Sunday Dover Notebook
Notebook Items:
· Third time is not the charm for Martin Truex Jr.
· Almirola gets hard-earned fifth-place finish
· Kyle Busch's uphill battle got harder
May 31, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Third time is not the charm for Martin Truex Jr.
DOVER,
Del.—For the third straight NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race, Martin Truex
Jr. led the most laps, and for the third straight race he failed to
win.
But
Truex left Sunday’s FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks at Dover
International Speedway not chafing with disappointment missing an
opportunity in a potential race-winning car—as had been the case last
week at Charlotte—but miffed at fourth-place finisher Kasey Kahne for
closing the door on the final restart.
With nowhere to go in the inside lane, Truex finished sixth after leading a race-high 131 laps.
“I
was inside him, and he ran me down on the apron,” Truex said. “So I
either had to let off or wreck all of us. We had a good car today but it
was never right. We were never right yesterday all through practice.
“We
made some changes today and we made some gains on it, but never really
got it where we needed it. Clean air was huge. When we were out front,
we were OK. It just never turned good all day long. It just eventually
caught up to us.”
Kahne, understandably, had a different view of the green-white-checkered-flag restart.
“He
was back behind me to get a run on me, obviously; the spotter said I
was clear, so I just went to the bottom getting into (Turn) 1,” Kahne
said. “I think he was a little upset. He gave me a bump after the race.
But I don’t know. I didn’t really know what else to do other than to go
there with guys on my outside and stuff.
“But
we had a pretty good car. We made good adjustments. The guys did a nice
job. I wanted more. We had a nice package, but just didn’t pull it
off.”
ALMIROLA GETS HARD-EARNED FIFTH-PLACE FINISH
How bad was the handling of Aric Almirola’s car early in Sunday’s Sprint Cup race?
So bad that he twice went a lap down early in the race.
But
Almirola also got two “lucky dogs,” free pass to the lead lap as the
highest-scored lapped car, and he spent the rest of the race making the
most of his second chances, posting a season-best fifth-place finish in
his No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford.
The
critical factor was Almirola’s ability to stay infront of leader Kevin
Harvick before a wreck involving Brian Scott and Kyle Busch brought out
the fifth caution on Lap 376.
“I
earned my money today, that is for sure,” Almirola said. “This
Smithfield Ford Fusion was a handful most of the day. It started off
extremely tight. (Crew chief) Trent Owens and the guys made really good
adjustments on the car, and got it better and better. Finally we weren’t
the lucky dog -- we raced and stayed on the lead lap, and when the
caution came out, we got a chance to restart with the leaders.
“That
was the big break for us. Every time we would get the lucky dog I had
to start dead last and 30-40-50 laps the leaders were right back on me.
It was a great day for us, a really good points day for us. I’m proud of
Trent Owens and all the guys at Richard Petty Motorsports. They have
been working their guts out trying to bring better cars to the race
track week in and week out.”
KYLE BUSCH’S UPHILL BATTLE JUST GOT HARDER
Kyle
Busch’s run toward the top 30 in points suffered a serious setback on
Sunday when contact from Brian Scott’s Chevrolet sent Busch’s Toyota
into the outside wall in Turn 3 on Lap 376 of a scheduled 400.
Busch
was running fourth at the time and made a move to pass Scott on the
inside. Unaware the No. 18 Toyota was below him, Scott turned into
Busch’s car.
“I
apologize to @Kyle Busch, his sponsors, his team, his fans and all of
JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing),” Scott posted to his Twitter account after the
race. “100% my fault, I didn’t know he was underneath me until 2 late.”
The
mea culpa, however, can’t undo the damage to Busch’s hopes of finishing
in the top 30 in the standings 13 races hence. Since Busch missed the
first 11 races of the season after breaking his right leg and left foot
in a Feb. 21 accident at Daytona, he must win one of the next 13 races
and finish in the top 30 in points to qualify for the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup.
“I
guess Brian said his spotter didn’t say anything and he just chopped
the corner and I was under him already, and it just sucked me around,”
Busch said. “I hate it. I hate it for my guys. Man, we had a really good
run going, obviously -- we ran in the top-five all day long.
“Just
hate it for the Skittles Camry and everybody at M&M Mars. This is a
shame. This isn’t what we need, and we weren’t going to win today, but
it doesn’t help when you finish 40th.”
Actually,
Busch was credited with a 36th-place result, but he leaves Dover 168
points out of 30th place, needing an approximate average of 15th place
over the next 13 races to have a realistic shot at the top 30.
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