Saturday Daytona Notebook
Engine failures in practice KO Danica Patrick and Tony Stewart
Feb. 15, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Kaboom!
First it was the engine in Bobby Labonte's Phoenix Racing Chevrolet.
Then,
in short order, the engines of Tony Stewart's and Danica Patrick's
Chevys failed in spectacular fashion, trailing white smoke
as they expired.
The
common denominator? All three engines were supplied by Hendrick
Motorsports, and the failures were unwelcome complications to Stewart's
return to racing after injury and to Patrick's quest for a second
straight Daytona 500 pole.
The
problems also raised the specter of possible future failures in the
Hendrick universe, which includes the four HMS cars of Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon and Kasey Kahne; the
Stewart-Haas cars of Stewart, Patrick, Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch; the
Chip Ganassi Racing entries of Jamie McMurray and Kyle Larson;
Labonte's Chevy and the HScott Motorsports Chevrolet of
Justin Allgaier.
If
there was a saving grace, Patrick said, it was that her engine blew
during practice, rather than a day later during qualifying at
the 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway.
"I
only had a few hundred yards to go before the start/finish, and then I
would have shut it off," Patrick told reporters after conferring
with crew chief Tony Gibson. "So I said, 'Man, I guess I'm glad it did
it then,' as opposed to being five seconds from blowing up, because that
would have been (Sunday).
"We'll
get our arms wrapped around it. We'll figure out what we can, but more
importantly, just get the next engine in and get going. I
said, 'Can I still start on the front row?' And they said, 'Yeah, but
you have to start at the back for the Duels.'"
Because
the engine changes took place before Sunday's time trials, the drivers
affected still can lock in the front-row starting spots
available to the two fastest qualifiers. They would have to drop to the
rear for the start of Thursday night's Budweiser Duels at Daytona but
could return to the front for the start of the Great American Race.
Scott
Maxim, director of engine track support for Hendrick Motorsports, said
the failures appeared to have occurred in the bottom end
of the engines. HMS general manager Doug Duchardt explained that it was
a matter of testing the edge of the envelope.
"Obviously
we have been pushing the limit, and we found the limit there," Duchardt
said. "We feel like we understand what's happening. We'll
get the engines back over and tear them down… I think we will be able
to confirm everything that is happening. The drivers have been
consistent; they feel like it has been something in the bottom end of
the engine.
"We
think we understand what's happening there, and we'll take a look at
that… I think it's just part of us trying to maximize two laps
for (Sunday). So it's not a specific component issue."
Larson
was the fastest driver with Hendrick power under the hood, running
third on the speed chart during Saturday's second practice
session.
Cars
with Earnhardt-Childress Racing engines dominated the practices, with
Paul Menard and Ryan Newman pacing the first session and
Newman and Austin Dillon running 1-2 in the afternoon.
FRUITFUL DECADE
Time flies when you're winning races.
A
decade has passed since Toyota made its first foray into one of
NASCAR's top three national series. The automaker entered NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series competition in 2004 and began its participation in
both the NASCAR Sprint Cup and NASCAR Nationwide Series in 2007.
To
say the least, Toyota has enjoyed a successful first decade. Toyota
drivers have won 263 races in that span -- 63 in NASCAR Sprint
Cup, 88 in NASCAR Nationwide and 112 in the NASCAR Camping World Truck
Series.
The
first 10 years have produced nine manufacturers' championships, six in
trucks and three in NASCAR Nationwide. About the only significant
items missing from the Toyota resume are a manufacturers' title and a
champion driver and owner in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
Matt
Kenseth came close last year, winning a series-best seven races before
finishing second to six-time champion Jimmie Johnson in
the final standings.
10 YEARS? REALLY?
In
the same year Toyota was making its debut in the truck series, Kyle
Busch ran his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race. Since then,
Busch has completed nine full seasons at NASCAR's highest level.
"It
doesn't feel like 10 years at all, but yet when you look back at life
outside of racing you think, 'Okay, I was 18 when I came in
here -- holy crap a lot of things have gone on and changed over 10
years.'" Busch said. "It certainly seems like a whole different world,
not only me in it, but just a whole different world in general."
As Busch sees it, one of the biggest changes is the overwhelming, and sometimes intrusive presence of social media.
"I
don't think we had Facebook or Twitter back 10 years ago," he
said. "You could actually go to a bar and not have somebody tweet about
it."
Busch also noted that, after nine seasons, there are plenty of items left on his bucket list.
"There's
certainly a lot of things that I have yet to accomplish that I'm
disappointed that I have not accomplished yet -- some big
wins of the marquis events as well as being able to become a Sprint Cup
Series champion," Busch said.
"The
Nationwide Series championship is great, but ultimately what all of us
drivers look towards is a Sprint Cup championship. Been
an interesting nine years, but we'll see what happens in the 10th."
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