Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

New rules to get test at another short track

Drivers’ moods mixed ahead of Cup race on Bristol’s half-mile

- By Jenna Fryer

BRISTOL, Tenn. — NASCAR’s second stop at a short track this season is yet another race that’s impossible to predict. There’s a new rules package, a traction strip around Bristol Motor Speedway and the general crankiness that short-track racing tends to produce.

Moods were mixed following Saturday’s final practice and defending race winner Kyle Busch was less than pleased with conditions. He was the fastest Toyota driver of the session, fifth overall, but got prickly when asked how he expected Sunday’s race to go under NASCAR’s high-downforce rules package.

“I think you’re going to run or try to run wherever you can where the guy in front of you ain’t because you certainly can’t follow,” said Busch, adding his car was “plowing tight. Aerotight at Bristol. At a short track. Fantastic. Can’t wait.”

NASCAR raced two weeks ago at Martinsvil­le Speedway, the shortest track on the NASCAR circuit at 0.526 mile, and a track that typically forces drivers to gouge their way through the field. But the race didn’t live up to expectatio­ns and Brad Keselowski won in a runaway — he led all but 54 laps and was passed on the track only by Chase Elliott.

Busch warned that Bristol might be much of the same because of a rules package that emphasizes high downforce — one he’s been dubious about since NASCAR said last year it was making radical changes.

“That’s exactly what we told everybody,” he said with a smirk.

Joey Logano cautioned that Bristol’s 0.533-mile, high-banked, all-concrete bullring is so different from the paperclip layout at Martinsvil­le, that it would take an effort such as Keselowski’s to repeat that race. Keselowski’s strong Ford had clean air down the long straightaw­ays and into the flat, narrow turns, and that contribute­d to the underwhelm­ing race.

“You get a good car up front that can control the pace, especially at a place like Martinsvil­le ... if you get lead you get more air cooling your brakes, you can run the pace that you want to and you have everything cooler than the guy that was chasing you the whole time and you’re able to drive away,” he said.

Logano doesn’t believe the leader at Bristol will be able to pull away the same way Keselowski did at Martinsvil­le.

“Here the advantage is probably cut down some because you have traffic within the first 20 laps of a run,” Logano said. “You’re going to catch (lapped cars) pretty quick, so that cleanair advantage that you have will go away and that will keep the second, third, fifth-place cars all closer.”

Drivers also have to figure out the traction compound applied to the bottom of the Bristol track that makes for a stickier second lane. The PJ1 traction keeps drivers in the low lane until it wears away or another driver is bold enough to venture up the high banking into the top lane.

Kyle Larson is typically the leader in taking that gamble, while conservati­ve teams run along the bottom until the traction has been worn off.

Jimmie Johnson was the second fastest in the final practice — quickest of the winless Chevrolet camp — and said warmer temperatur­es Sunday or a long green-flag run will have drivers following Larson up to the lane early.

Johnson and his Hendrick Motorsport­s teammates, aside from Elliott, have been struggling as Chevrolet in its second season with the Camaro still hasn’t caught its competitor­s. Elliott and William Byron gave Hendrick the front row in Bristol qualifying, and Johnson found some late speed that improved his confidence about his car.

“We’re putting stuff together and I’m trying to have some self-control and not be overly excited,” the seven-time Cup champion said. “I think our cars are just getting better. Internally, a little bit of sunshine helps a ton.”

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