Thursday Kentucky Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Keselowski advocates for tailoring competition packages to specific tracks
- New package locked in despite curtailed practice
- Is this the year for Jamie McMurray?
July 9, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Keselowski is vocal advocate for tailoring competition packages to specific tracks
SPARTA,
Ky. – Brad Keselowski is an avid proponent of different strokes for
different tracks—and the logic of his position is impeccable.
NASCAR
is trying out a new low-downforce aerodynamic configuration for
Saturday night’s Quaker State 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at
Kentucky Speedway and plans to repeat the process Sept. 6 at Darlington.
The most visible element of the new package is a spoiler reduced in
height from six inches to 3.5 inches.
At
Indianapolis in July and at Michigan in August, NASCAR will unveil a
higher-drag-and-downforce package the sanctioning body hopes will
enhance the quality of racing at those two venues.
Conceptually,
it’s a giant step for NASCAR, which is embracing the notion that
different competitive configurations may be appropriate for each of its
unique race tracks, much as a professional golfer might change his
arsenal of clubs for each different course.
It’s a mind-set Keselowski, the 2012 series champion, supports unequivocally.
“I’m
in that camp and on that team that says that’s what it’s going to take
our sport to the next level, as far as the quality of racing is
concerned,” Keselowski said, “is developing genre-specific packages for
the tracks with the realization that, when the Car of Tomorrow (2007)
and the Generation-6 car (2013) came out, I think it was designed to
perform at a higher level at the plate tracks and, in some way, whether
it was intentional or not, the road courses.
“And
we’ve seen the road course races and the plate tracks in that time –
the last seven or eight years – kind of turn into some of what I think
most of the industry and its fans would recognize as the best racing our
sport has to offer right now.”
Keselowski
believes that designing specific competition packages for specific
tracks will provide a series-wide improvement in the quality of the
racing.
“We
feel like, as drivers, we know the package that we need to put on the
best racing, and it’s somewhere around the marks that we had 10 years
ago, downforce-wise, power-wise, et cetera,” Keselowski said. “But the
reality was that was not perhaps the best racing for road courses and
superspeedways in terms of both the quality of racing and the safety
perspective.
“So
I think what that comes back to is kind of a self-awareness that the
sport is starting to grow, that I’m very supportive of, that running the
same rules package or car at every race track, despite glaring
differences in layouts, is probably not in the best interest of this
sport.
“To
see us grow self-aware of that as I’ve seen over the last month, I
think, is a very bright spot for the sport and its future in terms of
the quality of racing… I’m really supportive of that and think that
could be very significant for our sport going forward.”
NEW PACKAGE LOCKED IN DESPITE CURTAILED PRACTICE
Because
of rainy weather at Kentucky Speedway, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers
lost four hours of testing on Wednesday and another two hours of
practice on Thursday.
Practice
or not, NASCAR is committed to running its new lower-downforce aero
package at Kentucky, and drivers are hoping Friday brings a rain-free
window for practice.
Through
wind tunnel testing and computer simulations, Sprint Cup teams have a
good baseline for the way the new low-downforce package will behave, but
Roush Fenway Racing driver Greg Biffle thinks it’s important for the
series to see some track time before Saturday night’s Quaker State 400.
“I
think we could probably race this package without testing it,” Biffle
said on Thursday at Kentucky Speedway. “I doubt whether that will
happen. I think that we’ll at least end up getting some practice. I
think we’ll need some practice on the race track to race this package
because we have gotten as close as we can with the setup and the springs
and the shocks and the wedge and the front sway bar as we could
possibly get,
"But
I think we’re going to need at least an hour practice session to get
it, ‘OK, it’s not spinning out and I’ve got it fairly decent.’ Now, do
we need four hours of testing and then an hour-and-a-half of practice
and qualifying and all that? No, we don’t need all that, but we do need
some track time.”
Two Sprint Cup practices are scheduled for Friday before qualifying at 2:30 p.m. ET.
IS THIS THE YEAR FOR MCMURRAY?
Jamie
McMurray would like nothing better than to shed an unwelcome
distinction, and the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season appears to be
unfolding in a way that will help him do so.
Though
McMurray has driven full-time in the series since 2003, he has never
qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, the playoff system
introduced in 2004. Through 17 races this season, McMurray is sixth in
the standings—and the highest-rated driver without a victory so far.
If
fewer than 16 different drivers win races this season (11 drivers have
victories thus far), McMurray is in good position to make the Chase on
points. From McMurray’s point of view, it helped that last week’s
restrictor-plate race at Daytona produced a duplicate winner (Dale
Earnhardt Jr.) and not an unexpected one.
It
also helped that McMurray avoided catastrophe and finished 11th and
15th, respectively, in the first two plate races of the season, at
Talladega and Daytona.
“I
remember heading into to the first Talladega race, knowing that was a
big weekend for a guy who hadn’t won a race because you could have
someone new win, and you could also have a 40th-place finish, which
makes a big swing in the points,” McMurray said. “So, making it through
there was big for us, and then making it through last weekend (at
Daytona) was the same thing. Not having a new winner and then not having
a horrible finish. We didn’t really lose that many points to the guys
that we’re racing.
“So
I only look at maybe Watkins Glen (a road course race) as being
somewhat of a wild card where you’d have a unique winner. And so for us,
it’s just about doing the same thing and getting the best finish we
can.”
The
driver of the No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet has an average finish
of 13.2 this season. If he can maintain that pace for the next nine
races, a first-time berth in the Chase could well be in his future.
No comments:
Post a Comment