Saturday Pocono Notebook
Notebook Items:
• Gordon, Axalta promote STEM education through Penn State paint scheme
• Harvick hunting Pocono win
• NASCAR named “National Treasure”
June 6, 2015
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
LONG
POND, Pa. -- Jeff Gordon has always experienced strong support at
Pocono Raceway, a track where he’s won six NASCAR Sprint Cup races.
This weekend, he’s feeling a little extra love.
Gordon
is not only driving a Penn State-themed, blue-and-white Chevrolet in
Sunday’s Axalta 'We Paint Winners' 400, his team is helping to host more
than 100 Penn State students – primarily business and engineering
majors -- at the track.
“It’s
amazing. We had a chance to go over to Penn State and visit with the
students and the faculty and the group of engineers that are doing so
much to be the future of companies like Axalta and the future of
racing,” said Gordon, who is competing in his final full Sprint Cup
season.
Axalta
(formerly DuPont) is a Philadelphia-based manufacturer of liquid and
powder coatings. The Penn State program at Pocono, which includes a
garage tour and panel discussion with Axalta, NASCAR, Pocono Raceway and
Hendrick Motorsports executives, is designed to drive awareness of and
support STEM (science, technology, education and math) and business
education.
“Supporting
STEM and future business leaders is vital to our future,” Gordon said.
“I depend on the mechanical engineers on my team to make sure that my
car in in top form for every race. Everything in my car is linked to
engineering – drag and drafting, friction and heat, grip, sound, turning
and load transfer. That’s why linking STEM education to the technology
behind successful racing is so important.
"Having
Penn State and those blue and white colors on our No. 24 car, we are
certainly going to have more support. The pressure is on, but we are
excited about that relationship.”
Last
year, Gordon and Axalta teamed to run a maroon car at Texas Motor
Speedway with a Texas A&M paint scheme. Axalta chairman and CEO
Charlie Shaver says involvement in education and creating interest in
STEM research is vital to success, not only on the track but in
research, science and business.
“We’re
based on engineering, science and innovation,” Shaver said. “We work
hard on STEM projects to (reach) students who are in high school and
college to get them interested in engineering and, ultimately get them
interested in companies like Axalta.
“We
have a couple thousand engineers and chemists in the company. We have
to continue to replenish them and, as we think about staying ahead of
our competition, continue to recruit the brightest and the best. This
weekend, we’re exposing them, not just to the sport, but also behind the
scenes – how engineering works, how business works in not only NASCAR
but for the teams.”
Although
Gordon has announced that 2015 will be his final season as a full-time
Sprint Cup driver, Shaver says Axalta’s relationships with both Hendrick
Motorsports and Pocono Raceway will continue. Axalta also maintains
working relationships with Rick Hendrick outside of NASCAR and has
already announced a long-term agreement to keep Gordon on board as an
adviser.
“We
do have a 23-year relationship with Hendrick Motorsports. We will be
with one of their drivers (in 2016),” said Shaver, whose company is also
hosting more than 50 racing enthusiasts from Brazil this weekend. “That
contract continues. Jeff will continue to play a very active role with
us in the company. He just won’t be in the 24 car. Later this year we’ll
announce with Rick and the team where we’ll be and how that sponsorship
will work.
"The
sport is important to us, the relationships are important, and being
able to build one at what we call our ‘home track,’ right outside our
corporate headquarters is even more important.”
Harvick Hunting Pocono Win
Reigning
NASCAR Sprint Cup champ Kevin Harvick is winless in 28 career starts at
Pocono Raceway. But he came close last August, finishing second to Dale
Earnhardt Jr. in the GoBowling.com 400, and he’s consistently had the
fastest car on the track this weekend.
“Pocono
is one of those places where I haven’t had a ton of success,” Harvick
says. “Probably the best memory I have there is winning a truck race.”
But
the series points leader finally appears to have things zeroed in. His
Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet posted the fastest lap time in all three
practices for Sunday’s race, including a 175.974 mph circuit to edge
Kyle Larson (175.292) in Saturday’s final practice.
“The
car is really fast,” says Harvick, who also ran the fastest times in
the first two qualifying sessions on Friday before settling for his
fifth-place starting spot. His teammate, Kurt Busch, will start on the
pole.
Chevrolet
drivers Earnhardt Jr. (who swept last year’s Cup races at Pocono),
Martin Truex Jr. (second in points), Kasey Kahne, Larson and Busch each
turned top-10 laps in both of Saturday practice sessions. So did the
Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota drivers Matt Kenseth and Carl Edwards, who had a
top-four or better car in each of the three Pocono practices.
Jimmie
Johnson, looking to build on his fourth victory of the season last week
at Dover, was 19th in final practice. No Ford driver was better than
14th on Saturday (Brad Keselowski in the morning, Greg Biffle in final
practice).
NASCAR Named “National Treasure”
NASCAR
has been named one of the United States’ “National Treasures” by PARADE
magazine and will be featured in the widely distributed print edition
this Sunday.
PARADE’s
ongoing series highlights “uniquely American people, places and things
that make us very, very happy,” and so has also recognized the
Declaration of Independence, the Hollywood sign, Stevie Wonder and
potato chips among other “National Treasures.”
The
NASCAR distinction is supported by Sprint Cup driver Danica Patrick,
who describes the sport as “totally American – NASCAR’s roots are true.”
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