Saturday Las Vegas Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Kyle Busch explains Toyotas’ early reversal of fortune
- NASCAR opens pit road timing loops for Las Vegas practices
- Short Strokes
March 11, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
KYLE BUSCH EXPLAINS TOYOTAS' EARLY REVERSAL OF FORTUNE
LAS VEGAS – Early in the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, Fords have dominated the headlines.
Kurt
Busch won the season Daytona 500 in a Stewart-Haas Racing Ford. Brad
Keselowski won the following week at Atlanta. Kevin Harvick has won
three of the four preliminary stages
contested under NASCAR’s enhanced three-stage race format.
Harvick
led 292 laps at Atlanta and dominated the race before a late pit road
speeding penalty opened the door for Keselowski. Coming to Sunday’s
Kobalt 400 at Las Vegas Motor
Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX), Harvick, Busch and Keselowski were
1-2-3 in the series standings.
Keselowski backed that up with a pole-winning run at LVMS on Friday.
The
performance of the Fords early this season is a radical departure from
2016, when the Toyotas of Joe Gibbs Racing and Furniture Row were the
dominant cars through the first
half of the regular season.
Thus
far in 2017, Kyle Busch won Stage 1 in the Daytona 500, Denny Hamlin
won the second Can-Am Duel at Daytona, Matt Kenseth rallied from a lap
down to finish third at Atlanta,
and Martin Truex Jr. qualified on the outside of the front row on
Friday at Las Vegas.
Otherwise,
the highlight reel has been underwhelming for the Camrys, but Kyle
Busch says there are mitigating circumstances for the spotty
performance.
“I
think there was a good run going for Erik Jones, actually, last week
(14th at Atlanta),” Busch said. “He probably should have finished sixth
to eighth, ninth maybe, somewhere
in there. And you know, the 78 car (Truex) was running okay, as well,
too. I don't know where the rest of our cars were running. Obviously,
Matt (Kenseth) had a decent day. He was able to overcome a couple
penalties and get back to where he needed to be. There's
some strength there.
“For
me in the 18 car, though, we're just lacking the ability to have the
amount of front turn in the race car that I'm looking for because of
this lack of downforce. They took
a lot of front downforce away from the car (under 2017 rules), and
apparently, I rely heavily on that being able to cut through the
corners. We've got to get a little bit better aero platform going,
balance wise, aero balance, as well, through the corners
and figuring out how to do all of that through our setups in the race
car.”
Compounding
the loss of roughly 500 pounds of downforce this year is Toyota’s
introduction of a new Camry race car. Not surprisingly, there have been
some growing pains.
“I
don't think that this was a surprise to anyone that the lower-downforce
package was going to hinder anybody,” Busch said. “We all knew it and
expected it, and we worked on
it through the offseason as best we could to get ready and prepare. But
there's some other groups that maybe have done a better job of
preparing for it than we have.
“We've
just got to go to work on some fundamentals and some things that will
get our race cars feeling better, feeling better alone, feeling better
in traffic, being able to
pass cars, having the speed that we need to have. It seems like we can
have the speed for one or two laps. You know, we qualified pretty decent
last week (third at Atlanta). ... We’ve just got to get better with the
long haul.”
NASCAR OPENS PIT ROAD TIMING LOOPS FOR LAS VEGAS PRACTICES
Last
Sunday at Atlanta, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers
collectively were flagged for 13 pit road speeding penalties, with a
late ticket to Kevin Harvick changing the
entire tenor of the race.
Drivers
had to deal with the addition of timing lines on pit road at Atlanta,
creating scoring segments that were much smaller than those in play when
the series visited the
1.54-mile track last year.
Similarly,
for races this weekend at Las Vegas, drivers and crew chiefs are
confronted with double the number of timing lines in place for last
year’s events. To allow teams
to get familiar with the smaller segments, NASCAR opened the timing
loops for XFINITY Series practice on Friday and both Monster Energy
Series practices on Saturday.
During
Saturday’s first session, teams seemingly spent as much time huddled
around computers showing the speeds in pit road sectors as they did
congregating around the cars.
Ryan
Blaney, who qualified third on Friday in the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford,
was more concerned with getting in and out of his pit box cleanly than
he was with speeding on pit
road. That’s why crew chief Jeremy Bullins chose pit stall No. 40,
closest to the entrance to pit road.
“You
always want to be able to get in and out of your box clean and not have
to worry about going around cars or cars coming around you,” said
Blaney, who was sixth fastest in
Saturday’s first practice. “You can speed anywhere on pit road.
Nowadays, your box really has a small role in playing with timing lines
ever since they added a bunch of them.
“You
just have to watch your speed, but it maybe helps a little bit coming
in just so you can get in your box and reset, but then you have to focus
on getting down all of pit
road (without speeding).”
Blaney is not one to take chances by pushing the pit road speed limit (45 mph at Las Vegas with a tolerance up to 50 mph).
“I’ve
got other things to worry about,” Blaney said. “I know there’s been a
lot of talk about all the speeding penalties last week, but I’ve always
been on the conservative side
when it comes to that. I think giving up a little bit there is a lot
more beneficial than having to come back down pit road, so I’ve always
been on the conservative side of the pit road speed stuff.
“Now that I say that, I’ll probably get a penalty (on Sunday), but it’s not something I really worry about.”
SHORT STROKES
Chase
Elliott was fastest in Saturday’s first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
Series practice, turning his best lap in 28.197 seconds (191.510 mph).
In relative terms, that lap was
a quantum leap quicker than the 28.599-second circuit turned in by
second-place Kyle Larson (188.818 mph). Elliott also showed excellent
speed over a 10-lap run, posting the fastest average at 186.480 mph, a
run that included his session-best circuit on Lap
2. ... In warmer conditions during a second practice that started at
11:30 a.m., Martin Truex Jr. topped the speed chart at 188.613 mph, with
Elliott second fastest at 188.574 mph. Elliott’s Hendrick Motorsports
teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr., was third quickest
in the session at 188.436 mph. Earnhardt struggled with the handling of
his No. 88 Chevrolet in Saturday’s first practice (running 17th) but
made significant improvements in Happy Hour. ... With roughly 15 minutes
left in final practice, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
scraped the outside wall near the apex of Turns 1 and 2 with his No. 17
Roush Fenway Racing Ford and crinkled the right side of the car. After
examining the primary car in the garage, Stenhouse’s team rolled out a
backup Ford. Stenhouse, who qualified 29th
on Friday, will start from the rear in Sunday’s Kobalt 400 with no laps
on the backup car.
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