Dale Earnhardt Jr. salvages eighth-place finish, wants more
Sept. 16, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET,
Ill. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. blamed himself for having to start from the
rear of the field in Sunday's Geico 400 at Chicagoland Speedway, but an
eighth-place finish was
enough to raise his spirits — at least somewhat.
Earnhardt
claimed the fourth starting position in time trials but over-revved his
engine after his qualifying lap — a freak occurrence.
"We ran
a qualifying lap, and when you cross the finish line you bump it out of
gear, which is what I've done every time I've run a qualifying lap,
however many of those I've
ran," Earnhardt explained. "In practicing mock runs, I bumped it out of
gear and it went in third and over-(revved) the engine way over.
"The valves and the piston had a little party, and they all ended up with a hangover."
Because
his team changed engines, Earnhardt had to drop to the rear for the
start of Sunday's race, the first in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint
Cup.
With a
stout car in the early going and a couple of two-tire calls, Earnhardt
advanced through the field, ultimately finish eighth. If he's to be a
contender for the championship,
however, Earnhardt knows he must do better.
"To win
the championship, we're going to have to turn days like that, those
kind of mistakes, around into wins and top threes," Earnhardt said. "We
need to be in the media
center (as a top-three finisher) after all these races as much as
possible.
"Eighth
is all right, but I know (race winner) Brad (Keselowski) is going to
run well, and the No. 48 (race runner-up Jimmie Johnson) is obviously
going to be tough. You can't
run eighth every week and win the championship."
FUEL SHORTAGE COSTS HAMLIN
Denny
Hamlin, the top seed entering this year's Chase, dropped from the top
spot in the standings after running out of fuel late in Sunday's race.
After
spending most of the afternoon in the top five, Hamlin coasted across
the finish line in 16th place and fell into a tie for fourth in the
Chase standings, 15 points behind
Keselowski.
"We
didn't get it all the way full on the last stop," Hamlin said after the
race. "(Crew chief) Darian (Grubb) said we made an adjustment instead of
putting (a full complement
of) fuel in the car—and you have to have fuel to finish."
Knowing he was short, Hamlin tired to conserve fuel during the final green-flag run.
"Bad
thing is, I felt like we could have run to third right there," Hamlin
said. "I just was having to run so slow to keep from running out of
fuel, and we still ran out."
Though the first Chase race brought a miscue, Hamlin feels he's still in the mix for the title.
"You
can't have self-induced problems, and this isn't luck or anything like
that," Hamlin said. "This was just us making a big mistake with our fuel
again. It's tough, but
we're strong enough and fast enough this Chase that we can make up 15
points easily."
PENALTY—THOUGH RESCINDED—HURTS ALMIROLA
Front
row starter Aric Almirola had a top-five run going at Chicagoland, until
NASCAR penalized him for a tire violation during his first green-flag
pit stop.
Almirola
lost a lap serving a pass-through penalty, but NASCAR reviewed the
infraction, determined a penalty wasn't warranted and allowed Almirola
to regain his lap. Only one
problem: NASCAR couldn't restore Almirola to the fourth-place position
he occupied before the penalty.
Instead,
after a round of pit stops under caution on Lap 67, the driver of the
No. 43 Ford restarted outside the top 20 and wasn't a factor thereafter.
In his first run with
crew chief Todd Parrott, after an intra-team swap, Almirola finished
17th.
"That
was very bizarre," Almirola said of the rescinded penalty. "They pretty
much ruined our day. It was extremely tough to pass today. Track
position was everything."
Almirola, at least, had speed in race trim to match his second-place qualifying effort.
"All in
all, it was a good day, though," Almirola said. "I'm proud of everyone.
Todd Parrott and all the guys did a great job. Our car was so fast at
the beginning of the race,
and we ran like we should have.
"I was proud of that."
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