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Dicey top lane could play big role in Bristol Cup dirt race

The question: Who will be the first NASCAR Cup Series driver to win on Easter since Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace in 1989 at Richmond Raceway?

The answer to that question may depend on the answer to another: Which drivers will run the top lane in Sunday night’s 250-lap race on the Bristol Motor Speedway dirt track?

As several drivers found out in Friday’s practice sessions, the stronger composite body of their new Next Gen cars wasn’t enough to protect against suspension damage after hitting the wall with the right-rear corner.

Adding to the risk up top is the lack of a proper dirt cushion against the wall for drivers to lean on.

William Byron, among the unlucky ones to find the fence Friday, and Aric Almirola both used the term “crumbs” to describe track conditions against the wall.

Almirola’s teammate at Stewart-Haas Racing, Kevin Harvick, described the same area as “a big pile of dust.”

Altogether, it’s made for some wariness from those behind the wheel.

“I just don’t think you can (hit the wall) with the suspension,” Byron said Friday. “You’re going to hit the wall and something is going to break or it’s going to bend really bad.

“Every time I hit the wall (Friday), my (steering) wheel was at least a couple of numbers clockwise off. I don’t think I could race a whole race that way. We’ve just got to try to stay off it.”

Said Harvick on the subject: “The same guys have all hit the wall and they break the toe link. You hit the wall and the car is 45 degrees yawed out – it’s gonna hit the back of the wheel and it’s gonna break the toe link.

“There’s really no way around that, so I don’t know what to tell them, other than don’t hit the wall.”

Ryan Blaney noted that even dirt-track aces like Kyle Larson and Christopher Bell

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