segunda-feira, 10 de outubro de 2016

Chase Elliott, Austin Dillon pick up pieces after big wreck at Charlotte


RELATED: Elliott, Dillon give their perspectives on wreck

CONCORD, N.C. -- Leading 103 laps, Chase Elliott looked poised as a contender for the win in Sunday's Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

But a Lap 258 wreck steered the No. 24 Chevrolet -- as well as the No. 3 Chevrolet of Austin Dillon -- to the garage, rather than Victory Lane, leaving the young drivers just outside the Chase bubble sitting ninth and 10th, respectively.

"We had such a good car and I am devastated that we didn't get the result that the guys deserved," Elliott said after the wreck, his No. 24 Chevrolet being scored 33rd. "They gave me such a fast 3M Chevy and that is all you can ask for. We just have got to go and do more of that next week."

Elliott hung back on pit road before the restart, trying to grab the preferred line. But he wasn't able to get the fourth spot and lined up fifth, as a gutsy two-tire call put Dillon on the front row. When the green flag waved, Martin Truex Jr. gave Dillon a shove, getting the No. 3 loose and sending it sharply into the SAFER barrier on the inside wall near the exit of pit road.

In a domino effect, Kyle Busch's No. 18 hit the back of Elliott's No. 24 Chevrolet, causing Elliott to crash in the outside wall. Jamie McMurray, Greg Biffle, Carl Edwards, Ryan Blaney, Paul Menard, Kurt Busch and Brian Scott were also involved in the multi-car melee that brought out the red flag for more than 10 minutes.

"It just sucks," Dillon said. "We will have to work hard the next two weeks to get the points back. I felt like I got to third gear pretty clean and then the next thing -- I feel contact and I am spinning through the grass. It's part of it and we took two tires there and you know the risk when you get into it. You just hope that doesn't happen obviously."

Crew chief Slugger Labbe echoed his driver's disappointment.

"We had been behind most of the day and we tried to make something happen by taking two tires," Labbe told NASCAR.com in the garage. "We had 12 laps on the tires, thought it was the right call and on the restart, Austin had a good restart -- the EFI data we just downloaded clearly shows that Austin didn't spin the tires like the 48 did in the top groove -- and Martin (Truex Jr.) just got into him turning left.

"It's part of it ... (No. 78 crew chief) Cole Pearn already sent me a text saying him and Martin feel terrible and he flat out wrecked us. ... I'm sure Martin feels bad, (but that) doesn't fix it and Austin's pissed. It is what it is. We took a chance, it didn’t work out."

Truex, who finished 13th, immediately expressed regret for his actions on the radio and then again after the race.

"Unfortunate, but more importantly I want to say that I'm sorry to Austin Dillon, the 3 team, Slugger and all those guys," Truex said on pit road following the 500-mile event. "I know they're working hard and they certainly didn't need me to turn them around on that restart. I feel terrible about that. I was just trying to help get him going and just pushed way too hard so I just want to apologize to those guys and hopefully I can talk to Austin and make sure he's OK with everything."

Elliott and Dillon weren't the only Chase drivers to experience misfortune: Denny Hamlin's No. 11 Toyota blew up late in the race, while Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano experienced electric and tire issues, respectively, that left them at the bottom of the Chase Grid.

For Labbe, that provides a little encouragement with two races left before the next round of eliminations.

"We were the underdogs, no one expected us to be here, so we could take chances," Labbe said. "We took a chance, unfortunately we got dumped, that's the way it goes. The thing that's neat going to Kansas is there's five Chase guys that had a bad day: the 11 blowing up, obviously the 4 guys, us ... So it's kind of crazy, but it is what it is -- you don't want it to happen but it's the Chase and you gotta win."



Chase Bubble Watch: Analyzing the playoff picture ahead of Kansas



SHOP: Chase gear

A bright, sunny day at Charlotte turned cloudy in a hurry for Chase contenders Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano, who both experienced major issues within seconds of each other in the Bank of America 500.


Harvick lost power on Lap 154 of a scheduled 334 in his No. 4 Chevrolet, and Logano smacked the wall in Turn 2 of the 1.5-mile track, doing extensive damage to his No. 22 Ford. Both headed behind the wall for repairs that put them multiple laps down, and Harvick never returned to the race.
The good news for Harvick and Logano is other Chase contenders also experienced major problems. Chase Elliott and Austin Dillon were involved in a wreck that brought out a red flag with 74 laps to go and fell behind in the Chase standings. Then, while running in second place with 25 laps to go, Denny Hamlin experienced engine failure that knocked him out of the race and firmly into eighth place and on the Chase bubble.

Charlotte wasn't cloudy for everyone, though. Let's see what the Chase race looks like heading to Kansas.

Who's hot: There were questions leading up to Charlotte about whether the No. 48 team of Jimmie Johnson had what it took to make another title run, and at least for one week the answer was a resounding, "Yes!" Johnson led a race-high 155 laps to capture his 78th victory in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, and he advanced to the Round of 8 for the first time since the Chase format changed in 2014. ...
Matt Kenseth beat Johnson by one second in a late pit stop, but he couldn't hold the lead on the restart. Still, a second-place finish sets up well for Kansas, where Kenseth has the second-best driver rating behind Johnson and has two wins.

Who's not:
Harvick has one win apiece at Kansas Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway, with his most recent win at those tracks coming in the fall of 2013 at Kansas. Since 2014 (when the new Chase format took over), Harvick has three top-10 finishes in five races at Talladega and three second-place finishes in five races at Kansas. It's not a stretch to say Harvick could win during the next two weeks. ...

Logano, meanwhile, has two career wins at Kansas and one at Talladega, and he won at both tracks last year during the Chase. He hasn't shown quite the speed he had last year, but like Harvick, Logano has a legitimate chance at getting a desperation win. ...

Those who don't have such Sprint Cup experience are Chase Elliott and Austin Dillon, who were involved in a wreck that brought out the red flag with 74 laps to go. Elliott led 103 laps at Charlotte, and Dillon was in second place after gambling on two tires on a late pit stop, so the wreck was a big jolt to their chances at Charlotte and in the Chase.
 

Four in, four out: Here's a look at the Chase bubble, with four drivers being eliminated after the third race of this round, Oct. 23 at Talladega Superspeedway (2 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Chase Bubble Watch
Standing Driver Point Differential from Cutoff
5. Kurt Busch +24
6. Carl Edwards +20
7. Martin Truex Jr. +19
8. Denny Hamlin +3
------------ CUT-OFF LINE ------------
9. Austin Dillon -3
10. Chase Elliott -3
11. Joey Logano -6
12. Kevin Harvick -8
Up next: Hollywood Casino 400, Sunday, Oct. 16, 2:15 p.m. ET, Kansas Speedway (NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Who it favors
Most wins: Jimmie Johnson, 3 (20 races); Matt Kenseth, 2 (21 races); Joey Logano, 2 (14 races).
Best driver rating: Jimmie Johnson, 110.4 (20 races); Matt Kenseth, 107.4 (21 races); Kevin Harvick, 103.4 (21 races).
Best average finish: Chase Elliott, 9.0 (1 race); Jimmie Johnson 9.2 (20 races); Carl Edwards, 10.6 (19 races).

Who it hurts
Worst percentage of top 10s: Kyle Busch, 29.4 percent (5 in 17 races); Denny Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr., 31.3 percent (5 in 16 races).
Worst driver rating: Austin Dillon, 71.0 (6 races); Chase Elliott, 79.3 (1 race); Kyle Busch, 83.8 (17 races).
Worst average finish: Austin Dillon, 20.3 (6 races); Kyle Busch, 19.2 (17 races); Joey Logano, 18.7 (14 races).

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Owner Standings



Pot Owner Car # Points Ldr Nxt PPos G/L Wins Attempts
1 Hendrick Motorsports 48 3,045 0 0 11 10 3 30
2 Joe Gibbs Racing 20 3,040 -5 -5 4 2 2 30
3 Joe Gibbs Racing 18 3,036 -9 -4 3 0 4 30
4 Team Penske 2 3,034 -11 -2 7 3 4 30
5 Stewart-Haas Racing 41 3,033 -12 -1 8 3 1 30
6 Joe Gibbs Racing 19 3,029 -16 -4 10 4 2 30
7 Furniture Row Racing 78 3,028 -17 -1 1 -6 4 30
8 Joe Gibbs Racing 11 3,012 -33 -16 9 1 3 30
9 Richard Childress Racing 3 3,009 -36 -3 12 3 0 30
10 Hendrick Motorsports 24 3,009 -36 0 6 -4 0 30
11 Team Penske 22 3,006 -39 -3 5 -6 1 30
12 Stewart-Haas Racing 4 3,004 -41 -2 2 -10 3 30
13 Chip Ganassi Racing 42 2,109 -936 -895 14 1 1 30
14 Stewart-Haas Racing 14 2,106 -939 -3 13 -1 1 30
15 Chip Ganassi Racing 1 2,084 -961 -22 15 0 0 30
16 Front Row Motorsports 34 2,070 -975 -14 16 0 1 30
17 Hendrick Motorsports 5 766 -2,279 -1,304 18 1 0 30
18 Richard Childress Racing 31 738 -2,307 -28 19 1 0 30
19 Hendrick Motorsports 88 731 -2,314 -7 17 -2 0 30
20 Roush Fenway Racing 17 658 -2,387 -73 22 2 0 30
21 Wood Brothers Racing 21 655 -2,390 -3 21 0 0 30
22 JTG Daugherty Racing 47 653 -2,392 -2 20 -2 0 30
23 Roush Fenway Racing 6 651 -2,394 -2 23 0 0 30
24 Stewart-Haas Racing 10 577 -2,468 -74 24 0 0 30
25 Roush Fenway Racing 16 548 -2,497 -29 25 0 0 30
26 Richard Childress Racing 27 542 -2,503 -6 26 0 0 30
27 Richard Petty Motorsports 43 539 -2,506 -3 27 0 0 30
28 HScott Motorsports 15 526 -2,519 -13 28 0 0 30
29 Germain Racing 13 467 -2,578 -59 29 0 0 30
30 Circle Sport-Leavine Family 95 452 -2,593 -15 30 0 0 30
31 Front Row Motorsports 38 431 -2,614 -21 31 0 0 30
32 BK Racing 23 398 -2,647 -33 32 0 0 30
33 Tommy Baldwin Racing 7 394 -2,651 -4 33 0 0 30
34 Richard Petty Motorsports 44 371 -2,674 -23 34 0 0 30
35 BK Racing 83 339 -2,706 -32 35 0 0 30
36 Premium Motorsports 98 277 -2,768 -62 36 0 0 30
37 HScott Motorsports 46 268 -2,777 -9 37 0 0 30
38 GO FAS Racing 32 242 -2,803 -26 38 0 0 30
39 Premium Motorsports 55 201 -2,844 -41 39 0 0 25
40 The Motorsports Group 30 165 -2,880 -36 40 0 0 30
41 Front Row Motorsports 35 46 -2,999 -119 41 0 0 3
42 Circle Sport - Leavine Family 59 26 -3,019 -20 42 0 0 1
43 BK Racing 93 15 -3,030 -11 43 0 0 5
44 BK Racing 26 3 -3,042 -12 44 0 0 1
45 Hillman Racing 40 0 -3,045 -3 45 0 0 1

NASCAR has no plans to add substance to tracks this season to enhance grip


Steve O'Donnell 
A NASCAR executive discounted the notion that tracks will add a substance to their racing surface to enhance grip this year
Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer, made the comment Monday on “The Morning Drive” on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
“We’re looking at a lot of different options, meeting with Goodyear to see where and when we could apply it and how that would affect the racing on the track,’’ O’Donnell said. “A lot of different options that we hope to have on the table, maybe not necessarily at the start of 2017.’’
A substance was used at Bristol Motor Speedway before the August races for the Camping World Truck Series, Xfinity Series and Sprint Cup Series. The Cup race saw 20 lead changes. Only one other Bristol event in the track’s last eight Cup races had more lead changes.
A substance was put on the high lane at Martinsville Speedway last weekend on the final day of a tire test there to unfavorable reviews.
Among the biggest complaints was that it made both the high lane and low lane nearly equal in lap times. Martin Truex Jr., who was among those who tested there.
“I felt like with the second groove being as fast as the first I don’t know how you would pass anyone,’’ Truex said. “The great racing at Martinsville is the fight for the bottom. If you can’t hold the bottom you’re going to get passed. In that case. I don’t believe Martinsville is a place we ought to mess with.’’
That Martinsville test was done looking ahead to 2017. Officials from the track and NASCAR told NBC Sports that the track’s surface would not be changed for the Sprint Cup and Camping World Truck Series races there later this month.
Also during his appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, O’Donnell noted the type of racing in Sunday’s event at Charlotte Motor Speedway despite the limited practice time.
Sprint Cup teams had one practice session Friday before rain canceled two practice sessions Saturday. 
“One of the things we learned this weekend, which we’ll have to see, we’ll get some pushback from the garage, but it was nice to see teams almost just show up and have to race,’’ O’Donnell said. “We’re looking at how much practice is too much practice for an event. Maybe that is something we look at in the future as well.’’

Sprint Cup Chase grid: Harvick, Logano headline bottom fou


2016 Chase for the Sprint Cup

Sunday was not a good day to be a driver in the Chase for the Sprint Cup after five of the 12 remaining finished 30th or worse at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Chase Elliott and Austin Dillon are tied at three points behind Denny Hamlin in eighth, the cutoff spot for the third round. Following them are Joey Logano and Kevin Harvick.
But it was business as usual for Jimmie Johnson at Charlotte, who won his track record eight race. He advances to the third round for the first time since the elimination format was introduced.
Immediately behind Johnson is Matt Kenseth (+31) and Kyle Busch (+27).
Click here to see the full Sprint Cup Chase Grid.

Upon Further Review: Charlotte chaos changes Chase for title contenders


“Denny Hamlin luck in the Chase,’’ he radioed his team. “That gets you every time.’’
Just when it seemed as if the top eight Chase drivers could relax after four foes suffered misfortune Sunday, Hamlin saw his comfortable points bulge waste away quicker than a before and after picture.
He was one of five Chase drivers to finish 30th or worse at Charlotte Motor Speedway. He became the oddity that could throw this Round of 12, which includes a cutoff race at Talladega Superspeedway, into chaos.
Before Hamlin’s woes, it appeared the top eight Chase drivers would hold a healthy advantage on the four — Austin Dillon, Chase Elliott, Joey Logano and Kevin Harvick — who suffered from miscalculations, miscues and mischievous machinery.
Just before Hamlin’s engine blew while running second, he had a 31-point lead on those outside a transfer spot.
At that point, it appeared as if Dillon and Elliott would be 19 points out of the cutoff spot. In the two previous years of the elimination format, only one driver more than 15 points out of the final transfer spot after the opening race in the second round advanced. That was Brad Keselowski. He did so by winning at Talladega in 2014. No one so far back made it on points.
After Hamlin’s woes put him in the final transfer spot in the standings, Dillon and Elliott found themselves only three points behind him.
Now, there are two Chases. Those in the top seven can take fewer risks because the penalty of losing points could be critical with Talladega looming in two weeks. The bottom five, including Hamlin, are in a race among themselves for the final transfer spot if they can’t win this weekend at Kansas or the following week at Talladega.
“All I can do is try to run as fast as I can,’’ Hamlin said. “I won’t be able to control what any of my competitors do. All I can do is try to go to Kansas and try to win, go to Talladega and try to win.’’
Last year, Hamlin’s luck saw him fail to advance from the second round. He entered the cutoff race at Talladega second in the standings, 18 points ahead of the cutoff. He failed to make transfer after an issue with the roof hatch and then was collected in a last-lap crash.
Teammate Kyle Busch had it worse in 2014. Busch was second in the standings, 26 points ahead of the ninth place, the first driver outside a cutoff spot entering Talladega and was eliminated after a crash when hit from behind by Dillon.
Logano, who finished 80 laps behind the leaders Sunday after suffering two tire issues and slamming the wall twice, joked that if he had finished only two laps down, “I could have had a good points day.’’
Had he done so, he would have finished 23rd instead of 36th and those extra 13 points would have put him in the final transfer spot instead of Hamlin.
That’s how volatile Sunday was for some Chase contenders. Now, it impacts decision drivers and crew chiefs will make the next two weeks.
“We’re not in must-win, but we’re in can’t-screw-up mode,’’ Logano said.
HAIRY SITUATION
Blake Koch thought he’d have some fun after making the inaugural Xfinity Chase.
He decided to mimic hockey players who grow beards during the playoffs and do it for NASCAR’s version of the playoffs.
Truth be told, Koch, figured he’d have the beard for only the first three races and then could shave, but he’ll keep it going after advancing to the Round of 8 after Sunday’s race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
“I’m a pretty optimistic person, but I expected us to make the Chase, not to really transfer to the next group of eight,’’ he said. “That’s really tough to do. If I would have known that, I wouldn’t have set to growing this Chase beard because it’s going to get long now.
“I thought it was going to be a three-week beard. It’s going to be an eight-week beard, at least, maybe nine weeks.’’
Koch advanced with a team that has 16 employees and moved shops during the season. They prepared cars for Dover in May with flashlights because their new shop didn’t have power yet.
“I think that’s definitely the biggest story of the first round, Blake and his guys making the second round,’’ said Elliott Sadler, who advanced to the Round of 8 via his win at Kentucky Speedway. “The start-up team and where Blake came from last year to this year, congratulations, that to me is a job well done.’’
PIT STOPS
Kurt Busch and Brad Keselowski are tied with the best average finish in the eight races on 1.5-mile tracks. Both have a 7.0 average. Keselowski finished seventh on Sunday; Busch eighth. Three of the last six races, including the season finale at Homestead, are on 1.5-mile tracks.
— For the first time in this Chase, there were multi-car accidents. In the first three Chase races, there were seven cautions for spins or accidents. All had been single-car incidents. Sunday, two of the five cautions for accidents featured multiple cars, including the 12-car incident off a restart.
— Last year, Joey Logano and Kevin Harvick were 1-2 in the points after the opening race in the second round. This year, they are 11th and 12th.
Kasey Kahne’s third-place finish was his best result since his win at Atlanta in Sept. 2014 — a span of 77 races.
Danica Patrick’s 11th-place finish Sunday was her best result of the year. Her previous best was 13th at Dover in May.
— Five of the top-10 finishers Sunday were drivers not eligible for the title. They were Kasey Kahne (finished third), Ryan Newman (fourth), Kyle Larson (fifth), Tony Stewart (ninth) and Jamie McMurray (10th).
— Tony Stewart’s ninth-place finish snapped a streak of seven consecutive finishes of 13th or worse.
Michael McDowell’s 14th-place finish was his second top-15 result in his last four starts.

Ryan:Finally reaching the Round of 8 will mean a chance at seven for Jimmie Johnson

CONCORD, N.C. – The silver-edged and black magnetic bulletin board with the handy brackets and snazzy magnets didn’t tell the full story while displayed in victory lane Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Jimmie Johnson’s name and No. 48 was listed on the first magnet slotted into one of eight slots below “Martinsville/Texas/Phoenix.”
Because of that trio, no one would have blanched if Johnson’s name would have been slid over to the next tidy collection of empty straight lines on the board.
Those represent the four championship contenders in the Nov. 20 finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
The six-time series champion undoubtedly will be among them after a three-year absence.
With his win in the Bank of America 500, Johnson qualified for the Chase for the Sprint Cup’s Round of 8 for the first time Sunday.
In reality, the Hendrick Motorsports superstar effectively clinched much more than that — a shot at a record-tying seventh championship. Securing passage to the third round lays out like a layup for Johnson.
He has eight wins, tops among active full-time drivers, at Martinsville Speedway, the 0.526-mile that Johnson adores.
He also has eight wins at Texas Motor Speedway, including four consecutive in the November race on the 1.5-mile oval where Johnson’s knack for tire management is supreme.
Phoenix International Raceway, the flat 1-mile track where Johnson has four wins and 19 top 10s, would be considered his “worst” of the lot.
After Auto Club Speedway, these are the three best tracks on Johnson’s resume when ordered by average finish (7.5 at Martinsville, 7.8 at Phoenix, 8.3 at Texas).
“I’m super excited from the simple fact if there is any driver you want to go into the third round with, I don’t know who else it would be other than Jimmie Johnson,” crew chief Chad Knaus told NBC Sports. “We’re very optimistic for the next segment.”
Leading his team (including the driver) with the single-minded discipline of a drill sergeant for 15 seasons, that’s as close as you’ll come with getting Knaus to size up the No. 48 Chevrolet’s path to the championship as a cakewalk.
But it’s an absolute firewall that will catapult Johnson into the championship round for the first time in the three-year history of the playoffs revamped with points resets, elimination rounds and expanded fields that make it more difficult to recover from a setback.
There have been whispers of whether the changes had “Jimmie-proofed” the Chase.
But Sunday reaffirmed it mostly was circumstantial that Johnson – who raced for a championship at Miami in every season but one from 2004-13 – hadn’t reached the championship round in the new era.
Remove an axle seal failure at Dover in 2015 and a flat tire at Kansas in 2014, and Johnson might be aiming for his ninth title this year.
“All we needed was an opportunity to make it to that final round, and we could have been competitive,” Knaus said. “When you have mechanical problem that’s unforeseen. Those things happen. It just does. It’s life. Racing is a tough sport. It knocks you back into reality in a heartbeat.”
There will be no rude awakenings anytime soon. Clutching a golden ticket to the Round of 8, a rare two-race respite awaits the No. 48 – along with the dread-filled 500-mile roulette wheel at Talladega Superspeedway, which was the first place Johnson went after his 78th career victory.
“I just took a deep breath and was like, ‘Yes, we did it,’” he said. “I don’t have to be worried about finishing at Talladega.”
It’s the rest of the Chase field that should be worried now – though Johnson typically wasn’t betraying any hint of overconfidence and presumption.
“We can’t sit back and celebrate too much,” Johnson said. “We’ve got to buckle down and get to work and keep advancing our race cars.”
A date with history at Homestead-Miami Speedway awaits – and is virtually assured.