Sunday Charlotte Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Pit road tangle ruins Charlotte race for both Kyles—Busch and Larson
- Dale Earnhardt Jr. says 'It ain't over'
- No job security for Matt Kenseth?
Oct. 11, 2015
Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Pit road tangle ruins Charlotte race for both Kyles—Busch and Larson
CONCORD, N.C. – It was a comedy of errors, but the mistakes were too costly to be funny.
Kyle
Larson was running second, and Kyle Busch third, approaching pit road
after NASCAR called the eighth caution of Sunday’s Bank of America 500
because of fluid on the track.
Busch
feinted toward pit road, as he often does in similar situations. But as
Busch steered his No. 18 Toyota to the right of the commitment cone at
the entrance to pit road,
Larson suddenly turned his No. 42 Chevrolet into Busch’s path.
Busch’s
car sustained minor damage, and Larson’s spun on pit road, but both
drivers drew commitment line violations that would send them to the back
of the field for the subsequent
restart on Lap 201 of 334.
Neither
driver recovered from the incident, as their winning chances
disappeared with the contact. Busch subsequently slid in oil in the high
groove and further hurt his car
during contact with the outside wall.
“We
stayed out there on that caution and Kyle faked like he was coming, and
the 42 (Larson) in front of us, he was on the opposite end of the
commitment cone and there was
no way he was going to make it,” Busch’s crew chief, Adam Stevens, said
after the race.
“He
(Larson) panicked. I don’t know what happened there, but them two came
together. Then we were behind the eight ball at that point, but still
going to have a good day, and
the track had a little bit of oil on it, didn’t get cleaned up as
well—which a lot of people were talking about on the radio. Kyle slipped
in it and fenced it, and that’s what really did us in.”
Larson said he got contradictory instructions on his radio.
“They
told me to do what everybody around me was doing, and the No. 22 (race
winner Joey Logano) was staying out, so I was committed to staying out,”
Larson said. “And as soon
as I turned right to stay out they said ‘Pit, pit, pit.’
“I
hung a left and Kyle (Busch) was there. I feel really terrible to ruin
their day, and hopefully it didn’t hurt their chances of transferring
through this round (of the Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup). I know they deserved a top-three finish for
sure. I felt awful immediately and still do. I hate it.”
Busch
salvaged a 20th-place finish, but he’s 10 points out of eighth place,
the position that will transfer from the Chase’s Contender Round to the
Eliminator Round.
“Just
can’t say enough about my guys – all the work that they put into these
things,” Busch said. “They don’t deserve to be put in these situations
year in, year out, but we
are for some reason.
“But
it’s tough, and we’re going to have to battle through with what we’ve
got right now. I can’t say enough about what they did on pit road
getting us back salvageable.”
DALE EARNHARDT JR. SAYS ‘IT AIN'T OVER’
Dale Earnhardt Jr. said he lost count of how many times he hit the wall in Sunday’s Bank of America 500.
The
first brush with the SAFER barrier came on Lap 69, after contact from
Carl Edwards’ Toyota. Earnhardt later hit the wall when his No. 88
Chevrolet slid through fluid in
the top groove.
Ultimately,
Earnhardt finished 28th, four laps down, and left Charlotte in 11th
place in the standings, 19 points out of the last transfer position to
the next round of the
Chase, currently held by eighth-place Brad Keselowski.
“We
tried everything we could to get laps back, because we had a good
enough car to run in the top 20,” Earnhardt said. “Even after smashing
it into the fence after all them
times, we still had okay speed; but we just couldn’t get an opportunity
to get those laps back. Other guys had trouble. And it ain’t over.
Don’t worry about that.
“I
mean, we don’t have to go to Talladega (Oct. 25) and be nervous like
those guys that are going to have to play it safe. We can just go hard.
So, we’ve got a great car that
can win that race. We can go to Kansas (next Sunday) and run great. I
like that track and don’t see why we can’t run great there and maybe win
the race there. It ain’t over.”
NO JOB SECURITY FOR MATT KENSETH?
Matt Kenseth and his No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota epitomized Murphy’s Law on Sunday.
Contact
with Ryan Newman’s Chevrolet, a flat right front tire and several
brushes with the wall eventually forced the 2003 series champion out of
the race in 42nd place—with
a huge mountain to climb in the next two weeks to return to
championship eligibility.
Among Chase drivers, Kenseth is in last place (12th), 32 points out of the last transfer position.
“If this is the best I can do, it’s amazing I have a job,” Kenseth cracked in one of his post-race interviews.
No comments:
Post a Comment