“What did you expect?” he asked. “Seriously, what did you expect?” Montoya is still reeling from the midweek firing of Jimmy Elledge, a personnel decision that’s given the former Formula One driver his third crew chief in a month. Frustrated that his opposition to the dismissal went unheeded, Montoya is now worried that his team is ill-prepared for Sunday’s race at Lowe’s Motor Speedway.
Because new crew chief Brian Pattie had just two days to dissect Elledge’s setup on the No. 42 Dodge, changes were made on the fly during a difficult Thursday practice session that saw Montoya post the 45th slowest speed. It didn’t improve during qualifying, when Montoya was 47th out of 48 cars and will start next-to-last in the Coca-Cola 600.
Team owner Chip Ganassi sympathizes with Montoya’s frustration, but said Elledge’s dismissal was warranted after the crew chief engaged in a heated argument with competition director Steve Hmiel during last week’s All-Star race.
Elledge declined to comment on his dismissal, but Montoya has been vocal in his opposition of the decision. Elledge had only been atop his pit box for four races, dating back to an earlier crew chief swap that sent Donnie Wingo over to Reed Sorenson’s slumping team.
“They told me ‘We are thinking of getting rid of Jimmy’ and I said ‘Don’t do it,’ ” Montoya said earlier this week. “Next thing I knew, they did. That’s what happened. You are going to have to ask somebody else about it, because I wasn’t involved in this.”
The emotional Montoya has rode a wave of them this week over the direction of his race team. The Colombian had a successful first season in NASCAR after making the highly publicized jump from Formula One, but this second year has not been as smooth.
Montoya has just one top-10 finish - a second-place in Elledge’s debut race at Talladega - and he’s currently 16th in the Sprint Cup Series standings.
“I’m concerned about the forward progress of my teams every single day, and I work on it every single day,” Ganassi said. “Just because the whole world doesn’t know what I’m doing, doesn’t mean I’m not doing anything at all.”
Tony Stewart, who has two NASCAR titles and one Indy Racing League championship, said it’s unfair to compare Ganassi’s two programs because it’s like “apples and oranges.” But through past dealings with Ganassi, Stewart knows the car owner won’t rest until he gets all his programs in sync. In addition to the successful IRL operation, Ganassi’s Grand-Am operation leads the driver and team Daytona prototype standings.

|
|