Friday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Brian Vickers elated at opportunity to compete in Daytona 500
·
Logano stays motivated as new season approaches
·
Short strokes
Feb. 12, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Brian Vickers elated at opportunity to compete in Daytona 500
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – To say that Brian Vickers appreciates the opportunity to
drive the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet in place of injured Tony
Stewart would be nothing
short of a colossal understatement.
“If
anything, I feel more rested than every single person in this garage,”
Vickers said on Friday at Daytona International Speedway, as
Stewart-Haas announced him as the interim
driver for Stewart during Speedweeks. “I’m more hungry than every
single person in this garage.
“I’m happier to be here, more appreciative.”
Vickers
has good reason to feel both rested and appreciative. In fact, he has
experienced more health issues over the past six years than the driver
he is replacing. On three
occasions during that span, Vickers has been forced to abandon a NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series ride because of blood clots, which originally were
discovered in his legs and lungs in 2010.
“I
think all those feelings and all those experiences and things I’ve
learned will only contribute to success, not failure,” said Vickers, who
has received clearance to race
from his doctors and from NASCAR. “I feel good about it. I’m pumped.
It’s a great opportunity.”
But it’s an opportunity that comes at Stewart’s expense, as Vickers was quick to note.
“It’s unfortunate that this is the car I’m in, because that means Tony’s not here,” Vickers said.
Stewart
suffered a burst fracture of his L1 vertebra in a Jan. 31 all-terrain
vehicle accident in the Glamis Dunes of California.
The
three-time series champion had back surgery in North Carolina on Feb. 3
and will miss an indeterminate number of races as he recovers. Stewart,
however, did hold an impromptu
question-and-answer session with fans via the live-streaming
application Periscope on Friday, as he worked out on a treadmill.
“We’ve been through a lot worse than this,” Stewart told his fans during the session.
In
fact, Stewart missed the final 15 races of the 2013 season after
breaking his leg in a sprint car accident in Iowa. In 2014, he missed
three races after a sprint car he
was driving at Canandaigua (N.Y.) Speedway struck and killed fellow
driver Kevin Ward Jr., who had exited his car and approached Stewart’s
after an accident involving the two cars.
Thus far, SHR hasn’t named substitute drivers for Stewart beyond Daytona Speedweeks.
“Obviously,
the situation is fluid,” said Stewart-Haas president Brett Frood.
“There are a lot of different scenarios and tentacles to every decision
we’re making. We want
to focus on Speedweeks. We want to come in here and give ourselves the
best opportunity to win (Saturday night’s Sprint Unlimited) and the
Daytona 500.
“Then we’ll figured out Atlanta (Feb. 28) and the rest, and hopefully get Tony back in the car as soon as possible.”
LOGANO STAYS MOTIVATED AS NEW SEASON APPROACHES
Two
flirtations with the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship and the
continuing strength of the Team Penske organization over the past two
years have only intensified Joey
Logano’s desire to win a first title in the series.
To
win, though, he’ll have to avoid the sorts of pitfalls that have
derailed him. In 2014, a pit road snafu ruined his chances in the
Championship Round race at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. Last year, a feud with Matt Kenseth culminating in a wreck at
Martinsville knocked Logano out of the Chase in the Round of 8.
“The
last two years have been career seasons for me,” Logano said on Friday
at Daytona International Speedway. “I feel like we had two championship
seasons without a trophy.
We have a lot of confidence. We know what it takes to win this whole
thing. We have been right on that edge. Arguably, with the most wins
last year (six), we should have been there but that’s the way the format
is, and that’s the way we play it, and it is
what it is.
“I
feel like I learned a lot as a driver the last few years and what I
need to do to make it happen. I feel like I’ve found new levels as a
driver to reach. I know I am a silver
linings person, but I feel like that’s something you have to have, that
confidence and not get beat down. I feel like there’s nothing to hold
our heads down about. We’ve had two great seasons.”
This
past season included a victory in the Daytona 500, but Logano will have
to buck the odds to win back-to-back editions of the Great American
Race. The last driver to win
consecutive Daytona 500s was Sterling Marlin in 1994 and 1995.
SHORT STROKES
Jimmie
Johnson won the pole for Saturday night’s Sprint Unlimited without
getting behind the wheel of his No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.
The starting order for the
race was determined by a blind draw by crew chiefs in the Fan Zone at
Daytona International Speedway.
The
No. 48 team picked pit stall 43, closest to the entrance to pit road,
leaving pit stall 4, closest to pit road exit, to Brad Keselowski, who
drew the second starting position.
AJ Allmendinger and Kyle Larson will occupy the second row for the
start of the 75-lap non-points exhibition race…
NASCAR
and Chip Ganassi Racing on Friday announced sponsorship agreements with
Credit One Bank, one of the largest and fastest-growing credit card
issuers in the United States.
Credit One Bank will carry the designation “Official Credit Card of
NASCAR” and will serve as primary sponsor for three races on Jamie
McMurray’s No. 1 Ganassi Racing Chevrolet…
Kyle
Larson led opening practice for the Sprint Unlimited with a lap at
199.344 mph. Kasey Kahne was second fastest at 199.159 mph. As is his
custom, Jimmie Johnson eschewed
the draft in favor of single-car runs and was 23rd quickest of the 25
cars.
Denny
Hamlin topped the speed chart in the second Unlimited practice, posting
a lap at 198.930 mph with a strong run from the back of a drafting
pack. Clint Bowyer was second
fastest at 195.253 mph.
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