Championship 4 crew chiefs discuss Homestead strategies
Nov. 11, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
The 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship will be decided not only by the drivers but their teams in the pits.
In-race
decisions by the crew chiefs, the hands-on preparations and adjustments
made by the crew members, and the coordination between the four
contending drivers and their
teams will impact the drama as it unfolds in South Florida.
“It
will be a battle of mental toughness,” predicts Luke Lambert, the
32-year-old crew chief for Ryan Newman and the No. 31 Richard Childress
Racing Chevrolet.
“At any
given point throughout the weekend, each of the four championship
contenders will be faced with situations that will be less than ideal.
Exactly what that is going
to look like, I can’t say, but the team with the best mental toughness
will be the one that rises above.”
Guaranteed,
the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Sunday (3 p.m. ET
on ESPN) will be a Sprint Cup event like no other. For the first time,
four and only four
drivers have the chance to win the title. The champion won't
necessarily have to win the race – just find a way to finish in front of
his other three rivals because previous points don’t matter.
“We’ll
definitely monitor what’s going on with the other competitors,” said
Darian Grubb, crew chief for Denny Hamlin. “You don’t have to win. You
just have to be in front
of the other three – and you don’t have to be in front the whole race –
only at the end of 400 miles. Before that, it doesn’t really matter
what position you are on the track.”
If
experience becomes the deciding factor, give Hamlin and Grubb the edge.
Grubb, 39, captured the 2011 Sprint Cup title at Homestead-Miami
Speedway with Tony Stewart. Hamlin
has won the final race of the year at Homestead twice in nine starts,
including last year with Grubb as his crew chief.
“We
should be able to adapt and do what we have to do to perform,” Grubb
said Tuesday when NASCAR got the four championship-contending crew
chiefs together for a teleconference.
“The fact that we were able to win last year shows that we know how to
run up front.
“I’ve
won twice here as a crew chief, Denny has won the race twice and raced
for the championship under similar circumstances, so the pressure should
not make us crack where
some other guys down there may.”
Hamlin
is a decidedly more mature driver than he was in 2010 when he came to
Homestead leading the points but succumbed to the pressure and could not
hold off Jimmie Johnson
for the championship.
“Denny
is that relaxed individual now,” Grubb said. “He’s matured a ton since
the last time he was here in a battle for a championship. He knows that
adding stress is not going
to add anything to performance. We had some pretty big problems at
Phoenix (on Sunday) and he didn’t get out of control. We managed to get a
top-five out of it and make our way to the Championship Round.”
Like
each of his three competitors, Kevin Harvick has never won a Sprint Cup
title. But he seems unlikely to crack. And if momentum matters, he and
crew chief Rodney Childers
might have an advantage.
Harvick
has two victories in the last five races, including Sunday’s dominant
performance at Phoenix International Raceway. Moreover, Harvick has
finished in the top 10 in
11-of-13 career starts at Homestead, including in each of the last six
years.
“Anytime
you win a race going into that last one, I think it gives everyone a
boost,” said Childers, thrilled with the progress his team has made,
considering it had to build
a program from the ground up in Harvick’s first year at Stewart-Haas
Racing.
“We had
parts and pieces that had never been raced before,” Childers said.
“When we started the season, we didn’t have a single chassis, radiator,
not even fuel lines. … We
were building our trailer. We didn’t have a jackstand or a bench for
our shop. Every bit of that, we had to make. The coolest thing was to
see how hard everyone worked to get all that stuff done.”
Undeterred
by a start to the season in which Harvick finished 36th or lower in
four of the first seven races, the Stewart-Haas team preserved. They
found speed for Harvick,
who won eight Coors Light Pole Awards, including two in the Chase after
he and non-Chase qualifier Tony Stewart swapped pit crews.
“Going
into that deal, we all knew that something had to be done,” said
Childers, who has top 10s in six of the first nine Chase races. “The
crew that had been on the 14 had
been in high-pressure situations before and we all thought about what
was the right thing to do for the company. This wasn’t just Kevin saying
he didn’t like his pit crew. We all thought this was the right thing to
do to win a championship.”
But if
the team that best overcomes adversity prevails, well Todd Gordon and
driver Joey Logano might have the inside track. Running second 125 laps
into Sunday’s race, that
was Logano’s fuel can that went sliding into the next pit stall,
resulting in a penalty that left him in 29th place and ultimately put
him a lap down.
The
previous week, at Texas, it was loose lug nuts in the last 40 laps that
dropped Logano from fourth to 22nd. But the 24-year-old Team Penske
driver recovered to salvage
a 12th-place finish and take the points lead into Phoenix.
“We’ve
faced adversity in the last two weeks and recovered from it,” Gordon
said. “It’s a statement of where this team is and what we’re made of.”
Gordon believes Logano has what it takes to be a champion.
“When
Joey walked in here (from Joe Gibbs Racing last year), I think he
walked in with confidence and knew what he needed in a race car," Gordon
said. "He knew this was his
opportunity and his race team and he’s owned that.
"That
confidence is something that we believe in - and this whole race team
believes in Joey. He’s 24 years old now and he’s been in the Cup Series
for six years. He’s got
a lot of bangs and bruises, but he understands the business and what it
takes for us to be successful together. "
If
consistency wins over speed, Lambert and Newman will be the perfect
combination. The only team of the four not to test at Homestead, Newman
has yet to win a race this season
but utilized top 10s in five of the last seven Chase races and a
last-lap bump of Kyle Larson at Phoenix to nudge his way into The
Championship 4.
“As
that lap unfolded, I was just curious if it would be possible for Ryan
to mount any sort of challenge and get door-to-door with the 42,”
Lambert said. “I guess I was a
bit in shock watching it all unfold and pleased to see what we needed
to happen for us to transfer.”
Lambert won’t be surprised if any team shifts its focus from its own car to what competitors are doing late in Sunday’s race.
“Early
on, you have to execute the best you possibly can,” he said. “I don’t
think early in the race it will be very important to focus on what the
other teams are doing. In
the closing stages, when you’re down to one final pit stop or the final
run or run-and-a-half, then you start racing against your competitors.”
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