Sunday Sonoma Notebook
Notebook Items:
- First top five of season is little consolation for Clint Bowyer
- Late caution spoils Johnson's strategy
- Gordon finishes 16th in last Sonoma run
June 28, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
First top five of season is little consolation for Clint Bowyer
SONOMA,
Calif. – Despite scoring his first top five of the 2015 season—and the
first for Michael Waltrip Racing—in Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at
Sonoma Raceway, Clint Bowyer was all but disconsolate as he took the
dais as the third-place finisher at the 1.99-mile road course.
The
solid run was all well and good, but Bowyer had seen his winning
chances, not to mention a possible berth in the Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup disappear in Turns 2 and 3 after the final restart, when
contact with Matt Kenseth’s Toyota impeded Bowyer and gave eventual race
winner Kyle Busch the opening he needed.
“Everybody
went high into my groove and opened it up for him, and he drove right
into it and went on,” Bowyer said of Busch’s charge to the front. “He
had the right line, and unfortunately I didn't. It just didn't work out
for me. He beat me to the punch line, beat me to the lead, and the rest
was history.”
Bowyer
was on new tires after a late pit stop, and Kenseth had stayed out on
old rubber. With seven laps left when the race restarted, Bowyer felt he
had to try to bull his way to the front.
“We
were on tires there, and you knew there was going to be some of them
that stayed out, and unfortunately I was kind of on that outside line,
and my only chance was to just try to hammer my way up through them,”
Bowyer said. “And then Kyle was able to sneak up on the inside of them
and kind of beat me to the punch line and went on to win the race.
“You
hate to be in that situation. You've got to get rough, you've got to
get aggressive. Matt and I got hooked up and about gave away our whole
day there. It just turned me right, and damn near wrecked. Obviously,
when you come out here, we've won before, we've run really well here. I
wanted to win really bad. Got an opportunity there and just couldn't
capitalize.”
LATE CAUTION SPOILS JOHNSON’S STRATEGY
Jimmie
Johnson was 11 green-flag laps away from winning for the second time at
Sonoma Raceway, but a late caution foiled the efforts of the No. 48
team.
When
the left rear wheel assembly separated from Casey Mears’ Chevrolet and
caromed across the infield into a chain-link fence, the resulting yellow
put Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus in an impossible situation.
Johnson
had no choice but to stay on the track on old tires while those
pursuing him came to the pits for new rubber. Though four other cars
stayed out with Johnson, the buffer between the six-time champion and
the cars on new tires proved short-lived and ineffective.
Two laps after the restart, Kyle Busch passed Johnson, who fell to sixth at the finish.
“I
saw there were a bunch of cars between myself and the first guy on
(new) tires,” Johnson said of his assessment before the restart. “I felt
pretty good about things. And then after about a lap and a half, I
wasn’t feeling so good about things; they were there quickly.
“But
if we came back tomorrow, we’d still run the same strategy. We played
it perfectly. We were one caution away from it working out just right.
So this situation we’re in with the wins (four so far this year) and
being locked in the Chase, we wanted to come out and be aggressive with
our strategy.”
JEFF GORDON FINISHES 16TH IN LAST SONOMA RUN
Jeff Gordon fought a chancy setup early in Sunday’s race at Sonoma.
Then
his team incurred a penalty when a crew member threw a spring rubber
over the roof of the No. 24 Chevrolet—a violation of NASCAR’s rule
against throwing equipment on pit road—and Gordon had to drop to the
rear of the field.
Despite
the adversity, Gordon restarted third with a glimmer of hope when pit
strategy left him near the front of the field on old tires, but the
top-five position didn’t last long at the 1.99-mile road course Gordon
considers his home track.
Ultimately, the four-time champion finished 16th in his final run at Sonoma as a full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver.
“I
was really optimistic going into the race,” Gordons said ruefully. “Our
car was good in practice. We qualified well. They dropped the green and
we were moving forward. I was pretty happy with it. I felt that rear
starting to go off pretty early on and saw some guys coming from further
back. And so we tried to make a couple of adjustments. It just seemed
as the track continued to lay rubber, our setup, which we were taking a
little bit of a gamble and risk with--but it looked good in practice--it
just didn’t pay off for us.
“So,
we had to make some big adjustments and lose track position. But the
car was really, really good there at the end. Nothing’s going to take
away from this weekend for me. I know it wasn’t the finish we all
wanted, but it was a very memorable weekend. It’s still a little bit
more fun to go to hang out with some of my friends and family here. But I
hate that we weren’t a little bit better. And that last thing (staying
out) ... I was just taking some risk on that last pit stop. We didn’t
have anything to lose at that point.”
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