Saturday Auto Club Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Polesitter Kyle Larson among a handful of practice casualties
·
Saturday's first practice was no picnic either
·
New tire rules could have profound effect on Sunday
·
Former NASCAR Diversity Intern directs XFINITY race
March 25, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Polesitter Kyle Larson among a handful of practice casualties
FONTANA,
Calif. – Polesitter Kyle Larson and 13th-place starter Chase Elliott
both had brushes with the outside wall during Saturday’s final Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series
practice at Auto Club Speedway.
The
damage to the right side of Larson’s No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing
Chevrolet SS was cosmetic, and in short order his team had the series
leader back on track.
Elliott’s
issue was more serious. Shortly after he posted the fastest lap in the
session at 187.480 mph, the No. 24 Chevy’s contact with the wall pushed
the right rear quarter
panel into the rear deck lid and knocked the deck lid out of kilter.
As
Final Practice ended, Elliott’s Hendrick Motorsports team was
evaluating possible chassis damage and trying to repair the car, but a
final decision hadn’t been made as to
whether Elliott will have to go to a backup and lose his starting spot
in Sunday’s Auto Club 400 (at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX).
“We
had a part come loose on the left front, and it’s obviously something
that needs to be together to make laps,” Elliott said of the cause of
the accident. “I’m not real sure
why it broke or why that happened. It was nothing fancy that we were
doing. I was getting into (Turn) 3 at the time.
“I
don’t know if it was some sort of roughness to the race track that
bounced it loose, or what. I was really happy with the NAPA Chevy
throughout that run. Unfortunately, this
now puts us behind. But we’ll look into it and try to get this car
fixed for tomorrow. We would love to keep this primary car. I don’t know
if we can or not. I know they’ll work hard and try to get it tuned up
for tomorrow.”
Both
Busch brothers also had issues in final practice, with Kyle spinning
late in the session and Kurt brushed the wall with his No. 41 Ford
Fusion late in the final minutes.
SATURDAY’S FIRST PRACTICE WAS NO PICNIC EITHER
The
final 10 minutes of Saturday morning’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
practice at Auto Club Speedway provided unwelcomed excitement for
drivers Kevin Harvick and David
Ragan.
With
roughly 10 minutes left in the 55-minute early-morning session,
Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford Fusion scraped the wall in Turn
4.
Harvick
drove the car back to the garage, where the team began repairing the
cosmetic damage to the right side to avoid going to a backup car and
losing the seventh-place starting
position earned in Friday’s qualifying session.
With three body men at the race track, the No. 4 team had ample time to fix the damage.
Ragan
wasn’t as lucky. With time running out in the session, the driver of
the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford Fusion pounded the Turn 3 wall
after cutting a tire and destroyed
the race car.
Forced
to use a backup, Ragan will drop from his 27th starting position to the
rear of the field for the green flag in Sunday’s Auto Club 400.
“We
just cut a left-rear tire going down the back straightaway, and I tried
to start slowing it down as quick as I could and just couldn’t slow it
down fast enough,” Ragan said
of the incident. “By the time I got to Turn 3, I was wrecking before I
even got to the corner.
“It’s
certainly unfortunate. I felt like our Camping World Ford was pretty
decent. We made a few adjustments and hadn’t put new tires on yet, and I
felt like our speeds hadn’t
fallen off a lot, so it’s unfortunate.”
NEW TIRE RULES COULD HAVE PROFOUND EFFECT ON SUNDAY
Second-place
qualifier Denny Hamlin doesn’t think tire strategy per se will play a
huge role in Sunday’s Auto Club 400 because drivers are likely to take
four tires at every
available opportunity.
However,
tire allotment could play a huge role, with new rules compelling teams
to work with two fewer sets than they had for last year’s race.
“If
there’s a lot of cautions, it’s going to be a factor, for sure,” Hamlin
told the NASCAR Wire Service. “This race track is nearly like Atlanta,
where you have to take tires,
(event) if you just roll around under caution. I like it for that
reason. It’s one of the oldest surfaces we have on our circuit. It’s
still a great surface to race on.
“Being
that we have two less sets, we have to be mindful of it. It’s tough on
the crew chiefs, because you don’t know when the cautions will fall. You
only know when two will
fall (at the ends of the first two stages). So you’ve got to try to
plan around that if you have cautions in-between.
“My
guess is, if there’s a lot of cautions early, somewhere in the middle
of the race you’ll have to stay out on a short stint to save tires for
the end.”
FORMER NASCAR DIVERSITY INTERN DIRECTS XFINITY RACE
A
former member of NASCAR’s Diversity Internship program, Jusan Hamilton,
was tapped by the sanctioning body to serve as the race director for
Saturday’s XFINITY Series Service
King 300 at Auto Club Speedway.
Hamilton was charged with making the necessary split-second decisions regarding officiating, safety and emergency services.
“Being
Race Director is similar to being the quarterback in football,
“Hamilton said, “You have to know your job and the jobs of every other
team member to be successful."
The
26-year old has swiftly ascended the NASCAR ranks during his nearly
four-and-a-half-year tenure at the company, the majority spent as a key
member of the racing operations
and event management team.
With
Saturday’s assignment, Hamilton will become the first African-American
to serve as Race Director for a national series race.
The
Ithaca, New York, native’s entry into racing began as a driver at dirt
tracks across New York state and road courses across the East Coast.
Hamilton is just one of many rising
stars at NASCAR regularly appointed to race control to manage the
sanctioning body’s 92 national series races each year.
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