Friday Pocono Notebook
Notebook Items:
• Earnhardt attempts to join select company at Pocono
• Drivers' Council offers in-car perspective
• Rodney Childers signs extension with Stewart-Haas Racing
• Pocono Raceway improves the view for the fans
• Dillon meets real horsepower
June 5, 2015
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
Earnhardt attempts to join select company at Pocono
LONG
POND, Pa. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. is accustomed to being in select
company. This weekend, he seeks to join NASCAR Hall of Famer Bobby
Allison and Tim Richmond as the only drivers to win three consecutive
races at Pocono Raceway.
But
Earnhardt, who turned Friday’s fourth-fastest practice lap in
preparation for Sunday’s Axalta “We Paint Winners” 400 (1 p.m. ET, FOX
Sports 1), knows three in a row is a lot to ask.
“It’s
difficult to win one,” Earnhardt said. “We won those two races by
having some great pit strategy. Steve (former crew chief Letarte) got
real aggressive on his pit calls and I think that’s what definitely is
going to put you in position to win.”
Earnhardt
says the nature of racing at Pocono gives crew chiefs with cars strong
enough to lead the race, the option of employing unusual pit strategies.
This year, those calls will be up to his first-year crew chief Greg
Ives.
“You
kind of call this race in reverse,” Earnhardt said. “The tires are
pretty tough here and durable, so there’s not a whole lot of fall-off
and you can call a race sort of like a road course: Put yourself up
front and it makes it pretty difficult to get around you if you’ve got a
good car.
“Still,
everything’s got to fall in the right place to allow you to make those
choices. It worked out great for us last year. (But) we also had a fast
car. We ran pretty well, but there were about eight of us in either of
those races who could have won.”
If
any factor is in Earnhardt’s favor, it’s Hendrick Motorsports recent
run of success at Pocono. Hendrick has won the last five Sprint Cup
events on the 2.5-mile triangle with Jeff Gordon (2012), Jimmie Johnson
(2013), Kasey Kahne (2013) and Earnhardt (2014 sweep).
"We’ve
got four fast cars,” Earnhardt said. “This is a horsepower race track
where engines can make a difference and I feel like over the last
several years, we’ve had one of the best engine programs in the sport.
Your car really, really shines here and we’ve got some of the best
equipment in the garage.”
Seven
drivers, including Johnson (2004) and Denny Hamlin (2006) have won both
Sprint Cup events at Pocono in the same season. But success one season
hardly ensures success the next. Johnson went nine years after his sweep
at Pocono and Hamlin has been up and down since 2006, although he did
post consecutive victories in 2009 and 2010 Sprint Cup races.
“I
kind of put sweeping here in the same box as sweeping at Daytona or
Talladega,” Johnson said. “There are just so many circumstances out of
your control at this track. … There are always long green-flag runs and
varying strategies. The teams that don’t have the raw speed to race for
the win will roll the dice. There are a lot of moving targets. It’s not
just a straight-up downforce-style race and I think that increases the
difficulty to win here regularly.”
Drivers’ Council Offers In-Car Perspective
Johnson
said the NASCAR’s rules package remains the “hot topic” for the
Drivers’ Council that met with NASCAR officials for the first time last
weekend at Dover.
He
says that although NASCAR has “lots of simulation and technology” to
determine how cars will respond and compete on track, “we (the drivers)
are living it inside the car. We just want to make sure our voice is
heard and that the people that make the decisions know what is really
going on in the car.”
Although Johnson is not one of the eight driver representative, Earnhardt is.
“I
think it’s awesome because you’ve got all the NASCAR guys (together)
that you want five minutes with,” Earnhardt said. “Everybody’s in the
room to work together and everybody wants the same things – a healthy
sport, racing as good as it can be and as safe as it can be.”
One
thing Earnhardt doesn’t think will be left up to the drivers is changes
to the race schedule. He sees that as a matter left to NASCAR’s
governing body, teams owners and tracks. “I don’t expect to be in that
conversation,” he said.
Stewart-Hass Locks Up Childers
Kevin
Harvick’s championship-winning collaboration with crew chief Rodney
Childers will continue for the foreseeable future. Stewart-Haas Racing
announced Friday that it has signed Childers to a multiyear contract
extension.
In
2014, their first season together at SHR, Childers and Harvick won five
races and the NASCAR Sprint Cup title, becoming only the third Sprint
Cup team to lead more than 2,000 laps in a season since 2000. The
success has continued this season as Harvick has opened a commanding
44-point lead in the point standings, thanks to nine first- or
second-place finishes in the first 13 races. Only Bobby Allison (1972)
and Cale Yarborough (1977) had as many top-twos to start a season.
Childers,
who will turn 40 on Sunday and already had a contract through next
season, says he had a sense that things would pay off when he left
Michael Waltrip Racing to join SHR.
"I
knew when I came to Stewart-Haas Racing that this was a special
opportunity,” he said. “Kevin’s skills have always been evident, and his
hunger and desire to be the absolute best he can be in every practice,
qualifying session and race motivates our entire team. We have great
leadership at Stewart-Haas Racing along with a deep commitment toward
success, excellent people and strong partners. If you want to win, this
is where you want to be, and I’m happy to be here for a long time.”
SHR co-owner Tony Stewart called keeping Childers and Harvick together a “high priority.”
“Rodney
Childers and Kevin Harvick set a new standard of excellence in 2014
that they’ve carried into this season,” Stewart said. “We’re obviously
very happy to have the two of them at Stewart-Haas Racing for many years
to come.”
Pocono Improves The View
Pocono
Raceway announced that it will install two new 60-foot video towers,
each with two high-definition video screens to provide fans with
enhanced views of live action, entertainment and real-time statistics.
“The
video displays will provide new views of the race and leaderboard
information which previously were not available,” Pocono Raceway
President and CEO Brandon Igdalsky said. The 24.15 x 30.45 inch screens
from ANC Sports are expected to be operational for the July 31-Aug. 2
Pennsylvania 400 race weekend.
Dillon Meets Real Horsepower
If
thoroughbred American Pharaoh wins Saturday’s Belmont Stakes, Ty Dillon
jokes that he deserves the credit. Dillon came face to face with the
Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner while doing a track promotion for
Kentucky Speedway.
“We
met the assistant trainer,” Dillon said. “He let me go back there and
feed him some carrots and (we) watched him walk onto the hauler as he
was leaving to go to New York and hopefully win the Triple Crown. If he
wins, I’m going to take all the credit."
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