Friday Atlanta Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Ty Dillon welcomes opportunity to sub for Tony Stewart
- Johnson: Hendrick will adjust to loss of Stewart-Haas
- Hamlin spins in opening Sprint Cup practice
Feb. 26, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
TY DILLON WELCOMES OPPORTUNITY TO SUB FOR TONY STEWART
HAMPTON, Ga. – Ty Dillon’s work load tripled this weekend at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
With
Dillon tabbed as the substitute driver for injured Tony Stewart for
Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event (1
p.m. ET on FOX), Dillon will
be battling for 500 miles in addition to the 250 he’ll run in
Saturday’s Heads Up Georgia 250 NASCAR XFINITY Series race (1:30 p.m. ET
on FS1).
But to Dillon, the opportunity to race in the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet more than makes up for the extra work.
“It’s
a huge weekend,” Dillon said on Friday during a question-and-answer
with reporters in the Atlanta media center. “First of all, I have to
thank Stewart-Haas Racing for
the opportunity to be in the 14 car. I think everybody wants to see
Tony in this car. With those unfortunate circumstances, I was able to be
in the car this weekend, which is good for me to get the experience in
such great equipment.”
Stewart
suffered a burst fracture of his L1 vertebra in a Jan. 31 all-terrain
vehicle accident in Southern California’s Glamis Dunes. He has vowed to
return to the No. 14 car
this season, but there is no specific timetable.
Brian
Vickers took Stewart’s place in the Daytona 500, finishing 26th, and
will be back in the car March 6 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. SHR hasn’t
revealed a schedule for replacement
drivers beyond the first three races of the 2016 season.
Nevertheless, Dillon isn’t bashful about his prospects for his first trip in the 14.
“I
have high expectations for this weekend,” said Dillon, whose brother
Austin Dillon subbed for Stewart for two races in 2013, after the
three-time champion broke his leg
in a sprint car accident in Iowa. “I said it earlier in the week that I
always set my goals high.
“I
want to run good in this car. I want to do good for Tony and
Stewart-Haas Racing. I don’t see why we shouldn’t be able to run in the
top 10 or top 15. I’m going to give
it all I have. I’ve been talking with (crew chief) Mike (Bugarewicz)
all week. I want to go out there and impress a lot of people and show
people what I’m made of and what I can do in these race cars.”
JOHNSON: HENDRICK WILL ADJUST TO LOSS OF STEWART-HAAS
Stewart-Haas
Racing’s blockbuster announcement of its impending move from Chevrolet
to Ford in 2017 affects another NASCAR powerhouse -- Hendrick
Motorsports.
Six-time
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson is confident team
owner Rick Hendrick will make the adjustment in the 10 months between
Tuesday’s announcement and
SHR’s departure from the engine and chassis deal that has been in place
since Tony Stewart partnered with Gene Haas in 2009.
“It
was certainly a shock,” Johnson said on Friday at Atlanta Motor
Speedway. “We have contracts in place with Stewart-Haas Racing that
Hendrick has to honor and will honor
and honor with integrity the way we always do. We have a lot of
employees whose jobs count on that and rely on that.
“Nothing
is different this year. Fortunately, we have a year to figure out if we
service some other teams and provide engines and chassis or how we
handle it. I know Rick’s
goal is to keep the staff where it is. That gets me excited, because,
if we maintain the staff, I think we’ll be able to develop much more
cool stuff for our race cars.”
HAMLIN SPINS IN OPENING SPRINT CUP PRACTICE
Daytona
500 winner Denny Hamlin spun his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota during
Friday’s first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice at Atlanta Motor
Speedway, but the loss of control
wasn’t attributable to the lower-downforce competition package making
its 2016 debut this weekend.
Rather, Hamlin blamed the line he oftens runs during the Sprint Cup races.
“I
tend to use probably a little bit more of the apron,” explained Hamlin,
who was 23rd fastest in the opening session. “Me and Kevin (Harvick)
seem to use the apron a lot
to make our cars go around the corner and I just – I felt like I got on
the apron a little bit too much, and that just de-wedges the car a lot,
and that’s when it spun the car out.
“I
think it was just trying to kind of simulate a race simulation a little
bit more. You don’t like to practice down there a whole lot, but you
race down there, so I was trying
to get down there as soon as I could and just lost it. But we’re – at
the time, we’re kind of fighting the handling of our car anyways. I
think we ran – that was like our 11th lap in a row of a run and it’s
going to be handfuls on Sunday for a lot of people.”
Kyle
Larson paced the opening session with a lap at 192.902 mph, followed by
Kasey Kahne (191.807 mph) and AJ Allmendinger (190.975 mph).
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