Gordon would ‘play hurt' if he were close to title
Oct. 12, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
While
Dale Earnhardt Jr. earned praise for his forthright handling of a
concussion after Sunday's race at Talladega, Jeff Gordon, Earnhardt's
teammate at Hendrick Motorsports,
said he may not have taken the same path.
Earnhardt
sought medical attention for his second concussion in six weeks after
failing to do so for the first concussion, sustained Aug. 29 in an
accident during testing at
Kansas Speedway. Prominent neurologist Dr. Jerry Petty diagnosed the
issue this week and opted to hold Earnhardt out at least the next two
races, at Charlotte and Kansas.
Earnhardt,
who qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup for the second
straight season, starts his enforced hiatus 11th in the standings, 51
points behind leader Brad
Keselowski.
Realistically,
Earnhardt would have been a long shot for the championship. If he were
closer to the lead, would he have been as forthcoming with his
condition?
Gordon said that, personally, he wouldn't seek medical attention with the title on the line.
"Honestly,
I hate to say this, but no, I wouldn't," Gordon admitted. "That's why I
say we all play a part in this. If I have a thought at the
championship, there's two races
to go, my head is hurting, and I just came through a wreck, and I am
feeling signs of it, but I'm still leading the points, or second in the
points, I'm not going to say anything.
"I'm
sorry. You know, that's the competitor in me, and probably many other
guys. And, that's to a fault. That's not the way it should be. It's
something that most of us, I
think, would do. I think that's what gets a lot of us in trouble."
BUSCH FULL OF INFORMATION
If you thought Kurt Busch was going to a single-car team, think again — sort of.
Busch
recently signed on with Furniture Row Racing, a single-car operation
based in Denver, Colo., but Furniture Row has a strong alliance with
Richard Childress Racing as
a customer for engines, chassis and technical support.
Busch
will run the next six races with Furniture Row, having replaced Regan
Smith in the rdie after last Sunday's event at Talladega.
"The
basic core concept is just to get familiar with everything,
communication, the process on how the team operates through some of
their sequences of changes with the car,"
said Busch, who qualified 21st for Saturday night's Bank of America 500
at Charlotte in his first competitive outing in the No. 78 Chevrolet.
"All the information that I have from my days at Penske, my days at
Roush and then working with some of the Hendrick
guys (during his tenure at Phoenix Racing) this year - all that
information I need to be able to digest and give to them the right way.
"It's
all just what I have in my head. You're not really able to take your
trade secrets as far as paper. But what I have in my mind and what I've
done over the last 18 months
is definitely relevant, and I need to translate that to these guys.
Most importantly, it's fitting in with them and finding out how they
have done things, getting in with the RCR system on how they communicate
between the haulers. (Kevin) Harvick is a teammate,
(Paul) Menard is a teammate and Jeff Burton is a teammate today, so
I've got to go around and shake hands with those guys as well."
ENGINE CHANGE FOR NEWMAN
Early
in Friday's second practice session, Ryan Newman reported that his No.
39 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet was "blowing up." The team subsequently
confirmed that Newman's
car would require an engine change.
The
crew began work immediately in the Cup garage, but the engine change
consumed the final 50 minutes of practice, and Newman got no laps on the
new engine. On top of that,
Newman will lose his third-place starting spot because of the engine
change and will start Saturday night's race from the rear of the field.
"We
started off in Happy Hour to a long run, and we got about six laps into
it, and it started tightening up," said Tony Gibson, Newman's crew
chief. "So he shut it off and
came in, and there is definitely something big wrong.
"It's too bad when you've got the track position, but that's part of it, and we'll get after it."
Kyle Busch led final practice at 188.383 mph, followed by Regan Smith, subbing for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the No. 88 Chevrolet.
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