NASCAR Pleased with Performance of New Aero Package at Michigan

Gene Stefanyshyn, NASCAR Senior Vice President, Innovation and Racing Development and Scott Miller, NASCAR Senior VP of Competition   Photo - Kena Krutsinger / Getty Images

Gene Stefanyshyn, NASCAR Senior Vice President, Innovation and Racing Development and Scott Miller, NASCAR Senior VP of Competition
Photo – Kena Krutsinger / Getty Images

The new lower-downforce aerodynamic package under evaluation for 2017 got its first test in a points race at Michigan, and NASCAR officials liked what they saw in the 400-miler.

“It was definitely different than we’ve seen here before, a lot of action on the restarts, a lot of movement there,” said Scott Miller, NASCAR’s senior vice president of competition. “Obviously, we all watched it get strung out a little bit, which we weren’t hoping for longer into the runs.

“I think we saw a lot of things that we liked, some other things that may need a little bit of reevaluating, but I think overall, for such a big move in downforce, that it was a really pretty successful day and something that we can build on.”

If the new configuration, or a variation thereof, is adopted for next year, Goodyear will have time to build a tire designed for the new package and the track.

“I think we probably need to come back to a bit more work on the tires, which these tires have not been tuned to this package, so we’ll work with our Goodyear folks,” said Gene Stefanyshyn, NASCAR senior vice president, innovation and racing development. “Probably a bit handicapped by the entry speeds being pretty high (reaching roughly 218 mph), so still that creates some aero effects, so that’s something we’ll look at.

“But again, this has been planned as a two to three step process. We’re off to Kentucky tomorrow (for an organizational test on Monday and Tuesday), and then we’ll be on the track at Kentucky (July 9)—shorter track, lower speeds and all that, so we’ll see how that all comes together.”

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire Service

Another Race Goes up in Smoke for Kyle Busch at Michigan

Photo - Josh Hedges/Getty Images

Photo – Josh Hedges/Getty Images

To say 2016 has been a feast-or-famine year for Kyle Busch would be a colossal understatement.

And lately it’s been all famine.

Just past the 50 lap mark of Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Michigan International Speedway, the engine in Busch’s No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota gave up the ghost, spewing fire from underneath the chassis and filling the driver’s compartment with smoke.

Busch unpinned his window net, drove his car to the garage and exited the race in 40th place, the first driver out.

That marked the fourth straight event in which Busch has finished 30th or worse and the sixth time in 15 races he has run 25th or worse.

On the other hand, Busch has finished in the top four on nine occasions and has three victories to his credit, most in the series so far this year.

“Just been feeling the motor kind of going south for about 30 laps or so and it finally let go,” Busch said of Sunday’s failure. “At least there was plenty of warning, and I knew it was going to get hot in there, and it certainly did once it let go and it was on fire. It’s just been a dismal month, just haven’t been able to hit anything and get good finishes going.

“Our car has been really fast and (crew chief) Adam (Stevens) and the guys have been doing a great job getting us good stuff to the race track, but it just wasn’t our day today… We started out the season good and strong and had some top fives and such, so it was a good foundation for us to build off of. We’d like to be able to get our luck turned around and get back to finishing races where we know we can.”

By Reid Spencer

NASCAR Wire SErvice

Logano is Two-for-Two with New Aero Package

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In the second race that featured NASCAR’s new lower-downforce package, Joey Logano lowered the boom—again. 

There was one major difference between Joey Logano’s victory in Sunday’s FireKeepers 400 at Michigan International Speedway and his win May 21 in the Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte. This one counted in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings and punched Logano’s ticket into the Chase.

But it remained abundantly clear that Team Penske already has a handle on the aerodynamic configuration the sanctioning body is considering for 2017.
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Daniel Suarez Scores Breakthrough Victory at Michigan

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Daniel Suarez was speechless—and justifiably so.

The Mexican driver had just passed Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch for the lead on the next-to-last lap and held on to win Saturday’s Menards 250 presented by Valvoline NASCAR XFINITY Series race at Michigan International Speedway by 0.280 seconds over the man who sets the standard in the series.

The first Mexican-born driver to win a NASCAR national series race, Suarez overcame a pit road speeding penalty assessed on lap 29 of 125 under the first of three cautions. He restarted eighth after the third caution on lap 91, caught and passed Elliott Sadler for second place with ten laps left and ran down Busch for the lead on lap 124. Continue reading

Late Pass Gives William Byron Second Career Victory

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Teenager William Byron overhauled Matt Crafton with five laps remaining and drove to victory in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rattlesnake 400 Friday night at Texas Motor Speedway.

Byron, of Kyle Busch Motorsports, posted his second series victory at the expense of Crafton, who dominated the 167-lapper after brushing the turn three wall 11 laps into the night. Byron earned his breakthrough series victory earlier this season at Kansas Speedway, a 1.5-mile quad-oval similar to TMS.

Byron, 18, is the youngest Truck Series winner at TMS and the second-youngest overall, a record held by Chase Elliott in the NASCAR XFINITY Series in 2014. Continue reading