Sunday Martinsville Notebook
Notebook items:
· Jeff Gordon rallies from penalty, but disappointment lingers
· Never give up
· Mixed feelings for Kenseth
Mar. 29, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Jeff Gordon rallies from penalty, but disappointment lingers
MARTINSVILLE,
Va.—Exiting pit road after his final stop on Lap 462 of Sunday's NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series STP 500 at Martinsville Speedway, Jeff Gordon got the
bad news.
Gordon
had entered the pits as the leader under the 16th and final caution of
the race and was fourth off pit road, but the news was much worse than
that.
NASCAR
had flagged Gordon for speeding in Sector 5, the stretch of pit road
immediately before his stall. With his chances for a victory dashed,
Gordon restarted from the rear of the field on Lap 467 of 500.
“Oh,
my gosh, I’m so disappointed in myself,” Gordon said after the race. “I
know I was pushing the limit. I didn’t think I had done anything
different than I had all day long when I was behind other guys, so we’ve
got to look at that. I’m very, very disappointed. I felt like we
finally got the car, got ourselves in a position to win that race.
“It
was a struggle. We were really battling with tire wear and the car
getting really loose. I thought Denny (Hamlin) had the best car, but I
thought with our track position there at the end, we had a shot at it.
Oh, my gosh, I’m so disappointed. I don’t even know what to say right
now. Of course, then the car is the absolute best it had been all day
when I drove up from the back.”
Indeed,
Gordon put forth a yeoman effort in the closing laps, driving from the
rear to a ninth-place finish before Hamlin took the checkered flag.
NEVER GIVE UP
Martin
Truex Jr. finished sixth in Sunday’s race, posting his sixth straight
top 10 to start the season, but the performance of the No. 78 Furniture
Row Racing team was anything but routine.
In
the first tire run of the afternoon, Truex lost the power steering in
his Chevrolet because of a fluid leak and plummeted through the field.
But the crew fixed the problem with multiple pit stops, and Truex
regained his track position by staying out on old tires for a restart on
Lap 101.
From there, it was a matter of staying in touch with the lead cars and avoiding a myriad of incidents that produced 16 cautions.
“I
can’t believe after losing the power steering the first run we finished
sixth,” Truex said. “It was not fun to drive for a little while there,
but they did a great job getting fluid back in it and fixing the leak
and everything. Just fought all day, just like we always do—fought,
fought, fought.”
Of all his finishes this year, the run at Martinsville was perhaps most gratifying.
“It’s
awesome,” Truex said. “I can’t say enough about the team. Again, to
battle like we did today… We showed we never give up. We haven’t all
year long. We haven’t given up on each other since I started here. It
feels good to have another good run at one of my worst race tracks. Just
can’t believe we were able to stay on the lead lap, fix the power
steering and all that and drive back through there. It was a hell of an
effort.”
MIXED FEELINGS FOR KENSETH
With 30 laps left in Sunday’s STP 500, Matt Kenseth surged into the lead past Tony Stewart, who was driving on old tires.
But
Kenseth couldn’t hold the position. He lost the top spot to race winner
and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin on Lap 473 and later gave
way to the Team Penske Fords of runner-up Brad Keselowski and
third-place Joey Logano.
Nevertheless,
a fourth-place run at a track that had given him fits until he joined
Joe Gibbs Racing in 2013 and leaned heavily on Hamlin’s expertise
provided some consolation for the 2003 premier series champion.
“In
the long run, and at the end of the race, I thought we had the best
car—me and Denny,” Kenseth said. “Then, on that last restart (Lap 467),
the recent set of tires just didn’t agree with it. We didn’t have any
grip and couldn’t go anywhere. Just kind of hanging on, which is
unfortunate.
“It’s
hard to be disappointed with a fourth at Martinsville. Really happy
that Denny is in Victory Lane. He’s one of the biggest reasons I can
actually run in the top 10. Good for him, and a great teammate—glad for
him.”
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