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The fact he was in position to win is a testament to Carpentier's patience, something he had in short supply early in the season.
"In Indy cars, you can attack all the time," he said. "You still have to be smooth, but you can enter (a corner) as late as you want and just abuse the car. I think you need a little bit more finesse with a stock car than you do with an Indy car, otherwise you will just burn everything up."
It's a lesson Carpentier learned early in the season. Every weekend he'd find himself in a battle of wills with his car, and most of the time the car won.
"You have to let the car do what it wants," he said. "That's the biggest thing I've learned. I'm still learning. Every race that we go to, every track that I race on, I'm still learning a little bit more and more."
He hopes that knowledge will translate at the Glen. While he's still a little leery running in traffic on big ovals, Carpentier feels comfortable when the track makes you turn left and right.
"Things don't happen so fast as when you're in an Indy car," he said. "Even at an (oval) track like Las Vegas, I was coming down the straightaway and I would snap sideways with the car. But on a road course, things happen a little bit more slowly."
A strong finish this weekend would make a compelling argument for Carpentier's return next year. Even if Gillett Evernham decides to let him go, don't expect Carpentier to return to his open wheel roots.
"I like NASCAR," he said. "I like the ovals and that's what I want to do. The IRL is going away from ovals and for me, I have no interest in going back."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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