But that's not the case when it comes to the
application of PJ1 Traction compound. This weekend at Michigan,
for the first time on an International Speedway Corporation
track, PJ1 likely will play a role in widening the workable
racing surface.
And Logano is all for it.
"I've been all good with the PJ1 pretty much anywhere we've gone
so far," Logano said on Friday at MIS, site of Sunday's
Consumers Energy 400 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM
NASCAR Radio). "I think it has (done) nothing but help and
improve the racing and widen the race track out. Obviously, it's
the first time for it here, and we were all in qualifying trim
the first practice (Friday) and we didn't touch it."
No, the Cup drivers didn't go near the PJ1 in opening practice,
because the traction compound was applied in the outside lanes.
While it wasn't a factor in Friday's qualifying session, when
the bottom lane was the quick way around the circuit, it
doubtless will play a role on Sunday when 38 cars are looking
for racing room.
"The PJ1 is something that we are all still learning about, and
we are learning about how it works at each (track)," Logano
said. "It works different at Charlotte than it does at Michigan
or Bristol or Kentucky -- the way it gets activated and wears
out and how much grip it actually puts back into the race track.
"Those are all things that we are trying to figure out, and as a
sport we are trying to figure it out. I like the avenue we are
going down and playing with."
NO MORE KNOXVILLE NATIONALS FOR LARSON THIS YEAR
Kyle Larson knew the score when he entered the Knoxville
Nationals this year. A lackluster preliminary would end his
chances for the one of the dirt titles he covets most.
Besides, his day job with Chip Ganassi Racing is far too
important. Larson is 14th in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup
Series standings with four races left in the regular season, and
he's not locked into the playoffs.
So when Larson failed to advance to the feature at Knoxville
(Iowa) Raceway on Wednesday, he knew the logistics for a Friday
return just wouldn't work, given the 5:05 p.m. qualifying start
time at Michigan.
"I've always said that, if I didn't have a good prelim night, I
wouldn't be able to go back," Larson said on Friday afternoon at
MIS. "It's a bummer, but like I said, I already knew it going
into it. I just needed to do better on Wednesday."
Nor will Larson try to make his way through multiple races on
Saturday. Instead, he will return to Knoxville to cheer on the
winged 410 sprint car he fields for driver Carson Macedo.
"No, we wouldn't race on Saturday because, with me not racing
tonight, I'd have to start like last in the E-main, and it's
pretty much impossible to transfer. I couldn't pass anybody the
other night, so why would I be able to pass people tomorrow?"
For those who might question if Larson's racing in other series
might hurt his Cup effort, he has a definitive answer.
"To me, the way I view it, the more often I'm racing, the better
I'm becoming," said Larson, who qualified 17th for Sunday's
Consumers Energy 400.
"I would race every single day of the week if I could, and I
believe it would help me."
FOR RHODES, THERE'S ONLY ONE PATH TO TRUCK SERIES PLAYOFFS
One shot.
That's not a line lifted from the movie "Deer Hunter," not in
this case.
One shot is all that's left to ThorSport Racing driver Ben
Rhodes when it comes to qualifying for the NASCAR Gander
Outdoors Truck Series Playoffs for the third straight season.
There's one race left in the regular season, Saturday's Corrigan
Oil 200 at Michigan International Speedway (1 p.m. ET on FS1,
MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). In order to remain eligible for
the series championship, Rhodes must win the event.
The 22-year-old from Louisville, Ky., isn't new to the pressure
of a late run to make the playoffs. In 2017, he edged Ryan Truex
for the final spot on a tiebreaker. Last year, he qualified with
a victory at Kentucky in the 12th race of the season.
But Saturday's task is exponentially more difficult. Six drivers
-- Austin Hill, Johnny Sauter, Brett Moffitt, Ross Chastain,
Tyler Ankrum and Stewart Friesen -- already have clinched spots
in the postseason with victories. Grant Enfinger will wrap up
the regular-season points title and a playoff spot when he takes
the green flag at Michigan.
That leaves one berth left for Rhodes, or anyone else. If
there's no new winner other than Enfinger, two-time series
champion Matt Crafton would make the playoff field. And if
Rhodes does win, he would dislodge Crafton, his ThorSport Racing
teammate.
That's a lot to digest, but Rhodes is single-minded in his
approach. And part of that is standing his ground against
aggressive competitors.
"I'd hate to sound like I'm a bad guy in NASCAR, 'cause I'm
really not, but we've just been pushed around so much," said
Rhodes, who numbers boxing among his off-track hobbies. "I was
told as kid a kid that, if you're going to take stuff from
people, you're going to be taking it your whole life.
"So we're just standing up for myself and my team."
And perhaps that will leave Rhodes as the last man standing when
it comes to making the playoffs.
--By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level
Media.
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