Sunday Bristol Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Logano, Keselowski wreck early
- Erik Jones relieves Hamlin
- Season-best for Stenhouse
April 19, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Penske teammates are early casualties of rain-delayed Bristol race
BRISTOL,
Tenn.—Before the start of Sunday’s IndyCar Series Grand Prix of Long
Beach, team owner Roger Penske warned his drivers, front-row starters
Helio Castroneves and Juan Pablo Montoya, to avoid contact on the first
lap.
Perhaps Penske should have been at Bristol instead, to have the same conversation with his two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series stars.
Eighteen
laps into Sunday’s rain-delayed Food City 500 in Support of Steve
Byrnes, in a light, misting rain was Brad Keselowski’s No. 2 Team Penske
Ford slid sideways in Turn 4, as Keselowski moved to the outside of the
lapped car of Alex Kennedy.
Keselowski
tried to save the car but turned broadside into the path of teammate
Joey Logano, who could do nothing to avoid ramming his teammate.
The
accident damaged both cars severely. Logano took his No. 22 Ford to the
garage, while Keselowski’s No. 2 entry sat covered on pit road through a
lengthy stoppage for heavier rain that began falling moments after the
wreck.
“The
rain was coming in and out, and the car just took off on me,”
Keselowski said. “I would like to blame the rain, but I honestly don’t
know. Usually, when a car gets that far sideways and it’s kind of out of
nowhere, there’s a reason behind it. I just really hate that I tore up
my teammate in the process. That’s really a bummer. I felt like I had a
pretty normal line, and it just flew crazy sideways on me.
“It’s
a bummer for everybody at Team Penske to tear up both cars that way. I
hate racing in the rain, but I understand the position that NASCAR is
in. They want to get the race going, and this is one of those days where
it’s going to just keep raining off and on, and we’re trying to get as
many laps in at a time as we can to give the fans the best race
possible. But we’re racing in the rain to do it, and that’s what
happens.”
When Keselowski turned sideways, Logano had no time to react.
“Brad
just got loose underneath that lapped car,” Logano said. “You start
checking up, and it looked like he was going to have it saved, and he
checked up more than I expected, and the next thing you know I’m in the
back of him and we’re both headed towards the fence.”
Keselowski
and Logano both returned to the track after a rain delay of nearly four
hours. Keselowski finished 35th and Logano 40th.
ERIK JONES GETS EARLY DEBUT IN RELIEF OF HAMLIN
When
drivers were ordered to their cars after a rain delay of near four
hours, Denny Hamlin wasn’t among them. Instead, Erik Jones was a
surprise relief driver in Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota.
Having
suffered neck spasms roughly 12 laps into Sunday’s Food City 500 in
Support of Steve Byrnes, Hamlin received treatment during the rain
delay, but he opted to remove himself from the car because he didn’t
feel capable of winning.
Jones,
who won last week’s NASCAR XFINITY Series race at Texas and finished
fourth on Saturday at Bristol, was a likely candidate for his NASCAR
Sprint Cup debut in relief of Kyle Busch later this season, but Hamlin’s
exit pressed him into service earlier than expected.
“I
pulled something in my neck to upper back,” Hamlin said in an interview
with Fox Sports 1. “I started going backward because the pain was
bothering me quite a bit. I stretched it out, and we'd been working it
the last few hours.
“I'm
not 100 percent. With this (Chase) format, it's all about winning, and
there's no way I'd be able to compete for a win. It's just doing my team
a complete injustice to run a bunch of laps.”
Consequently,
it made sense to get some seat time for Jones, who had to start from
the rear of the field after the stoppage because of the driver change.
Jones
flew to Bristol during the hiatus and arrived five minutes before the
drivers were recalled to the cars. Ultimately, he finished 26th, six
laps down, though Hamlin gets credit for the result because he started
the race.
SEASON-BEST FOR STENHOUSE
Even
though Bristol doesn’t have characteristics common to any other race
track, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s fourth-place finish—the first top five for
Roush Fenway Racing this season—has to be an encouraging sign for an
organization that has been floundering this year.
Stenhouse drove from sixth to fourth during the final two-lap overtime shootout in Sunday’s race.
“It’s
good,” Stenhouse said of his top-five run. “It’s tough because we
always feel like we can run well here. It’s not 100 percent what every
track is like, and that’s the problem.
“We
go to Richmond next week, and the track is old and it gets slick and
wears out, and we need the car to turn a little bit better. We use the
banking here to get the car to turn, so hopefully we can keep
maintaining and getting our cars a little bit better each week.”
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