NASCAR notebook: Busch locks into NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs
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[June 30, 2017]
By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service
Distributed by The Sports Xchange
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- For practical
purposes, Kurt Busch is locked into the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
Series playoffs.
Sure, there's the possibility that an excess of race winners -- more
than 16, to be precise -- could eliminate a driver who has been to
Victory Lane in the first 26 events. Based on recent history,
however, the prospects of that happening are remote, and as the
winner of the season-opening Daytona 500, Busch figures to be
competing for the championship in the final 10 races.
With that in mind, Busch feels his time is best spent preparing for
the five 1.5-mile intermediate speedways that populate the playoffs.
Only one problem: there's only one 1.5-mile track on the schedule
(July 8 at Kentucky Speedway) between now and the postseason opener
at Chicagoland.
Accordingly, Busch and his team will have to be creative with their
preparation.
"Well, we tested at Kentucky earlier about a month ago working with
Goodyear on the tires," Busch said in his media availability prior
to Saturday's Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola (7:30 p.m. ET on
NBC). "I know that we have a Chicago test with Goodyear on the tire
that they're wanting to bring to that race
"Again, a lot of it is getting into sim work. I was on the simulator
before we went out to Sonoma to physically drive the simulator. And
then there are the computer simulation models that the engineers
use."
Busch said Texas Motor Speedway used to be one of the most important
tracks on the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series schedule because the
asphalt was closest in character to that of Homestead-Miami
Speedway, site of the championship race.
But after the recent repave in Fort Worth, Busch's emphasis is
elsewhere.
"Right now, I think the two most important races coming up are
Kentucky and Chicago, if we're gearing up for a championship run,"
he said.
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Incidentally, Busch will try to join an exclusive club in Saturday
night's race. Only Fireball Roberts (1962), Cale Yarborough (1968),
LeeRoy Yarbrough (1969), Bobby Allison (1982) and Jimmie Johnson
(2013) have swept both Daytona races in the same year.
CHASE ELLIOTT: WHY WOULD I LEAVE HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS?
Before Thursday's opening Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice
at Daytona International Speedway, Chase Elliott took questions from
reporters for the first time announcing a contract extension with
Hendrick Motorsports.
Though the 21-year-old is still looking for his first victory in the
series, his message was emphatic.
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"I'm thankful for the opportunity and the chance to
stay at Hendrick Motorsports for another five-and-a-half years,"
Elliott said. "It's been an honor to work with the men and women
that make Hendrick Motorsports go around every day. And as I've told
everyone before, I owe so much to Mr. Hendrick and what he's done
for me and really just kind of believing in me from the time I met
him.
"I owe an awful lot to him, not just for the
opportunities he's given me, but for the faith he's had in me over
the years. Even when nobody else does, he does; and he's made that
very apparent for everybody else to see. That means a lot to me. You
don't see people like that in this world very often these days that
are willing to go out of their way to help you. And he's one of
those guys. I'm very lucky to have him on my team to do that."
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Nor does Elliott think the term of his contract -- a four-year
extension that will carry him through 2022 -- will diminish his
level of motivation.
"I think if the length of a contract changes how you go about your
job, then you're in the wrong sport," Elliott said. "I feel very
passionate about that. I think you have to bring the same amount of
intensity and drive each weekend, whether your contract is good for
10 years, or this is your last race.
"I think that's how you need to go about it or anything that you do.
So, I'm not changing how I race or how well I want to do. We want to
win and run well more than anybody else wants us to or thinks they
want us to. We're certainly very driven to want to continue to do
well, regardless."
SHORT STROKES
Stealing the thunder from a large pack of Fords, Kyle Busch ran the
fastest lap of the day in the draft during Thursday's opening
Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Daytona International
Speedway. Busch's No. 18 Joes Gibbs Racing Toyota covered the
2.5-mile distance in 45.584 seconds (197.438 mph). Led by Brad
Keselowski, Fords occupied the next six positions on the speed
chart.
Drafting in a pack that included Hendrick Motorsports teammates
Jimmie Johnson and Kasey Kahne, as well as Brendan Gaughan, Michael
McDowell and Clint Bowyer, retiring Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the
fastest lap in final Cup practice at 193.328 mph. McDowell was
second quickest at 193.249 mph.
Earnhardt will be racing at Daytona for the final time in the No. 88
Hendrick Chevrolet, though he has allowed that he might race again
in the Daytona 500, should the right opportunity present itself.
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