Thursday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Jeff Gordon teases occasional return after 2015
- Waltrip, Hamlin show off golf skills
- Few take advantage of Thursday practice
Feb. 19, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Jeff Gordon faces a big hurdle to occasional racing after 2015
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—Never say never.
Though
Jeff Gordon has left the door cracked ever so slightly when it comes to a
possible appearance on the track after 2015, he’s more likely to end
his competitive role in
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series racing at the end of the season.
“I have
too much respect for other drivers that have ended their career or said
they were going to end their career of driving the Cup cars and then
they come back and want
to run some more races,” Gordon said Thursday morning at Daytona prior
to practice for Sunday's Daytona 500 (1 p.m. on FOX). “I feel like
because I have so much respect for those guys, I felt like it was
necessary for me to leave those options open.
“But
when I start really thinking about it from a realistic standpoint, what I
love about racing is not going out there and driving fast and driving
race cars. I like competing
at a high level to win. If I felt like I could go to a Brickyard or a
Martinsville or Bristol or--I don’t know, a couple of tracks that come
to mind and be competitive with a competitive team—then I might consider
doing that.”
When
Gordon started enumerating the obstacles to an occasional return to
competition, however, the probability of a reappearance on track after
2015 started to sound far less
likely, though he did allow that he’d enjoy racing at Indianapolis
Motor Speedway if he had a competitive car.
“You
can’t do it at Hendrick really,” Gordon said. “The way I see it, there
are four teams there (at Hendrick Motorsports) that are focused on
winning the championship, so
it would be a disruption to that flow. Then you have to have somebody
as a car owner, you have to team up with somebody to pull together a
team. Pull together good cars and engines and (make) sure we have the
resources there.
“Then
you have to get sponsors. I don’t see it happening, but if I were to do
it, if it did become a reality, certainly Indianapolis would be pretty
high on my list of tracks.
It would have to be something non-restricted, and it would have to be a
place that I feel like I can make a difference and really be
competitive at. Indianapolis is one of those tracks that come to mind.”
STROKER ACE
NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series drivers Michael Waltrip and Denny Hamlin displayed
their skills at another sport on Wednesday morning, during a FOX
Sports/USGA gathering in the Daytona
International Speedway infield.
Drivers,
media members and professional golfers Brad Faxon, Paula Creamer and
Marco Dawson took turns trying to hit a small floating green in Lake
Lloyd from a distance of
85 yards. Predictably, a pro won the overall competition. Dawson hit
the 20-by-20-foot green with two of his three attempts and won a $10,000
donation to charity, which he designated for The First Tee.
Hamlin,
a lefty, and Waltrip, who swings from the right side, tied for the lead
among drivers after the first round. Waltrip won the playoff by
sticking a wedge shot 5 feet
from the flag.
PRACTICE? WHO NEEDS PRACTICE?
Only
five drivers chose to participate in Thursday afternoon’s NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series practice at Daytona International Speedway, and Kyle Larson’s
No. 42 Chevrolet was the
only car to run more than seven laps in the 85-minute session.
On the
17th of 18 laps of single-car runs, Larson posted the fastest speed of
the session—192.699 mph. Cole Whitt, who ran seven laps, was second
fastest at 190.710 mph, followed
by Michael Annett, JJ Yeley and Jeb Burton.
Danica
Patrick, who wrecked early in Wednesday’s opening NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series practice, did not participate in Thursday’s session. Patrick ran
13 laps in Wednesday’s second
practice in her backup No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet.
No comments:
Post a Comment