Saturday Phoenix Notebook
Nov. 12, 2016
Notebook Items:
·
Experience should help Kyle Busch in Phoenix elimination race
·
Harvick hopes to beat odds at Phoenix again
·
Pole winner Bowman not NASCAR's only tie to Tucson
·
Short strokes
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE,
Ariz. – Last year, Kyle Busch felt he was playing with house money when
it came to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship.
This
year, the driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota needs to hit a
full house on the river, in poker terms. He’s one of six drivers who
hopes his number comes up when
the final two Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship 4 slots are
filled in Sunday’s Can-Am 500 at Phoenix International Raceway (2:30
p.m. ET on NBC).
As
the defending series champion – a title he won after missing the first
11 races of the 2015 season because of injuries sustained in a wreck at
Daytona in February – Busch
is well-versed in the vagaries of the Chase’s current elimination
format.
The
only other driver who has won a championship under the current system
is Kevin Harvick, who took the checkered flag in the final two races of
2014.
As someone who has survived the championship pressure cooker, Busch feels he has an edge.
“I
think that when you do have a championship, yes, you don’t have the
same amount of pressure in tense moments and things like that,” he said.
“You don’t necessarily let it
get to you as much. You can just kind of moreso float through the
process and kind of let what comes to you come to you, so you know
that’s what we did last year.
“We
essentially played with house money. A lot of people said we didn’t
deserve to be there. We didn’t feel that way, but we just did what we
needed to do in order to make it
through each round and contend for the championship, and we won the
thing. We won it fair and square and now this year we’re doing the same
sort of thing.”
Busch
was a disappointing 19th in Friday’s knockout qualifying session, but
he was eighth fastest in race trim in Saturday’s first practice session.
In final practice, Busch
topped the speed chart at 136.538 mph.
“We’re
just trying to make sure that we do all the right things in order to
have a good solid day here on Sunday to make sure that we’re eligible
going into next week,” said
Busch, who is tied with Joey Logano for the final spot in the
Championship 4.
HARVICK HOPES TO BEAT THE ODDS AT PHOENIX – AGAIN
Kevin
Harvick is the only driver who has advanced to the Championship 4 at
Homestead-Miami Speedway in each of the first two years of the Chase’s
elimination format.
To
do so this year, however, Harvick probably will have to win on Sunday.
Then again, Phoenix is Harvick’s personal turf – or pavement, to be
literal.
The
driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet has won five of the
last six races at the one-mile track in the Sonoran desert. In the one
of those six he didn’t win, last
year’s Chase race, Harvick led a race-high 143 laps before finishing
second to Dale Earnhardt Jr. in a rain-shortened event.
This
year, Harvick comes to Phoenix 18 points below the Chase cutoff line.
Whenever Harvick has needed a victory to advance in the Chase, he has
gotten it. But will the odds
eventually catch up to him?
“They
did last year,” Harvick said. “We dominated the end of that race and
wound up losing it to rain and where the caution came out. So they are a
lot easier to lose than they
are to win. Anything can happen, and we just have to control the things
that we can control and try and put ourselves in position to where we
usually do and see where it all falls.
“That’s
what makes all this here exciting, and really what I like about it is
the sense of the unknown, the competition, the effort, and the thought
and everything that goes
into that is intriguing for me. From a team standpoint, to see where
everybody is at and how they approach it is fun to me, and I like to see
people performing and working at that level. Because once they do it,
you can hold them to it.”
POLE WINNER BOWMAN NOT NASCAR'S ONLY TIE TO TUCSON
Alex
Bowman, the 23-year-old Coors Light Pole winner for Sunday’s Can-Am 500
at Phoenix International Raceway, calls nearby Tucson, Arizona home.
Bowman
isn’t the only NASCAR tie to Tucson. In fact, NASCAR Chairman and CEO
Brian France managed Tucson Raceway Park early in his career, a
four-employee operation that he compared
to running a Minor League Baseball team.
"People
were saying, 'You got stuck in Tucson, Arizona,'" France told attendees
at Transitions West 2016, a family business conference at which he
spoke prior to NASCAR’s Phoenix
race weekend. "I said, 'I'm going to get to run something,' which I
did. I got great experience.”
France
spoke at the conference about the importance of learning the business
from the ground up, and how that led to his first signature achievement –
when as senior vice president
in 1999, he consolidated the sanctioning body's television rights.
"People
said it could never be done, you're too independent, tracks would never
go along with that. And we took revenues at the time from $90 million
to now $900 million in that
one area."
SHORT STROKES
You
can expect some blazing speed coming from the rear of the field in
Sunday’s Can-Am 500. Martin Truex Jr. led Saturday’s first practice
session at Phoenix in both single-lap
speed (135.476 mph) and 10-lap average (134.529 mph). Truex will start
40th because his backup car (necessitated because of an early crash in
Friday’s practice) did not make it through pre-qualifying inspection in
time for Truex to post a lap in time trials…
In
the final 10 minutes of Happy Hour, second-place qualifier Kyle Larson
spun off Turn 2 but managed to keep his No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing
Chevrolet away from the outside wall…
Phoenix
International Raceway announced on Saturday morning that DC Solar will
be the entitlement sponsor of the March 17, 2017 NASCAR XFINITY Series
race at the one-mile track.
In conjunction with the event sponsorship of the DC Solar 200, PIR will
implement the company’s mobile solar generator portfolio throughout the
raceway property.
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