Sunday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Fast lap is big stress-reliever for Carl Edwards
·
Johnson finishes in the nick of time
·
Earnhardt, Hamlin fail inspection
Feb. 15, 2015
Fast lap is big stress-reliever for Carl Edwards
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla.—For the first time during Speedweeks at Daytona
International Speedway, Carl Edwards was able to crack a relieved smile.
Edwards
had just run a lap at 202.315 mph in the first round of group knockout
qualifying for next Sunday’s Daytona 500 (1 p.m. ET on FOX). Third
fastest in time trials — all
rounds combined — Edwards earned a guaranteed starting spot in the 57th
edition of the Great American Race.
Edwards
entered 2015 with a new team, Joe Gibbs racing, but without 2014 owner
points that would have given him a provisional slot in the 500, had he
failed to advance through
time trials or Thursday night’s Budweiser Duel at Daytona (7 p.m. ET on
FOX Sports 1).
Small wonder it was a happy, relaxed Edwards who took the dais in the Daytona media center after Sunday’s qualifying session.
“We had
not really talked about it much publicly,” Edwards said. “There were a
lot of meetings and a lot of anxiety over the fact that we could
possibly miss the Daytona 500.
I think we’ve had four or five meetings trying to come up with a
strategy for qualifying.
“To
have the third-fastest time of the day — I believe we are locked into
the show, which is huge, to say the least. With (sponsor) Arris coming
on board in such a huge way
— Stanley (Tools) — it was going to be really tough to explain to them
if we had trouble in the qualifiers.
“Now we can go out, be aggressive (in the Duels), have fun and try to start up front.”
NICK OF TIME
Jimmie Johnson thought he had missed the boat.
Last to
leave pit road during the cat-and-mouse waiting game in the third and
final round of Sunday’s knockout qualifying session at Daytona, Johnson
felt he had little chance
to make it back to the start/finish line before time expired.
Having
run the fastest lap in the second round, Johnson initially was in no
hurry. If no one got to the stripe in time to run a valid timed lap,
Johnson would win the pole
for the Daytona 500 by default. But when Martin Truex Jr. left pit road
with about a minute remaining in the session, and other cars followed,
Johnson began to worry.
He was last to leave pit road, falling in behind Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon.
“We had
some cues, timing marks, what we thought we needed to leave pit road
at,” Johnson said. “That time came and went. I really felt like no one
was going to get back in
time, and I would be on pole position…
“As we
were making the lap, we got up to speed, through the gears, covered so
much territory, they’re giving me my cues, I think most are going to
make it, and I’m in a position
where I’m not going to make it.”
For Johnson, the waiting game was a risk/reward situation.
“We
knew what the risks were,” he said. “In order to get the pole, you’ve
got to take a big chance. That could be front row or 12th, but 12th at a
plate track is not the end
of the world. We were willing to take the risk and gamble to be there.
“We made it around faster than I thought we could. I thought I was out. I thought I was going to miss the cutoff on the time.”
As it
turned out, however, Johnson made it to the start/finish line as time
expired, and he earned the outside front-row starting position beside
Gordon, who won the pole for
his last running of the Daytona 500.
EARNHARDT, HAMLIN FAIL INSPECTION
Both
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Denny Hamlin had their qualifying times
disallowed for infractions discovered during post-qualifying inspection
on Sunday.
The
left front of Earnhardt’s No. 88 Chevrolet measured too low in ride
height. The track bar split on Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota was three-quarters
of an inch larger than the
allowable 3.0 inches.
Both cars will start from the rear in their respective Budweiser Duel at Daytona qualifying races on Thursday night.
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