No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team slapped with heavy penalties
July 29, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
NASCAR
hit the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team with a points penalty of
unprecedented magnitude for infractions discovered during Sunday’s
post-race inspection at Indianapolis
Motor Speedway, the sanctioning body announced late Tuesday afternoon.
NASCAR
inspectors found violations with the rear firewall block-off plates of
the No. 11 Toyota driven to a third-place finish by Denny Hamlin. NASCAR
rules mandate that the
firewalls be sealed to prevent airflow from the inside to the outside
of the car.
Venting
or failing to seal the block-off plates can provide an aerodynamic
advantage by adding downforce to the car, especially useful at a flat
track such as IMS, where maintaining
momentum through the corners is of paramount importance.
NASCAR
docked Hamlin 75 driver championship points and team owner Joe Gibbs 75
owner points. Crew chief Darian Grubb was fined $125,000 and suspended
for six weeks, meaning
he will be lost to the team until the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup’s
opening weekend at Chicagoland Speedway in September.
Car
chief Wesley Sherrill also drew a six-week suspension. Both Grubb and
Sherrill were placed on probation for the next six months.
The
points penalty is the largest since NASCAR instituted its new
one-point-per-position scoring system in 2011. And since 75 points are
the functional equivalent of 312 under
the previously-used Latford scoring system, the points penalty is the
largest ever imposed.
Joe
Gibbs Racing issued a statement after the penalties were announced
indicating the organization’s intent to appeal the penalties. Grubb and
Sherrill, however, will begin
serving their suspensions this week and will miss this weekend’s NASCAR
activities at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pa.
The
infractions rose to the level of P5 under the new deterrence system
introduced by NASCAR before the 2014 season. P6 is the designation for
the most egregious violations.
NASCAR
indicated on Sunday at the Brickyard that there were “possible issues”
with the rear firewall block-off plates of the No. 11. The sanctioning
body confiscated the parts
in question, took them to the NASCAR Research and Development Center in
Concord, N.C., for further inspection and evaluation and announced the
findings and penalties on Tuesday.
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