Thursday Kansas Notebook
Notebook items include:
• Suarez not worried by little things like rain
• Crafton ready for a second start to Camping World season
May 7, 2015
By Jim Pedley
NASCAR Wire Service
Suarez not worried by little things like rain
KANSAS
CITY, Kan. – The rain was coming down hard and pooling up across the
garage area at a rate that was putting Thursday afternoon practices for
Friday night’s Toyota Tundra 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at
Kansas Speedway in serious jeopardy.
Might
have been a good weekend to stay home and get some rest, it was
suggested to rookie Daniel Suarez, who has raced in all nine XFINITY
Series and all three Camping World Truck Series events this year.
Not a chance, the Kyle Busch Motorsports driver said.
“Take
an off weekend? I want to be in a race car,” Suarez said. “Every single
weekend. My ‘off’ weekends will come in December. That’s when we’ll
have time for that.”
Suarez’s
plan to plant himself in drivers’ seats in the two top-tier NASCAR
series is understandable. Especially these days. Even with his youth,
his relative inexperience and his relative newness to stock cars, he
appears to be creeping toward phenom status.
The
23-year-old native of Monterrey, Mexico is having himself a year. In
the eight XFINITY starts he’s logged since getting caught up in a wreck
during Speedweeks, Suarez has six top-15 finishes with a career best of
second three weeks ago in Bristol.
Better
still, he’s finished in the top nine in each of his Camping World
starts in 2015 with finishes of fourth and sixth the past two races at
Atlanta and Martinsville respectively.
Suarez
is embedded in NASCAR and he’s looking good. And nerves? None. Not even
the prospect of losing practice time Thursday at a track he was
visiting for the first time in his life.
“I
was actually thinking about that an hour ago,” Suarez said rain washing
out Friday’s track time. “To be honest, I feel like I’m a very lucky
driver to be with race teams like Kyle Busch Motorsports and Joe Gibbs
Racing (his XFINITY team). I’m very confident that I’m going to have a
fast truck in this race. The worry will be on me to adapt to the race
track and to the truck. Definitely, it’s going to be a challenge, but I
don’t feel like we are going to be super horrible if we don’t have
practice.
“To
be honest, I feel like that chemistry and that communication has been
getting better and better with my crew chief and my engineers in the No.
51 Tundra. I’m a little worried about that, but I feel like if we don’t
have practice, nobody will have practice then. We’re going to be in
good shape anyway.”
MATT CRAFTON SAYS KANSAS MARKS NEW START
Officially, the 2015 Camping World Truck Series kicked off during Speedweeks in February at Daytona International Speedway.
Unofficially,
and thanks to an end to long breaks between races as spring heads
toward summer, it kind of restarts this weekend at Kansas Speedway.
“Yes,
for sure,” the defending Camping World Truck Series champion said
Thursday in the Kansas infield when asked if this weekend marked kind of
a restarting of the 2015 season. “We race, I think, like six of the
next seven weeks. Now is the time. We’ve raced well up to this point but
we really haven’t raced a whole lot. So now, this part of the season,
it’s game time for sure.”
The
trucks will be racing for just the fourth time this year when they take
to the track for Toyota Tundra 250, which is scheduled for Friday night
at Kansas.
Crafton,
the only driver in truck series history to have won back-to-back series
championships, has got to be hoping that resumption of regular racing
will produce same-old, same-old 2015 results.
Crafton
and his ThorSport Racing team are sitting first in points as they
arrive at Kansas – though just by two points over Tyler Reddick and by
six over third-place Erik Jones. The victory for Crafton came at Atlanta
Motor Speedway which, like Kansas, is a 1.5-mile oval. Not that that
matters.
“It’s
just about having good trucks,” he said. “These guys (ThorSport’s crew)
bring really, really good Menards Toyota Tundras each and every week to
the mile-and-a-half stuff. I think our short track stuff is just as
good as our mile-and-a-half stuff. I look forward to each and every week
that we go to the race track to be totally honest.”
Kansas
has not always been a friendly confine for Crafton. His first 12 visits
to the track produced just one top-five finish. But during his
championship seasons, he’s finished like, well, a champion – he won here
two years ago and was second last year.
Not surprisingly, love has blossomed between Crafton and the nation’s-heartland track.
“I
love coming to Kansas – the whole facility, the race track – they
repaved it and the new pavement was a little bit of a bear at the
beginning, but it’s starting to get some weathering,” he said. “It’s
getting better. The racing is getting better and they’re starting to get
a second groove to it. Every year I love coming here without a doubt.
I’m super stoked for each and every race, I can’t say that enough. I’ve
got an awesome group of guys that bring just crazy, fast trucks and I’m
lucky enough to get to drive them.”
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