![]() |
|||||
|
WALLACE VIEWS
TALLADEGA AS "MOST PIVOTAL" REMAINING RACE;
|
|||||
|
TALLADEGA, Ala. (Oct. 1, 2002)-Miller Lite Team Penske driver Rusty Wallace is calling this weekend's EA Sports 500 at Talladega Superspeedway the "most pivotal" of the seven races remaining on the 2002 NASCAR Winston Cup schedule. Meanwhile, Doug Ingold, gas man for Wallace's No. 2 Miller Lite Ford Taurus, says the smaller fuel cell rule mandated for this weekend's final restrictor-plate race of the season could produce a rare scenario.a race with no four-tire pit stops. "When you stop and take
a look at the remaining races, you have to point to this weekend at Talladega
as being probably the most pivotal," said Wallace, who closed to
within 137 points of the lead in the Winston Cup standings after a third-place
finish at Kansas Speedway on Sunday. "You can look at all the other
races left and say that your preparation and durability are the biggest
factors involved. At Talladega, you certainly have to consider all of
that, but the most important thing you have to add to the equation is
missing the big wreck. I mean nobody comes in there looking to wreck,
but it seems to just about always For Sunday's race on the mammoth 2.66-mile Talladega track, NASCAR is reducing the size of the fuel cell to 20 by 17 by 9 3/4 inches. The current tank holds 22 gallons; the new dimension will hold about 12.5 gallons. "I understand what NASCAR's trying to do with this smaller fuel cell rule that we'll be running under," said Wallace, who finished second in the most recent restrictor-plate race, the July 6 Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Speedway. "They're looking at it producing more pit stops which will maybe break the field up into a bunch of smaller packs running out there instead of just one giant cluster. "Now that theory may just work, I don't know for sure and it's yet to be seen," added Wallace. "It definitely will put additional pressure on the guys for getting the job done all day in the pits. But even if it does make for smaller packs, you always have to look at what will happen at the beginning of the race. "When the green flag
falls and until the first round of pit stops Doug Ingold, Wallace's veteran gasman, says Sunday's 500-mile, 188-lap race on the Alabama track could be "the most unusual race we've ever run." "It's gonna' be interesting,
to say the least," said Ingold. "But, what if there are
no yellow-flag stops in the early part of the "I understand that this Sunday's race could very well be a test run for using the smaller (fuel) cells at some of the other tracks.tracks like Michigan and others where the fuel mileage has been so key and the tire wear not much of a big deal at all. They're saying it could be a trial run to take this thing elsewhere. "As far as the smaller
fuel cells go, I don't think the dump can "But all the stuff that can happen.all that will be going on Sunday.it could produce a race that they'll be talking about for years to come," concluded Ingold. "I just hope we can finish 500 miles at Talladega without anybody getting hurt out on the track and on pit road." Friday's 3:05 p.m. CDT single round of qualifying will allocate all the starting spots for Sunday's 500-mile, 188-lap race. The EA Sports 500 has a 12:00 noon CDT starting time on Sunday and features live coverage by NBC-TV and MRN Radio.
|
|||||
Copyright © 2000-2002 Rusty Wallace, Inc.
All rights reserved. Do not duplicate or redistribute in any form.
Photographs © 2000-2001 Steven Rose, Motorsports Memories Photography
Site Designed and Maintained
by Animink Incorporated