Notebook: Absent from the Chase, Carl Edwards needs a new goal
Sept. 15, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET, Ill.—Carl Edwards is ready to go, but there’s a problem.
There’s no big prize in front of him.
Winless
since March 2011, Edwards won’t be part of the Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup this season. When the driver who lost last year’s
championship on a tiebreaker comes to the track for the final 10 races,
there will be a void.
“Everything
I’ve done this year has been geared toward these 10 races, and the idea
of missing them… that wasn’t the plan,” Edwards
told reporters after Friday’s Roush Fenway Racing sponsorship
announcement at Chicagoland Speedway.
“I’m
physically fit as I can be. I’m mentally fit. I’m prepared, and I feel
like we’re ready to go, and there are still victories out
there, but there’s not that huge goal, and that’s tough. I don’t know
how to really put that into words.”
Whether it’s battling Kyle Busch for 13th in the standings or helping teammates Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle--both of whom
qualified for NASCAR’s playoff--Edwards needs something to compensate for the absence of a title run.
“I
need a challenge,” Edwards said. “That’s what I told Jack and the guys.
If there’s anything I can do to help Matt and Greg, anything
to give me a goal, that’s how I’m built.”
To
Edwards, perhaps the most disappointing aspect about missing the Chase
is the knowledge that any of the 12 eligible drivers can put
together a 10-race championship run, as Tony Stewart proved last year
when he won five races in the Chase and overtook Edwards for the title.
“That’s
why it’s so painful for Kyle and I, to be on the outside, because we
know anything can happen,” Edwards said. “What if I go
out there in this 99 car, and me and (crew chief) Chad (Norris) win six
races and dominate. How sickening would that be, to not be in it?”
NEW SAFETY MEASURES FOR 2013 CAR
Earlier
this week, NASCAR issued a technical bulletin to Sprint Cup and
Nationwide Series teams mandating enhanced safety measures for
2013 cars.
Starting
in January of next year, teams will be required to strengthen the roll
cage through the addition of a forward roof bar and
a center roof support bar that will intersect near the front center of
the roll cage.
The new safety measure comes as the result of extensive testing at NASCAR’s Research and Development center in Concord, N.C.
A RESPONSIBLE PAINT SCHEME
In
Sunday’s GEICO 400 at Chicagoland Speedway, Chase driver Kevin Harvick
will sport a “Designate a Driver” paint scheme on his No.
29 Budweiser Chevrolet, in support of Anheuser-Busch’s “Global Be(er)
Responsble Day” on Sept. 21.
The
paint scheme promotes Budweiser’s initiative to encourage adults to
drink responsibly and to pledge to do so through the web site
www.nationofresponsibledrinkers.com. Harvick himself has taken the pledge.
“For
me to take the pledge to be a responsible drinker, it’s very easy,
because in my profession, in what I do, there’s no room for
error,” Harvick said. “Off the race track, there’s no room for error
either… When you’re drinking and having a good time, don’t take it for
granted.
“Go out, get a designated driver, call a taxi. It’s very easy to make it simple, have a good time and go home safe.”
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