Disappointed Earnhardt fails to capitalize on winning opportunity
Sept. 29, 2013
By Seth Livingstone
Special to the NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER,
Del. – If not for Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jimmie Johnson and a
couple pit road snafus, Dale Earnhardt Jr. would likely have been
celebrating
his 20th career Sprint Cup victory and a dominant weekend at the
Monster Mile.
Instead,
Earnhardt settled for a second-place finish in Sunday's AAA 400 at
Dover International Speedway, leaving somewhat dejected, but with a
positive outlook for the remaining seven races and the knowledge that
his equipment is plenty fast enough to get the job done.
"I'm
just real disappointed," said Earnhardt, who had earned the pole after
finishing sixth the previous week at Loudon, N.H. "We had an awesome
car. These are two of the best cars I've had all year.
"It's
probably harder to run second than it is fifth or 10th. When you have a
car like we had today – and you don't get good cars every week – you
like to capitalize. I've got to thank the team. But running second is
no better than running 10th. I'd like to get a trophy here, soon."
It's
been more than a year and 48 starts since Earnhardt's last trip to
Victory Lane, last June 17 at Michigan. His only victory in 28 career
Cup
starts at Dover came in 2001.
"In
the last couple of weeks, we've been able to really show what our team
is capable of," Earnhardt said. "We've been really quick on the sheet
every day – fast in practice. The changes we're making seem to be
working and we're going in the right direction. I feel like when we get
it right, we can compete and we can win. We came really close today."
Earnhardt
said he had no one to blame but himself for surrendering control of
Sunday's race after leading 76 of the first 117 laps.
Attempting
to pit under green at that point, he missed the commitment cone to pit
lane and was forced to make an extra circuit of the one-mile oval.
That miscalculation dropped him from first to eighth, 9.3 second behind
Johnson.
"I
take responsibility for getting a little too eager coming onto pit road
for that green flag stop," Earnhardt said. "That track position is
really
important and I gave that up early in the race with that mistake coming
onto pit road. It cost us a shot at the win."
On
Lap 313 of 400, Earnhardt again was a bit slow in the pits, losing time
behind Mark Martin on entry. Running second at the time, he dropped to
fourth.
"The
other pit stop wasn't as big a deal," Earnhardt said. "I came on pit
road about as hard I could. Mark was running maybe 5-10 miles an hour
slow in the first couple of segments (of the pit lane). I don't know if
that cost us a ton of time."
In the end, those particular seconds might not have mattered as Johnson went on to lead 243 laps.
Even so, Johnson was very much aware of Earnhardt in his rearview mirror.
In
fact, after a caution flag for debris with 29 laps to go prevented race
leaders from requiring splash-and-go pit stops in the closing laps, a
potentially game-changing decision by crew chief Steve Letarte gave
Earnhardt one more shot at catching Johnson. While Johnson took only
right-side tires, Earnhardt's team opted for four.
"I
thought that four tires were going to be enough to get him, but he is
just that fast around here," Earnhardt said. "I was definitely going to
do whatever I could to win if I could get within reach. I just couldn't
get to him.
Earnhardt restarted fourth, but quickly passed teammate Jeff Gordon and Matt Kenseth to provide Johnson's stiffest challenge.
"I
had a fast enough car to get back to the leaders," said Earnhardt, a
distant 10th in the point standings, 57 behind Matt Kenseth. "But you've
got to be the leader on that last start. Most of these races are won by
the guy leading it at the last restart or after the last round of pit
stops. That wasn't us today."
Johnson knew he had his hands full.
"Junior
drove a whale of a race. He kept me honest there at the end," Johnson
said. "I saw him miss pit road early in the race. That couldn't have
helped his overall cause. He finally got back up to the front and was
awfully strong.
"I
ran my guts out to stay ahead of him. Any switch that I could flip in
the car – maybe a fan that could help turn my brake bias - anything I
could
turn, twist or pull I did. I just drove the heck out of the thing to be
able to keep him at bay. That opening 10-12 laps (of the final run) was
really a pressure-packed situation for me. At that point I was able to
stretch (the lead) a little bit and get back
to running a smart race."
With Earnhardt leading 80 laps and Gordon three, Hendrick Motorsports drivers set the pace for 326 of the 400 laps.
"Jimmie
is so tough here, it's no surprise that he won," said Gordon, who
vaulted three places in the standings and trails Kenseth by 39 points.
"It was a great job by Junior, too. That was fun to watch."
Just not real fun for the driver who finished second.
"Real
proud of the company," said Earnhardt, who has 16 top-10 finishes this
season. "(But) we were going to have a helluva party if we could have
got to (Johnson). ... I'll be honest with you: It sucks to lose,
regardless of who wins."
No comments:
Post a Comment