Saturday Chicagoland Notebook
Notebook Items:
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Ambrose to leave RPM and return to Australia at season's end
·
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers dominate Saturday morning practice
Ambrose to leave RPM and return to Australia at season's end
Sept. 13, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET,
Ill.—Marcos Ambrose will leave Richard Petty Motorsports and return
home to his native Australia at the end of the 2014 season, in what the
Tasmanian driver termed
Saturday as a personal decision.
“I feel
like the timing’s great for myself and my family to just return to
Australia, and that’s what we’re going to do,” Ambrose told reporters
Saturday morning at Chicagoland
Speedway.
In
confirming Ambrose’s impending departure in a Saturday morning release,
RPM said the organization already is exploring “several driver
opportunities to help drive the No.
9 team forward,” and will announce Ambrose’s replacement at the
appropriate time.
“Marcos
will always be part of our extended racing family,” team co-owner
Richard Petty said. “He came over to the United States with his family
and dedicated his time here
giving the best he had each week.
“I
couldn’t ask anything more from Marcos and his commitment on and off of
the track to our race team and our partners. Away from the track, he’s a
family person first. That’s
something I respect, and we’ll miss Marcos, (wife) Sonja and their
children."
Ambrose’s
tenure at RPM included a transition of ownership from George Gillet,
under who the team struggled to make ends meet, to a more stable group
headed by Richard Petty
and investors Andy Murstein and Doug Bergeron.
“I feel
like I’ve left them better than when I entered with them,” Ambrose
said. “I feel like I’ve contributed to their turnaround. They’re a great
team. They’re moving forward.
They’ve got a car in the Chase this year (the No. 43 of Aric Almirola).
They’ve won races.
“When I
first joined them in the turmoil of the Gillett changeover, there were a
lot of gray clouds circling around them. They’re on a great path. I
wish them the best. I value
Richard’s friendship greatly, and the family and everybody here at RPM.
They’re a great company, and I wish them the most success.”
Though
Ambrose’s decision was personal—and was made earlier this year—his
frustration with a lack of progress on the competitive side was a
factor, too. One of the most talented
road course drivers ever to compete in NASCAR racing, Ambrose notched
his only two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories at Watkins Glen, but he
never scored a breakthrough victory on an oval track.
“I feel
like my level has plateaued at the Sprint Cup level,” Ambrose said. “I
haven’t kicked off the next level. I’ve always said that, if I felt like
I had flattened off
my learning curve or my success—that I was only in the U.S. to win, and
if I wasn’t able to contend like I want to—then I need to look at my
situation, and that has been the case.
“It has
been a tough couple years on the race track for me, and the personal
situation is clear, and I just think the timing is right to go home.”
A
two-time champion in the V8 Supercar Series, Ambrose has been rumored as
a candidate to return to that series in a car fielded by Roger Penske.
“Today’s
not the day to talk about my racing future,” Ambrose said on Saturday.
“I felt like, personally, it’s the right choice for myself and my family
to call it a day here
in the U.S. and move on to our next chapter.”
The
discussion of Ambrose’s racing future may come sooner rather than later.
Team Penske president Tim Cindric announced on his Twitter account
Saturday that the organization
plans “to have a teleconference on Monday at 9 p.m. ET to give a
@v8supercars update for the media. No further comments. Focused on the
Chase now.”
For
those who question the starting time for the teleconference, remember
that 9 p.m. ET Monday is 10 a.m. on Tuesday in Sydney, Australia.
SHORT STROKES
Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers dominated Saturday morning’s first
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice session, filling eight of the top 10
spots.
Non-Chaser
Paul Menard, however, paced the session with a fast lap at 188.772 mph,
nearly one mile-an-hour faster than second-place Kasey Kahne’s 187.780
mph. Kevin Harvick
was third quickest, followed by Kevin Harvick, Jeff Gordon, Carl
Edwards, Brian Vickers, Aric Almirola, Greg Biffle, Dale Earnhardt Jr.
and Jimmie Johnson.
Vickers was the other non-Chase driver in the top 10…
Leading
Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate Kyle Larson slammed into the
outside wall during the first Saturday practice and will start Sunday’s
MyAFibStory.com 400—the first
race in the Chase—from the rear of the field in a backup car.
After
shaking down the backup later in the session, Larson got the car up to
speed in Saturday’s second practice, running third behind Edwards and
Brad Keselowski. Edwards’
top speed of 186.413 mph was a reflection of warmer track conditions.
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