South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Ford looking for first win of the season

- By Jim Vertuno

AUSTIN, Texas — Five races into NASCAR’s 2024 season and Ford is in a funk.

Make no mistake, the Ford cars have been fast, just not quite fast enough to produce any wins yet. At the race in Atlanta, the razor-thin margins at the finish meant 0.003 seconds was the difference between first and third.

But winning is what counts the most and Ford drivers are searching for answers to break the drought as NASCAR holds its first road race of the season Sunday at the Circuit of the Americas.

“Been close to a couple of (wins),” said last season’s Cup series champion Ryan Blaney, who just missed out on the victory in Atlanta and has three top-five finishes. “I don’t really get into panic mode too easily. Just understand it is a long year.”

A Ford win in Austin would seem like a long shot in NASCAR’s fourth run on a track built for Formula One. Road course specialist­s Tyler Reddick (Toyota), New Zealand’s Shane van Gisbergen (Chevrolet) and Chase Elliott (Chevrolet) rate among the race favorites.

Chevrolet has three wins and Toyota has two this season, as Ford teams and drivers try to understand the nuances of the Mustang Dark Horse body style that was supposed to provide better handling and aerodynami­cs.

And while it’s still early, Ford drivers make up just three of the 16 available Cup playoff spots. Blaney tops that short list at fourth.

Ford drivers point to some solid statistics, even if the major results are lacking.

“I know it doesn’t look good on paper when you say that we haven’t had a Ford in Victory Lane yet,” said RFK Racing driver Chris Buescher, who is currently 14th in the Cup standings.

“Look at our year and how competitiv­e we’ve been. We’ve been able to lead in four of the five races at some point. And when we didn’t lead any laps, we finished second. So to me, we’ve been very good. We’ve certainly had a little bit of rough luck,” Buescher said.

Chase Briscoe of Stewart-Haas Racing said Fords have shown good “raw speed.”

“I feel like we’ve had the speed, we just haven’t been able to put the races together as a manufactur­er,” Briscoe said. “This week will be probably, truthfully, another struggle for the Fords to win. We just don’t have as many good road racers as the other manufactur­ers have.”

Briscoe noted how Ford ended last season with Blaney’s championsh­ip.

“If you would have looked at us last year, you would have never thought a Ford was going to win a championsh­ip and then it did,” Briscoe said. “Hopefully when it matters, Ford is going to be strong.”

NASCAR vs. F1

The Circuit of the Americas is the only track used by NASCAR and F1, but the two racing series have vastly different styles. F1 cars lap the 3.4-mile (5.5 kilometers) circuit, with its steep elevation changes and 20 turns, about 30 seconds faster than the stock cars. F1 also races with much stricter track limits than NASCAR.

NASCAR will be enforcing track limits through a series of s-curves in the first sector. But look for drivers to use every bit of the sweeping runoff areas around several turns, most notably on No. 19 before the cars enter pit row.

“I think the guys are off the track more than they are on it,” said van Gisbergen, who is making his Cup series season debut on the road course. “You forget how much elevation it has. The TV doesn’t give it justice. It’s a really cool track.”

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