Sunday Texas Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Harvick OK with Keselowski’s driving, as long as he’s willing to fight
·
NASCAR to review brawl
·
Great save for Logano
Harvick OK with Keselowski’s driving, as long as he’s willing to fight
Nov. 2, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
FORT
WORTH, Texas—Kevin Harvick says he has no problem with the way Brad
Keselowski races, as long as Keselowski is willing to back it up outside
the
car.
In
fact, Harvick gave Keselowski a shove toward a melee developing with
Jeff Gordon after Sunday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series AAA Texas 500
at
Texas Motor Speedway, after Keselowski’s aggressive driving on a late
restart cut Gordon’s left rear tire and dropped the four-time premier
series champion from a chance for victory to a 29th-place finish.
“I
didn’t get in the middle of anything,” Harvick said of the shove. “I
just turned him around and told him to go fight his own fight.”
Gordon,
Keselowski and their crewmen brawled on pit road after the race,
leaving both drivers the worse for the wear, wiping specs of blood from
their
faces.
Harvick said the fisticuffs were a predictable result of Keselowski’s aggressiveness on the restart.
“I
think he’s just racing as hard as he can for his team,” Harvick said.
“He’s trying to get all he can. But when it gets down to that type of
racing,
those things are going to happen, exactly like they happened after the
race tonight.
“But
I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it, as long as you’re ready
to roll… If you’re going to race like that, you’re going to have to man
up at some point. I mean, he’s done it several times. Can’t just turn
around and let everybody fight all the time without you in there—have to
stand up for your actions at some point yourself.”
NASCAR TO REVIEW THE BRAWL
NASCAR
will study film of the post-race fight involving Jeff Gordon, Brad
Keselowski and a host of crew members, but according to Robin Pemberton,
the sanctioning body’s senior vice president of competition and racing
development, NASCAR has no issue with the incident that caused it.
“I
think it was hard racing, and this is a contact sport,” Pemberton said
of Keselowski’s up-the-middle attempt pass on the next-to-last restart, a
move that left Gordon with a cut tire and diminished championship
chances.
“You
look at what drivers are trying to do. We had a couple shots at a
green-white-checkered finish, and everybody was going for it. Nobody was
leaving
anything behind.”
The
brawl itself is a different story. NASCAR will review the incident in
its entirety and decide if penalties are warranted. Keselowski already
is
on probation from post-race actions three weeks ago at Charlotte.
“We
knew the (new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup) format was going to put a
lot of pressure on people to perform and make aggressive moves and
decisions
out there on the race track,” Pemberton said. “You could see the result
of that after the race.
“We’re
going to take our time. We’ve got a lot of film to review and things
like that. The important thing is to make the right decision at the end
of the day.”
Pemberton says NASCAR draws the line when drivers and crew members come to blows.
"You
shouldn’t punch somebody,” he said. “Everybody gets together, and when
you’re holding onto each other and grabbing and this, that and the
other,
that’s one thing. When punches are landed, that’s a different
scenario...
“We have a lot of work to do this week.”
GREAT SAVE FOR LOGANO
Joey Logano’s entire Chase could have come unglued—literally.
During
a race that saw rapid-fire cautions from the midpoint on, NASCAR
allowed teams to get extra sets of tires from Goodyear for the late
stages
of the 500-mile event.
Only
one problem. In Logano’s case, the glue that holds the lug nuts in
place for the tire changer didn’t have a chance to set, and during a
late pit
stop, three lugs fell off, dropping Logano to the back of the field.
To
make matters worse, as Logano tried to recover, contact from Marcos
Ambrose’s Ford sent him spinning, causing the ninth caution of the race
on Lap
309 of a scheduled 334. Logano restarted 26th, but a subsequent yellow
on Lap 314 gave him a chance to recover significant track position by
foregoing a pit stop.
Logano
restarted seventh on Lap 318 and held 12th at the finish, salvaging a
share of the Chase lead with one race left in the Eliminator Round.
“I
don’t know what happened with the glue on the pit stop, and I haven’t
gotten the full story yet, but we had a hell of a time trying to put
rear
tires on the car,” Logano said. “We lost all our track position with 30
(laps) to go, and I came off the corner and the 9 (Ambrose) hit me and
popped my right rear (tire), and then we spun out.
“We
put tires back on it and then just held on till the end and got
something decent out of something that could have been way worse. I’m
proud of
everyone that kept their heads down and kept digging. That isn’t the
way we wanted to do it, that is for sure…
“We put ourselves in a bad spot and got in an even worse spot and then dug ourselves halfway out of a hole there.”
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