Wednesday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
NASCAR modifies Daytona qualifying format for XFINITY, Trucks
·
Patrick goes to backup car
·
NASCAR clarifies Chase eligibility
Feb. 18, 2015
NASCAR modifies Daytona qualifying format for XFINITY, Trucks
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.—Why have a five-minute qualifying session if no one is going to use the full five minutes?
That
was one of the rationales NASCAR considered in streamlining the time
trial process for the NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series for
events to be held at Daytona
International Speedway this weekend.
The
first round of qualifying for Friday’s Nextera Energy Resources 250
NCWTS race (7:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1) and Saturday’s Alert Today
Florida 300 XFINITY Series race
(3:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1) will feature cars divided into four
groups, in numbers as equal as possible based on a random draw.
Smaller
groups will ease pit road congestion, which was an issue during
Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying. The cars will be staged
with their left-side tires just
outside an assigned pit box, giving each driver an unimpeded exit from
pit road.
And
once a car begins to roll, it must continue its progress toward the end
of pit road. No more starting and stopping. No more backing up.
Each
qualifying session will be reduced to 2.5 minutes as opposed to the five
minutes used in the Cup series on Sunday. The 24 fastest cars from the
four sessions in the first
round combined will advance to the second round, which will feature two
2.5-minute sessions with cars divided into even and odd-numbered groups
based on speeds in the first round.
The fastest 12 cars advance to the final 2.5-minute round, which will determine the pole winner.
Though
the new format applies only to the NCWTS and NXS races at Daytona,
NASCAR considers this a trial run for possible modifications to the
system for other superspeedway
races, and perhaps extending to Sprint Cup.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. applauded NASCAR for its willingness to make modifications to the process.
“I’m
happy that NASCAR is looking to improve and tweak and learn and to
change from single-car to group qualifying,” Earnhardt said. “It works
really well at all the other
race tracks to try to find the right mix of excitement and
professionalism and all those good things that you want to have in a
show and in a qualifying segment.
“It’s
going to take a pretty unique set of circumstances and guidelines and
rules for group qualifying at the plate tracks. And I’m glad that
they’re open to making moves and
making changes and trying to learn from those changes.”
Earnhardt,
who will compete in Saturday’s XFINITY Series race, also favored the
move to shorter segments, given that most drivers waited until late in
the sessions to leave
pit road.
“Well,
the waiting on pit road feels kind of clunky and unnatural,” Earnhardt
said. “So, we’re all kind of waiting. Everybody wants to be last so you
can get the best draft.
We all understand that.
“So,
obviously it’s almost pointless to have the extra time if you’re going
to wait until the end anyway. So cutting down the segments may work well
and just alleviate some
of that waiting and anticipation.”
PATRICK GOES TO BACKUP CAR
Six
minutes into Wednesday’s first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice
session, Danica Patrick’s No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet sat
immobile on the infield grass.
Patrick’s
car had turned and smacked the outside wall when Denny Hamlin steered
to the middle in a three-wide draft, and her team immediately rolled out
a backup car to use
in Thursday night’s Budweiser Duel at Daytona 150-mile qualifying races
(7 p.m. on FOX Sports 1).
“I was
just riding along and it turned, so it’s the nature of pack racing, and
that’s what makes it challenging, too,” Patrick said after exiting the
infield care center. “Sometimes
there’s not much you can do about it. I could have collected more
people, and it wouldn’t have been anything that they were a part of.
“But
that’s just group racing at Daytona. That’s the gamble that we all face.
That’s what makes it exciting and very frustrating. So, we knew we were
going to have to run hard
in the Duels no matter what, and that just doesn’t change.”
Hamlin said he was trying to gauge how his car would react in a three-wide situation.
“People
say in practice that you can't make aggressive moves, but we also have
to put ourselves in decent positions where we're going to have to figure
out what our car is
doing,” Hamlin said.
“I went
through the middle and it was really wide – it just closed as soon as I
had already got inside of her (Patrick) and the lane closed. It knocked
me into the 13 (Casey
Mears) and we had some attrition after that.”
The
damage to Hamlin’s car wasn’t serious enough to scrap the primary car,
but Michael Annett, who also was collected in the crash, will go to a
backup No. 46 Chevrolet for
the Duels.
NASCAR CLARIFIES CHASE ELIGIBILITY
To be
eligible to compete in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, drivers must
start each race for which they have qualified, unless the sanctioning
body finds reason to waive
that requirement.
That
change, announced in a bulletin on Wednesday morning modifies the
language of Rule 17.6.2.1.a, which last year required drivers to attempt
to qualify for each event to
retain Chase eligibility.
Under
the current provision, drivers still must attempt to qualify for each
race, but they also must start every race for which they qualify
successfully, unless NASCAR authorizes
otherwise. A driver does not lose Chase eligibility for attempting to
qualify for a race and failing to make the field.
The
clarified rule would apply in a situation where Kurt Busch, for example,
were to qualify for the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, race in the
Indianapolis 500 on Sunday (as
he did last year), but fail to return to Charlotte in time to start the
Cup race. In that event, NASCAR would be unlikely to grant a waiver.
On the
other hand, NASCAR already has indicated that Brian Vickers, who will
miss the first two events of the season while recovering from offseason
heart surgery, retains
his Chase eligibility because of a medical exception.
No comments:
Post a Comment