Racing in front of his home fans during last weekend's Nationwide Series race in rain-soaked Montreal, Carpentier wasn't too busy chasing his first stock car win to keep from taking a look at one of the big TV screens, where he caught Carl Edwards using a squeegee on his windshield.
"I thought that was the highlight of the race," Carpentier said. "I was like, 'Where the heck did he get that squeegee at?' I thought maybe he stopped at a gas station on the way to the track. It was funny."
Carpentier's rookie NASCAR season hasn't been quite as amusing.
The former open wheel star enters this weekend's Sprint Cup race at Watkins Glen 37th in the season points standings. He'll need to crack the top 35 to guarantee his No. 10 Gillett Evernham Motorsports team a spot on the series next year.
If Carpentier is nervous about his job status, it doesn't show. The easygoing Canadian has become popular with fellow drivers and seems to smile no matter the situation. He knows this weekend could be his final opportunity to convince his sponsors he deserves another year, but he's not going to treat every lap as his last.
"If you worry about it, you'll perform worse most of the time," he said.
The race at the Glen marks the one-year anniversary of Carpentier's Sprint Cup debut. He navigated the tricky road course deftly last summer, finishing 22nd after starting 40th.
"We had a good race," he said. "I went off track a couple of times (but) the car was fast and hopefully we'll have the same type of car this weekend."
Good cars have been hard to come by this year. Carpentier failed to qualify for Daytona and didn't finish in the top half of the field in his first 15 races, but thinks his team is turning it around. He won his first pole in New Hampshire, then finished a season-best 14th in Chicago.
"The last five races and ever since we won the pole in Loudon, it's given us a little bit more confidence and now we're running top-20 a little bit more," Carpentier said. "I'm starting to battle with (the Cup) drivers a little bit more where I couldn't early on out there."
Now, the two-year transition from open wheel to NASCAR's top circuit appears to be paying off for Carpentier, who has quickly gained the respect of his fellow drivers.
His Nationwide Series results have been good, too. Carpentier has four top 10s in five starts this year and might have won in his home country if the Montreal race hadn't been shortened by rain. He settled for second.
The fact he was in position to win is a testament to Carpentier's patience, something he had in short supply early in the season.
"In Indy cars, you can attack all the time," he said. "You still have to be smooth, but you can enter (a corner) as late as you want and just abuse the car. I think you need a little bit more finesse with a stock car than you do with an Indy car, otherwise you will just burn everything up."
It's a lesson Carpentier learned early in the season. Every weekend he'd find himself in a battle of wills with his car, and most of the time the car won.
"You have to let the car do what it wants," he said. "That's the biggest thing I've learned. I'm still learning. Every race that we go to, every track that I race on, I'm still learning a little bit more and more."
He hopes that knowledge will translate at the Glen. While he's still a little leery running in traffic on big ovals, Carpentier feels comfortable when the track makes you turn left and right.
"Things don't happen so fast as when you're in an Indy car," he said. "Even at an (oval) track like Las Vegas, I was coming down the straightaway and I would snap sideways with the car. But on a road course, things happen a little bit more slowly."
A strong finish this weekend would make a compelling argument for Carpentier's return next year. Even if Gillett Evernham decides to let him go, don't expect Carpentier to return to his open wheel roots.
"I like NASCAR," he said. "I like the ovals and that's what I want to do. The IRL is going away from ovals and for me, I have no interest in going back."
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