Saturday New Hampshire Notebook
July 12, 2014
Notebook Items:
·
Streaking Ford teams set sights on Chase
·
Larson seeks turnaround
·
Almirola wrecks in practice
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
Streaking Ford teams set sights on Chase
LOUDON,
N.H. – Enjoying a sustained run of success not experienced in nearly a
decade, Ford teams are thinking about the long haul as they prepare for
Sunday’s Camping World
RV Sales 301 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at New Hampshire Motor
Speedway.
Thanks
to Carl Edwards (Roush Fenway Racing), Brad Keselowski (Team Penske) and
Aric Almirola (Richard Petty Motorsports), Ford is riding a three-race
winning streak for the
first time since June 2005.
The
last time Ford won four consecutive Cup events was 2001 with Dale
Jarrett and Robert Yates Racing posting three of the four victories and
Elliott Sadler the other for the
Wood Brothers.
“I do feel like one of us can win the championship,” said Penske’s Joey Logano of Ford’s 2014 chances.
Keselowski,
who qualified seventh for Sunday’s race, easily had the fastest laps in
both of Saturday’s practice sessions. Keselowski turned the fastest lap
of the day in the
morning session (133.745 mph) and was the only driver to top 133 mph in
final practice (133.254).
That
said, New Hampshire continues to present both a challenge and a
checkpoint. No Ford driver has won on the Magic Mile since Greg Biffle
in 2008. Logano was the top Ford
qualifier for Sunday’s race, checking in with the sixth-fastest lap on
Friday.
Logano,
Edwards and Keselowski are all but locked into the Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup field with two victories apiece this season. Almirola’s
victory last week at Daytona
nearly assures his place. That doesn’t mean that every Ford team will
take the same approach as it applies to preparation for the Chase or
choosing tracks at which to test.
While
teammates Biffle (15th in points) and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (28th) need a
win to start thinking about the Chase, Edwards views Sunday’s race at
New Hampshire (one of 10
tracks in the Chase lineup) as a chance to experiment.
“For
us, this is really a race where we can try some things for the second
race of the Chase because it is going to be so important to try to make
it through that first round,”
Edwards said.
Team
Penske and Richard Petty Motorsports are already taking very different
approaches when it comes to testing. Penske has yet to use any of its
allotted four test sessions
this season.
“We are
stockpiling them because we are both in,” Logano said. “We are going to
go to the tracks where we feel we need to test the most. It definitely
gives us an edge. Are
we where we want to be? No. We want to keep getting better and will
work with Ford with that. We want to make sure that come Chase time our
weak points are as strong as our good points.”
RPM
plans to use its third of four tests to prepare for the Aug. 10 road
course race at Watkins Glen International. The team knows that its best
chance of putting a second
car in the Chase is to have Marcos Ambrose win at Watkins Glen.
“For as
small an underdog team as we are, to have the possibility of getting
both our cars in the Chase is phenomenal,” Almirola said. “We want to
give Marcos the best shot
to win there. That is the priority on our list right now.”
Ambrose
has two victories in 209 Sprint Cup starts, wins at Watkins Glen in
2011 and 2012. He has 11 top-10 finishes in 13 career road course races.
One
thing could change RPM’s plans to test at Watkins Glen: a win by Ambrose
either this week at New Hampshire or next week at Indianapolis. A
victory at New Hampshire would
be a true upset for Ambrose, who in 10 Cup races at NHMS has finished
no better than ninth.
“I
would love for (Ambrose) to win here this weekend,” Almirola said. “Then
we don’t have to test Watkins Glen because we know he will be good
there anyway.”
“But
our philosophy is still that it doesn’t do us any good to save and hold
onto those tests. We have to do everything we can to be the best in
that first round of the Chase.
It doesn’t do us any good to save a test for Homestead if we are
knocked out of the Chase. Our motto: Go big or go home.”
LARSON SEEKS TURNAROUND
NASCAR
sprint Cup rookie Kyle Larson was eighth in points after his seventh
top-10 finish of the season June 15 at Michigan International Speedway.
Since then, Larson has finished
28th, 40th and 36th, plummeting to 17th in points, 12 behind Austin
Dillon (13th) in the battle for rookie supremacy.
“Our
chances (to make the Chase) were really good up until three weeks ago.
Then we lost power steering at Sonoma. At Kentucky we were pretty fast
and blew a right-front tire.
Then at Daytona we got caught up in a typical Daytona crash. Now we’ve
fallen to where we have to fight really hard again. I figured we may
have some bad luck one week or two weeks in a row, not three.”
Larson
said he looked forward to coming to New Hampshire, a track “where you
have a little more control over your outcome.” And heading into Sunday,
the 21-year-old from Elk
Grove, California had demonstrated speed.
Larson
had the Target Chevrolet among the five fastest cars in the weekend’s
first two practice sessions and was second to Keselowski in best 10
consecutive lap average (131.569)
in final practice. Although on the wrong side of the knockout
qualifying bubble (13th), Larson qualified fourth for Saturday’s
Sta-Green 200 Nationwide race.
BACK TO REALITY
Almirola,
fresh off his first career victory at Daytona, crashed his Charter Ford
Fusion in Saturday’s morning practice. He was forced to a backup car
and will start Sunday’s
race at the rear of the field. Similar to Logano’s mishap in Friday’s
practice, a left-rear tire was the culprit.
Jeff
Gordon (132.771) and Denny Hamlin (132.739) were second- and
third-fastest in final practice. Pole-sitter Kyle Busch was eighth
(132.370).
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