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Friday, May 4, 2012

Mike Ford hopes to recapture old magic with Aric Almirola

Notebook: Mike Ford hopes to recapture old magic with Aric Almirola

May 4, 2012

By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

TALLADEGA, Ala. -- The most fun Mike Ford had as Denny Hamlin's crew chief occurred during his first two years in that role.

By the time Ford was replaced by Darian Grubb in his job at Joe Gibbs Racing, the fun was gone -- long gone.

In his move to Richard Petty Motorsports as crew chief for Aric Almirola, Ford sees a chance to rekindle the sort of excitement that buoyed him during the early days with Hamlin.

Ford said his release from Gibbs at the end of the 2011 season was timely.

"I'm not going to say a lot about that, other than to say a lot of outside influences made it not fun," Ford said Friday at Talladega Superspeedway. "The past couple of years truly weren't that fun. It was best for both parties . . .

"It was just time to go. It was time to move on. I don't have any problem with Denny, and I still have a lot of good friends over there. That's life. You move on, and you continue on."

Hamlin and Ford won two races together in 2006, Hamlin's rookie year. In 2010, Hamlin won a career-best eight races and had the Sprint Cup championship within his grasp before spinning early in the season finale at Homestead and losing the title to Jimmie Johnson.

Ford sees the same spark of talent in Almirola that he nurtured in Hamlin. In his first full season in the Cup series, Almirola is driving the No. 43 Ford for RPM.

"I have seen him be competitive in this series," Ford said, citing Almirola's fourth-place finish in a fill-in role at Homestead in 2010. "To see that encourages me. On top of that, he's a nice guy.

"You want to have someone that you can work with and is kind of low-key -- and I'm fairly low-key. I think it's going to be a good match."

Ford also relishes the role as a steadying influence for a young driver. Almirola is 28.

"Some of the veteran guys don't really do well with veteran crew chiefs, because you are bull-headed on some things," Ford said. "I looked at this and sat with Aric, and he is looking for a leader and someone to mentor him a little bit.

"I'm looking for that role as well, but also, you always learn something from somebody coming in. I'm looking forward to that."

The collaboration got off to an excellent start at Talladega. Almirola paced both Cup practices, posting a top speed of 199.172 mph in the first session.

DRAFTING WITH A WINNER

Clint Bowyer won two of the last three races at Talladega with Richard Childress Racing. Now Bowyer drives for Michael Waltrip Racing, and Martin Truex Jr. is happy to have him as a teammate.

"To have a teammate that is obviously a proven winner on plate tracks -- somebody that I have confidence in that, if we can get hooked up together, he's going to do the right things -- that's really, really cool," said Truex, who enters Sunday's Aaron's 499 fifth in the Cup standings, 22 points behind leader Greg Biffle.

"We worked very well together at Daytona (in the season-opening Daytona 500), and that was the first time we had been teammates at a restrictor-plate track. I expect that this time it will be a little but easier. We'll both be a little bit more comfortable and kind of understand the way each other does things. That should make for a better tandem if we're able to do it long enough at the end."

PATRICK LIKES THE PLATE TRACKS

Danica Patrick enjoys racing at Daytona and Talladega. For one thing, racing at restrictor-plate superspeedways reminds her most of IndyCar competition.

"It reminds me a lot of IndyCar racing because you're flat-out, you're looking for air, you're just trying to stay with the pack, and you're trying to weave your way through," Patrick said. "It's a high-speed chess match. I'm used to it. I like it. It's not about speed -- it's about the style."

Speaking of style, Patrick arrived at her interview session sporting a necklace of gaudy Talladega beads. Typically, beads are awarded in the Talladega infield for behavior involving alcohol and exhibitionism.

Asked how she got her string of beads, Patrick said coyly, "I can't tell you that."

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