South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Letarte to play crew chief again

- Associated Press

NBC analyst Steve Letarte moonlights as the competitio­n consultant for Spire Motorsport­s, a position he never imagined would put him back on top of a pit box.

Then COVID-19 protocols sidelined Spire crew chief Ryan Sparks and two other team members for Sunday’s race NASCAR at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Letarte was brainstorm­ing solutions for Spire when his wife stated the obvious.

“Why don’t you just do it? Why are you making this so complicate­d?” she told Letarte.

She had a point.

Letarte will return to competitio­n Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway for the first time since he called the 2014 season finale for Dale Earnhardt Jr. That race capped a 19-year career with Hendrick Motorsport­s, where Letarte started as a teenager sweeping floors before graduating to crew chief for Jeff Gordon and then Earnhardt.

Letarte will call the race for Corey LaJoie and the No. 7 Chevrolet but is hesitant to take the title of crew chief.

“I’m not a crew chief. I’m a TV analyst who has crew chief experience who is going to fill in for one race on one day,” Letarte said Thursday. “It’s Ryan’s team, it’s Ryan’s car, it’s Ryan’s setup. All I’m really doing is managing the day and managing the race for Corey.”

Letarte was still considered a top crew chief when he retired after nine seasons. He took a job with NBC Sports for the lighter workload and has successful­ly transition­ed into one of NASCAR’s top analysts. The preparatio­n he puts in to dissect races on television has prepared Letarte to get back into action after a five-year hiatus.

“My work in the broadcast booth requires me to stay sharp when it comes to rules, regulation­s, race flow,” he said. “My job is to analyze the performanc­e of people on pit road, so I think I’m comfortabl­e with race strategy.”

Homestead isn’t the most technical of tracks and its a no-brainer for a crew chief to call for four fresh tires during a caution period. For the difficult decisions, Letarte will have electronic communicat­ion with Sparks. He will rely on gut instinct but largely try to stick to Sparks’ plan.

LaJoie is in his first season with Spire and he opened with a ninth-place finish in the Daytona 500. Though Letarte is consulting the organizati­on as it attempts to grow, he said he’s had “zero” involvemen­t in day-to-day operations.

Letarte doesn’t plan to make any bold in-race adjustment­s to the Chevrolet or fall back on strategies that worked for a combined 15 victories with Gordon and Earnhardt.

“It’s been six years. The sport moves weekly, monthly, yearly, it moves so fast,” Letarte said. “The most important thing is just to make sure I don’t create any storylines.

“Be very calm on the radio, be very clear with my direction, be very clear with Corey. Not do anything silly. Just do a nice, solid block-andtackle type job.”

When the race ends Sunday, Letarte will return his focus to his NBC gig and assisting Spire, which is aiming to be a two-car Cup Series organizati­on in 2022 when the Next Gen car debuts and has taken steps to become an independen­t organizati­on this year.

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