Sunday Talladega Notebook
Notebook items include:
· Ryan Blaney delivers top-five finish for Wood Brothers
· Hendrick dominance
· Ragan ready
· Crew chief conflicted
· France award
May 3, 2015
By Mark McCarter
NASCAR Wire Service
Ryan Blaney delivers top-five finish for Wood Brothers
TALLADEGA,
Ala.– It has been almost 35 years since the Wood Brothers enjoyed their
last victory at Talladega Superspeedway, with the late Neil Bonnett
behind the wheel. But in the late stages of Sunday's NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series GEICO 500, there seemed a possibility of making history again in
the No. 21 Ford.
Ryan
Blaney, the 22-year-old son of long-time NASCAR fixture Dave Blaney,
steadily rode on the rear bumper of Jimmie Johnson in the final stretch,
ready to pounce on the opportunity should Johnson and race winner Dale
Earnhardt Jr. ignore him.
Blaney
finished fourth—Paul Menard sneaked past him into third when the field
broke apart on the dash toward the checkered flag—for his best Sprint
Cup finish.
“It
was a good day,” Blaney said. “We had a fast car and a good starting
spot (he qualified third). We went back a couple times and came back up
through there. … It’s good to get a good finish with these guys and
we’re really excited to go to Charlotte.” (The Wood Brothers run only a
limited schedule and will not enter Saturday’s race at Kansas Speedway.)
This
was the NASCAR Next alum's second Talladega start and he raced at
Daytona in February, but acknowledged that his inexperience affected
other drivers’ willingness to work with him.
“You’ve
got to go through that rookie deal in the beginning, even the middle of
the race nobody wants to go with you,” he said. “Luckily, about
three-quarters of the way through the race we made a couple strong moves
and guys went with us, and I think that helped put us in position later
in the race for guys sticking with us. The yellow stripes back there
don’t help out at all, but hopefully this helps us out for the next
Daytona.”
HENDRICK DOMINANCE
Hendrick Motorsports started the race 1-2 and finished that way. However, it was four different drivers filling those spots.
Jeff Gordon was the Coors Light Pole-sitter with Kasey Kahne on the outside pole. Those cars are produced in the same shop.
Then Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jimmie Johnson, whose cars are produced in another shop, were 1-2 at the finish line.
“Hats
off to Dale Jr. and that whole team, and everybody at Hendrick
Motorsports,” Gordon said. “Boy, we had amazing cars this weekend.”
“The Hendrick cars and engines were just extremely tough today,” Denny Hamlin said.
Kahne’s
day was ruined when he was trapped in a 14-car crash on lap 47 and
Gordon’s hopes for victory were scuttled when he was caught speeding
down pit road during a late caution period.
Ironically,
Gordon was a guest analyst on FOX's XFINITY race broadcast on Saturday
and talked about how “you’ve got to get to pit road without locking the
tires up,” he said. “I thought I was plenty conservative there but the
tires were worn out and I just carried too much speed to pit road and
kind of locked the tires up I was just speeding. I couldn't get the car
slowed down.”
RAGAN READY
David
Ragan made his final run in the No. 18 Toyota as a substitute for the
injured Kyle Busch, a seat now to be filled by NASCAR Next alum Erik
Jones. Ragan moves on to take over the No. 55 Toyota of Michael Waltrip
Racing next Saturday night in Kansas.
“I
wish Kansas was in about an hour,” Ragan said after being caught up in
an early wreck and completing only 123 of 188 laps. “I just don’t like
the five or six days that you have to dwell and think about last week’s
race. Certainly, this is not a good race to go out on. I was hoping we
could get a good finish and contend for a win here today, but just
wasn’t meant to be. We had a lot of fun. We didn’t end on a good note,
but you have that at Talladega sometimes.”
CREW CHIEF CONFLICTED
Greg Ives, the crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Jr., won his first race in Sprint Cup, but he nearly missed the race.
On
Saturday, his eight-year-old daughter Payton broke her arm in a
playground accident, requiring surgery. Earnhardt offered to fly Ives
back to Charlotte to be with his daughter, but Payton talked her father
into remaining at Talladega.
“I
wanted to give him that obligation to choose,” Earnhardt said. “She’s
tough as nails and she told him not to come home. She was mad at him for
the call he (made) in Richmond.”
Earnhardt
related encountering a downcast Ives after that race, only to learn
that “he’s worried about what she’s going to tell him when he got home.
It’s good she keeps him honest.”
FRANCE AWARD
Daniel
Noltemeyer, a 33-year-old from Louisville who was named winner of the
annual Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award last year, was a visitor to
Talladega Superspeedway Sunday morning.
Noltemeyer,
who has Down syndrome, established Best Buddies Kentucky, a foundation
that creates opportunities for people with intellectual and
developmental disabilities. He has become a spokesperson for the
foundation and works for more inclusion for those with disabilities.
The
Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award, now in its fifth year, includes a
$100,000 from The NASCAR Foundation to Best Buddies Kentucky. People
may nominate dedicated NASCAR fans who have made a profound impact on
the lives of children in their community at NASCAR.com/award through May
8.
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