The Columbus Dispatch

Preece hopes short track history helps at Martinsvil­le

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MARTINSVIL­LE, Va. — Ryan Preece is a rookie struggling to find his rhythm at NASCAR’S top level. But as the series shifts to Martinsvil­le Speedway, the first short track on the schedule, Preece may have a slight advantage on some of his competitio­n for the first time this season.

Preece took an unconventi­onal path to the Cup Series and establishe­d himself on short tracks across the Northeast. The Connecticu­t native eased into NASCAR via the Whelen Modified Tour, where he won 22 races and the 2013 series championsh­ip.

His first win in that series? At Martinsvil­le, of course.

“I expect that we should show really well and at least be running top 10 and hopefully get a top five by the end of the weekend,” Preece said of his hopes for Sunday’s race.

Martinsvil­le, at 0.526 miles, is the shortest track on the Cup schedule and the only circuit visited every year since NASCAR’S 1948 formation. It’s referred to as “The Paperclip” for its combinatio­n of long straightaw­ays and flat, narrow turns, and drivers must master a hard brake then transition into a smooth accelerati­on to find any sort of success.

It was an eye-opener in Saturday’s first practice for Corey Lajoie, who lost his brakes entering a turn and destroyed his primary car.

“There is no coffee strong enough that will wake you up like losing brakes into Turn 1 at Martinsvil­le. It’s not a good feeling,” Lajoie said as his backup car was unloaded from the team truck.

“It’s unfortunat­e because small teams like ours, we don’t really bring a backup that’s fully ready to go, so my guys have a lot of work ahead of them. I’ll probably pitch in and help a little bit, but, obviously, our backup is not going to be as good as the car that we choose and bring as our primary.”

Preece also drives for a small team, JTG Daugherty Racing, but believes Martinsvil­le will be a strong stop for the two-car organizati­on. AJ Allmending­er drove the No. 47 Chevrolet until Preece replaced him this year and Allmending­er had five top-10 finishes in 10 Martinsvil­le races with the team. Allmending­er finished second in this race in 2016.

Preece is admittedly most comfortabl­e on short tracks. In the Xfinity Series, Preece lodged six top-10 finishes on tracks one mile or shorter and won at Iowa Speedway and Bristol Motor Speedway the last two years.

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