Saturday Martinsville Notebook
Notebook items
· Chase Elliott to start first NASCAR Sprint Cup race on 'weird weekend'
· A case of Deja blue
· Short strokes
Mar. 28, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Chase Elliott to start first NASCAR Sprint Cup race on 'weird weekend'
MARTINSVILLE, Va.—There's nothing unusual about Chase Elliott being at a race track.
The reigning NASCAR XFINITY Series champion is a full-time racer at age 19.
But coming to the track to start a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race on Sunday-now that's another matter.
For
Elliott, Sundays at the track have always meant watching his father,
NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott, but that will change this Sunday when
Chase Elliott makes his first start in NASCAR’s top division in the STP
500 at Martinsville Speedway (1 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).
“This
is definitely special,” Elliott said Friday night after qualifying 27th
for his first Cup start. “For me, this is something I’ve wanted to do
for a long time. Going to the race track and watching my dad running
these races for a number of years, it’s very odd to be showing up here
and not be coming to watch him. So, this is definitely a weird-feeling
weekend, more than anything else right now.
“It’s
definitely exciting. But at the same time, you don’t want to forget
you’re still racing. You’re still in a seat and you’re still trying to
achieve the same thing. So, you don’t want to lose sight of what your
goals are, no matter what you’re driving. I think you’re going to fight
some of the same things you fight in these cars and anything else you
drive on asphalt. Hopefully we can try to manage it and have a solid
day.”
With
five Sprint Cup races on his agenda in 2015, as he prepares to succeed
four-time premier series champion Jeff Gordon in the No. 24 Hendrick
Motorsports Chevrolet next year, Elliott hopes to learn as much as he
can from his limited Cup schedule this season.
“Obviously,
we want to go as fast as we can for as long as possible,” Elliott said.
“We want to do the best we can and make the most of these races and try
to just gain as much knowledge as possible.
“To
have an opportunity to go run five races doesn’t seem like a lot, but
at the end of the day it really is, if you can get in all five, and make
those laps. You’ve got to take it one at a time, first off. You just
want to put together 500 solid laps on Sunday and try to run all the
laps and hope we can have a good day.”
A CASE OF DEJA BLUE
When
Aric Almirola’s No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford pulled out of the
garage for Saturday’s Sprint Cup Series practice at Martinsville, it
recalled the halcyon days of Petty Enterprises when team owner Richard
Petty won 15 Cup races at the .526-mile short track.
Now,
Aric Almirola is carrying the striking Petty blue and red color of the
STP-sponsored car, and he’s fully aware of the history that accompanies
him.
“They’ve
had a lot of success here, and any time you come here with the 43 car
is special, but to come here with the STP colors on the car is that much
more special with that iconic paint scheme,” Almirola said Saturday
morning before practice for Sunday’s STP 500. “It’s such a neat weekend
for us to have STP sponsoring the race and seeing how involved they are
and how they’re activating at the race track and all they’re doing.
“It’s
just a lot of fun to be a part of it. Any time you get to drive that
STP 43 car it’s cool to see the reaction of all the fans and all the
crew members, because you’ve got to think that most of the crew members
and guys working in the garage, they’re all guys that grew up watching
the sport, too. So they’ll walk up and are like, ‘Man, that’s awesome.
That car looks so cool,’ and everybody loves it when that car shows up.”
SHORT STROKES
Martinsville
ace Denny Hamlin paced Saturday’s first practice session with a lap at
97.113 mph, and defending STP 500 winner Kurt Busch topped Happy Hour at
97.098 mph…
Eight-time
Martinsville winner Jimmie Johnson slowed during the first practice,
thinking he might have lost a cylinder. But the crew diagnosed and fixed
an electrical issue, and Johnson was soon back up to speed, posting the
second fastest time in the session at 96.988 mph…
A
day before the actual race, drivers already were showing their
short-track tempers. Reigning NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Kevin
Harvick gave Jamie McMurray’s Chevrolet a tap during Happy Hour, upset
with what he considered continued blocking. Austin Dillon and Danica
Patrick battled for five straight laps, trading some paint in the
process.
If Saturday’s practices are any indication, Sunday’s race could have some spectacular fireworks.
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