penske to give
Logano a position at the finish of Saturday night's race. There was no
corresponding radio traffic from the No. 22 team.
Logano
finished 22nd and Gilliland 23rd, but as it turned out, Logano didn't
need that point to qualify for the Chase, after the Michael
Waltrip Racing cars of Brian Vickers and Clint Bowyer also finished
behind the No. 22 -- by design.
NASCAR
hit MWR with the largest monetary fine in the history of the sport --
$300,000 -- and assessed points penalties that knocked
MWR driver Martin Truex Jr. out of the Chase in favor of Ryan Newman.
For Logano, the attention arising from the controversy is clearly unwanted, but he's used to it.
"I've
been the focal point all year on something," said Logano, who was part
of the wreck at Fontana, Calif., in late March that sidelined
Denny Hamlin for four races with a fractured vertebra. "I'm used to it
at this point. I just go with the flow.
"I
guess I've learned a lot this year and experienced a lot. It just makes
you stronger. They say it's character-building. I'm a hell
of a character now."
EDWARDS SEES SILVER LINING
Carl
Edwards, who won Saturday's race and finished the first 26 NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series events as the series leader, hopes the flap
over the closing laps at Richmond can be a net positive for the sport.
"There
are still a lot of things in the air, and I don't personally know where
all the lines are," Edwards said Thursday during Chase
Media Day. "And so I think that what we will see here in the next few
weeks… we'll see some real clarity and direction on what is morally
acceptable and right or wrong, but also what NASCAR is OK with.
"I
think that will be important. The other thing is, I hope we see that
this doesn't diminish our sport. I hope it isn't a negative.
I hope it makes people interested in the complexities of our sport,
that there is a lot more going on here than just guys driving around in a
circle. That's what I hope."
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