Saturday, November 28, 2009

Cup drivers expecting intense heat at Michigan

BROOKLYN, Mich. — After watching rain wipe out the races for two Sundays in a row, drivers will have to contend with a different weather element in scorching heat Sunday at Michigan International Speedway.

"It's going to be a battle inside the car," Kurt Busch said. "You just hope that you're hydrated enough and that you can keep as much heat out of the car as you can. Mentally, you just have to suck it up and concentrate on driving the race car and not worrying about how hot you are."

Sunday's forecast is for temperatures in the high 20s C, with only a slight possibility of scattered afternoon thunderstorms. The heat won't be fun, but drivers will anything over yet another rained-out race.

Jimmie Johnson called for earlier start times to races, perhaps allowing more time to get races in even when rain postpones the action on a Sunday.

"I think we need to start the races early enough so that you can have a rain shower, you can get the track dryers out to dry the track and go back racing and have a chance to complete the event," Johnson said. "I was thinking the same thing when I was sitting in my bus (last Sunday) knowing we were going to go to our second Monday race."

Johnson understands the argument for starting races late enough to target fans on the West Coast - he's from California - but he'd rather have a better chance at racing Sundays instead of Mondays.

"It's great to target the perfect time zone, the perfect viewing audience, and I understand those factors given a perfect situation," Johnson said. "But when you race as often as we do and all around the country and weather being an issue, I guess my point of view is from living it ... week to week. We should have raced on Sunday and been home on Monday."

TESTING, TESTING: NASCAR president Mike Helton said officials are close to a decision on the sport's testing policy for next season. NASCAR banned all testing at racetracks where it sanctions events this season, a move intended to cut costs for teams.

"Right now, the question is, 'Why do anything different right now?"' Helton said. "And again, I go back to the fact that suspending testing was an economic issue more than anything, and the input that we get from the team owners and the crew chiefs has a lot to weigh in on what we would do if we do anything different."

Helton also said officials from NASCAR and track ownership group International Speedway Corp. are looking at potential safety changes at Watkins Glen after Sam Hornish Jr.'s multicar accident there Monday.

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