DAYTONA BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 20:  Executive Vice President & Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell announces the indefinite suspension of Kurt Busch, driver of the #41 Haas Automation Chevrolet, at Daytona International Speedway on February 20, 2015 in Daytona Beach, Florida. A Delaware judge issued a no-contact order against Busch after an alleged incident of domestic violence between Busch and his ex-girlfriend Patricia Driscoll in his motorhome at Dover International Speedway in September 2014.  (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
Steve O’Donnell

June 16, 2015

By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service

Confirming what had been widely discussed this past weekend at Michigan, NASCAR announced on Tuesday it will implement significant changes to the current NASCAR Sprint Cup Series rules package for the July 11 Quaker State 400 at Kentucky Speedway.

Specifically, the rear spoiler will be shortened from six inches to three and a half inches, the front splitter overhang will be shortened by 1 3/4 inches and the splitter extension panel will be decreased from 38 to 25 inches wide.

The net result will be a lower-downforce package that will be offset to some extent by a Goodyear tire combination that provides more mechanical grip than did last year’s Kentucky tire. Because of the time frame for implementation of the new rules package, which at this point is for Kentucky only, Goodyear did not have an opportunity to test a tire combination with NASCAR’s new specifications.

Race teams, however, will have extended practice time on Wednesday, July 8 in order to fine-tune the new competition package.

“We’ve probably been too steadfast about our rules packages being an annual component to the sport, and that’s really not accurate,” said Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer, during a conference call with reporters on Tuesday. “If you look at where we’ve been, we’ve actually had several different elements of rules for many of our events, whether that’s tire combinations, drive train configurations, engine specs, aerodynamics. …

“Look no further than, as we head out to Sonoma, Daytona and then Kentucky, you’ve got a road course, superspeedway rules package and then we’ll head into Kentucky as well. I think, when you look at the industry as a whole, we feel like we’re as nimble an industry as we’ve ever been, with the ability to evolve almost in real time, and I think that’s great news for the fans.”

O’Donnell indicated the Kentucky rules package changes occurred after extensive input from drivers, race teams and manufacturers. He also stressed that the changes are part of the evolution of the sport, not a reversal of existing rules.

“This is not an abandonment of any rules package,” O’Donnell said. “There’s many positives we’ve seen out of our current rules that shouldn’t be dismissed, but we’re constantly working on all areas of competition, and we’ll never consider the racing package final, because we’ve been vocal and will continue to be vocal about our commitment to continuing to improve the racing.”

Asked about the potential changes last weekend at Michigan, driver Carl Edwards, long a proponent of reduced downforce, was enthusiastic.

“I’d be in favor of anything that makes the cars able to race around each other and to put more of the speed into the drivers’ hands,” Edwards said. “I know NASCAR is all for the same thing. Everybody wants this thing to be the best possible show for the fans and I don’t think NASCAR is scared to make changes.

“I think it’s really cool that they’ve been talking with the drivers more, they’ve been more involved with it. … I think we’re heading in the right direction.”

Whether the Kentucky changes are incorporated elsewhere will depend on what happens in the Quaker State 400.

“We’ve been very, very vigilant in talking about tighter racing,” O’Donnell said. “I think we’ve achieved that in terms of first to 43rd. You see that those teams are closer than ever, but we certainly want to see more lead changes on the race track.

“We’ll evaluate not only that but a number of different factors coming out of Kentucky and see what we can learn and potentially what we can implement down the road.”

The Final Lap Weekly Podcast LogoSHOW #362 – Guest: Daniel Suarez – We recap the Pocono race weekend, congratulations to Martin Truex Jr., Matt Kenseth hangs back stage with Taylor Swift, teams tested Darlington, MWR crew shuffle, chase spots dwindle, plus a full Michigan preview. Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Toby Christie

( Roughly 48:00 mins)

Continue reading “The Final Lap Weekly #362 Daniel Suarez / Michigan Preview”

preseasonthunder_JimmieJohnsonJohnson said the NASCAR’s rules package remains the “hot topic” for the Drivers’ Council that met with NASCAR officials for the first time last weekend at Dover.

He says that although NASCAR has “lots of simulation and technology” to determine how cars will respond and compete on track, “we (the drivers) are living it inside the car. We just want to make sure our voice is heard and that the people that make the decisions know what is really going on in the car.”

Although Johnson is not one of the eight driver representative, Earnhardt is.

“I think it’s awesome because you’ve got all the NASCAR guys (together) that you want five minutes with,” Earnhardt said. “Everybody’s in the room to work together and everybody wants the same things – a healthy sport, racing as good as it can be and as safe as it can be.”

One thing Earnhardt doesn’t think will be left up to the drivers is changes to the race schedule. He sees that as a matter left to NASCAR’s governing body, teams owners and tracks. “I don’t expect to be in that conversation,” he said.

during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series SpongeBob SquarePants 400 at Kansas Speedway on May 9, 2015 in Kansas City, Kansas.
during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series SpongeBob SquarePants 400 at Kansas Speedway on May 9, 2015 in Kansas City, Kansas.

The comforting term “It’s still early” doesn’t really apply anymore – not when discussing opportunities to lock into the 2015 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

Thirteen down, 13 to go. The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular season officially reached its midpoint as the checkered flag dropped at Dover to give Jimmie Johnson his series-leading fourth victory of the season.

It was a storyline-rich first half…

· Nine different drivers have won a race, all but locking up a spot in the Chase.

· Kevin Harvick opened the season with five consecutive finishes of second or better. Dating to the end of the 2014 season, Harvick cobbled together a string of eight consecutive top-two finishes, the longest streak since 1975.

· Johnson is closing in on a hallowed NASCAR number – 76. That’s Dale Earnhardt’s career win total, which currently is good for seventh on the all-time list. Johnson’s four wins thus far puts his career total at 74.

· After a rough 2014, Martin Truex Jr. is in the midst of a career-year. Though still searching for his first victory, Truex is second in the points and is on pace to obliterate his career-high of 19 top-10 finishes. He currently has 12.

· Through 13 races, there have been a total of 55,701 green flag passes, the second-highest total through 13 races since the inception of loop data in 2005.

Each manufacturer – Chevrolet, Toyota and Ford – has at least two victories.

The Final Lap Weekly Podcast LogoSHOW #361 – Guest: Chris Buescher – We recap Dover and the avalanche of Jimmie Johnson stats, audio, and accolades, Jimmie becomes a home improvement lobster, Logano plays foosball, Vickers gets a TV gig, what is the drivers council and is Yoda involved, plus a full Pocono Preview. Hosted by Kerry Murphey and Toby Christie

( Roughly 48:00 mins)

Continue reading “The Final Lap Weekly #361 Chris Buescher – Pocono Preview”