Special Feature
Work ethic will bolster Stenhouse as he transitions to Cup ride
Oct. 12, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD,
N.C. — Last Wednesday at Talladega Superspeedway, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
arrived early for a test of the Ford Fusion version of NASCAR's 2013
race car.
Unexpectedly,
Stenhouse beat his team to the track. Heavy fog delayed the arrival of
Sprint Cup team planes at the municipal airport adjacent to the
speedway.
That didn't stop Stenhouse, who decided to get a head start on the test session by helping to set up his own garage stall.
"The
plane was late due to the fog in the area, and I drove down at 5 o'clock
in the morning, so I beat everybody there," Stenhouse told the NASCAR
Wire Service. "I helped
unload the trailer, get it all set up and was ready to go. It's all
part of it.
"Good
thing I pay attention to how they set up everything when they go testing
and things like that. We were able to get a jump start on things."
Stenhouse
got his work ethic from his father, an engine builder from Olive
Branch, Miss. Stenhouse also got an education in fabricating NASCAR cars
in 2010, when team owner
Jack Roush compelled him to work in the shop to understand the
consequences of a rash of early-season wrecks.
"I grew
up working on my own race cars," Stenhouse said. "Dad made me work on
the car if I wanted to race. That was just how it was, and if I didn't
like it, I could go do
something else and not race. I definitely enjoy working on the race
cars, definitely enjoy hanging around the guys at the shop and really
just showing 'em that I'm as dedicated as they are.
"When
I'm needed to help out, it doesn't matter what it is. It could be
sweeping the floor in the shop. Whatever they need me to do, I'm there
to do it—and I really enjoy it."
Stenhouse
is defending the Nationwide Series championship he won last year while
preparing to move full-time to the Sprint Cup Series next year. Slated
for his fourth Cup start
— and first return trip to a track in a Cup car - at Charlotte on
Saturday night, Stenhouse finished 11th in his debut at Charlotte last
year.
This season he posted a 20th-place result in the Daytona 500 and ran 12th in the Chase race at Dover on Sept. 30.
"I
don't really count Daytona as a real race track finish, given that
anything can happen there, and we got caught up in a wreck there,"
Stenhouse said. "I look at the other
two and feel pretty good about what we've done. Charlotte I felt good
with last year. Dover this year, not exactly how we wanted it to go, but
there were a lot of people who didn't have a good day, and we still got
a solid finish out of it.
"Our
plan at Dover was to not make mistakes, work on the car and get it
faster, get closer to the leaders' times throughout the race, and,
really, that's what we did and ended
up coming home with a 12th."
Preparing
for his first full-time Cup season, however, won't distract Stenhouse
from the matter at hand — fighting for his second straight Nationwide
title. Entering Friday
night's Dollar General 300, Stenhouse trailed series leader Elliott
Sadler by nine points.
"When I
run the Cup car, it doesn't hurt my Nationwide program, I don't feel
like, 'cause I know what I need to do in the Nationwide car," said
Stenhouse, who also is scheduled
to run the Cup season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. "Qualifying
the Cup car after practicing the Nationwide car can get a little bit
tricky.
"I saw
that at Dover when we overdrove the Cup car in the corner. The
horsepower's the main thing. At a place like Charlotte, in the
Nationwide car I won't use any brake. In
the Cup car, you will use brake, and you have to lift. It's a drastic
difference in what you do with the throttle, but all in all, they drive
similar. Not exact, but similar."
And given that he's in a title fight in the Nationwide Series, Stenhouse knows how to organize his priorities.
"I
think we did a really good job of that at Dover," Stenhouse said. "I'll
quit Cup practice early to go make sure I'm in the Nationwide car before
practice starts. If I have
to stay late in Nationwide, I will. That's our main focus.
"We're
doing the Cup deal just to get more experience and more acquainted with
the horsepower. Obviously, the cars are going to be different next year.
For me, being a race
car driver, I just like being on the race track. It doesn't matter what
kind of car it is."
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