Saturday Atlanta Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Drivers bid farewell to old asphalt at Atlanta Motor Speedway
- Ryan Reed a role model as spokesman for Lilly Diabetes
- Short Strokes
March 4, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DRIVERS BID FAREWELL TO OLD ASPHALT AT ATLANTA MOTOR SPEEDWAY
HAMPTON, Ga. – If it were up to the world’s best stock car drivers, race tracks would never be resurfaced.
In
fact, faced with the final race on old pavement at Atlanta Motor
Speedway -- Sunday's Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 (2:30 p.m. ET on FOX)
-- Dale Earnhardt Jr. facetiously suggested
on Twitter that he and his compatriots hold some sort of memorial for
the soon-to-be-jackhammered old asphalt.
Reality
and necessity, however, sometimes contravene the drivers’ wishes. In
the case of Atlanta, the pavement is 20 years old, abrasive and bumpy
enough to chew up tires within
a few laps. Texas Motor Speedway also is getting a new surface because
“weepers” in the asphalt have rendered track drying a near impossibility
in humid conditions.
Though the drivers would rather slide around on pavement that’s aged, they understand.
“We
get it,” said seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Champion
Jimmie Johnson, who will try to win his third straight Atlanta race on
Sunday. “We understand, but it’s
just going to take a long time for the track to get back to this
condition. ...
“We’ll
enjoy it this weekend and maybe have that memorial service Dale Jr. is
talking about and come back and go really fast next year.”
RYAN REED A ROLE MODEL AS SPOKESMAN FOR LILLY DIABETES
Roush Fenway Racing driver may not consider himself a role model, but his sponsor certainly does.
The
winner of the season-opening NASCAR XFINITY Series event at Daytona for
the second time in three years, Reed visited Atlanta media center on
Friday to participate in the
announcement of Lilly Diabetes as the “Official Diabetes Health Partner
of NASCAR.”
Reed himself has overcome the limitations of Type I diabetes to establish a successful racing career.
“I
see myself as someone who has the opportunity to use the racing
platform to spread awareness, and so I hold very high standards for
myself to do so,” Reed told the NASCAR
Wire Service. “That means being in the gym, working hard to be the best
race car driver I can be, and if I have the opportunity to inspire
someone, I think that’s really cool.
“I
try to stay humble and not think of myself as a role model, but I
certainly have had a lot of people come up to me and tell me that I am
to them, and that’s something I’m
extremely grateful for the opportunity to do in my life. At the end of
the day, I’m just a kid who loves to drive race cars, and I’m very
fortunate that I get to do so.”
Mike Mason, U.S. vice president of Lilly Diabetes was quick to add the company’s point of view.
“He
definitely is a role model,” Mason said emphatically. “Obviously, we’re
here to educate about diabetes and what you can do to better manage the
disease, but one of the best
parts of this is what we get to see with the social media interaction
with Ryan.
“You
see individuals—kids, adolescents—who have Type I diabetes, and the
emotion they put in to see Ryan’s success and living with diabetes on
daily basis actually brings tears
to your eyes.”
SHORT STROKES
Chase
Elliott led final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice for the
Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, posting a lap at 188.015 mph on
Saturday afternoon. Brad Keselowski
was second fastest at 187.602 mph.
Pole
winner Kevin Harvick was 27th on the speed chart in Happy Hour. Ryan
Newman, who qualified second on Friday afternoon, recorded the fastest
average speed over 10 consecutive
laps at 181.429 mph.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., who will start 12th on Sunday, was second fastest in 10-lap average at 181.398 mph.
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