Friday New Hampshire Notebook
With NAPA leaving MWR, Martin Truex Jr. can shop for new ride
Sept. 20, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON,
N.H.—Team owner Michael Waltrip intends to field three Sprint Cup cars
next year, but with NAPA pulling its sponsorship from the No. 56 Michael
Waltrip Racing Toyota
at season's end, driver Martin Truex Jr. can explore other
opportunities, Waltrip said Friday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
"We
asked if we could have a little bit of time to figure this out, and he
(Truex) agreed to that," Waltrip told reporters during an interview
session behind the No. 56 transporter.
"If he came to me tomorrow and said, 'I've got a deal to go do
something,' then obviously I would not hold him back. His support and
loyalty to our organization has been amazing.
"He
drove some kind of crappy cars when he first got to our shop, and we
were able to build those cars better, make 'em faster, and he's been
able to be a race-winning Chase
guy. So I owe him a lot for his loyalty and his passion for our team. I
wouldn't hold him back from doing something he wanted to do, but what I
would like him to do is hang around so we can attract a sponsor and
keep him in our car."
NAPA
announced in a Facebook post Thursday morning that the auto parts
retailer would opt out of its three-year sponsorship deal with Waltrip,
effective at the end of the year.
Discomfort with MWR's attempted manipulation of the outcome of the
final regular-season race at Richmond — which drew a record fine from
NASCAR and ultimately cost Truex a spot in the Chase — led to NAPA's
exercising an escape clause in the contract.
With
seven laps left in the Sept. 6 Federated Auto Parts 400, MWR driver
Clint Bowyer spun off Turn 4, bringing out a caution that radically
changed the race. Ryan Newman,
who had been leading at the time — and who would have sewn up a Chase
spot with a win — ultimately finished third, losing the second wild card
berth to Truex.
Both
Bowyer and teammate Brian Vickers came to pit road after a restart with
three laps left, ensuring they would finish behind Joey Logano, who
consequently clinched 10th
place and Knocked Jeff Gordon out of the Chase.
On
Sept. 8, NASCAR penalized all three MWR drivers, dropping Truex out of
the Chase, and fined the organization $300,000. As a result, Newman got
the final wild card spot.
After attempted collusion between Front Row Motorsports and Penske
Racing, designed to help Logano secure a Chase spot, came to light later
in the week, NASCAR added Gordon to the Chase as a 13th driver.
The cost to MWR goes far beyond the loss of a Chase spot. NAPA's sponsorship is worth an estimated $16 million annually.
The
news, however, isn't all bad. Aaron's, which sponsors Vickers' No. 55
car, has expressed its support for the organization, and Waltrip said
Friday he expects Bowyer's primary
sponsor, 5-Hour Energy, to remain on board.
Waltrip
also raised the prospect of sponsorship for Truex through RK Motors,
the classic car business owned by his partner in MWR, Rob Kauffman, who
acknowledged Friday on
Twitter that he had discussed that possibility with Waltrip.
"Obviously,
it's been a rocky couple of weeks, and, yes, I was scared, and I was
uncertain of our future," Waltrip acknowledged. "But after speaking with
the folks from Aaron's
and speaking with all of our partners, they're supporting us.
"They're
going to stick with us and believe that we are a quality, first-class
organization. We will race forward with respect and appreciation for
being able to be here and
start to gain back trust."
That
could be a tall hurdle for Waltrip, who continued to assert on Friday
that Bowyer's spin wasn't intentional, despite a preponderance of
opinion among fellow drivers and
fans that it was.
"I've
said it repeatedly—there was no master plan to manipulate the race,"
Waltrip said. "That was never discussed or brought up. Do they want an
arm? What are they looking
for? I hope that we can put it behind us. Clint did not spin on
purpose, and I stand behind him."
NAPA's
announcement of the departure from MWR also indicated the company was
evaluating its position in NASCAR racing as a whole. That could mean a
total withdrawal from the
sport. It could also mean accompanying Truex to a new team, despite
Waltrip's hopes to keep the driver in his fold.
"We're
just full set on having three quality Chase teams with great drivers,"
Waltrip said. "That's the reality. If we have to vary from that plan,
we're prepared to do that
as well. Going from two (cars) to three is a little hard and going from
three to two is just a little disappointing.
"But we don't plan on doing that."
THE COST OF CHANGING JOBS
Vickers
won at New Hampshire in July with crew chief Rodney Childers on his pit
box, but Childers subsequently announced plans to accept an offer from
Stewart-Haas Racing to
fill the crew chief role for Kevin Harvick next year.
Childers
is still under contract to MWR, which, understandably, wants to isolate
the soon-to-be-former crew chief from the team's proprietary
information. While he's in limbo,
Childress can't work for Stewart-Haas, and he can't come to the track
as part of the Waltrip organization.
It not hard to tell, however, that Childers misses the action.
"Sure
wish I was at the race track today @NHMS," was Childers plaintive Friday
posting on his Twitter account. "Miss being there and would like to
have tried to defend the
win from earlier this year."
NOTHING TO LOSE
You
could argue that Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Joey Logano have nothing to lose
in this year's Cahse because they've already lost it.
Both
Earnhardt and Logano suffered engine failures last Sunday at Chicagoland
Speedway, and their early exits from the first Chase race cost them
dearly in the standings. Earnhardt
is 53 points behind Chase leader Matt Kenseth, and Logano trails by 52
points.
That
sort of ill fortune, says Jeff Gordon, can change your perspective on
the Chase. He should know. In last year's Chicagoland race, Gordon's
throttle stuck, and he pounded
the outside wall—effectively dashing his hopes for a fifth Sprint Cup
title.
"Instead
of maybe having a game plan where you were going to try to fine tune a
set-up, you can just go completely outside the box and just go for broke
and make very gutsy
calls on pit road," Gordon said Friday before opening Cup practice for
Sunday's Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire. "You can be more aggressive as a
driver. The engineers can be more aggressive in the set-up as well.
...
"I
think that they are looking at it like 'Listen, unless something
miraculous happens, we are not going to be back in this thing,' to the
level that they would like to be.
I think there is a part of you that just says ‘'K, let's just see how
high up in points we can get,' and there is a part of you that says, 'We
go for broke, and if we get on a heck of a roll, we can still do
this'.
"You certainly never stop giving up hope."
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