Las Vegas Review-Journal

Earnhardt hails ‘Gen 6’ car

NASCAR banking on new model to improve product on the track

- By JENNA FRYER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CONCORD, N.C. — NASCAR spent almost the entire year developing its 2013 car in hopes the “Gen 6” model will dramatical­ly improve the racing.

After his first test drive Tuesday, NASCAR’s most popular driver approved.

“This sport is going to be revolution­ized again with this car,” Dale Earnhardt Jr. said.

That’s a ringing endorsemen­t for NASCAR, which stumbled out of the gate with the launch of its 2007 car and never recovered. Drivers were mixed on the “Car of Tomorrow” during its developmen­t, and the messaging reflected the varying opinions.

When Las Vegas native Kyle Busch won the CoT’s debut race at Bristol, Tenn., he panned the car in his victory celebratio­n on live television. He didn’t let up in his post-race interviews, likening the car to a milk crate. The car was forever tainted with fans. The CoT was finally retired in last month’s season finale.

NASCAR has worked tirelessly this year on orders from chairman Brian France to develop a racier 2013 model, which will officially debut at the season-opening Daytona 500 in February. It’s been tested some over the fall, but Charlotte Motor Speedway opened Tuesday for a two-day session attended by 16 drivers.

Among them was Earnhardt, who won 17 races in the “old” car but only two after the CoT was introduced in 2007.

“I think the car has really awesome potential, and I like it already leaps and bounds beyond the CoT,” he said. “This car really gives me a lot of sensations that are similar to the old car that we ran 10 years ago. The CoT was just frustratin­g for me. I had good runs and good races in it, and I had races where the car drove well, but I never really connected with that car from the very beginning. Just personally, I didn’t really like the car for what it was.”

NASCAR strived to give the manufactur­ers brand identity with the 2013 cars in an effort to make them resemble what automakers are selling in showrooms. That’s important to Earnhardt. “You’ll stand there, and you’ll see Fords and Toyotas and Chevrolets driving by, and it’s great because everything looks different and everything is recognizab­le,” he said. “You don’t have to think about the driver and the team itself to associate with the manufactur­er. You look at the car to see it instantly. I can appreciate the cars for that fact. I’m not sure a lot of people realize how important that is, having that instant recogni- tion on a manufactur­er for our sport and how much more healthier it is for that happening.”

Reigning Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski made his debut in a Ford, and Matt Kenseth switched to Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota after 13 years in a Ford with Roush Fenway Racing.

Kenseth tweeted a picture from inside the car, where a Darth Vader mask hung from his rearview mirror, and he made a joking reference to moving over to the dark side. Kenseth later admitted to being anxious before arriving at the track, and he over-revved his engine before the lunch break, forcing the No. 20 crew to swap engines.

“It was probably the first time I’ve been nervous in a racecar, getting in there and going out for the first time, in as long as I can remember,” he said. “I guess it was a good icebreaker. My last run, I proceeded to go from second gear to first gear and over-revved the engine. So, I think the guys are in love with me right now. Like, ‘Where did we find this clown? Give us the other one back.’ Other than that, it’s been good.”

Keselowski, back from a brief vacation after collecting his Sprint Cup trophy in Las Vegas, had a whole new look as champion.

Penske Racing switched from Dodge to Ford, and with the manufactur­er change came a new paint scheme and fire suit for Keselowski, who is still tinkering with a final design. After sporting a predominan­tly blue look the past three years, his new schemes have a heavy white presence.

Keselowski said he’s 80 percent settled on the design.

“It’s a work in progress. This is something I’m working on to try to keep up with the Joneses,” he said. “All of these Hendrick guys have their new lightweigh­t, cool fire suits, and I don’t like getting beat on or off the race track. I want to be the best everywhere, so I’ve got adidas helping me out. I’m not all the way there.”

Keselowski also was working for the first time with new teammate Joey Logano. The combinatio­n of a new car and a new teammate made this first test critical for the champion.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY CHUCK BURTON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Matt Kenseth takes his car onto the track during testing Tuesday for the NASCAR Sprint Cup at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C. Sixteen drivers tested NASCAR’s 2013 car at Charlotte, including Dale Earnhardt Jr., who said he was impressed with...
PHOTOS BY CHUCK BURTON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Matt Kenseth takes his car onto the track during testing Tuesday for the NASCAR Sprint Cup at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C. Sixteen drivers tested NASCAR’s 2013 car at Charlotte, including Dale Earnhardt Jr., who said he was impressed with...
 ??  ?? Brad Keselowski checks his phone as his crew works on his car Tuesday in Concord, N.C.
Brad Keselowski checks his phone as his crew works on his car Tuesday in Concord, N.C.

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