NASCAR – Denny Hamlin Wins at Phoenix, Johnson Climbs Out Of The Hole, EFI Causes Trouble For Stewart

Denny Hamlin had enough fuel to make it, Kevin Harvick did not.  With 1 lap to go and as the white flag flew Kevin Harvick ran the tank dry, giving it everything he had trying to catch Hamlin, until he coasted into second place.  This was the first win for the pairing of Hamlin and Darian Grubb, formerly of Stewart Haas Racing, and from their practice speeds no one thought they would be in contention.  Darian Grubb worked the same magic he had at the end of the 2011 chase, and somehow managed to bring the car to life under Hamlin’s piloting.

“I don’t know where this came from,” Hamlin said. “We were solidly off in practice. We were off, but we kept getting it better and closer and closer to being competitive, but I had no idea that we were going to fire off like we did today.”

This marks the first win for Hamlin at Phoenix in 14 starts, after finishing 3rd here 4 times before and never marking a win, it takes one more track off his to do list.

Greg Biffle managed a 3rd place finish for the second race in a row.  In this sport we all know that consistency makes all the difference, this is an excellent start for Biffle and his 2012 season.  Biffle credits his success so far to his new crew chief Matt Puccia.

“I’ve got all new guys. I’ve got guys working really hard on the car … and a guy that’s really, really smart paying attention to all the fine details, and that’s Matt Puccia,” Biffle said. “The reason why we got two third-place finishes is because of his leadership and his decision-making on pit road on what to do to the car. He makes the decisions he wants, and that’s why we’re sitting here now.”

“We fought the car really bad at the beginning of this race,” Biffle said. “Matt never gave up on the car. He kept adjusting on it and I never thought it would get that good. I thought I was in trouble. I was ready to write that thing off for a 15th- or 20th-place finish.

“I am excited about how they got the car going.”

Jimmie Johnson started the race 23 points in the hole, 71 points behind the leader.  A position that “Five Time” has not found himself in before, and not one he enjoyed in the least.  Yesterdays 4th place finish was enough to pull him out of the deficit and put his points total back in the black.  Leading the Hendrick team with the highest finish in phoenix, there was certainly a lot more optimism for the team after losing 8 cars in Daytona.

“We’ll take it,” Johnson said. “I’m not really satisfied. I really felt like we had a car to win the race with. Unfortunately things didn’t work out there. We had a little hiccup early in the race, but we still rebounded back and got a very strong finish.

“So I’m proud of the fight this team has and the race car we brought to the track, and I passed a lot of race cars on a track that’s tough to pass and still got back to fourth.”

Tony Stewart ran up in the front of the pack all day long, until with 61 laps to go and trying to save a little fuel, he shut the engine down and it failed to restart.  None of the procedures to get the EFI system to reboot or to get the car to restart were working so he rolled it onto pit lane and the crew managed to get it to restart shortly after switching the battery box switch to position 2 .  Falling 2 laps behind and back into 22nd place on the grid, Stewart moved from a challenger to an also ran.  You can bet there will be a long discussion in the Stewart Hass shop this morning about how to prevent that issue from rearing it’s head again this season.

Next week it is on to Las Vegas and another place where there’s sure to be a ton of gambling, both on and off the track.

 

NASCAR – Mark Martin Takes The Pole For Phoenix – Hendrick’s Teams Look For Big Rebound

In only his second start in the #55 MWR Toyota, Mark Martin led the field for speed during yesterday’s qualifying in Phoenix with a time of 26.313 seconds at a speed of 136.815 mph.

“I’m sure this makes (MWR partner) Rob Kauffman and Michael Waltrip, who stuck their necks out to hire an old guy, feel a little bit better about it,” said Martin, “Makes me feel better about it, too.”

Martin, who has driven for Hendrick, Roush and now MWR, credits the equipment he has had the opportunity to drive over the years, for his success with winning races and poles.

“I’ve driven really good stuff, ever since 1988,” Martin said. “I did drive a couple of slugs back in the early ‘80s, but since then … you can’t do that without superior effort and equipment—but effort on top of that. It’s more than equipment that does that.

“I think all of you know that I do work real hard at it, and I know that I have to work harder at it than the guys that are 20 years younger than me. I’m willing to do that to be able to continue to compete. But make no mistake—MWR and [crew chief] Rodney Childers have good stuff.”

Martin will be followed on the grid by Tony Stewart, Regan Smith, Jimmie Johnson and Juan Pablo Montoya rounding out the top 5.

I am willing to bet right now that Mark Martin is also glad that he was not a part of the Hendrick carnage last weekend.  During Speed weeks Hendrick lost 8 cars amongst all of their drivers.  Dale Earnhart Jr. was the only one who managed  to keep his cars intact through both the Shootout and the Daytona 500, resulting in a second place finish in each race.  The trouble started for the Hendrick’s teams with Jeff Gordon’s No. 24 was collected in an accident in practice for the Bud Shootout. One day later, Gordon’s car ended up getting flipped in a horrific accident in the Shootout itself.

The Hendrick troubles only got worse from there. Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 Chevy also suffered damage during the Shootout and Kasey Kahne finished three laps down in that race because of damage to his No. 5 Chevy. Then Kahne wrecked during a Daytona 500 practice session, killing another car.

Then during the 500 Johnson wrecked out on lap one, and Jeff Gordon blew his engine on lap 81.  Kahne got caught up in an accident on Lap 189 that completed the carnage and brought the final total of damaged or totally ruined Hendrick race cars to eight for all of Speedweeks, Leaving the #88 of Dale Jr to represent the organization, a feat he accomplished well by fighting hard for a win, and finishing second place.

Amidst all of this carnage was the specter of punishment yet to be handed out for the C-Posts in the #48 car before inspection.  Chad Knaus was issued a $100 000 fine and the 48 team was handed a 25 point penalty.  Couple that with the early finish for the 48 car in the Daytona 500 and we see Jimmie Johnson heading into today’s race at Phoenix with a -23 point deficit.

“I’ve never seen so much equipment torn up as what we saw this last week at Daytona. It was incredible,” Gordon said. “That’s just the tight racing, competitiveness, how easy it is to make a little mistake and cause a lot of carnage and take you out of a race.”

“You always know that Junior is going to be strong at Daytona, so it was great to see him finish [second],” Gordon said. “It was unfortunate that it was him up against the two Roush [Fenway Racing] Fords there because he didn’t have a lot of support there to have a chance at beating those guys at the end.

“I think really even as strong as [those Fords] were, I think that our cars were strong enough to battle with those guys. It would have been nice to be up there to give him some more support and be able to work together to try to win that race. It was still a great effort by him.”

“I think that obviously being as popular as he is and the attention being on him win or lose, when he wins it’s a positive for the sport,” Gordon said. “But I don’t see his attitude being any different than any other year. He comes into every season pumped up and excited and optimistic just like everyone else.

“I think that their finish at Daytona definitely adds a little to that, so his confidence I think is good and strong right now — especially after coming off of a decent year last year. I think right now if you look at what happened last year with the Chase and the championship and all the excitement that happened in Daytona — Junior finishing second and the great battle, Danica [Patrick], the great ball of flames, it all got a lot of attention. There’s a lot of momentum with the sport right now. Whatever is going to keep that momentum going, I’m all for it. I hope it’s a win from the 24 car that can keep it going, but if it’s the 88 and 24 then OK, I’ll take that, too.”

Earnhardt himself felt that the Hendrick’s team was shorted on showing just how strong they are by the results of Speedweeks.

“Yeah, Daytona really doesn’t show what we’re capable of,” said Earnhardt, whose seventh-place finish in the final point standings last year was his highest since 2006. “We ran good and that’s good for our confidence. But we’ll see how we can make that work for us the next couple of weeks. I’d like to win here. I’ve won some races here at Phoenix.”

Chad Knaus met with the media before practice sessions at Phoenix for the first time since his suspension was announced, and addressed his feelings on the situation.

“Obviously I’m deeply saddened, of course,” Knaus said. “We didn’t expect this.”

Knaus will remain on the pit box due to the appeal launched by the Hendrick’s organization.  If they should lose the appeal then Johnson will be without his crew chief for 6 weeks.  No announcements have been made as to whom might fill the seat if that happens.

“We’re very fortunate to have the ability to go through this appeals process that NASCAR put in place a long time ago. I’m glad they did,” Knaus said. “It’s unfortunate that I have to keep taking advantage of the process from time to time, but it’s good that it’s there. We’ve seen some things changed or reversed or even maximized through that process.”

“When we know more details, we’ll maybe talk about it more at that point,” Knaus said. “NASCAR does a good job. They have a good set of structure, a good set of standards, that provide for a wide set of scenarios.

“I really didn’t expect any of this, to be quite honest with you. We do everything we can to build the best possible race cars we can to bring to the race track. That’s what we do, and unfortunately they didn’t like something and they addressed that. But it definitely was unfortunate and not something we expected at all.”