Saturday Daytona Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
Team Penske drivers (and affiliate) top Daytona 500 practice
·
Three charters change hands
·
Ken Griffey Jr. named honorary starter for Daytona 500
Feb. 13, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Team Penske drivers (and affiliate) top Daytona 500 practice
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – Defending Daytona 500 winner Joey Logano saved his best
for the last two minutes of the second and final practice session on
Saturday afternoon.
Drafting
with teammate Brad Keselowski and Ryan Blaney of Wood Brothers Racing, a
Team Penske affiliate, Logano topped the speed chart at 2.5-mile
Daytona International Speedway
with a lap at 195.933 mph (45.934 seconds), the fastest of the day.
Keselowski
was a close second at 195.848 mph, followed by Blaney at 195.797 mph.
Those three drivers were the only ones who cracked the 46-second mark.
Logano
was consistently fast all day, running second to two-time Daytona 500
winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. in Saturday’s opening practice for the Great
American Race (Feb. 21 on
FOX).
While
Logano established himself as one of the favorites for the Feb. 21
season-opening points race, Blaney, who has to qualify for the race on
speed, positioned himself for
a spot in the field in the unlikely event of a qualifying rainout on
Sunday.
“We
had a plan,” Blaney said after practice in an interview with
Motorsport.com. “That’s what we usually do. Brad, Joey and I figure out
how we can run together — a little
three-car — to see how they draft up. You can’t tell much, but you can
see where you’re at and where they’re loaded down with extra drafting
help. That was kind of the plan, to line up there at the end.
“We
have a pretty fast car, compared to the cars we need to beat — if we’re
in the top two of the eight that don’t have charters. I feel pretty
good about that. As far as overall
raw speed, I think we need to find a little bit more, but I don’t feel
like we need too much more. I feel pretty good about (qualifying on
Sunday).”
THREE CHARTERS CHANGE HANDS
Saturday
afternoon brought confirmation of the first sales of NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series charters under the new ownership model announced on Tuesday in
Charlotte, N.C.
“Charter
for the No. 41 car (driven by Kurt Busch) has been secured,”
Stewart-Haas Racing asserted on its Twitter account during Daytona 500
practice on Saturday afternoon.
“SHR officially has 4 charters. #NASCAR”
Joe
Gibbs Racing made a similar proclamation a few minutes later. “It’s
official!” JGR tweeted. “Today JGR secured a 4th charter to be used for
the No. 19 team (with driver
Carl Edwards).”
Stewart-Haas
and Gibbs obtained their charters from Rob Kauffman, who earned two
charters as a principal with Michael Waltrip Racing, which ceased
operations at the end of
the 2015 season.
In
discussing the possible purchase of a charter on Friday at Daytona,
Stewart-Haas Racing president Brett Frood deflected the question with a
joke.
“As
far as what we paid for it, Rob’s a fairly reasonable
guy—well-traveled—enjoys cars, fine dining. We ended up coming to an
agreement. We’re going to give him a lifetime
supply of Mobil 1 (motor oil) for his cars, and we’re going to deliver
Jimmy John’s and Busch beer for the next two years. Good deal!”
On
Friday, the day before the official confirmation of the sale of
Kauffman’s charters, HScott Motorsports announced it had acquired a
charter on a short-term lease basis from
Premium Motorsports, owned by Jay Robinson.
Team
owner Harry Scott said the charter will be used with the No. 46
Chevrolet driven by Michael Annett. Scott already had earned a charter
for the No. 15 Chevy, to be driven
this year by Clint Bowyer, who will move to Stewart-Haas in 2017.
KEN GRIFFEY JR. NAMED HONORARY STARTER FOR DAYTONA 500
Ken
Griffey Jr., who will be inducted into the Major League Baseball Hall
of Fame in late July, was named honorary starter for the Feb. 21 Daytona
500, Daytona International
Speedway officials announced on Saturday.
“We’re
honored to welcome baseball great Ken Griffey Jr. as the honorary
starter for the Daytona 500,” said DIS president Joie Chitwood III.
“We’re looking forward to having
such a legendary athlete wave the green flag on the first ‘Great
American Race’ in the world’s first motorsports stadium.”
Griffey
led the 2016 Hall of Fame class with a record 99.32 percent of the vote
(437 of 440) by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. In 22
seasons total with the Seattle
Mariners, Cincinnati Reds and Chicago White Sox, Griffey was a 13-time
All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove winner and 1997 American League MVP.
He is sixth on the all-time home run list with 630.
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