• Montoya: NASCAR tough for drivers without dirt racing backgrounds

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 14 15:35:27 2019
    from https://www.autosport.com/nascar/news/142079/montoya-nascar-tough-without-dirt-background

    Montoya: NASCAR tough for drivers without dirt racing backgrounds
    By Jack Benyon @jackbenyon Published on Wednesday March 13th 2019 NASCAR
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    Juan Pablo Montoya believes a lack of dirt racing backgrounds among
    foreign drivers is one of the key reasons why more are not competing in
    the NASCAR Cup Series.

    Montoya moved into NASCAR full-time in 2007 following the end of his
    Formula 1 career at McLaren, and took two wins in 255 starts, mostly
    with Chip Ganassi Racing.

    In an extended interview with Motorsport Report's Julia Piquet, Montoya
    said he believes the fact that most countries encourage karting on
    asphalt means drivers from outside the US are at a disadvantage compared
    to those rising through the ranks in North America.

    Mexican Daniel Suarez is currently the only foreign-born driver
    competing in the top-tier of NASCAR competition with Stewart-Haas Racing.

    "The culture when you grow up racing in Latin America or Europe, you
    grow up racing karts on asphalt and circuits, you don't grow up doing
    ovals or dirt," said Montoya.

    "Dirt is a big part of what you need to do to be good in NASCAR. That
    was one of my biggest struggles at the beginning.

    "When you get out of shape in an open-wheel car and you think you're
    going to wreck, like you're crashing, that's when the NASCAR starts
    working like, 'OK, this is where I need to be'.

    "That feeling when you think you're going to crash, it's tough because
    at that point you are only about right.

    "So, mentally to understand, 'Hey, you're OK [the car is just loose],
    it's tough."

    The 2009 season was Montoya's best in NASCAR, when he finished eight
    overall with the Ganassi team he had dominated Champ Car with in 1999.

    He became the first foreign-born driver to qualify the final 10 shootout
    known as 'The Chase' that year.

    "We had a shot at the championship until I think Texas, when [Carl]
    Edwards wrecked us," added Montoya, who is competing in the IMSA
    Sportscar Championship with Penske this year and in the Le Mans 24 Hours
    with LMP2 squad United Autosports.

    "Until that point we were in a really good position. We had a strong car.

    "One of the tough things is, Ganassi has never been a top team in NASCAR.

    "They do a really good job, and when I went there I knew from day one,
    he [Chip Ganassi] told me, 'We aren't a top team but we want to take it
    there'.

    "For me it was a good opportunity because I could grow with the team and
    make it better and we did.

    "We won races and made it to the Chase and we were in a really good
    position.

    "Then a lot of changes were made in the team and all the key people that
    made the cars go fast went. A lot of politicking went in and I think the
    wrong people got fired."

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  • From John McCoy@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Sun Mar 17 16:12:05 2019
    a425couple <[email protected]> wrote in news:[email protected]:

    "The culture when you grow up racing in Latin America or Europe, you
    grow up racing karts on asphalt and circuits, you don't grow up doing
    ovals or dirt," said Montoya.

    If you put the emphasis there on ovals rather than dirt, that
    aligns with what I've seen many other drivers say, going back
    to David Hobbs years ago. Hobbo was in the 76 Daytona 500,
    and one of the USAC guys (Foyt or Andretti, I forget which)
    told him how to set the car up. Hobbs ignored that and set
    it up to what he felt was fast & comfortable, and about spun
    out the first time a car went past him in practice. _Then_ he
    understood why he was being told to setup the car a certain way.

    John

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