June 7, 2012
By John Sturbin, Special for NASCAR Wire Service
FORT
WORTH, Texas -- Persistent rain prompted NASCAR officials to cancel
Keystone Light Pole Qualifying early Thursday afternoon for the WinStar
World Casino 400k at Texas Motor Speedway, giving Todd and Janet Bodine
time to ramp up their sponsor search.
Justin
Lofton, driver of the No. 6 CollegeComplete.com Chevrolet Silverado,
will start the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event on-pole here
Friday night via 2012 owner points. Timothy Peters, who trails Lofton by
one point (235-234), will start alongside in the No. 17 Toyota Tundra,
with the remainder of the 35-truck field also set by points.
Four-time
series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., driver of the No. 9 SWM/AM/FM Energy
Chevrolet, is defending event champion. Hornaday, winless in 2012, will
start ninth.
Bodine,
winner of last Friday's rain-shortened Lucas Oil 200 at Dover
International Speedway, will roll off seventh in a bid to add to his
record six series victories on TMS' 1.5-mile quadoval.
"I
love Texas," said Bodine, a two-time series champion and driver of the
No. 11 Toyota Care Tundra fielded by Red Horse Racing. "I've been
fortunate to have a lot of very good race trucks here and you've got to
have luck to go with all of that. Got a lot of cowboy hats (that go to
the winner) and look forward to getting another one."
Another
victory by "The Onion" would give team-owner Tom DeLoach added
ammunition in his search to put a corporate backer on the
refrigerator-white No. 11. "We didn't have a sponsor last week," said
Bodine, who has an average finish of 8.5 in 15 series starts at TMS. "We
had Toyota Care on the quarter panels and that was kind of a ‘thank
you' for Toyota. They didn't actually pay for the race, but Toyota is so
good to us and they did support us for four races.
"It's
kind of the same deal here. We don't have a sponsor for this race;
Tom's doing it out of the goodness of his heart and his pocket. We've
got a lot of really good things happening. My wife, Janet, is working
really hard on getting a sponsorship, and she's actually having some
success. The win definitely helps. There's three different corporations
we're talking to, and they all three called up and said, ‘Man, we wish
we were on (the truck) last week.' I can't speak for Tom saying we're
going to continue without sponsorship, but I think Tom knows this is a
great opportunity for this race team, not only for right now but also
for the future."
RHR
parked the No. 7 Toyota of Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender John
King, winner of the season opener at Daytona International Speedway, on
May 29 because of a lack of funding. "That really hurt Tom, to not be
able to do that," Bodine said. "All I can say is stay tuned. We've got a
lot of great things happening at Red Horse Racing."
LOFTON'S CONFIDENCE SOARING
Lofton
said Bodine deserves some credit for his victory at Charlotte Motor
Speedway -- Speedway Motorsports Inc. sister 1.5-mile track to TMS --
on May 18.
"It's
one of those places I probably didn't think I was going to get my first
win at," Lofton said. "But I went over and spent some time with Todd on
Wednesday night before the race, and he kept pointing at my head the
entire time we were sitting at dinner. I think he was trying to tell me
to use my head a little bit. We did just that. We had a very fast truck
from the minute we unloaded it to the last lap on the racetrack."
Lofton
started 16th and finished 10th at Dover's "Monster Mile," where he led
22 laps in the truck fielded by Eddie Sharp Racing.
"It
(the win) took a lot of pressure off myself and the team so now let's
go to work and run consistent every weekend," said Lofton, who posted a
pair of 10th-place finishes in the spring/fall NCWTS events last year at
TMS. "We know we have the equipment, we know we have the camaraderie in
the shop among the guys. It made going into Dover really exciting, and
then to be able to have a truck as good as we did at Dover kind of
secured this wasn't a fluke deal. We have the same truck (at TMS) we had
at Charlotte and hopefully we can pull another really good finish off,
and leave here the point-leader, too."
DON'T MESS WITH THIS TEXAN
Native
Texan David Starr believes former NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion
Kurt Busch of Phoenix Racing got off lightly this week, when NASCAR
suspended him for a verbal confrontation with a reporter after
Saturday's Nationwide Series race at Dover. Busch, who drives for
brother Kyle's first-year Nationwide team, will sit out Sunday's Cup
race at Pocono International Raceway.
"Without
the media, you don't really have a sport," said Starr, driver of the
No. 81 Build Your Future/Zachry Toyota owned by Billy Ballew. "Yeah,
there's reporters out there that ask pretty off-the-wall questions. I
understand that. But man, they're just here to give the public a story.
And without you guys (media) talking about us we wouldn't have those
sponsors.
"Some
of the stuff the Busch brothers (Kurt and Kyle) do, where I'm from
(Houston), we kind of self-police that. We take care of itself. I think
if a little bit of the people he's having these altercations with, if
they were from where I was from, we'd handle it right then and there and
I don't think you would have any more problems -- if you can understand
what I'm saying. I was raised you got a problem with somebody, go ahead
and handle it and let's move on. I don't know where he's from.
Obviously nobody's taken care of it.
"It's
a shame it needs to come to that. What a great competitor, and a good
friend of mine. It's a shame he don't know how to keep his mouth shut,
you know? And the problem is, he's going to run his mouth to the wrong
people, wrong person -- and the consequences are going to be a lot worse
than him just missing one race. Know what I'm saying?"
No comments:
Post a Comment