Saturday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
A new day at Daytona: Group qualifying for the Great American Race
·
Smoky Coincidence for Newman and Truex Jr.
·
Jimmie Johnson makes rare appearance in a draft
Feb. 14, 2014
A new day at Daytona: Group qualifying for the Great American Race
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla.—After two lackluster seasons to begin his NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series career, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. already has shown signs that 2015
might well be different.
In
Saturday’s opening Daytona 500 practice, Stenhouse ran the fastest lap,
covering the 2.5-mile distance at Daytona International Speedway at a
top speed of 202.643 mph.
In
Friday’s Sprint Unlimited practice, in a different No. 17 Roush Fenway
Racing Ford, Stenhouse had the second-fastest lap (199.769 mph), behind
only Kurt Busch on the
speed chart.
“It
was great to get back out on the race track, and it was a lot of fun out
there,” Stenhouse said between Saturday’s two practices. “The car is
fast and feels really good
on the track.
“We’ll keep working with it in the next session and see what we have for qualifying.”
Indeed,
the next major hurdle for Stenhouse is Sunday’s Daytona 500 qualifying
session (1 p.m. ET on FOX), which will lock two cars into the front-row
starting positions
and guarantee starting spots (with exact positions still to be
determined) to the next four fastest cars.
For
the first time, the Daytona 500 (Sunday, Feb. 22 at 1 p.m. ET on FOX)
will implement the group qualifying format introduced at Talladega
Superspeedway last year. In
a nutshell, here’s how it works:
All
told, 49 cars are entered in the 57th edition of the Great American
Race. Based on a drawing for qualifying order, cars with odd-numbered
positions will have five minutes
to post their fastest laps. The even-number positions follow with
another five-minute session.
After
a 10-minute break, the 24 fastest cars in the two first-round sessions
combined have five minutes to post a lap. The top 12 make the cut for
the final round, another
five-minute session that follows a seven-minute break.
But
unlike Talladega or the July race at Daytona, only the pole position and
the outside of the front row are locked in for the Daytona 500 during
time trials. What the
qualifying session does determine are the starting positions for
Thursday night’s Budweiser Duel at Daytona, two 15-mile qualifying races
that set positions 3 through 32 for the 500.
Positions
33 through 36 in NASCAR’s most prestigious race go to the four drivers
who posted the fastest speeds in qualifying but fail to transfer through
the Duels. Positions
37 through 42 are provisional starting spots available to the top
finishers in the 2014 owners’ standings not otherwise qualified.
The
43rd starting spot goes to the most recent past champion not otherwise
qualified. If there is no past champion who fails to make the field
through qualifying or the
Duels, the 43rd position becomes a seventh provisional.
Stenhouse
was the odd man out at Talladega last fall in the debut of five-minute
group qualifying sessions. He was part of a large group of top drivers
who failed to get
to the start/finish line in time to take a hot lap in the first round,
and Stenhouse was too far down the provisional list to make the race.
Having
missed the Talladega event, Stenhouse is understandably nervous about
Sunday’s time trials. And he believes drivers may take a different
approach at Daytona because
waiting until the last minute at Talladega clearly didn’t work.
“I’m
definitely worried about qualifying,” Stenhouse said. “I think
everybody will approach it a little different. I don’t think anybody
will be hanging around and waiting
and trying to get a good lap. I think everyone will go out there and
basically race for five minutes and see where you stack up.
“We
have tried to come up with different plans of what we need to do, but,
really, we just have to go make fast laps. That’s definitely in the back
of our minds of making
sure we get a decent lap in. If we can make that top 24 and move on to
the second round, I think that would be a lot of weight off our
shoulders.”
SMOKY COINCIDENCE
At
almost the exact same moment during Saturday’s second Daytona 500
practice session, the cars of 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series runner-up
Ryan Newman and Martin Truex Jr.,
both of which use Earnhardt-Childress Racing engines, began to trail
smoke.
Newman’s issue was an engine failure in the No. 31 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.
“Something
just happened in the bottom end of the motor going into Turn 3,” Newman
said. “Everything was going as planned until then. The Caterpillar
Chevrolet tried to
diesel on me, and it doesn’t like to diesel.
“We will change the motor, figure out what happened to this one and get ready for qualifying (on Sunday).”
Because
of the engine change, Newman must start from the rear in his Budweiser
Duel race on Thursday night. Should he win either of the two front-row
starting spots during
Sunday’s Daytona 500 qualifying, he will have to drop to the rear for
the start of the 500, too.
Truex’s
problem was an oil leak caused by a crack in the oil pan. The No. 78
Furniture Row Racing team did not have to change engines before Sunday’s
qualifying session.
QUICK QUARTET
Late
in Saturday’s second practice, Jimmie Johnson made a rare appearance in
the draft at Daytona, hooking up with teammates Kasey Kahne, Jeff
Gordon and Dale Earnhardt
Jr. to post a lap at 199.313 mph.
Before
that abbreviated drafting session, Johnson had confined his practice
time to single-car runs, as has been his custom in the past.
The
six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion finished the final Daytona
500 practice second fastest behind the No. 95 Ford of Michael McDowell.
Kahne, Gordon and Earnhardt
were fourth, fifth and sixth-quickest, respectively.
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