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 Friday, October 6
Tire shortage a monkey wrench for NASCAR
 
 Associated Press

CONCORD, N.C. -- If there's one constant in racing it's tires: Every car has them and all sets are exactly the same.

But this weekend there's a tire shortage, and that could have big implications for two NASCAR races at Lowe's Motor Speedway.

Because hundreds of tires were thrown away after failing a quality-control test at its Akron, Ohio, production plant, Goodyear officials warned NASCAR officials they might not have enough tires to get through the weekend.

On Friday, NASCAR moved quickly to remedy the situation by changing the right-side tires the Busch teams will use in Saturday's All Pro Bumper to Bumper 300 to a different model.

The Busch teams then had to return their unused original tires to Goodyear, which then distributed them to the Winston Cup teams for use in Sunday's UAW-GM Quality 500.

"Goodyear came to us and told us they might have a problem and we felt like we were at the point of no return," Winston Cup director Gary Nelson said. "We didn't want to take a chance, so we made the change."

The change effects Busch and Winston Cup teams dramatically.

Winston Cup teams need at least seven sets of tires for a typical race. Because of the shortage, they are now forced to ration what they have over the remaining practices to ensure they have enough left on Sunday.

By taking the tires from the Busch teams, NASCAR is trying to guarantee the Winston Cup teams will have enough.

But there is no guarantee, and that changes pit-stop strategies at a track where races often come down to one final tire change.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. pulled off a stunning victory at this track in May. He gambled by changing all four tires on the final pit stop of The Winston when the rest of the field took only two.

In sixth place before the tire change, Earnhardt Jr. rode the fresh set to victory.

Winston Cup teams had Friday off and weren't at the track to comment on the change. But Harold Holly, crew chief for Bush series points leader Jeff Green, said the tire shortage would have a huge effect on the teams.

"They are going to be limited to what they can practice on to make sure they have enough for the race and that should never happen," he said. "This is a track that often comes down to the last pit stop and what each team has left for tires."

The change also harmed all the Busch teams that had practiced and set up their cars based on one kind of right-front tire only to have it switched the day before the race.

Compounding the problem was that NASCAR forbid any Busch teams that had already qualified for the race to practice on Friday morning to conserve tires.

Only teams still trying to make the field were allowed on the track, and they were allowed to run only two laps at a time to keep from wearing down tires.

Once the second-round qualifying was over, Goodyear gave all Busch teams one free set of new tires and all 43 cars were allowed to test them during afternoon practice.

The teams then had to buy whatever else they needed, at $1,500 per set of four tires.

"It's ridiculous, and it's expensive and it's frustrating," Holly said. "We used seven sets of tires to test for this race and now all that data is useless and all the money is wasted. And when we finally get the new tires we have to use, we get just one practice session to adjust to them.

"It's pretty late in the game to be making this change."
 


AUDIO/VIDEO
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 Goodyear's Director of Racing Greg Stucker explains the tire shortage at this week's races.
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 Jeff Burton feels that with the change of tires, his team is a bit behind schedule.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6