Sunday Auto Club Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Clint Bowyer will save the celebration until he wins
·
Boxed in by pit strategy, Truex happy to run fourth
·
Logano recovers to finish fifth
March 26, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Clint Bowyer will save the celebration until he wins
FONTANA,
Calif. – Even though he had just posted his best Monster Energy NASCAR
Cup Series finish since 2015, Clint Bowyer didn’t expect effusive praise
from the driver he succeeded
in the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford.
So
when Bowyer pulled onto pit road at Auto Club Speedway on Sunday after
running third behind race winner Kyle Larson and runner-up Brad
Keselowski in the Auto Club 400, Stewart’s
reaction, as a car owner, was predictably restrained.
“Good job,” Stewart said to his driver.
Bowyer hadn’t expected anything more.
“Tony
wins a lot of races,” Bowyer elaborated. “He's won a lot of races.
Anything less than a win, you know... he expects that. And I love that
about Tony. “Obviously, I know
he's proud. He was happy with that. But that's what you want in an
owner. You know what I mean? To have that instilled in everything, in
your DNA, I mean, this is the way I was raised.
“Anything
else but a win is a bad day. You are miserable with anything less than
that. It's just the way we're wired as a race car driver from five years
old and on. The problem
is, is everybody else on that race track is wired the same way. So
there's really only one guy happy, and everybody else is pissed at the
end of the day. That’s what it boils down to.”
In
his first season with Stewart-Haas Racing, and back in top-of-the-line
equipment, Bowyer earned his best result since June 2015 at Sonoma,
where he also ran third.
But to get a bona fide celebration, he knows he’ll have to improve two positions.
BOXED IN BY PIT STRATEGY, TRUEX HAPPY TO RUN FOURTH
When
Corey LaJoie’s brush with the Turn 2 wall brought out the sixth of
seven cautions on Lap 192 of a scheduled 200, Martin Truex Jr. and crew
chief Cole Pearn gambled.
They
stayed out on old tires for a restart on Lap 196, but only two other
drivers, Denny Hamlin and Jamie McMurray, followed suit. That left race
winner Kyle Larson in the fourth
starting position, and one lap after the resumption of action, he had
the lead.
Truex
considered himself fortunate to hold onto fourth place on old rubber,
after the race went to overtime and extended two laps beyond its posted
distance.
“It
was definitely not the situation we wanted to be in, but we thought
more guys would stay out there (under the sixth caution),” said Truex,
who led 73 laps, second only to
Larson’s 110. “I think we only ran a few laps. It was definitely a
disadvantage at the end and just really tight.
“Holding
on for fourth was good for points. Overall, it was a good day for
everybody. We just had that one pit stop and I slid a little bit – a
foot or so further than I had
all day. The guys got the air hose caught on the splitter and we lost
six spots or whatever it was (during a stop under caution on Lap 181).
All in all, it was a good day, and we ran up front and led laps. The 42
(Larson) and I felt like we were the class
of the field – he just got it done, and we didn’t.”
LOGANO RECOVERS TO FINISH FIFTH
Joey
Logano didn’t experience the early complications that beset teammate
Brad Keselowski, but the driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford
nevertheless had to overcome late-race
obstacles to pull off a fifth-place finish.
Logano
pitted early on Lap 177, along with Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase
Elliott. Three laps later, an ill-timed caution trapped Logano a lap
down, but he regained the lead
lap with a wave-around for a restart on Lap 185.
When
caution flew on that same circuit for Matt Kenseth’s hard crash into
the inside backstretch wall, Logano came to pit road for tires and
ultimately drove up to fifth by the
end of the two-lap overtime.
“It
was up-and-down, for sure,” said Logano, who started the race 35th
after his car failed to pass inspection in time to make a run in the
first-round of knockout qualifying
on Friday. “Our car was really good on the short runs just like
yesterday (in the NASCAR XFINITY Series race). Our car was good on the
short runs and not good on the long runs. We would lose too much time.
“We
tried to short-pit them and got caught with the caution and got stuck
down a lap with 20 to go or so. We were able to recover, and at one
point I thought we were going to
win the race and had some trouble on pit road and lost some spots
again. But we were able to make some of them back up and end up with a
top five out of it.
“I guess we need to try to make our car a little bit better on the long run and smooth out some mistakes.”
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