Saturday Texas Notebook
April 8, 2017
Notebook Items:
·
With lots of speed in the back of the field, Sunday’s race should be a free-for-all
·
Trevor Bayne clobbers the wall in practice
·
Stenhouse was willing participant in April Fool’s hoax
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
With lots of speed in the back of the field, Sunday’s race should be a free-for-all
FORT WORTH, Tex. – Sunday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 at Texas Motor Speedway
(1:30
p.m. ET on FOX) promises to be one of the most interesting Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup races of the season—and not just because the repaved,
reconfigured speedway will pose an enormous
challenge to the top drivers.
When
the green flag waves on Sunday a large percentage of the speed in the
field will be coming from the rear. The Chevrolets of series leader Kyle
Larson and of Hendrick Motorsports
drivers Chase Elliott, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne will start
toward the back on owner points because their cars failed to pass
pre-qualifying inspection in time to make a run during time trails.
Further
expanding the contingent at the rear of the field are Kyle Busch, who
hit the wall during opening practice and did not make a qualifying
attempt; Erik Jones, who destroyed
his primary car during practice and went to a backup; and seven-time
champion Jimmie Johnson, who spun during the first round of knockout
qualifying, flat-spotted his tires and will start from the back on fresh
rubber.
Those
drivers will be trying to work their way forward as quickly as
possible, and they’ll have the muscle to do so. Larson was second
fastest to Brad Keselowski in Saturday’s
first practice session. Earnhardt and Elliott were and fifth on the
speed chart, all but guaranteeing a free-for-all when the race starts.
“I
ain’t too worried about it,” said Earnhardt, who will start 37th on
Sunday. “The race is pretty long. I don’t know what was wrong with our
car going through tech, but if you
don’t make it, you don’t get out there and I like that. I like the
rules being the same for everybody.”
Though he clearly has a fast car, Larson acknowledged the difficulty in starting from the rear on the new Texas asphalt.
“I
don’t know exactly what happened--we just didn’t make it through tech,”
Larson said. “Yeah, this is not the place you want to not make it
through tech. It will be really hard
to pass, I think, on Sunday. Wherever we end up starting is going to
hurt us.”
TREVOR BAYNE CLOBBERS THE WALL IN PRACTICE
Moments
after posting the fastest lap in the first six minutes of Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice on Saturday, Trevor Bayne lost
control of his No. 6 Roush Fenway
Racing Ford and obliterated the car against the Turn 2 wall.
“Basically,
I wrecked the best race car I ever had,” Bayne said after exiting the
infield care center. “It’s really disappointing for me. I just got into
the gray getting into
Turn 1. I got the right rear just a little bit in the gray, and it was
gone. As soon as that happens, you know you’re in trouble, but you can’t
go back.
“We’ll
just have to be really disciplined in the race not to make mistakes
like that. Hopefully, the backup car is as good as the primary. They do a
really good job at Roush
Fenway Racing of making sure our cars are consistent. Man, I’m so proud
of what we’re doing right now. It’s just frustrating that I had the
best car I’ve ever had here and had an issue.”
Because
he was forced to go to a backup car for Sunday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts
500, Bayne will give up the 12th-place starting position he earned in
Friday’s time trials and will
take the green flag from the rear of the field.
Bayne got 11 laps in the backup car before the end of Happy Hour.
STENHOUSE WAS WILLING PARTICIPANT IN APRIL FOOL’S HOAX
When
Danica Patrick pressed the button on Twitter last Saturday to announce
her engagement to boyfriend Ricky Stenhouse Jr., social media blew up
with the news—until word got
out it was an April Fool’s joke. Stenhouse was in on the prank, but he
had forgotten about it.
“I
was out in the woods working after Martinsville practice, and she says,
‘Hey, it’s April Fool’s—I want to send something out,’” Stenhouse told
reporters on Saturday at Texas
Motor Speedway. “She said, ‘I’ve got this idea. Are you in?’ And I
said, ‘Yeah, I guess so. Let’s do it.’
“Then
I was on the phone talking to somebody for 30 or 40 minutes, and my
phone kept going off, and I wasn’t sure why it kept going off, and I
forgot she had sent that out. Then
I realized real quick what it was all about.”
Stenhouse said the joke hadn’t increased the urgency to make a bona fide proposal.
“I wouldn’t say there’s a ton of pressure, but I get it from fans a lot,” he said.
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