Daily Camera (Boulder)

Bowman, on mend, looks to pick up

- By Steve Reed The Associated Press

CONCORD, N.C. >> NASCAR drivers have long considered the Coca-cola 600 the most grueling race on the schedule.

It’s expected to be even more challengin­g Sunday for Alex Bowman, who’ll be racing for the first time since fracturing his vertebra last month at a sprint car race in Hendrick Motorsport­s’ teammate Kyle Larson’s new racing series in West Burlington, Iowa.

Bowman said even twisting the wrong way can be painful.

“There’s some some discomfort here and there, and there are things that I do that don’t feel good,” Bowman said. “But that’s just part of it, and stuff I’m gonna have to deal with. ... At the end of a six-hour race I’m probably not going to feel my best.”

Bowman missed three Cup points races while sidelined, leaving him five points out of the 16th and final playoff qualifying position with 13 races remaining in the regular season.

When he’s run, he’s run well.

He had the best average race finish of any driver before the accident and despite missing three races and being docked 60 points earlier this season by NASCAR he’s still confident he can make some noise in the playoffs.

“If we can just go back to how we were running, I know we can do it,” Bowman said.

Doctors determined Bowman didn’t need surgery because of the location of the fracture. Instead he spent time resting with limited exercise and said he has been told it’s all about pain tolerance moving forward.

He climbed back into a car last week and drove 200 pain-free practice laps at North Wilkesboro before being cleared by NASCAR to return. That has given him confidence he can complete 600 miles.

Joey Logano said it probably won’t be an easy ride for Bowman given the bumpy track at Charlotte

Motor Speedway’s 1.5-mile oval.

“It’s got to be hard,” Logano said. “But Alex is a profession­al and he’s been racing his whole life and he’s a good driver. I’m sure it’s going to feel a little weird at first because you’re getting in (a car) and going really fast and it takes a few laps to get used to it again.”

“It’s going to hurt. I don’t know how much it’s gonna hurt,” Bowman said.

At some point Bowman wants to return to sprint car racing, but joked “it’s probably smart if I give my day job a little alone time.” BYRON ON THE POLE Cup points leader William Byron will start on the pole after qualifying was washed out Saturday.

“It’s certainly nice to get the pit selection,” Byron said. “Really the track position is not that big of a deal for a long race like this, but the pit stall selection is huge going into the race.”

Wallace’s channel

NASCAR is still looking into how a derogatory message was broadcast on the radio channel of Bubba Wallace’s race team during last weekend’s All-star race. Wallace, NASCAR’S only Black driver in the Cup series, had just finished Sunday’s race at North Wilkesboro Speedway when a person not on the 23XI Racing team said over the radio, “Go back to where you came from” and then added another non-racial expletive.

Denny Hamlin, co-owner of the 23XI Racing, said his team is looking into what happened as well, and how to fix the issue.

“I know the team internally talked about it — about what they wanted to do to prevent it,” Hamlin said. “I haven’t heard what the exact fix is for that.”

Ford’s struggles

Logano is the only Ford driver to win a race this season, attributin­g that shortfall to the failure to maximize Nascar-approved adjustment­s to the front end of their racecars this past offseason.

“We’re starting a little bit behind,” Logano said.

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