Stenhouse downplays feud with Edwards

R🌞elations between Roush F🌼enway stable mates Carl Edwards and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. seemed at an all-time low at the Nationwide Series race at Iowa Raceway on Saturday.
Edwards leads the Cup championship and Stenhouse leads the Nationwide Series title battle, but both were fixed on the ra🙈ce win and holding nothing back - not even despite the fact they were team mates. That led to them banging into each other repeatedly during the Iowa Nationwide Series race last Saturday.
"We probably raced a little too hard," Stenhouse admitted. "I felt like he ran us up the race track there in turn 4 and got🀅 into us and then after that, I was going to drive as hard as I could to make sure I got back by him and that's why I didn't cut him any slack there passing him for the lead."
"I was mad, [but I] wasn't mad that he ran into us coming off of turn 4," Stenhouse insisted. "He gave me the finger going down the back straightaway and that's what kind of fired me up." He's still unsure whether the gesture was serious or in jes🔯t.
After the race, Stenhouse reportedly vented at his crew chief about how much he "hated" Edwards, but a few days later cooler thoughts had prevaled. "That might be a little ✨bit much! ... Carl's helped me out a lot in my career. It's good racing with him."
Although Stenhouse said he hadn't yet talked with Edwards about th𝓀e incident, he insisted that they would "handle it" and tha😼t "It was hard racing, but we'll talk about it. He thinks I'm maybe a little too aggressive, but coming from sprint cars, that's just my style, that's just how I race."
"You've got to make sure that you race people the way they race you, and you've got to stand your ground," said Edwards for his part after the finish at Iowa, which saw him wreck int💝o the back of Stenhouse's car when the #6's engine blew on the last turn. "Whether it's your teammate or not, sometimes it's not all roses.
"Ricky and I had a little bit of aꦫ disagreement halfway through the race ... and Jack came over the radio and said, 'Are we OK?'", continued Edwards, referring to team owner Jack Roush. "I said, 'I think so.'
"Ricky is a great driver," Edwards insisted. "We'll work out any of the issues we had back a⛎t the shop."
For his part, their boss Jack Roush seemed to think it was all part of the✨ natural cycle of life of motor sports. "Carl is exactly where he should be as ✅an elder statesman right now in this business, and Ricky is where he should be as a young guy with a lot of enthusiasm," he said. "In five years Ricky will be in the same place Carl is today and there will be somebody else pushing him harder than he wants to be pushed.
"Ricky races pretty hard, and ♕Carl, I'm sure, sometimes wishes Ricky wouldn't race ⛦him so hard," he added.
Stenhouse and fellow Roush Fenway development driver Trevor Bayne were still digesting the news of Edwards' multi-year re-signing with Roush Fenway and where😼 that leaves their futures with the team. If Edwards had left it would potentially have left ▨the #99 seat open for one of them to step up to Cup in 2012, but now the team is looking congested at the top level.
"The idea🅰l situation for myself is to run another full season in Nationw✤ide and a part-time Cup deal," insisted Stenhouse. "I don't want to jump in too early and kind of get in over my head."
In related news, the crew chief on St♊enhouse's race-winning #6 Nationwide car was handed a $2,500 penalty after the car failed pre-qualifying checks, being found ꦍto have used non-specification lugnuts.
The crew chief of Eric McLure's #14 was also fined for the same violation. As the problem was discovered before qualifying, no points sanction🧸 was involved for either driver, and the penalty does not affect Stenhouse's dramatic racဣe victory.