New Hampshire Notebook
July 13, 2014
Notebook Items:
·
Logano upset after crash with Shepherd ended promising day
·
Johnson exits early
·
Ford keeps rolling
·
Fuel shortage
·
Chasing the Chase
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR News Service
Logano upset after crash with Shepherd ended promising day
LOUDON,
N.H. – Perhaps the only driver with a chance to prevent Brad Keselowski
from winning Sunday’s Camping World RV Sales 301 NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series race was his Team
Penske teammate Joey Logano.
Logano
was one of nine drivers to lead the race and was running second when his
quest was ended by a crash on Lap 213 with Morgan Shepherd.
It was
the kind of incident that occurs all the time in NASCAR, one car getting
into the back of another. But this one came with a twist.
Logano, age 24, was a contender to win the race and remains a contender to advance in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Shepherd,
72, is the oldest driver to compete at NASCAR’s highest level. Breaking
into Sprint Cup in 1970, he’s notched 168 top-10 finishes but not a one
since 1997. His last
win came in 1993.
This
was just the second race this season for Shepherd, who did not race Cup
from 2007-12, and his Thunder Coal Chevrolet posed a threat only as a
rolling roadblock, struggling
at times to maintain minimum speed.
“I got
taken out by the slowest car out there,” said Logano, visibly upset
after the crash. “You would think there would be some courtesy to the
leaders. It is just dumb that
it happened. I feel like that’s stuff that shouldn’t happen at this
level of racing.”
Logano
went on to say that if a driver can’t “control his stuff,” he “shouldn’t
be out there. He suggested that NASCAR might consider requiring drivers
to pass a test.
NASCAR’s
Vice President of Competition Robin Pemberton defended Shepherd’s right
to be on the track, competing against some drivers who are more than a
half-century his junior.
“Morgan
Shepherd has always been approved (to drive),” Pemberton said. “He’s
been approved for decades. Under our situation here, you take a physical
at the beginning of the
year. You pass your physical. You pass inspections with your car, you
qualify for the race and you run the event. So, he met everything he
needed to meet.
“Joey
was half-kidding (about requiring a test). I understand that. Nobody
wants to be (taken) out of a race because of an accident.”
Pemberton called Sunday’s incident “an accident” that “could happen to anybody.”
“Those
things happen,” Pemberton said. “(Shepherd) was above the minimum speed.
He pulled over to let Joey go by. That’s a responsibility for all
competitors. Everybody has
a responsibility to lay off each other.”
Asked if his age should be a barrier to competition, Shepherd responded with a question.
“Was that the only wreck out there?” he asked. “OK. That answers that.
“It was
nobody’s fault. Maybe he didn’t realize how wicked-loose I was. I was
having to tip-toe through the corner. It’s one of those deals that my
car wasn’t driving real
good. Whenever he drove down in the corner, he was close to me and it
pulled my car around.”
Roger Penske seemed very willing to give Shepherd a pass.
“Morgan’s a good friend of everyone in the garage area. He’s a good friend of mine,” Penske said. “We’ve tried to support him.
“I told
Joey, ‘Look, you can’t go back and fix it.’ When Brad came up on
(Shepherd) later in the race, he slowed down to let everybody by him.
“The
great thing about the sport (is) that if you want to tee it up here and
bring your car and have a team, we let them run. So, I don’t feel bad
about it other than the fact
that Joey got knocked out. He was running second at that time and,
obviously, at that point you say, ‘damn,’ but at the end of the day
we’ve got to move on.”
Johnson exits early
A week
after completing just 20 laps at Daytona, Jimmie Johnson suffered a pair
of early flat tires, the second of which resulted in a race-ending
crash. Johnson completed
only 11 laps and recorded a second consecutive 42nd-place finish.
Johnson refused to believe that lower-than-advised air pressure might have led to his tire failures.
“I’m
not sure what caused it,” he said. “I’m sure there will be a lot of
speculation and, I’m sure, finger-pointing back to the team or our team.
But we saw some issues here,
especially with the particular tire the last couple of days. We will
try to dig in and learn more. But I can promise you one thing: It wasn’t
due to low left-rear tire pressure.”
Johnson
did not rule out the possibility that damage to his car from the first
flat might have caused a rub that led to the second tire failing.
The
early exit hurt Johnson in multiple ways. New Hampshire is the second
race of the Chase and the No. 48 team, which slipped to fifth in points,
now has a limited notebook.
“It would have been nice to get a race in here before we come back for
the second one,” Johnson said. “It’s definitely a setback, missing out
on track time.”
Ford keeps rolling
Keselowski
gave Ford its fourth consecutive Cup victory, something that the
manufacturer has not enjoyed since 2001. Ford’s eight trips to Victory
Lane this season are the
most since it had 11 wins in 2008.
Keselowski,
who won at Kentucky Speedway on June 28, has won twice during the
four-race streak. Carl Edwards (Sonoma) and Aric Almirola (Daytona) have
accounted for the other
wins.
Fuel shortage
Jeff
Gordon remained the Sprint Cup points leader despite running out of gas
during the final caution and finishing 26th. His lead dwindled to 12
points in front of teammate
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
“I felt
very confident we could finish third until that caution came out,”
Gordon said. “We knew we were very close. That (fuel) pickup is on the
right side, so I was scuffing
my tires. I think if we had (stayed) green we would have been fine.
Under caution, it wouldn’t pick up the amount of fuel that was in
there.”
Chasing the Chase
Matt
Kenseth finished fourth, Ryan Newman fifth, Clint Bowyer sixth, Austin
Dillon 14th and Paul Menard 19th to remain positioned to make the Chase
field without a victory
this season.
Greg
Biffle, the first driver on the outside looking in at this point,
battled through early tire issues to finish 16th and remain five points
behind Dillon for the final Chase
spot. Kasey Kahne (11th) is just four points behind Biffle.
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