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| Denny Hamelin wins the 2012 Subway Fresh Fit 500 Photo courtesy of Nascar.com |
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| Phoenix International Speedway Photo courtesy Nascar.com |
Those were the words shouted out over the radio by Denny Hamelin to his crew chief. Denny finally redeemed himself with his 18th career victory at Sunday's Subway Fresh Fit 500 at Phoenix International Raceway. In his second race with 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup championship crew chief Darian Grubb calling the shots from his pit box, Hamlin managed to hold off Kevin Harvick in a 53-lap green-flag race to finish the 312-lap race at the one-mile track. The win allowed Hamlin to take over the series points lead for the first time since giving it up in the final race of 2010 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. As an at-home spectator, it wasn't exactly a nail biter of a race. Quite frankly it was somewhat anti-climactic after last week's Daytona 500. I was waiting to hear that Juan Pablo Montoya took out a hot dog vendor's cart. I am quite sure, however, it was sweet justice for Darian Grubb, who was fired from Stewart-Haas Racing after last season even though he helped Tony Stewart win the Cup championship. It must feel good to beat Tony Stewart to victory lane.
Kevin Harvick lost fuel pressure with less than two laps left but still managed an impressive second place followed by Greg Biffle in third, then by Jimmie Johnson, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., and Jeff Gordon. Pole-sitter Mark Martin and Joey Logano rounded out the top 10.
Other drivers encountered their fair share of trouble:
Clint Bowyer (30th) blew two right front tires in the first 25 laps. Kasey Kahne (34th) hit the wall early in the race. And Stewart (22nd) fell two laps down after being unable to restart his Chevrolet after turning it off in an attempt to save fuel under caution.
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| The starting line-up at Phoenix Photo courtesy of Nascar.com |
The often used tactic of shutting down the engines to save fuel then quickly restarting them bit Tony right in the butt late in the race. He lost a lap during a caution when he couldn’t re-fire his car and had to get a push from the wrecker to make it back to the pits. He finished 22nd.
“I just shut the car off like we did at Daytona and turned it back on, and it never re-fired,” Stewart said. “That’s all I can tell you. I don’t know why it didn’t re-fire. I honestly don’t know. It’s not really my department. I just turned the switch back on, and it never re-fired. I don’t know why that was, but it definitely cost us a good day.” Judging by his demeanour in that post race interview with Tony, I would hate to be the electronics guy on his team once Tony gets back to the hauler. Crew chief Steve Addington said a faulty circuit breaker apparently was the problem.
“I just shut the car off like we did at Daytona and turned it back on, and it never re-fired,” Stewart said. “That’s all I can tell you. I don’t know why it didn’t re-fire. I honestly don’t know. It’s not really my department. I just turned the switch back on, and it never re-fired. I don’t know why that was, but it definitely cost us a good day.” Judging by his demeanour in that post race interview with Tony, I would hate to be the electronics guy on his team once Tony gets back to the hauler. Crew chief Steve Addington said a faulty circuit breaker apparently was the problem.
Could a new rivalry be brewing??? Keep and eye on Ryan Newman and Carl Edwards in future races. While Ryan Newman conceded Carl Edwards likely didn't wreck him intentionally on lap 256 of Sunday's NASCAR race at Phoenix International Raceway he wasn’t happy about it. Newman, who was on the outside of Edwards heading into Turn 3, ended up being hit broadside by the 99 car, sending him hard into the wall. "I don't consider that a deliberate move by any means. (But) we know plenty of times in this sport, what comes around goes around." Have at it boys!
Once again my team, the #48 Lowe’s Chevrolet in caught up in a so-called “cheating controversy” *cough*. On Feb. 17, NASCAR ruled the car had illegally modified sheet metal between the roof and the side windows, an area known as the C-posts. Chad Knaus was fined $100,000 and suspended six races. His car chief Ron Malec was also levied a six week suspension. Jimmie Johnson was docked 25 points as a driver and Jeff Gordon lost 25 points as an owner. An appeal date has not yet been set, and Knaus can work until the appeal hearing. Knaus said he looked forward to the appeals process, insisting the car that failed the visual inspection in Daytona was the same one that passed repeated inspections in four previous restrictor-plate races at Daytona and Talladega last season. This is nothing new for this team as Knaus has been suspended four previous times, one coming when Johnson won the 2006 Daytona 500 and Darian Grubb filled in. Knaus also had a two-race ban in 2005 overturned on appeal. Chad Knaus and Jimmie live by the motto "if you ain't cheating, you ain't trying”. But people are completely naive if they think that the Lowe’s team is the only team bending the rules, or the metal per se. I understand the accusations and what is at stake. I mean if Chad is going to “cheat” at any given race and is consistently and frequently penalized for technical violations and found guilty of trying to gain an illegal advantage wouldn’t he cheat with a championship on the line (or five)? Did he and maybe he just never was caught? Could that explain why Jimmie has such an incredible record in previous Chases?
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| Crew Chief Chad Knaus & Car Chief Ron Malec for the #48 Photo courtesy of Hendrick Motorsports |
I am sure that what a lot of fans think-a lot of non-Jimmie Johnson fans for sure. I personally find it hard to believe Johnson and Knaus won those champions and 55 Cup races all while cheating. Jimmie is far too talented of a driver and Chad is an extremely brilliant crew chief. They do not have to cheat to win. Chad is only doing what a good crew chief should do – look for loopholes in the rules and try to find an edge in a sport that has long applauded and encouraged mechanical resourcefulness. However when you’re the sport’s most successful crew chief, and it’s most penalized, that only raises the cloud of suspicion and tarnishes your reputation even more. Chad doesn’t seem too fazed by any of it. He was quoted this weekend as saying “As far as my reputation goes, I’m not too concerned about that. What we want to do is go out there and do the best thing we can for Hendrick Motorsports and the best things for Lowe’s and try to win races and championships.”
We will await the appeal and see what the outcome is. Like most other professional sports teams, the Lowe's Chevy is a well oiled machine. They have over 500 people working at the Hendrick garages in Charlotte, NC. If they do end up losing Chad for some races, I do not foresee it being detrimental to the team as a whole. After all, Jimmie IS in the driver's seat.....
Next week...It's Vegas baby!!!!
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| Denny Hamelin doing his victory burnout Photo courtesy of Nascar.com |
Incidentally, did anyone catch the commercial for Tide? Boy did I call that one right last week hahaha ... in case you missed it...
http://www.sbnation.com/nascar/2012/3/4/2843959/tide-nascar-commercial-daytona-500-jet-dryer-explosion-2012
By Sherri Breaton
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