Friday Talladega Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Kenseth isn’t buying Logano’s explanation of last Sunday’s wreck
- Win or bust for Dale Earnhardt Jr.
- Reddick needs wins to make up ground
Oct. 23, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Kenseth isn’t buying Logano’s explanation of last Sunday’s wreck
TALLADEGA,
Ala. -- Joey Logano’s pants may not be on fire, but his ears might be
burning after Matt Kenseth accused the driver of the No. 22 Team Penske
Ford of being less
than forthcoming in his assessment of last Sunday’s fateful wreck at
Kansas Speedway.
Logano
insists he didn’t dump Kenseth on purpose with less than five laps left
in the Hollywood Casino 400, a race Kenseth desperately needed to win
to earn a berth in the
Eliminator Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Logano
won the race. Kenseth finished 14th. And the Joe Gibbs Racing driver
didn’t think much of Logano’s characterization of the decisive wreck as
“hard racing.”
“Someday
he might mature a little bit,” Kenseth said after Friday’s opening
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice at Talladega Superspeedway, site of
Sunday's CampingWorld.com
500 (2:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN). “But, first of all, he should have stopped
running his mouth...
“And
number two, he’s lying when he said he didn’t do it on purpose, because
he lifted (my) tires off the ground, offset to the left, and he’s too
good a race car driver to
do that by accident.”
For
practical purposes, Kenseth is in the same position he found himself
last week—needing a victory to advance to the Eliminator Round. With
victories at Charlotte and Kansas,
Logano already is locked into the Chase’s third round.
WIN OR BUST FOR DALE EARNHARDT JR.
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. comes to Talladega 11th in the Chase standings, four
points in front of Matt Kenseth and 31 behind Martin Truex Jr. in eighth
place, the last transfer position
into the Chase’s Eliminator Round.
Though
there are far-fetched scenarios that would enable Earnhardt to advance
without a victory, a Talladega win on Sunday is by far the most
realistic way for Earnhardt to
keep his title hopes alive.
Toward that end, Earnhardt has a straightforward plan.
“We’re
just going to go out there and practice and work on the car and do what
we need to do today,” Earnhardt said on Friday at Talladega.
“Qualifying is (Saturday). We’ll
try to do as good a job as we can there; and when the race starts, run
up front and try to stay toward the lead.
“I think it’s important to be in the lead in the last 50 laps of the race, so we’re going to try to be there.”
Earnhardt
also applauded NASCAR’s move to limit the number of possible
green-white-checkered-flag finishes to one for Sunday’s race.
“I
thought three was a lot,” Earnhardt said. “I still think three is a
lot—anywhere at any race. One attempt was kind of the norm, if anybody
ever did that in racing in the
last 100 years. One attempt seemed to be plenty. And I thought that was
a good move for NASCAR, not only considering what happened in Daytona
(with Austin Dillon’s wreck in July), but just one attempt.
“We
want to finish under green. We should hopefully finish under green
without the opportunity of a green-white-checkered. But if there is a
problem where we have to run extra
laps, they’ll be one attempt, and that should satisfy not only the
fans, but the drivers and everybody involved.”
REDDICK NEEDS WINS TO MAKE UP GROUND
In
recent weeks Ford driver Tyler Reddick has fallen out of the NASCAR
Camping World Truck Series lead, thanks largely to a 19th-place finish
at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park
and a 15th-place run at New Hampshire.
Now
third in the standings and 16 points behind series leader Erik Jones,
Reddick knows believes he can make up ground in short order, if he can
find his way back to Victory
Lane. The Brad Keselowski Racing driver has two wins this season but
none since Dover in the year’s sixth event.
“I
think to be able to truly win the championship we’re going to have to
win a couple races,” Reddick said on Friday at Talladega, site of
Saturday’s fred’s 250 (1 p.m. ET
on FOX). “We’ve won two races early in the year and hit a stretch there
where we weren’t in the right position to be able to win a race, but we
were able to get top fives and be able to stay pretty close with those
other two (Jones and second-place Matt Crafton).
“The
last couple races, consistency-wise, we’ve made a few mistakes and
we’ve had bad races, which we haven’t really had all year long, so we
put ourselves in position where
we have to win, but I feel like it’s no different than any other
weekend we’ve come into. We’ve always come with the same mind-set, to
win that race at that given event.”
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