Tuesday, July 07, 2015

The Frontstretch Newsletter: Austin Dillon "I've Had Worse Injuries Playing Football"

THE FRONTSTRETCH NEWSLETTER
Presented by Frontstretch.com
The Best Seat at the Track, The Best View on the Net!
Jul. 7, 2015
Volume IX, Edition CXIII

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What to Watch: Tuesday

- Today, Cup teams are putting the finishing touches on their Kentucky cars before departing for the drive to Kentucky Speedway.  While the transporters don't enter the track until tomorrow, the staging will likely begin tonight.

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Top News
by the Frontstretch Staff

Austin Dillon Speaks Out On Violent Wreck

Austin Dillon made the rounds Tuesday, appearing on NBC's The Today Show and then on a NASCAR teleconference to discuss his death-defying wreck coming to the checkered flag at Daytona. The early Monday morning incident has left Dillon with a slightly bruised tailbone, a sore groin but otherwise none the worse for wear. "I've had worse injuries playing football growing up," he told reporters this morning. "It's pretty impressive to see, after something like that and then be able to talk to you guys like I am right now."

Dillon also attributed his good condition to being in top physical shape. The former high school athlete has a vigorous fitness program he follows, a perfect pairing for NASCAR's safety equipment that helped keep him from getting hurt. And while five fan injuries were unsettling, the second major incident for the track in two years during a major stock car race Dillon believes you can't point fingers at the track for what happened Monday.

"
You can't blame things on Daytona," he said. "I feel like it's a racetrack that has done its job to put on good races. We just have to keep developing to keep our stands safer, our drivers safer, and do what we can as a sport to develop and bring new technology."

Dillon, who watched the wreck after hearing the concern in brother Ty's voice after connecting with him after the race does understand the severity of what he went through. But moving forward, he feels the safety at both the cars and the tracks are strong enough that plate racing should continue to be part of NASCAR's repertoire going forward.

"
I think the wreck kind of tarnished a great race," he said. "We'll work and develop ways to make it where we're not flying through the air."

State Favorite KFC Joins Front Row Motorsports for Kentucky Speedway
 
Monday, Front Row Motorsports announced that Louisville-based Yum! Brands will serve as the primary sponsor of Cole Whitt's No. 35 Ford this weekend at Kentucky Speedway. They'll do it via the Kentucky Fried Chicken chain of fast food restaurants.  Read more
 
Entry List: Sprint Cup Field Preps for New Rules Package, Same Bumpy Kentucky Speedway

NASCAR has released the entry list for Saturday night's Quaker State 400 at Kentucky Speedway.  46 cars are entered with The Motorsports Group's Jeff Green joining the fray.  Read more

Entry List: Dale Jr. Joins XFINITY Field at Kentucky Speedway

The entry list for Friday night's XFINITY Series race at Kentucky Speedway is out.  Dale Earnhardt, Jr. is the field, running his JR Motorsports No. 88 but otherwise, a short field of 39 is entered.  Read more

Entry List: Truck Series Prepares for Bumpy Kentucky Ride
 
NASCAR has released the entry list for Thursday night's Camping World Truck Series race at Kentucky Speedway.  34 trucks are entered, including Christopher Bell in a fourth entry, the No. 52, from Kyle Busch Motorsports.  Read more

Have news for The Frontstretch? Don't hesitate to let us know; email us at phil.allaway@frontstretch.com with a promising lead or tip.

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Today's Featured Commentary
Stop Fooling Ourselves: Daytona Has Got To Go
Sitting in the Stands: A Fan's View
by S.D. Grady

I yawned again. Yes, the Air Titans were doing their job, but @dennyhamlin was right: green flag for the Coke Zero 400 was not flying until after 11 p.m.. I must be getting old. The thought of staying up to watch the race was not as desirable as heading off to my bed. I programmed the DVR to record until 5 a.m. -- hey, if NASCAR was willing to run until 2 a.m., why would they stop then? Then, I turned out the lights and sought my dreams.

However, the old cat had other ideas about sleeping through the night. She got me up somewhere around 1:30 a.m,. demanding some snacks. She's 19. I oblige, and turn on the TV just to make sure the race is still being recorded. Jeff Burton and company mentioned a few big wrecks, but the laps were running down. I kept an eye on the competition and actually enjoyed the coverage. With ten laps left, I gasped when David Ragan went for a ride across the grass, and again when the No. 9 ripped his splitter off a few circuits later. Neither of those crashes were real Daytona heart beaters, though.

However, you knew we couldn't finish the night without the Big Show. On the green-white-checkered finish, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. blocked all attempts by Denny Hamlin and Dale's teammate, No. 48, to sneak by. The miles ticked down. The pack bounced around the track. I swallowed and fought back the rising nausea. Maybe they would make it across the start/finish line without any further mayhem. Maybe...not.

The explosion of the catchfence as Austin Dillon's No. 3 impacted it sent my pulse racing. My cry of alarm woke up my husband. The cameras followed the bulk of the injured field down into Turn One, but I knew the black No. 3 was not rolling with them. It couldn't be. Not after a replay of Kyle Larson's XFINITY wreck from 2013. We fixed the fence, right? NBC showed us the complete engine lying on the track, flames flickering around the twisted heap. The entire snout of the upside down car was missing. There was no fence remaining at the point of impact. Good God, not again.

The teams from the No. 88 and No. 13 pits raced out to Dillon's car. He was OK. Upside down, but fine. Our hearts and minds kept returning to the other side of the fence. A reverse angle of the wreck was shown -- even more horrifying than the first time. Shrapnel could clearly be seen flying into the stands. First responder lights flashed in front of the seats. However, there wasn't a sense of panic in the area. I couldn't believe we would be that lucky this time around, not after all the drama of the few years.

Well, we were lucky. Four fans received attention for minor wounds at the track. A fifth fan went to the hospital, but was released a few hours later. All's well, right?

No! It's not OK. It has not been "OK" for many years. Dale Sr. snaps his neck impacting the wall in turn 4, NASCAR mandates HANS devices and installs SAFER barriers throughout the circuit. Catchfences are penetrated multiple times at Daytona and Talladega, so the fences are strengthened. Wheels and hoods escape from cars during wrecks, so tethers are installed. The cars get faster; NASCAR plays with the aero and engine packages to slow them down. More drivers are injured; more patches are applied in an effort to assuage fears that the track is not a safe place to compete. It's been a never-ending chase of wreck and response.

At what point will NASCAR and the owners of the tracks actually do some research before deciding things are good enough, or that we've had enough? How far back do you need to move the fans so a car disintegrating at the fence won't send shreds of metal into the stands? Don't feed me the line about taking a chance of dismemberment or disfigurement when attending a race. Just don't. Don't tell me the fence worked perfectly. I can't believe it would do as well if the No. 3 hit it at a slightly different angle. And stop telling me the TV ratings justify maintaining these two tracks on the circuit. We stopped watching people kill each other in the ring a few hundred years ago.

Yes, the thought and idea of Daytona glistening in the Florida sun speaks to me as a race fan. In my gut, I still harbor the desire to attend a race there. But four times a year, I suffer through a broadcast that inevitably leaves me wondering why we go there at all. I've never visited Disney World because I despise the manner in which the Mouse manipulates the slathering masses of America. It sickens me that I have to put the location of the Great American Race in that same category.

We continue to feed a product to the world that has no value in it -- not for competition, for guaranteeing a safe day at the track, or where we can report on a weekend without adding the pathetic caveat at the end that nobody died.

Daytona Rising. Out of what? The ashes of injured fans?

Don't fix the fence. Don't fix the walls. Don't fancy up the seats. Just tear it down.

Sonya's Scrapbook

2011 Quaker State 400 -- Kentucky Speedway

Not a Jeff Gordon memory. When I think of Kentucky, I think of traffic and everything that can go wrong when operations management doesn't do their homework.  I hear things have improved since this debacle, but what a way to enter into Sprint Cup competition!

S.D. Grady is a Senior Editor for Frontstretch and runs a NASCAR blog called the S-Curves. She can be reached via email at sonya.grady@frontstretch.com. Follow her on Twitter at @laregna and on her Facebook page (she's an author, too!) at https://www.facebook.com/Author.SDGrady.

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Numbers Game: Coke Zero 400
by Tom Bowles

0
Laps led by Kevin Harvick in two Cup races at Daytona this season. He's led a series-high 1,225 laps virtually everywhere else (Sonoma is the only other track where Harvick has not led in 2015).

1
Of nine cautions at Daytona that was flown for reasons other than a wreck: the competition caution on lap 27.

1.04%
Reduction in Daytona purse money compared to the 2014 edition of the Coke Zero 400. Several races this season have seen purse money shrink based on reduced attendance and other factors.

2
Straight restrictor plate races won by Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Earnhardt has now led 195 of his 204 laps this season at Daytona and Talladega, scoring an average finish there of 1.7.

3
Cars within the top 27 that escaped the checkered flag wreck with no damage.

3
Times we've seen the catchfence torn down in major incidents at Daytona and Talladega since Bobby Allison's major wreck in 1987 brought about restrictor plates. They were early Monday morning (Austin Dillon at Daytona), February 2013 (Kyle Larson - then-Nationwide Series at Daytona) and April 2009 (Carl Edwards/Brad Keselowski at Talladega). I'm sure more examples are out there.

28
Years since plates were brought about as a "temporary" solution to rising speeds at those tracks.

3
Wrecks in six races since Kyle Busch returned to the Cup circuit. Luckily, Busch recovered from his bout with the wall at Daytona, climbed back on the lead lap and wound up 17th.

5
Of the top-6 finishers Monday morning ran Hendrick chassis and engines: Earnhardt, Jimmie Johnson, Harvick, Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon.

40.0
Average finish of Martin Truex, Jr. the last two races.

14
Top-10 finishes in 15 races for Truex before the last two races.

12
Positions lost by Justin Allgaier, fighting for a top-30 points position when Kurt Busch gouged him out of the way in the closing laps. Allgaier wound up finishing behind Kyle Busch, in 18th in an ending that could make the difference if Kyle makes the Chase.

$110,960
Money won by Landon Cassill for finishing 13th.

$113,148
Money won by Kyle Larson for crashing out and winding up 39th.

Tom Bowles is the Editor-in-Chief of Frontstretch.  He can be reached via e-mail at tom.bowles@frontstretch.com.

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TODAY AT FRONTSTRETCH:

by Jerry Jordan

by Matt McLaughlin

by Danny Peters

Who's Hot and Who's Not in NASCAR: Kentucky Edition
by Jeff Wolfe
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FRONTSTRETCH TRIVIA:

Q:  In 1981, Mike Mosley won the Gould Rex Mays Classic at The Milwaukee Mile from 25th on the grid.  In doing it, Mosley made history.  What was this achievement?

Check back Wednesday for the answer, here in the Frontstretch Newsletter!

Monday's Answer:

Q:  We'll start with an easy question.  The Carroll family was responsible for building Kentucky Speedway in time for the 2000 season.  What track did they operate prior to the construction of Kentucky?

A: The Carrolls previously operated Louisville Motor Speedway, a oval that had 3/8 and 7/16ths of a mile configurations.  The track was located immediately south of Louisville International Airport. The venue hosted two races for what is now the XFINITY Series on the 3/8ths of a mile track and five Truck Series races on the 7/16ths of a mile version.

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COMING TOMORROW
In The Frontstretch Newsletter:
We'll have more NASCAR news to report. Meanwhile, Dr. Mark Howell returns with another edition of Professor of Speed.

On Frontstretch.com:
Greg Davis will be here to answer your questions in NASCAR Mailbox while Aaron Bearden subs in with The Frontstretch 5. Also, we'll go Beyond The Cockpit with 2000 Cup champion Bobby Labonte to see what he's been up to since scaling back the racing schedule to part-time.
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