Saturday Bristol Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Is the bottom groove at Bristol getting faster?
- Action-filled practice has teams scrambling
- Parrott is a short-timer; Lambert back on the box
April 18, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Is the bottom groove at Bristol getting faster?
BRISTOL, Tenn.—Drivers at Bristol Motor Speedway are starting to like it on the bottom.
Ever
since the grinding of the concrete racing surface in 2012, the top lane
has been the fastest way around the .533-mile short track, but that may
be changing.
During
qualifying runs for Sunday’s Food City 500 in Support of Steve Byrnes
on Friday afternoon, Kasey Kahne moved to the bottom of the track and
found speed there.
“My
first qualifying attempt was through the middle, and I just didn’t have
quite the speed that I wanted, so I ran the next two around the bottom,
and I felt like I picked-up when I was down there," said Kahne, who
qualified eighth for Sunday's Food City 500 in Support of Steve Byrnes
(1 p.m. ET on FOX), the only Hendrick Motorsports driver to crack the
top 12. “The track has been interesting today. To me, there’s been a
little less grip up high, compared to what it’s been for a while here.
“Usually
in practice and qualifying you’re a bit higher than what we were today.
So, I was a little surprised by that. But it’s still a long ways away
from how it’s going to be for race day, and during the race, it will
change as well. I think maybe it’s a good thing. Maybe we’ll be able to
race all over the track on Sunday rather than just as much on the top.
That would be good.”
The
question remains whether the short way around the bottom of the track
will continue to provide speed once the racing surface gets rubbered in
during Sunday’s race.
ACTION-FILLED PRACTICE HAS TEAMS SCRAMBLING
Roughly
eight minutes into Saturday morning’s first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
practice, Tony Stewart smacked the outside wall exiting Bristol Motor
Speedway’s fourth turn.
That was just the opening act in a series of mishaps that punctuated the opening session at Thunder Valley.
Seven
minutes after Stewart hit the wall, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. spun, damaging
his own No. 17 Ford and nicking the No. 19 Toyota of former Roush Fenway
Racing teammate Carl Edwards in the process.
Fighting
a loose handling condition in his No. 48 Chevrolet, six-time champion
Jimmie Johnson scraped the wall later in the session.
The
good news for all four drivers was that none had to roll out a backup
car. Stewart’s No. 14 Chevrolet sustained the heaviest damage, but his
crew worked diligently to repair the rear deck of the car, and Stewart
was back on track with enough time to complete 56 laps in the session—24
before the wreck and 32 after.
Of
the four drivers, Edwards was fastest in Saturday’s first session,
running 125.889 mph on his fourth lap (before the incident with
Stenhouse). Johnson was 10th fastest, with Stewart 24th and Stenhouse
31st.
Kasey
Kahne paced the early-morning practice with a fast lap at 126.829 mph.
Kurt Busch (127.554 mph) topped the speed chart in final practice, which
was incident-free.
TODD PARROTT IS A SHORT-TIMER
When
the National Stock Car Racing Appeals Panel upheld NASCAR’s six-race
suspensions to Richard Childress Racing crew chief Luke Lambert, race
engineer Philip Surgen and tire specialist James Bender on Thursday,
those team members began serving their enforced exiles.
In
the wake of the penalties imposed for altering tires in the NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series race at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, and
the loss of the appeal, RCR installed its XFINITY Series competition
director, Todd Parrott, as interim crew chief for Ryan Newman’s No. 31
Chevrolet.
But
when team owner Richard Childress opted to take his case to National
Motorsports Final Appeals Officer Bryan Moss and paid the $500 fee late
Friday afternoon, he also chose to let the suspended team members return
to the track.
So, on Friday, Lambert was back on the pit box and Parrott returned to his day job—after one day at the track with Newman.
The
final appeal hasn’t been scheduled yet, but if Moss rules against
Childress, Parrott likely will fill the interim crew chief’s role once
again.
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