Saturday Atlanta Notebook
Notebook Items:
• Gordon reaches 750th start
• Starting spot doesn't worry Logano
• Kenseth still looking for first win
Aug. 30, 2014
Jeff Gordon’s consecutive start streak will reach 750 on Sunday
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
HAMPTON, Ga.— Making 750 starts in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series is quite an accomplishment in itself.
Doing so without interruption is even more remarkable.
Jeff
Gordon will make his 750th start at NASCAR’s highest level in Sunday
night’s Oral-B USA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Gordon hasn’t missed a
race since he took the green
flag in Cup competition for the first time, in November 1992 at
Atlanta.
“It
seems like just yesterday that it started right here, over 20 years
ago,” Gordon said. “I love this track, love racing here, so it’s pretty
cool to have 750 happening here.”
If
Gordon’s streak remains unbroken, he’ll surpass Ricky Rudd’s
series-record 788 consecutive starts in the 28th race of 2015, at New
Hampshire Motor Speedway.
Gordon’s
longevity, and the four series championships that have accompanied it,
have earned the driver of the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet a
number of enviable perks
over the years.
Earlier this week, he got an invitation to tour Air Force One when President Barack Obama visited Charlotte, N.C.
“I was
testing in Martinsville, and so luckily my mom and my dad were able to
go as well as (wife) Ingrid and the kids,” Gordon said. “They didn’t
expect to be able to say
‘hi’ to President Obama. They just thought they were going to go and
have a tour. So it was quite a surprise and quite an experience for
them.
“They’ve
been talking about it all week and how cool it was. It’s interesting
these days. You know, you have a seven-year-old daughter (Ella), who
missed a day of school and
then goes back the next day and they say, ‘Where were you?’ and she
says she was seeing the president and I went on Air Force One and
they’re like ‘Oh, right, where were you?’”
Starting Spot Doesn’t Worry Logano
In
Friday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying session at Atlanta Motor
Speedway, Joey Logano failed to make the final session of knockout time
trials for the first time on
an open-motor track.
Logano
qualified 14th for Sunday’s Oral-B USA 500 at the 1.54-mile track, but
the winner of last week’s Bristol race isn’t particularly concerned
about his starting position.
Logano’s No. 22 Team Penske Ford was fast enough to pace Saturday’s
first Sprint Cup practice session with a lap at 189.351 mph.
“You
have to go fast for a long time here, but we were OK, even on the long
runs, Logano said after the session, which was truncated by an afternoon
rainstorm. “We never put
new tires on it, so we kind of just kept working,
“We’ll see. I think the 4 car (of pole winner Kevin Harvick) is super-fast, but I don’t think we’re far behind him.”
Looking For A Win
Matt
Kenseth is a likely Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup qualifier whether he
wins one of the final two regular-season races or not, but the driver
of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs
Racing Toyota would rather solidify his Chase berth with a victory.
In
final Sprint Cup practice at Atlanta, Kenseth was headed in the right
direction. He was fastest in the Happy Hour with a lap at 188.251 mph.
Given that Atlanta is a track
where the Gibbs cars traditionally have excelled, Kenseth has to like
his chances in race trim on Sunday night.
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