NASCAR Media Day Notebook
Notebook Items:
- In fourth Cup season, Danica Patrick is more confident, comfortable
- Ty Dillon says nothing set in stone with SHR
- Despite pole, Elliott still low man on Hendrick totem pole
- Allgaier embracing career move
Feb. 16, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
In fourth Sprint Cup season, Danica Patrick is more confident, comfortable
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Danica Patrick has 118 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts to her credit.
She has no victories, no top fives.
But
as Patrick starts her fourth full season in Sprint Cup, paired with new
crew chief Billy Scott, she points to her ability to get up to speed
more quickly in practice as
a source of confidence that the results will be better this year.
“I'm
far more confident,” Patrick said on Tuesday at Daytona International
Speedway during NASCAR Media Day, the annual media event that serves as a
preview for Sunday's Daytona
500 (1 p.m. ET on FOX). “I'm far more confident and comfortable. I'm
understanding the car properly and able to help in making it better
quickly on the race weekend. Also the comfort of getting up to speed
fast helps that learning curve, too.
“I
remember there was lots of times in the very beginning when I wasn't
able to drive the car to the very limit. We'd come in and make changes
based on the way that I was driving
it. Once I was driving it the way it needed to be, all of a sudden we
ended up back where we started. We wasted all practice for me to learn
how to do it.”
That’s one area where Patrick has made significant improvement over the past three seasons.
“(I’m)
much better at getting up to speed,” she added. “But always room to
improve. I'm still working on doing a better job at that. I think, as a
driver, we all tend to have
our general weak areas and general strong areas. I know mine. I'm sure
everybody else knows theirs, too.”
Patrick
already has established a bond with Scott, who most recently worked
with Clint Bowyer at now-defunct Michael Waltrip Racing.
“Billy
is just a very relatable guy,” Patrick said. “He's very easy to talk
to. He's just a really normal, normal guy. I think that's important when
it comes to a team, that
everyone can talk to him, communicate, and feel like they cannot only
say what they want, but have a good time, as well.
“I
feel like it creates a good environment. Even last weekend (in the
Sprint Unlimited) when we were faced with quite a few different things,
with accident, crash damage, overheating,
things like that at the end, the team did a great job of working
together, even though it's the first time we've all done that.
"I think that's a reflection of everybody being comfortable and confident based on his leadership.”
TY DILLON SAYS NOTHING SET IN STONE WITH SHR
Don’t
bet against Ty Dillon replacing injured Tony Stewart in the No. 14
Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet for a number of Bass Pro Shop-sponsored
races.
Though
Dillon acknowledged discussions with SHR about that very possibility,
he said talk of a done deal at this point are “premature.”
“Unfortunately,
it kind of stinks that we even have to talk about this down here,”
Dillon said on Tuesday at Daytona. “I think everybody, including myself,
wants to see Tony
go out the right way and run every single race.
“It
would be an honor to drive Tony’s car in his last year and hopefully do
good for those guys. Nothing has been announced, and I haven’t signed
anything yet. We’ve been in
talks, obviously. Hopefully, we’ll have some news sooner or later.
“It’s
a slow process. There are a lot of different things going on.
Hopefully, we’ll have some news later on. Nothing is set in stone, and I
don’t like to say anything until
pen hits paper.”
LOW MAN ON THE TOTEM POLE
Chase
Elliott may be the youngest Daytona 500 pole winner in NASCAR history,
but that doesn’t mean he’s moved up the pecking order at Hendrick
Motorsports.
If
an HMS driver happens to have an opportunity to participate in a
Goodyear tire test during an off week in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
schedule, Elliott already has been
“volunteered” for the job—by teammates Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt
Jr. and Kasey Kahne.
“I
get volunteered for tests that those guys don't want to go do,” Elliott
said on Tuesday during Daytona 500 media day interviews at Daytona. “If
there's a test on an off
week, you're probably not going to see Jimmie, Dale or Kasey go do it.
They're going to sign me up firsthand. What am I going to say?
“I'm
not against it. It's just funny. We were in a meeting the other day,
and they talked about having a test sometime throughout the year, maybe
one of the off weeks or something.
“It hadn’t (been) two seconds, and Jimmie said, ‘Chase—sign him up.’”
A NEW OPPORTUNITY FOR ALLGAIER
With
Clint Bowyer needing a place to drive for a year while waiting to take
over the No. 14 Chevrolet at Stewart-Haas Racing, Justin Allgaier was
the odd man out at HScott
Motorsports.
But
in Allgaier’s estimation, the opportunity to race for a NASCAR XFINITY
Series championship with JR Motorsports is ample compensation for losing
a full-time Sprint Cup ride.
The presence of team principals Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kelley Earnhardt
Miller made signing with JRM a no-brainer.
“This
is the easiest decision I’ve made in a long time, I think,” Allgaier
said. “I look at what Dale and Kelley and this whole organization has
done and accomplished and what
they’re trying to accomplish.
“And
I think, from a driver’s aspect, to have an owner that races and
understands the on-track stuff, and to have owners that understand the
off-track stuff as well as anybody—to
be able to understand how to put the right people in place—I feel like
just being part of the organization for the past couple of months, I
think they’ve got a great handle on that, and that’s all I needed to
see.”
Allgaier
considers the move to the XFINITY Series a step forward, given the
resources and the wealth of experience available to him at JRM.
“Nothing
against any of the race teams I’ve been with in my past history,” he
said. “It’s just different. And I think you can go to every team in the
industry and drive for
them. Some you’re going to be competitive in, and some you’re not. Some
you’re going to have fun in, some you’re not. Sometimes you’re going to
be competitive and not have fun. There are all these things that weigh
into it.
“Personally,
I needed to get back to being competitive and trying to go to the race
track to win races and win the championship—and learning. I think the
resources, for me,
are something I’m really excited to be a part of. ... I think, from a
driver’s standpoint, the learning side has been the coolest thing for
me.”
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