Friday Darlington Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Almirola looking for magic on throwback weekend at Darlington
- Gordon can beat stress by winning
- Short Strokes
Sept. 4, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Aric Almirola looking for magic on throwback weekend at Darlington
DARLINGTON,
S.C. – In keeping with the homage to NASCAR history at Darlington
Raceway, Aric Almirola showed up with a Fu Manchu moustache grown as a
tribute to his boss, team owner Richard Petty.
Hoping
to race his way into the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, as he did
last year, Almirola will be driving the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports
Ford—complete with throwback STP paint scheme—in Sunday’s Bojangles’
Southern 500 (7 p.m. ET on NBC).
Perhaps the moustache will bring him luck.
“I
have about five days with this,” said Almirola, who is 16th in the
series standings and 35 points outside of a Chase-eligible position with
two races left before the cutoff at Richmond. “I wasn’t fully
committed. I shaved last week on vacation when I went to dinner with my
wife and I got cleaned up.
“After
that, I kind of just let it go crazy and I had a few drinks out on the
beach and thought it would be cool to grow this. I got a late start. I
would like for it to be a little fuller, but this is all I’ve got for
now.”
It was full enough, however, to get a positive reaction from Petty.
“He
saw it and he actually liked it,” Almirola said. “He said he won the
Daytona 500 with a mustache that looked just like this. We’ll see if we
can’t win the Southern 500 with one.”
Though
Almirola currently is one spot out of the Chase, 35 points behind Clint
Bowyer, the driver of the No. 43 Ford remains optimistic about his
chances.
“I
think when you are mathematically still in–until somebody tells us
we’re not—I feel like we have a shot,” Almirola said. “I’ve been really
proud of what we have accomplished this year. Last year, we were 25th or
26th in points, but we made the Chase because we won at Daytona.
“This year, I feel like if we made the Chase we certainly earned it.”
JEFF GORDON CAN BEAT STRESS BY WINNING
Jeff
Gordon knows full well that the best way to remove the pressure of a
stressful weekend at Richmond is by winning on Sunday at Darlington (7
p.m. ET on NBC).
Barring
a victory at the Lady in Black, Gordon likely will have to avoid
disaster in the Bojangles’ Southern 500 and the following Saturday in
Richmond to secure a spot in the Chase. And it will help his chances
immensely if the next two races don’t produce a new winner.
Gordon
currently is 12th in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings, with a
52-point advantage over Aric Almirola, the first driver below the
current Chase cut line. But a victory comes with the immediate guarantee
of a Chase spot.
“That
would be huge,” said Gordon, who is making his final appearance at
Darlington. “We definitely feel pressure, and it’s a little bit
stressful right now, being on the bubble. I felt like we were in a
pretty comfortable position about a month ago. We’ve just had some
misfortunes. I feel like we’ve performed well enough to securely be in
by points.
“I
can’t say we have performed well enough to be real confident coming in
here that we are going to be one of the cars to beat. But I will follow
that up also with the amount of hard work that (crew chief) Alan
(Gustafson) and the team, everyone at Hendricks Motorsports has been
putting in, the effort for this weekend especially, but going forward as
well. I’m pretty happy with the car. I think we’ve got a shot at doing
that.”
It’s
not that Gordon isn’t used to pressure. In 2012, he edged Kyle Busch
for the final Chase spot by three points. In 2013, NASCAR chairman and
CEO Brian France added on to the Chase field after late-race
machinations at Richmond by Michael Waltrip Racing finagled the
four-time champion out of a Chase berth he otherwise would have secured.
“No
matter what, we realize it’s important for us to execute really well
this weekend to put a great result out there on the track to get those
points we need to go to Richmond and be a little more comfortable
anyway,” Gordon said.
“Other than a win this weekend, Richmond is going to be stressful. But the good news is we’ve dealt with it before.”
SHORT STROKES
Greg
Biffle, whose only feasible path to the Chase requires a victory in one
of the next two races, led Friday’s opening NASCAR Sprint Cup practice
at Darlington with a lap at 176.201 mph. Biffle has won twice at the
Lady in Black, his last victory coming in 2006. ... Austin Dillon was
the first driver to pick up a Darlington stripe early in the opening
practice session. Though Dillon’s No. 3 Chevrolet suffered hard contact
with the outside wall, his team opted to repair the car rather than go
to a backup. ... Kurt Busch, the only driver using the new high-tech
digital dashboard in his car this weekend, was quick in both practices.
He was second to Biffle in the opening session and second to Brad
Keselowski in Happy Hour ... Kyle Busch was eighth fastest in final
practice before smacking the Turn 2 wall on his 33rd lap of the session.
Busch’s team rolled out the backup No. 18 Toyota, which Busch will now
drive in Sunday’s race. After his team prepped the backup car, Busch
returned to the track, ran 21 laps and ended up 34th fastest in the
session.
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