Friday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Jimmie Johnson quickly up to speed in No. 48 backup car
·
Toyotas form dominant draft in practice
·
Practice is over for Blaney and Wood Brothers
·
Suarez, Roush Fenway crewman earn NASCAR Diversity Awards
Feb. 19, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Jimmie Johnson quickly up to speed in No. 48 backup car
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Jimmie Johnson is down to his last car.
That’s
the bad news. A last-lap wreck in Thursday’s second Can-Am Duel
150-mile qualifying races destroyed Johnson’s primary No. 48 Chevrolet
and forced him to a backup car
for Sunday’s Daytona 500 (on FOX at 1 p.m. ET).
But
fans of the six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion can take heart
in Johnson’s performance in Friday’s practice sessions. The backup No.
48 Chevy was actually faster
in single-car runs than the primary car in Thursday’s practice.
True,
the wind was blowing in a different direction at Daytona International
Speedway, but Johnson ran 194.083 mph in Friday’s opening session and
backed that up with a lap
at 194.250 mph in the second practice of the day.
“We’re
minimizing risk, because that’s our last car,” Johnson said of the
single-car runs, as his team was replacing his engine with the one he
will use in Sunday’s race. “If
something happened in one of the practice sessions, we’d be going to a
teammate or somebody, trying to use one of their backups and then put a
wrap over the top of it.
“That’s
just a world we don’t want to be in. We get a lot of experience in the
draft through all the races that take place, and it’s just something
that… we’ve done enough,
and we know what our race-time adjustments need to be and the balance
that I’m looking for. So for us, it’s just business as usual, and it
gives everybody else something to talk about.”
Johnson
said the change in wind direction made it difficult to compare the
primary and backup cars, but he described the backup as “very
comfortable.”
“I
think we finished second with it at Talladega last year (in the spring
race)… We didn’t want to lose that race car last night, but things are
going good with this one.”
TOYOTAS FORM DOMINANT DRAFT IN PRACTICE
While
Jimmie Johnson was squeezing speed out of his Chevrolet in single-car
runs, the most formidable Toyotas in the field were dominating the speed
chart in a mini-draft.
Joe
Gibbs Racing drivers Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch and Carl Edwards hooked
up with Furniture Row affiliate Martin Truex Jr. to post the fastest
four laps in Friday’s second
Daytona 500 practice session.
Hamlin,
who won last Saturday’s Sprint Unlimited, had the top speed at 199.658
mph, followed by Busch (198.640 mph), the winner of Thursday’s second
Can-Am Duel, and Truex,
who matched Busch’s speed in a backup car necessitated by the same
wreck that KO’d Johnson on Thursday night.
Edwards
was fourth fastest at 198.610 mph, and after those four drivers
established the draft, JGR teammate Matt Kenseth, another victim of the
last-lap wreck in the second
Duel, joined party in a backup car.
“We
seemed to have pretty good speed out there,” said Kenseth, who was
fifth on the chart at 198.566 mph. “I got to run with my teammates there
a little bit, and that was encouraging,
and the single-car speed seemed like it was pretty much as good as the
other car.
“These
guys build great race cars, and I feel pretty bad that I’ve been
wrecking ‘em all. I appreciate all the work they’re doing, and hopefully
we’ll get this thing all tuned
in tomorrow (during Saturday’s final practice) and be good on Sunday.”
Kenseth
had qualified second for the Daytona 500 during last Sunday’s time
trials, but must drop to the rear of the field to start the race in the
backup No. 20 Toyota.
PRACTICE IS OVER FOR BLANEY AND WOOD BROTHERS
When
the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series holds its final practice on Saturday, Ryan
Blaney and No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford won’t be taking part.
Blaney,
who finished third in Thursday night’s first Can-Am Duel, shook down
his car on Friday after his team changed to the Daytona 500 engine. The
No. 21 won’t see any more
action on the track until the green flag drops for the Great American
Race.
“Everyone
swaps over to their race engines today pretty much,” said Blaney, who
was sixth fastest overall and quickest in the Ford camp during Friday’s
second practice session.
“That’s what we did, so we wanted to go out there for 10 laps just to
make sure there were no leaks and everything runs smoothly.
“We
got enough data for the engine guys to look at and make sure everything
is OK, so that was just a test run on our race motor. We’re not going
to run (on Saturday), so all
we have to do now is get ready and make sure everything is ready to go
for the 500.”
With
his third-place finish in the Duel—where he rallied from one lap
down—Blaney earned the fifth starting spot in Sunday’s race.
SUAREZ, ROUSH FENWAY CREWMEN EARN DIVERSITY AWARDS
Joe
Gibbs Racing driver Daniel Suarez, the 2015 NASCAR XFINITY Series
Sunoco Rookie of the Year, was honored Friday as the recipient of the
Ignition Award, given annually to
a minority or female NASCAR national series driver who demonstrates
leadership both on and off the race track while helping to foster
diversity in the sport.
Suarez
received one of eight awards conferred during the ninth annual NASCAR
Diversity Awards luncheon at Daytona International Speedway.
Two
members of Roush Fenway Racing’s NASCAR XFINITY Series championship
team, Rafael Diaz and Mike Russell, received the crew member award for
inspiring awareness of NASCAR
through competitive performance and outreach activities.
Other
recipients of NASCAR Diversity Awards were: Sirius XM radio personality
Claire B. Lang (Industry Ambassador Award); 2014 NASCAR Mexico Series
champion Abraham Calderon
(Diverse Driver Award); Victoria Kim (Outstanding Intern Award);
National Association of Black Journalists (Institution Award); Chevrolet
(Partner Award); and Macy Causey (Young Racer Award).
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