NASCAR notebook: Bowyer got run he needed in Atlanta
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[February 26, 2018]
HAMPTON, Ga. -- Clint Bowyer
didn't win Sunday's Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, but he got the sort
of run he needed in the second Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race
of the season.
On a day when all the Stewart-Haas Racing Fords were fast, Bowyer
finished third behind SHR teammate Kevin Harvick, who dominated the
action, and fellow Ford driver Brad Keselowski.
The third-place result was a welcome tonic for Bowyer, who suffered
through an up-and-down campaign last year in his first season with
SHR.
"I said it all offseason," Bowyer said after the race. "What we have
to do is get more consistent, know what I mean? Over the course of
my career, kind of what's kept me in the game is consistency, and
last year we were spraying it all over the place.
"We'd have a good run and back it up with a bad one or two bad ones
and then a good one. We were all over the place."
Bowyer managed a 15th-place run in the season-opening Daytona 500
despite an engine issue.
"We were at the big dance last weekend and dropped a cylinder, and
everybody was dejected and bummed out, and we come here and unload
four fast (Stewart-Haas) cars and did a great job as a company.
"That's what it takes. You've got to be able to unload good cars and
then work together to fine-tune them to make them good for the race
and enjoy that strength in numbers, and that's certainly what we had
going on this weekend."
Bowyer climbed to fifth in the series standings, 15 points behind
leader Joey Logano.
CONTRARIAN STRATEGY GETS A SOLID FINISH FOR DENNY HAMLIN
When race leader -- and eventual winner -- Kevin Harvick came to pit
road on Lap 212 of Sunday's Folds of Honor Quik Trip 500 at Atlanta
Motor Speedway, Denny Hamlin and Joey Logano stayed on the track.
Brad Keselowski inherited the lead two laps later, and still Hamlin
and Logano stayed out. Not until Lap 226 did the two drivers come to
pit road, after running laps at a far slower speed than those with
fresh tires.
Staying on the track was a deliberate strategy play, designed to run
the final 155-lap stage of the race on two pit stops, rather than
the customary three. Indeed, Hamlin picked up the lead after Harvick
pitted for the third time during the stage on Lap 288, but his stint
at the point was short-lived.
Rocketing around the track on fresh tires, Harvick passed Hamlin for
the lead on Lap 291 and regained control of the race.
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Crew chief Mike Wheeler prepped Hamlin for the strategy before the
start of the third stage.
"As soon as I left pit road, he said I was going to have to go 50
laps the first time, so I immediately knew he was going to break it
up into two stops instead of three," Hamlin said. "I wasn't
surprised at all about it. Worried about it a little bit in the
second stint because I wasn't running really fast lap times on new
tires -- I think 32 (seconds) flat or something like that.
"Other guys were able to run some 70s (31.70) and 80s (31.80), and
it seemed like we got to the lap time of like 33 or whatever pretty
quick, and I was just worried that the strategy ... you need the lap
times to be pretty linear for that strategy to work, and we kind of
leveled off a little bit, and some of the field leveled off.
"I was worried a little bit, but I kept seeing it cycle around to
where I was in a good position."
Hamlin rolled home in fourth place and left Atlanta third in the
series standings, 12 points behind Logano, who assumed the lead with
a sixth-place run.
SHORT STROKES
A glance at the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series standings reveals a
real shocker. After finishes of 38th at Daytona and 27th on Sunday
at Atlanta -- both after crashes -- seven-time champion Jimmie
Johnson is 35th in the series standings, behind Mark Thompson and D.
J. Kennington, neither of whom raced at Atlanta. ...
Brad Keselowski, the runner-up in Sunday's Folds of Honor QuikTrip
500, couldn't match the speed of race winner Kevin Harvick. "Nobody
had anything for Kevin today," Keselowski said. "Not that I'm aware
of. Shoot, I think we all threw everything we had at him. He drove a
great race and he had a really fast car, and that's a potent
combination. If he hadn't had the pit road issue today (a
malfunction of the front tire changer's air gun), he probably would
have led almost 300 some laps." As it was, Harvick led 181.
--By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level
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