Friday Kansas Notebook 5/8/15
Notebook items include:
• Bowyer gets a lesson in speeding
• Talladega win puts Earnhardt Jr. in relaxing mood
• Erik Jones gets second chance at first impression
• Gordon ranks Kansas Speedway
May 8, 2015
By Jim Pedley
NASCAR Wire Service
Bowyer gets a lesson in speeding
KANSAS
CITY, Kan. – So, when is 95 miles per hour scarier than 200 mph? For
Clint Bowyer it was when a very, very hard baseball came at him at 95 as
he stood in a batter’s box at Kauffman Stadium earlier this week.
Bowyer,
driver of the No. 15 Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota Camry and who grew
up about 100 miles away from Kauffman, made his way to that batter’s box
courtesy of Kansas Speedway and defending American League champion
Kansas City Royals.
And on a night at the old ballpark during which he was just going to be relaxing and munching hot dogs.
“I
showed up and suited me up and we went and had batting practice,”
Bowyer – a native of Emporia, Kan. who is back in The Heartland to drive
in Saturday night’s SpongeBob SquarePants 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
race at Kansas Speedway – said. “Went to the bullpen and (Jeremy)
Guthrie (pitcher, Kansas City Royals) threw some stuff at me. He threw a
fastball by me and then a curveball.”
Bowyer found out how civilians feel when he gives them thrill rides in fast cars from time to time at race tracks.
“Man,
I’m telling you,” he said, “when you stand in front of that baseball it
gives you a whole new appreciation for a professional level of ball
like that – holy cow. Here I am, my knees are already buckled and I’m
starting to get out of the way and by the time it hits the dirt it’s
like 12 feet away from you. It wasn’t even close. Great experience, fun
to see the Royals. It’s been a great ride here so far and they ain’t
done yet.”
The
fun will be just beginning should Bowyer win at the Kansas. And hot fun
it could be. Bowyer, whose best finish in Cup at his home track was
second back in 2007, said that if he wins on Saturday, he just might
break out the flamethrower that was given to him as a gift when his baby
was born last September.
With
half – or more – of the population of Emporia at the Speedway for the
race, Bowyer will have no shortage of people to celebrate with if he
wins.
“You
always have that pressure and when you go home it’s that much more
because all your friends will start calling last Thursday – ‘Are you
ready to win Kansas?” Bowyer said. “We’re going to be there Tuesday, are
you ready?’ It would be awesome to win here. We’re going to need a
hospital if we win here.”
TALLADEGA TOOK EARNHARDT JR. BACK TO MYRTLE
Trophies
are nice, large paychecks are better but for Dale Earnhardt Jr., the
relief that comes from winning a Sprint Cup Series race may be the
biggest perk of all.
On
Friday morning at Kansas Speedway, Earnhardt Jr. was asked about the
outpouring of emotions that resulted from the victory he posted last
weekend at Talladega Superspeedway.
He
said the emotion No. 1 was relief but for an interesting reason. The
victory likely put him in the year-ending, 10-race, 16-driver Chase for
the NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship and in doing so, it will allow him to
continue his love affair with the actual racing of stock cars.
“You
just get back to the core values and just enjoying racing and driving,”
the driver of the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet said. “You
don’t have to worry about points. You don’t have to worry about when
you are going to win and answering questions about when you are going to
win. You don’t have to worry about a speck of doubt within the team or
morale within the team. You can just go race and have fun.”
The kind of fun that can get pushed to the sidelines when racing becomes a bill-paying job.
“We
used to go race at Myrtle Beach (South Carolina) every weekend,”
Earnhardt said. “We didn’t care whether we won the track championship or
not. We just loved racing. We couldn’t wait for our 100 lap feature.
The whole process of getting there, going and sizing your tires,
getting the car ready and qualifying, the whole process was so much
fun. You can get right back down to the core of that. Going through
the whole weekend and just enjoying yourself because the pressure of the
points, winning, the expectations, all that stuff can sort of zap the
enjoyment out of it a little bit. We had so much fun last year and now
we get to do it all over again.”
ROOKIE JONES HAS HAD MORE TIME TO THINK
Technically,
Saturday night’s SpongeBob SquarePants 400, will not be Erik Jones’
first in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. But emotionally? It kind of is.
Jones’
first Cup drive came at Bristol Motor Speedway a couple weeks ago. But
because of the circumstances of that ride – he was put into the No. 11
Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota after regular driver Denny Hamlin suffered back
spasms early in the race and got out of the car during a rain delay –
Jones didn’t get the full-force experience associated with most first
races. That is, he didn’t have time to freak out.
“Bristol,”
Jones, who was watching the race on TV at home before getting a call
from JGR and jumping on the team’s private jet, said Friday, “really and
honestly I didn’t have time to think about it so it wasn’t much
different” than getting into his car in the XFINITY and Camping World
Truck series.
Jones
will get the full Cup-debut experience this weekend. He has known for
weeks that he would be in the seat of the No. 18 JGR Toyota, taking the
place of injured Kyle Busch.
While
he said, no, he’s not freaking out, Jones did admit that there is an
edge to the situation that was not present at Bristol.
“There
is a little bit more nerves going into the race weekend,” the
18-year-old from Byron, Mich., said early Friday morning. “I’m not
feeling them right now. I’m excited about practice right now honestly
and just getting on the track and I’m sure as the race comes around and
as we get closer to the start time I’ll be a little bit nervous about
getting the green flag and going out and making laps. Right now, feel
pretty calm, but there’s definitely more time to think about it.”
Jones finished 26th at Bristol.
He
will be racing in both the Camping World Truck Series Toyota Tundra 250
and the Cup race. Jones will be doing so at a track that he is visiting
for the first time ever. Preparation has been by using his eyes and his
ears.
“I
watched quite a few videos from last year’s race – not only on the Cup
side, but the truck side too,” Jones said. “Talked to Kyle (Busch), he
won the Truck race here last year and on the Cup side he gave me a few
tips. He told me to lean on my teammates for that as well. It will be a
fun weekend. It will be a busy weekend – this is probably the busiest
day of the weekend here today. I’m excited and I’m looking forward to
it. I will learn a lot and it will be a good weekend.”
WINNING MAKES THE HEART GROW STRONGER
Kansas Speedway, site of Saturday night’s SpongeBob SquarePants 400, has to be considered a Jeff Gordon track.
The
Hendrick Motorsports driver with four Sprint Cup championship trophies
decorating his den won the first two races (2001, 2002) held at the
1.5-mile oval located on the far west side of Kansas City. Then, a year
ago, Gordon won for a third time at Kansas.
He also has seven other top-5 finishes and an average finish of 10th in his 18 starts at Kansas.
On
Friday, Gordon, who has said 2015 will be his final season as a
full-time Sprint Cup driver, was asked where the Kansas intermediate
sits on his list of favorite venues.
“I
would say it’s in the top-five,” Gordon said. “Now Clint Boyer (walks
in) on the other hand, he’s somewhere in my top 15 or 20 drivers of
all-time (Laughing). I’m certainly very comfortable and enjoy this
track. But you’re talking about going against tracks like Indianapolis,
which certainly goes to the top of my list, or Bristol or Michigan are
ones that stand out. I like a lot of tracks, so it’s hard to grade them
in any way. But Kansas is certainly way up there.”
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