Month: June 2011

  • J. J. Yeley Has One Word for Daytona: Impressive

    J. J. Yeley will be back on track this July 4th weekend for the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway. As he pilots the No. 46 Red Line Oil Chevrolet Impala for Whitney Motorsports, the driver has just one word for the superspeedway: ‘impressive.’

    “I will always remember the first time I went to Daytona International Speedway,” Yeley said. “I couldn’t believe that the race track was right in the middle of town.”

     

    [media-credit name=”J.J. Yeley Official Facebook Page” align=”alignright” width=”200″][/media-credit]


    “It’s such a magnificent facility,” Yeley continued. “The fact that this city has grown up around the track and has supported it like they do is what makes it so special.”

     

    “It’s a place that takes your breath away.”

    One thing that Yeley knows for sure is that he will have to have a qualifying lap that will take his breath away at Daytona. He is in the unenviable position of being a ‘go or go homer’ for this race.

    “When you come to a place like this, you’ve got what you got,” Yeley said. “We’ll tune on the engine as best we can and hope that the new body that we’ve put on this car is streamlined enough to make us fast enough to qualify in.”

    “It’s a horrible position honestly to have to be in, especially when you come to a restrictor plate track,” Yeley continued. “It’s tough because there is nothing that I can do as a driver to help make the car go faster.  But if we can make it into the race, we’ll be pretty excited about it.”

    While Yeley is not terribly fond of the two-car tandem racing that has become the norm at Daytona, he is still excited about trying to find that partner to hook up with to go to the front.

    “As long as you have a partner, it’s kind of exciting,” Yeley said with a chuckle. “The problem is there are 43 cars that start the race so someone is going to be left out.”

    “The toughest part is the vision,” Yeley continued. “If you are the car that is pushing, you really are limited in what you can see. For the most part, you’re just looking at the back of the car in front of you, hoping that wherever he is going to lead you is a safe place.”

    Yeley, like so many of the other Cup drivers, already has a partner in mind with whom he would like to race. But he also realizes that he may have to have a backup plan, a particularly difficult situation for a single car team.

    “Everyone knows who they are going to work with at the start of the race,” Yeley said. “I worked with Terry Labonte a bunch at Talladega and we worked very well together, but then he had an engine problem.”

    “Unfortunately, we don’t have others on speed dial,” Yeley continued. “Being a single car team, it’s not going to be as easy to have other guys on the same system, like the Hendrick guys.”

    “We’ll sit down and talk and go through the scenarios,” Yeley said. “We know the single car teams that also need help.”

    “There’s guys that you want to work with and guys that you want to stay away as far as you possibly can,” Yeley continued. “Hopefully, we can hook up with Terry Labonte again and can get to the front.”

    Yeley is looking forward not only to partnering with other drivers for the Daytona race but also is seeking sponsorship partners so that he can race more this season.

    “We have run five races so far this year,” Yeley said. “We’ve had to start and park the rest of them.”

    “This is one of the races on our schedule where we will run the entire race.”

    While looking forward to running the full race, Yeley is also strangely looking forward to ‘silly season,’ a time when drivers and teams start making changes. And he is making sure that he is at the track and keeping his name out there as part of the ‘silly season’ mix.

    “Right now, we’re getting into ‘silly season’ and there’s a lot of teams looking to make changes,” Yeley said. “I’m trying to be a part of those discussions. The biggest thing for me is to qualify and be competitive with the equipment that I have so we can prove to people that this is where we belong.”

    Another way that Yeley is keeping his name out in front, as well as connecting with his fans, is through the use of social media.  He has concocted interesting games and promotions, from ‘Speed Dice’ on his Facebook page to ‘Pay it Forward Friday’ on his Twitter account.

    “Obviously, this is the time and age of technology,” Yeley said. “So, you have to take advantage of everything you can.”

    “I’ve been on Twitter for a year and a half and now Facebook,” Yeley continued. “It’s a way you can really communicate with fans one on one.”

    Yeley hopes that all fans, including his Facebook friends and Twitter followers, will be watching him not only as he qualifies his way into the Coke Zero 400 but also as he races toward the checkered flag. What are Yeley’s predictions for the big race?

    “If I could look into my crystal ball and we were able to come out of Daytona with a top-10, that would be very special for this team and myself,” Yeley said. “For a team with one car and one speedway engine, that would be great and is very doable.”

  • Denny Hamlin Says Kyle Busch Aggressive But Not an Instigator

    Denny Hamlin Says Kyle Busch Aggressive But Not an Instigator

    Even though Denny Hamlin had not seen the handshake between his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch and Richard Childress Racing’s Kevin Harvick, he still had plenty to say about it.

    [media-credit name=”Kirk Schroll” align=”alignright” width=”240″][/media-credit]“I would consider it genuine,” Hamlin said Thursday at Daytona. “Kyle’s just not a head games type of guy, I don’t believe. In 2008 when he was winning a lot of races I remember a race throughout the season where a lot of emphasis was being put on Kyle and different things that he was doing and I remember a lot of teams going after them as far as playing heads games and stuff. But Kyle never really responds to that, I don’t feel like.”

    Harvick and his supporters would disagree. At Darlington in May, Busch hooked Harvick under a caution flag after the two raced hard a few laps before. Their actions carried over to pit road and led to NASCAR placing them on probation until June 15.

    Probation or not, the two never stopped racing each other as hard as they did before. Just days before their probation period was to be over, Harvick ran Busch down the frontstretch at Pocono and said afterwards Busch knows he has one coming. Harvick sounding as though Busch started it and he was going to finish it.

    It made Hamlin’s comments on Thursday particularly interesting. According to Hamlin his teammate is tough but not dirty.

    “He [Busch] never really does anything on-track to instigate it. I feel like he’s one of the most fair racers really out there. Even though he’s aggressive at times, he does a pretty good job of keeping it relatively safe for other drivers. I would consider it something that is sincere.”

    When asked directly about last weekend Busch said, “I felt like we had a really good race with each other. So, I just wanted to let him know that. We gave each other great room and raced each other hard and clean. And, that’s all there is to it.” Adding that those around the sport looked too much into it.

    Harvick on the other hand was confused by what took place. He didn’t know where it came from and said things between he and Busch aren’t necessarily fine because they only raced each other for half a lap.

    But for Hamlin, having been involved in altercations with Harvick last season, he has a different view. The two traded words and paint in the Chase at Dover after taking shots at each other’s organizations. Harvick had also previously been involved in incidents with another JGR driver, Joey Logano, making it three for three with the Gibbs team. All of which taught Hamlin a lesson.

    “As far as Harvick, that’s just kind of the team make-up I believe,” said Hamlin. “Whether it’s back to the old 3 car or anything like that, that team has always kind of been in those situations. When they’re racing for championships, that’s part of their game that they play.”

    Ones Hamlin fell for last season, something he acknowledges, while also saying some drivers are better at staying away from altercations than others. There are too many personalities in this sport for them all to fit on one track.

    Harvick and Busch, or Childress and Busch have plenty of personality to go around. While Hamlin has nothing but praise for his teammate and his driving style, team owner Richard Childress isn’t a fan. He made that known in Kansas a few weeks ago.

    In Hamlin’s mind though, the feud between the two organizations or any two drivers blow over in time. Something yet to be seen in this instance.

    “A lot of times they don’t mesh well together and we saw that with the 29 and the 18 this year,” said Hamlin. “In general, everyone is going to work it out in time. Even though you consider yourself the toughest of rivals we still do a lot of things together that kind of patch that up.”

  • CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA TWO: Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA TWO: Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    COKE ZERO 400

    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    JUNE 30, 2011

    DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD HERITAGE/AMP ENERGY CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at Daytona International Speedway and discussed two-car draft, going to Kentucky Speedway, winning in July in 2001 and other topics. Full transcript:

    TALK ABOUT THE 10-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF YOUR WIN HERE AT DAYTONA IN JULY: “I didn’t even think about it. I guess that’s cool. I sure wished that was the first year anniversary of when we won here. That would be better.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE TWO-CAR TANDEM DRAFTING HERE AT DAYTONA? “I’d rather have control of my own destiny and be able to go out there and race and just do my own work and worry about my own self. It’s really weird and kinda wrong on some levels to race that way and to think like you think. You take care of somebody and you feel this obligation to take care of them and then worry about having them take care of you and how that makes them feel. Been growing up all these years racin’ for number one-lookin’ out for number one. Doing my job. This is what I need to do. I need to do this to get up through the pack. This is how my car drives and now you are doing it so different. Your thought process and everything you think about during the race is nothing near that. It is just different and weird. It won’t be like that forever I assume and hopefully I am alive and still racin’ when it goes back to the way it was because I just really enjoy lookin’ out for number one, man. If you had a car that drive up through there and you were smart about drafting and knew what you were doing, you could make some cool things happen and that was pretty fun.”

    DO YOU EXPECT IT TO BE ANY DIFFERENT IN JULY THAN IT WAS IN FEBRUARY? “I think that the track pavement is in really, really good shape. Especially the technology they have these days. A lot of these tracks that they are repaving here were paved in the 90s if not early when the technology was similar to your average road construction and repaving job. But now these days, they’ve got a lot better technology. It’s more racing specific, methods and these surfaces will last a lot longer. If you look at Charlotte, it still looks like it was paved last year. Darlington is doing very well. It is taking these tracks a little longer to start to sort of wear away and get slick. I like them really smooth when they pave them, but, I also like how slick the older pavement is as far as the racing goes. It’ll get back the way it used to be. We won’t be able to push each other through the corners just because it will spin each other out once the pavement slickens up a little bit. I think it is going to take a little longer than it usually does with the new technology that they have. The pavement just holds up so well which it needs to. We’ll just have to see.”

    WHAT IS GOING TO BE THE BIGGEST CHALLENGE NEXT WEEK FOR THE FIRST RACE AT KENTUCKY SPEEDWAY? “We have all been there testing so there is no real challenge. Everybody has tested there at least a dozen times in their careers, so, it’s not like opening up a new place. We just haven’t had a full-on race there and everybody will be trying. When you test, you don’t get around cars as much. Everybody will be wantin’ to get on the race track and get around people and see how the aero is and see what you need to work on with your car when you are in traffic.”

    HOW MUCH DO NEW TRACKS AGE IN A FEW MONTHS? “None, really, for the first few months. The technology they have now is really, really amazing. They do a great job of getting it smooth and the surface itself holds together really well. That’s the way to do it. You hate to see a track deteriorate to the point where it needs to be repaved. You would like the slickness and race-ability of the old asphalt. But when the time comes to do it, it is best to go on and get it over with and get that new surface on its way to turning out to be a good track. Once the tracks get a couple of years on them, the groove starts moving around and the color of the asphalt starts changing and the track starts to lose a little grip and it gets a lot more fun.”

    WITH THE NEW SURFACE, WE HAD AN UNEXPECTED WINNER IN FEBRUARY, DO YOU FEEL LIKE WE WILL SEE MORE OF THE EXPECTED GUYS IN VICTORY LANE? “No, I think you will still see a lot of the unexpected, especially at the (restrictor) plate tracks, man. These tracks are more about the race car than the driver. Whenever you have a fast car, you really have a lot more potential and possibility and the odds are better for you to win.”

    WITH NASCAR’S NEW MARKETIN PROGRAM BEING PUT IN PLACE AND RATINGS UP, IS THIS NASCAR TURNING THE CORNER? “I feel really good about the sport this year. I’ve been running better so I am definitely obviously going to feel better about it just from my standpoint. I think we do a great job. I think the product is pretty decent. I think we can always improve on the competition side of it. Things need to evolve. This sport has always evolved. Look at cars in the 70s, the 80s and the 90s. That always needs to change and be changing. We need to flow with the technology. But, I think we need to stay concerned and focused on the competition side – what happens on the race track. That is what we sell. We don’t sell personalities. It is cool to have personalities and it is great when drivers have good personalities but the fans show up to be a race. We need to make sure we put on a race. So, we need to focus on that and anything else we can do to improve their experience which I think NASCAR is focusing on as far as the pre-race. What they buy when they buy the ticket. What they get; what they see and what they experience is real important too. But, what it all comes down to, if the race itself is not as good as it should be, that’s what we need to stay focused on. I think this year it’s been great. I think this year we have been having good success. Some races will be boring. Some races will be great. Some things you just can’t control. You just have to appreciate what the drivers are trying to do out there and what kind of technology we have got on the race track. You can’t manufacture the perfect race every weekend. You just kind of have to let it play out and some will be great and some won’t”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK IT IS LIKE FOR TREVOR BAYNE COMING BACK HERE THIS TIME? “I believe it probably brings up a lot of memories about that weekend. He is probably just thinking about all the things that happened and how special that was to him. I think it brings it all back, all the memory of that win. Probably just being in here and getting ready to race here again. Obviously he comes in with some confidence having won here, which will help him and hopefully, give him the opportunity to be successful.”

    WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER THINKING WHEN YOU SAW AND HEAR HE WON THE RACE? “He is just a really good kid. He is well rounded and seems very grounded. He is very young but he seems like he appreciates what is happening to him. He appreciates the people that he works with; that has helped him get to where he is today. He does a ton of things away from the race track that are really impressive. His faith and the way he helps people and wants to help people. He wants to be more than just a guy behind the wheel. You would like seeing people like that influence so much do well. You like to see them become part of the foundation of this sport.”

    DO YOU THINK THE DRIVERS WHO HAVE RUN IN RACE CONDITIONS AT KENTUCKY WILL HAVE AN ADVANTAGE? “Not really. If I had never drove a race car in my whole life, maybe. But, I’ve run a race car enough and the guys that haven’t raced in Kentucky in those conditions, we’ve all been around race cars long enough to know what to expect.”

    HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE YOU TO GET COMFORTABLE IN THE CAR WHEN YOU GO TO A NEW TRACK? “20 minutes, probably.

    THIS MORNING SOMEONE ASKED KEVIN HARVICK HOW THE TWO-CAR DRAFT GOT STARTED AND HE SAID WHEN YOU WERE PUSHING JEFF GORDON AROUND TALLADEGA A FEW YEARS AGO THROUGH THE CORNERS, THAT WAS WHEN EVERYONE FIRST REALIZED IT WORKED: “I’ll buy that. I don’t think he is blaming me for what we have today. Maybe he is (LAUGHS) I don’t know. I know Kevin pretty good and I know what he means. But, when you are out there on the race track, you have to do what you have to do even though I don’t prefer this style of racing and believe that it is.I believe in how we used to race before. I believe in how they raced here in the 70s and the 80s even more. When it came down to car and it was a lot more handling. Guys going around here fast enough. Sliding the cars around the corners and stuff. I’m too damn nostalgic for my own good sometimes. I just want to embrace what’s happening and I want to embrace all the changes and the things that are happening throughout the sport but sometimes, you get so happy and used to one way. When you are out there on the race track you are going to do everything you can to win and you are looking for every possible advantage as a driver. If I am the one that found it, I’m sure there are about a dozen drivers in this garage that are going to claim that they’re the ones who did it first. And who knows who it was. But, everybody’s out there is going to try and find any advantage. And those are the types of things that are going to crop up and when repaved those tracks, it made it so much easier. Now with the noses and stuff that these cars have versus the older style car, they match up so well, it was just a matter of time before we got to where we could do it all the time.”

    IS THAT A BADGE OF HONOR IF YOU ARE THE ONE WHO GOT IT STARTED? “No, not so much. No, not really and I don’t know if I was. (Denny) Hamlin and a couple other guys were doing it too. Hopefully the asphalt on both these tracks, Talladega and Daytona, will start to slicken up a little bit over the next couple of years and this will kind of go away to where we can get back to in control of our own destiny and be able to control. I mean, I show up with three teammates, but I am one team; one driver; one group of guys showing up here to control our car. Drive our car around the race track and through the pack and up into the lead on our own. When you have to work with somebody all day long, it just doesn’t feel natural. It feels totally un-natural. I appreciate the partnership that I have formed with Jimmie (Johnson) at ‘Dega and we are going to try to work the same magic this weekend if we are fortunate and both can be competitive all day long. Only because we have to. That is the only way you can do it so you are kind of forced into that situation to work with somebody. We would both rather be in control of our own selves.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE SENTIMENTAL ASPECTS OF YOUR WIN IN THE JULY RACE AT DAYTONA AND HOW SPECIAL IT RANKS IN YOUR CAREER? “It was one of my favorite wins. Of course it was at that moment, I was in a really good place emotionally and personally. It had been a tough year and had been tough on a lot of people around me, a lot of my family and a lot of my close friends. A lot of my Father’s close friends. It was a very difficult time and I didn’t daydream early. I didn’t daydream about coming in a winning that race. I just wanted to come here and race. I just wanted to race; do my job and go to the next race. I didn’t ever see what happened coming. I used to love how the schedule was where they had the off weekend here because this is such a fun town and we would come in on the off weekend before the race and man, we would have a blast partying up and down the strip and hanging out in the bars and stuff all day long next to the beach. It was just so much fun and that’s not the way it is anymore (LAUGHS), but that is a whole different story. I couldn’t believe it, man. I thought that off weekend was there because someone in the France family thought it ought to be, but apparently that’s not the case. We came down here with some friends and just hung out and had some fun and did what we always did down here and showed up to the race track and the car was fast. I just jumped into the car for the race and went around there. I was running about half way through the race and I remember thinking that we’d led a lot and we were really fast. I said man. That was when it dawned on me that I might win; that I could win the race. Then I started getting nervous and anxiety about it. Anytime I get a glimpse of hope that something is going to go right, I start to freakout. But, it all worked out.”

    WHAT WAS THE IMPACT NOT JUST FOR YOU BUT FOR THE FANS, THE PEOPLE AT DEI AND RCR? “You’ll have to ask them how that made them feel. I think (Kevin) Harvick’s win at Atlanta did a lot of great things for RCR around that time. It made me happy to see that happen for that whole team. A lot of things happened, not just my win, I don’t want to put my win on a pedestal among all the great things that a lot of people did that would have brought a little closure to the situation. If my win was a part of it, it definitely helped me. I think it helped some people in my family. My Dad’s sisters and brothers had mentioned that it was a really neat moment for them. It is what it is. We had an awesome car and you couldn’t write a better story.”

    THE MOMENT YOU AND MICHAEL (WALTRIP) EMBRACED, WHAT DID YOU THINK? “That was more fun for me than emotional because I was pulling down into the grass there and the team came running and I saw Michael’s car and it was fun to do it with a friend. It is just fun to be with friend. It is just fun to be celebrating with people and the more the merrier. Bring Michael on, bring his team on, the RCR guys-everybody. Michael had a big part in helping me win that race being my drafting partner and he wanted to be part of the celebration which he had every right to come on down in there. It was a big moment for the whole company, Anytime we were successful that year, we all sort of silently, consciously appreciated whoever in the company made that possible to keep carrying us through the rest of that year. When (Steve) Park was winning and Michael was having success that year, everybody was so appreciative of each other for just trying to keep it going. At that time and that year, we were all, everybody was ‘Let’s just keep this going, we’re going to do whatever it take’. Richie Gilmore and everybody was like ‘we’re just going to make this company something he’d (Dale Earnhardt, Sr.) would be proud of’. It was a good time.”

    IT WAS SAID WHEN THE CHASE WAS CREATED THAT THE RETIREMENT AGE FOR DRIVERS WOULD MOVE UP TO BE 38 TO 40, THAT PEOPLE WOULD RETIRE SOONER? “Oh no man. This sport is pretty tough on you regardless of how they stack them up. But, I see myself going quite a ways, you know. Probably farther than I should.”

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  • CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA TWO: Ryan Newman Press Conf. Transcript

    CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA TWO: Ryan Newman Press Conf. Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    COKE ZERO 400

    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    JUNE 30, 2011

    RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 BASS PRO SHOPS CHEVROLET met with media and discussed the blocking controversy, tandem drafting, recent success of Penske Racing in NASCAR, and more. Full Transcript:

    YOU’VE WON HERE BEFORE. TALK ABOUT THIS WEEKEND AT THE WORLD CENTER OF RACING

    “I’m excited to get back after the Daytona 500 itself, after leading the most laps with our U.S. Army Chevrolet; and I’m excited just the same this week to have Bass Pro Shops and the NRA on our No. 39 Stewart-Haas car. And the tandem drafting is something I look forward to, much more so than the way it used to be, racing-wise. So we’ll see if we can have some fun and put on a good show. It’ll be interesting to see what the weather lets us do here in the next couple of days. I don’t know how much track time we’re going to get. But either way, I’m sure we can put on a good show for the fans on Saturday night.”

    WERE YOU AT ALL SURPRISED WITH THE WAY TONY STEWART RETALIATED AT SONOMA THE WAY HE DID? IN THE TV INTERVIEW, HE SAID HE WOULDN’T CARE IF IT WERE RYAN NEWMAN, HE WOULD HAVE DONE THE SAME THING. WHAT IS YOUR TAKE ON ALL THAT?

    “I’m not a fan at all of blocking and if you don’t block on an oval, you shouldn’t block on a road course; and there are a lot of guys who get in the bad habit of blocking on a road course, especially in Turn 7 and Turn 11 there at Infineon. It’s difficult to be able to work through some of those things when somebody does block in front of you. However his whole retaliation thing worked out, that’s not for me to talk about or say. But it is frustrating. I had guys that blocked me and (I) let them know about it and I got turned around myself twice in Turn 11. So, the blocking part is not cool at all. And it’s something that we as drivers have to address and gain a little more respect out of each other so that we’re not doing that. We can have great racing and great passing there without the blocking.”

    DENNY HAMLIN SAID A WHILE AGO THAT SOME OF HIS CREW GUYS OR YOUR CREW GUYS WALKED BY AND SAID HOW YA’ DOING, TEAMMATE. DOES THIS TANDEM RACING ACTUALLY MEAN THAT YOU’VE GOT 42 POTENTIAL TEAMMATES OUT THERE? DO YOU BECOME MORE FRIENDLY JUST FOR THESE FOUR SUPERSPEEDWAY RACES THAN YOU WOULD ANY OTHER TIME?

    “It’s kind of ironic how some of the things work out because we always talk about how much we work with our teammates and here a teammate means a lot in the essence that it may not be your true teammate, your shop mate, but it may be a teammate of another team that helps push you or work with you in Daytona as well as Talladega and both times got involved in somebody else’s crash. I texted Denny as I was getting in my airplane leaving Talladega I said let’s try it again in Talladega. And he said all right. And in saying that, you can try all you want to try to make a plan to do that and it might not work out. Our cars do work good together. Communication-wise, we’re on top of things it seems like in the car. So it’s a difficult situation and something we’ve had to work through as teams and as drivers and crew chiefs to work with me being on somebody else’s radio frequency or vice-versa. But it’s something that makes it a lot more interesting for me here, coming to the race.”

    HOW MANY PEOPLE WILL YOU HAVE?

    “I don’t know the exact number. I’m going to say 11. It’s not the whole garage. And at the same time, you don’t have to have somebody else’s radio frequency, it just helps. If you get somebody that you’re working with, it’s like a dance partner. You don’t need to communicate. Even just like body language in dancing, you have body language in the way you’re driving the race car so you have an idea. But it does help to be able to see the next group of cars or the next two-wide group of cars or if the track is blocked in front of you when you’re getting pushed. I think it was here in the 500 that (Jeff) Gordon was pushing me and I thought he was going to drive me right into the biggest crash in my life and we ended up missing it (laughs). But he couldn’t see. Every situation is different and the extra communication can be a benefit and it can be a hindrance.”

    AT THIS POINT IN THE SEASON WE’RE AT THE SIX-MONTH POINT WITH 16 RACES IN THE BOOK; YOU’VE BEEN OUT TO THE WEST COAST SEVERAL TIMES, WHAT’S THE FATIGUE FACTOR FOR YOU AND YOUR RACE TEAM?

    “The fatigue-factor shouldn’t be there. If we’re manned correctly and the guys are doing their jobs and we’ve torn up a couple of race cars but it hasn’t been outrageously difficult for us this year. And you know it going in what to expect of the schedule and of the season and when the breaks are and when they’re not. Other guys have had to fluctuate their schedules a little bit on Mondays and sometimes on Sundays to do different things so they can have a little bit of time to themselves sometime on Thursday morning before they fly out on Thursday afternoon. So it’s kind of up to the crew chief to make sure that they’re flexible enough to get the job done and do the things that they need to do to be 100 percent when they get to the race track.”

    WE’RE TRYING TO NAIL DOWN EXAMPLES OF TANDEM RACING IN RECENT YEARS AND THE 2008 DAYTONA 500 COMES TO MIND WHEN KURT (BUSCH) PUSHED YOU AROUND THAT LAST COUPLE OF LAPS

    “Actually it was just the back straightaway on the last lap. He pushed me the length o the straightaway from (Turn) 2 to 3. But in saying that, Kurt and I actually did work on some to tat tandem-style drafting and pushing in practice when we tested here with the brand new race cars. Actually I should say when we tested at Talladega. So we had a little bit of experience. So we had a little bit of experience before we got to the 500 in February and it all just worked out to be there at the last lap the last second; and having that experience gave us a little bit more confidence to do what we did. We had done that with other drivers, but we had never done it as teammates before that point.”

    CAN YOU COMMENT ON THE FACT THAT 30 YEARS AGO, MILITARY GUYS WITH DISABILITIES WERE NO LONGER ABLE TO SERVE; BUT TODAY, THEY ARE STILL SERVING.

    “I know that the Army in particular has a screening process when they’re working with new soldiers. But when they have soldiers that have experience and understand the team commitment and what it is to serve, even having a prosthetic limb, they still allow them to come back and I think there is a lot of merit in that. I’ve seen it, and you’ve probably seen it yourself, going to a place like Walter Reed, those soldiers are literally excited to get back; and after they get back moving again, after they get a bionic arm or a prosthetic limb attached to them, they’re excited to get back with their team and their command and be a part of the U.S. Army and protecting our freedom. You’re right in that the mindset has changed a little bit with technology. Back in the day I’m sure there were people that got pushed to the side even though they were willing because of their physical situation, so it’s nice to see technology help and tie that mental, physical and emotional strength together for soldiers that want to go back to battle.”

    YOU SPOKE EARLIER ABOUT THE BLOCKING ISSUE. WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR STANDING UP FOR THAT? YOU COULD HAVE A ROOM FULL OF PEOPLE AND NOT EVERYBODY IS GOING TO AGREE. IF THERE IS AN ISSUE, HOW DO YOU CONVINCE PEOPLE? “The best example I can give you is what we dealt with here for our first experience here in Daytona when we were working with the tandem drafting and the speed difference between the cars. There was the most respect I’ve ever seen out of all drivers in a Cup race when it came to not blocking somebody with a run because you have the opportunity to get that run back. The racing was good because of that. That same respect doesn’t carry over to road courses. So that’s what I guess as a group, us drivers have to work on; and I’m sure there were plenty of phone calls and plenty of texts and plenty of confrontations whether good or bad after that race that helps us work in that direction. But every time we go to the race track it’s a new set of circumstances; different cars, different tires and different brake packages that we work with to try to make the cars better and faster and we have to develop, I guess our respect develops last of all of those things.”

    COMPARING ROAD COURSES TO OVAL TRACKS HOW DO GET THROUGH THAT MINDSET TO HAVE RESPECT?

    “There is a fine balance. Of all the things that we work on, it’s probably the last thing and the most underdeveloped thing that we have as a group in our garage is respect when it comes to certain drivers at certain times. Yeah, there are times when I’m blocked at Dover or Charlotte or places like and it’s much less often than it is the road course. The road course is the most you’ll ever get blocked or blocking is a part of what we do as a whole. Go back to ’79 when Donnie (Allison) ran Cale (Yarborough) down. He was blocking of sorts. You saw what happened because of it.”

    THAT WAS THE LAST LAP AS OPPOSED TO LAP 50

    “But it’s every lap is like a last lap. You look at the way our competition is. We race every lap like it’s the last lap. There are times when it does slow down a little bit. California and Michigan; big places, Pocono, where you can only do so much, there comes a point where you have to save your race car and save your tires and save your brakes. But on restarts, especially with the double-file restart, it’s definitely added to the excitement and definitely added to us drivers having to have a little bit more demand for respect because of the hard racing that we do. We’re literally going for everything we possibly can; and if that means somebody else’s throat, that’s part of it sometimes. Going for their throat and ripping their throat out are two different things.”

    ON THE VISION ISSUES THAT COME WITH THE TANDEM DRAFTING, IS THERE A WAY THEY COULD ALLEVIATE THAT?

    “It’s not even so much the spoiler as it is when you’re in the car and you’ve got a car in front of your and you’re in the banking and it’s almost like their roof actually blocks it because you’re looking up and out to the left. And the way our cars work and the way you draft, typically you draft off the right side of the bumper, not the left side; so that puts you right in the center line of the guy’s car in front of you, which blocks say 20 degrees left or right. And that’s just the way the physics work out with the way the cars draft. I’m not saying that there is nothing that could be done. But what would be done would probably be more work than it’s worth.”

    PENSKE RACING SEEMS TO BE IN AN UPSWING. AS A FORMER PENSKE DRIVER, WHAT HAS MADE THEM SO QUICK RECENTLY?

    “The OC swings in the every part of the history of our sport. Hendrick, I would say, has the least swing or at least maybe the longest swing, depending on how you look at it. But Roush, Childress, Penske; they’re all typically up and down teams that I’ve seen at least in the 10 years I’ve been a part of this sport; whereas Hendrick has been the benchmark, at least obviously the last five years, but even before that, with the competitiveness and the lack of peaks and valleys in their performance. So, no; no secrets. Sometimes it’s a part of racing. It’s a part of teamwork. It’s a part of sometimes being complacent and therefore not.”

    YOU TOOK A TOUR OF THE NASCAR ARCHIVES, CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THAT?

    “It was really neat to see some of the old trophies. I like old things in general. But to see old historical parts of racing is cool but to see it here at Daytona with all the different spectrums of racing was pretty neat as well. I think the oldest trophy in there was 1905, which I didn’t even know they were building trophies then. And some of the cool old helmets that they had; one was Wynn’s Friction Proofing, which was a sponsor of mine back in my open-wheel days. So it was pretty cool to see an old open-faced helmet. I shouldn’t even say open-faced; it was an open-eared helmet (laughs) from back in the day that carried the same sponsor. It was something I did probably 50 years later. Just things like that. And the fact that it is open for the fans to see, is good. A lot of it is France-family-owned but either way, fans can go in and see it and gain a little bit more appreciation for the history of Daytona, be it the beach or the big oval.”

    About Chevrolet: Founded in Detroit in 1911, Chevrolet celebrates its centennial as a global automotive brand with annual sales of about 4.25 million vehicles in more than 140 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. The Chevrolet portfolio includes iconic performance cars such as Corvette and Camaro; dependable, long-lasting pickups and SUVs such as Silverado and Suburban; and award-winning passenger cars and crossovers such as Spark, Cruze, Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly to gas-free” solutions including Cruze Eco and Volt. Cruze Eco offers 42 mpg highway while Volt offers 35 miles of electric, gasoline-free driving and an additional 344 miles of extended range. Most new Chevrolet models offer OnStar safety, security and convenience technologies including OnStar Hands-Free Calling, Automatic Crash Response and Stolen Vehicle Slowdown. More information regarding Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com ce5&URL=http%3a%2f%2fwww.chevrolet.com%2f> .

  • Kentucky Speedway Sells Out its NASCAR Sprint Cup Series ‘Quaker State 400’

    Kentucky Speedway Sells Out its NASCAR Sprint Cup Series ‘Quaker State 400’

    Infield Pit Road Club and standing room only tickets are on sale now

    [media-credit name=”kentuckyspeedway.com” align=”alignright” width=”233″][/media-credit]SPARTA, Ky. – Kentucky Speedway announces it has sold out the 107,000 grandstand tickets available for the inaugural NASCAR Sprint Cup Series “Quaker State 400.”

    Fans who wish to witness NASCAR history July 9 can still take advantage of the speedway’s Pit Road Club that offers an infield view of the race action from behind pit road wall or $60 standing room only tickets that will provide access to the Turn 1 and Turn 4 concourses.

    Both can be purchased at http://www.kentuckyspeedway.com or by phone at 888-652-7223 and 859-578-2300.

    “Selling out the inaugural ‘Quaker State 400’ with more than a week before the event is a great testament to this market and our fans. Our packed stands will combine with overflowing corporate display, hospitality and camping to create an electric atmosphere as we make Kentucky sports history,” Kentucky Speedway General Manager Mark Simendinger said.

    The speedway’s sold out exterior and infield campgrounds will open on Tuesday, July 5 at noon. Fans still seeking race week campsites can visit http://www.kentuckyspeedway.com and click “Camping” in the top navigation bar for a listing of campgrounds offering good options within walking distance of the speedway and in the surrounding area.

    Race week festivities begin Wednesday, July 6, when NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team haulers visit Cincinnati, Ohio, Lexington, Ky., and Louisville, Ky.

    Roush Fenway Racing (RFR) haulers will visit Fourth Street Live! in downtown Louisville from 11:30 a.m., to 1:00 p.m.; Cincinnati fans can meet Mayor Mark Mallory while viewing Joe Gibbs Racing and Stewart-Haas Racing team haulers at the corner of Fifth St., and Race St., near the Millennium Hotel from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.; and Lexington, Ky., will play host to 35 to 40 haulers at Hamburg Place at 2350 Grey Lag Way from 10:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m., before they depart on a 12-mile parade that will traverse the city by way of Sir Barton Way, Winchester Rd., Midland Ave., E. Main St., and Newtown Pike.

    Kentucky Speedway’s first NASCAR tripleheader weekend opens Thursday, July 7 with the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series “UNOH 225” and additionally features the NASCAR Nationwide Series “Feed The Children 300” on Friday, July 8. Tickets for both events can be reserved through the Kentucky Speedway Web site and ticket office phone numbers.

  • A cooler atmosphere in Michigan

    A cooler atmosphere in Michigan Fans, ticket prices, coolers and NASCAR traditions mean something at MIS

    BROOKLYN, Mich. (June 30, 2011) – At a time when wallets are tight and expendable income is shrinking, why in the world would anyone alienate their guests and potential guests?

    Michigan International Speedway boss Roger Curtis doesn’t know either and has vowed to never undercut loyal guests of the race track.

    “Contrary to what some race promoters think, NASCAR isn’t Macy’s,” he said. “We don’t try to get rid of inventory at the expense of our most loyal guests. And for all the new race fans out there, simply dumping tickets at cut-rate prices is not practiced at every racetrack, and shouldn’t be. So don’t be fooled.”

    In fact, Curtis is so passionate about it he is willing to offer any race fan with a NASCAR Sprint Cup ticket from other racetracks automatic renewal privileges and pricing for 2012 races at the track. That’s right, MIS practices what it preaches and in a big way.

    The speedway introduced tiered pricing two years ago, ensuring race fans who renew will always get the lowest prices guaranteed.

    The average ticket price at Michigan International Speedway hasn’t been this low since Dale Earnhardt won the Daytona 500 in 1998. Back then, as it is today, the average price of a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race ticket at MIS is $56.

    Of course, race fans at MIS who purchased when tickets went on sale paid $20 for a general admission ticket and $35 for a reserved seat.

    Race fans who waited until race day, saw general admission tickets increase to $30 and reserved seats $39 – still low by circuit standards, but not lower than what loyal renewing customers paid.

    So any race fan who wants to receive information about 2012 tickets to MIS need only to send a race ticket from any 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup race with mailing address and contact details to MIS, and you will receive an invitation to buy tickets for 2012. You can even fax us a copy to 517-592-8445 or send us an e-mail to mitickets@MISpeedway.com. You’ll automatically receive a renewal invitation in October for 2012 at MIS.

    And that’s not all! The speedway also increased its cooler and bag sizes, allowing fans to bring even more of their favorite food and beverages through the gates. Guests can bring a 10x10x12-inch soft-sided cooler and an 18x18x4-inch bag or lightweight backpack with all their race-day treats. Two!

    “Our research tells us a lot. And nowhere in any of our surveys has a race fan ever told us that they don’t want to bring coolers to the track,” Curtis said. “In fact, we are doing everything we can to make sure NASCAR is differentiated from other sports in that you can still bring in food and beverages. That’s how it was when Bill France started NASCAR in 1947 – and that’s how it is today.

    “We have too much respect for our guests and for this sport to tell a fan who has chosen to spend his hard-earned dollars on a race ticket at MIS to leave his food and drink at home. Period.”

    Next up at Michigan International Speedway is the Pure Michigan 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup race on August 21. The $30 tickets will move fast, so visit MISpeedway.com or call the MIS ticket hotline at 800-354-1010 today to take advantage of great pricing and free days for kids.

    You can also visit us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/MISpeedway or Tweet with us @MISpeedway.

    Nestled in the lush Irish Hills of Southeastern Michigan, Michigan International Speedway is a Great Escape, a venerable NASCAR national park where race fans and sports fans can get away and enjoy the very best in racing and camaraderie. It’s the fun of NASCAR and the thrill of a great time for guests and drivers alike.

    This year at Michigan International Speedway

    Friday, Aug. 19 Meijer Pole Day Saturday, Aug. 20 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series VFW 200 Sunday, Aug. 21 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

    Sunday, Sept. 11 Spirit of America Blood Drive 10th Anniversary

    Saturday, Sept. 17 MI-Fest

  • Hot 20 over the past 10 – Daytona should be hot, but what about Newman, Martin & Montoya?

    Hot 20 over the past 10 – Daytona should be hot, but what about Newman, Martin & Montoya?

    With ten races to go before the Chase invites get handed out, there are some who just need to keep on doing what they are doing. It is no mistake that Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick currently lead the parade. Then there are the boys who seem to be heating up at just the right time, with Clint Bowyer and Denny Hamlin are among them. Joey Logano and Marcos Ambrose might still be outside the Top 20, but those two boys also are making noise as of late, providing an argument that maybe we should not count them out just yet.

    [media-credit name=”Ed Coombs” align=”alignright” width=”236″][/media-credit]While we expect it to be hot at Daytona this weekend, some of our favorites are starting to chill, and not in a good way. Kyle Busch seems to have put the disappointments of Talladega and Charlotte behind him, but Dale Earnhardt Jr could have done without getting caught up in someone else’s mess last Sunday to finish 41st. Coming after a 21st place conclusion to Michigan, Junior needs some good fortune to come his way. Daytona is one place he might expect that.

    Forget Earnhardt’s troubles, as it is Ryan Newman who is a top ten guy heading down the rabbit hole. He might have three Top Tens in his past ten, but five times he has been outside the Top 20. Mark Martin is 14th in the official standings, but lately he has averaging 17th. You need consistency or wins to make the Chase, and the 52 year old has not been accused of either this campaign.

    Hey, it could be worse…unless your name is Juan Pablo Montoya. In more than half of the last ten events, the Columbian has finished in the back half of the pack. You can say he was consistent by finishing 22nd in California, but I’m sure that is not exactly the kind of result they were looking for.

    The boys begin the ten race countdown to the Chase this Saturday night in Daytona.

    Over the past 10 events…

    Pos – (Official Pos) – Driver – Pts-(W-T5-T10)

    1. (1) Carl Edwards – 359 pts – (0-6-8)
    We might have an idea as to why he leads the standings.

    2. (2) Kevin Harvick – 344 pts – (1-3-5)
    Forget a dress like Prince William’s wife wears. I’m getting my wife a firesuit!

    3. (8) Clint Bowyer – 338 pts – (0-3-6)
    Heating up at about the right time.

    4. (4) Kurt Busch – 334 pts – (1-3-5)
    Started turning right and left the rest behind at Sonoma.

    5. (3) Jimmie Johnson – 333 pts – (1-2-7)
    Six straight; why not?

    6. (6) Matt Kenseth – 326 pts – (2-3-5)
    If you can forget about Daytona, Talladega, Richmond, and Darlington, he’s been great

    7. (11) Denny Hamlin – 318 pts – (1-3-5)
    I’m starting to see that whining equates into winning

    8. (5) Kyle Busch – 317 pts – (1-4-4)
    See above.

    9. (9) Jeff Gordon – 310 pts – (1-4-4)
    Half dozen Top Fives keeps him in the hunt.

    10. (7) Dale Earnhardt Jr – 309 pts – (0-2-5)
    Sometimes Lady Luck is with you, sometimes she aint no lady at all.

    11. (13) Greg Biffle – 304 pts – (0-1-4)
    Still in the running with just a single Top Five to his credit this season.

    12. (12) Tony Stewart – 280 pts – (0-0-4)
    It all started when Vickers got even.

    13. (23) Joey Logano – 274 pts – (0-1-3)
    Needs his next ten to be even better than his last ten.

    14. (21) Marcos Ambrose – 272 pts – (0-2-4)
    See above.

    15. (10) Ryan Newman – 272 pts – (0-1-3)
    Officially 10th, unofficially sinking like a stone.

    16. (22) Brad Keselowski – 266 pts – (1-2-3)
    3rd at Darlington, 1st at Kansas, 10th at Sonoma…and not much else.

    17. (15) A.J. Allmendinger – 265 pts – (0-1-2)
    Not quite ready for prime-time just yet, but it is coming.

    18. (20) David Ragan – 263 pts – (0-2-3)
    They might love logistics, but can’t be fond of where they sit here.

    19. (14) Mark Martin – 262 pts – (0-1-3)
    With time running out, this would be the time to go, daddy!

    20. (18) Martin Truex Jr – 261 pts – (0-0-4)
    He can be beaten, and on Sunday was beaten upon often.

    21. (17) Paul Menard – 259 pts – (0-2-2)
    Having his best season ever, but that’s not saying much.

    22. (19) Kasey Kahne – 248 pts – (0-0-2)
    11 wins with the AllState girls, none without. I’m just sayin’…

    26. (16) Juan Pablo Montoya – 231 pts – (0-0-1)
    Thornton can shove this ranking system between his nalgas.

  • Predicting A Winner At Daytona Takes More Luck Than Ever

    Predicting A Winner At Daytona Takes More Luck Than Ever

    This past February, all of we NASCAR fans were treated to the biggest surprise that the sport as a whole as ever seen as Trevor Bayne won the Daytona 500 in his first attempt and his second start overall tying Jamie McMurray for that feat when he won UAW-GM Quality 500 in 2002.

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”281″][/media-credit]As we come to the Coke Zero 400, what are some things we need to look out for and what are some things that we shouldn’t look out for? Well, #1 would be Michael Waltrip because he isn’t racing this weekend. That will bring a sigh of relief to many drivers as he caused two wrecks that day including the one that took out most of the top contenders. 2. A person who usually wins a lot. This race will come down to the wire and you never know who will win until that one car crosses the finish line. Sure, Johnson won at Talladega, but that was just luck.

    Another thing we used to see at just Talladega and now appears in both is hanging out in the back until a certain amount of laps to go. Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson are pretty notorious for doing so and in 2007 they got the job done at Talladega. However; you can’t lose your draft partner otherwise it’s going to be a long night for many Sprint Cup Series drivers.

    I know that I talked about surprises, but I’ll have to pick the driver who has the most momentum coming into Daytona. It is a toss up between Jeff Gordon and Kurt Busch, but I have to go with the 24. Reason? He’s actually won a plate race and Busch hasn’t yet, but who knows! Busch may surprise me, but it takes experience and strategy to win this race! Who are you guys picking? Comment below!

  • CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA TWO: Jeff Gordon Press Conf. Transcript

    CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA TWO: Jeff Gordon Press Conf. Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    COKE ZERO 400

    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    JUNE 30, 2011

    JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at Daytona International Speedway and discussed the two-car drafting expected this weekend, racing at Kentucky next week, how tire changes effect the handling of the car and much more. Full transcript.

    HAVE YOU MET WITH NASCAR AND ALL THE OTHER DRIVERS, I’M ASSUMING YOU WERE THERE? “Yes.”

    SOUNDS LIKE THEY ARE DOING A LOT OF RESEARCH AND THEY HAVE A LOT OF IDEAS, WHAT WAS YOUR IMPRESSIONS OF WHAT THEY SAID? “Really excited. I think some of the things to me are definitely going in the right direction. Sometimes you have to take a step back and look at everything of where the sport is at. We were on such a climb for such a long time that some of these measures were necessary even though they would have been effective at the time until you didn’t look as hard into it.

    “In these times, not just in our sport, I think it’s having a great year, but you look at how tough it is just to be in business in general around the world. How you impact not only our core fans that are already big loyal fans but reach out to new fans. I think a lot of what they are saying makes a lot of sense and looking forward to seeing some get implemented.”

    SEEMS LIKE A LOT OF THEIR STRATEGIES INVOLVE WHAT THE DRIVERS CAN DO AND MORE ACTITIVY, MORE TIME OUT OF YOUR SCHEDULE, DOES IT FEEL LIKE YOU GUYS BEAR SUCH A HEAVY BURDEN RELATED TO THAT? “I think we have some responsibilities. The thing is if as the sponsors cut back some of their budgets it also cuts back the demand on time that the drivers have. You hope from a sponsorship standpoint you don’t have that because you’ve got sponsors that are willing to put the budgets out there and utilize the time. You’re biggest problem is trying to find time to do more things. The key to me on that was letting us know early. I think that we can find ways to fit important things into the schedule to give back to the fans but we’ve got to do it efficiently and we’ve got to do it in advance.

    “You can’t come to be today if you need something tomorrow just because our schedules are so tight when you look at any amount of testing, time spent with the team, time spent with our sponsors which also is with our customers and to our fans. I think at track there is some time to be had, for me. I don’t run Saturday races so I think there are some potential opportunities for us to do more and give back to the fans. As long as we are doing it where we are planning for it and we’re involved in the planning then I’m all for it.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE TWO-CAR DRAFTING AND IF YOU LIKE IT OR ARE LOOKING FORWARD TO IT? “It doesn’t matter if you like it or not, it’s just a part of it. What I am anxious about here in Daytona here in July is the temperatures being warmer than they were in February, has the track lost much grip since February, how easy is it going to be to do the two-car draft. In February it was pretty easy and in Talladega it was really easy.

    “So coming back here we are all planning for it but it might not be as easy as we think now that the track temperature is going to be up and if the track losing much grip. This is a track where the two-car draft is not as easy to do because the transitions are pretty tricky getting in and off the corners so it might take a little bit different technique to make the two-car draft work. I’m looking forward to working with Mark Martin, my teammate, like I did in Talladega and seeing what we feel like we can do during the race.”

    HOW MUCH DID THE TRACK AGE WITHOUT RACING ON IT? “This is Florida. It’s very hot here, a lot of sun, a lot of sand and those things can definitely contribute to that. I really don’t think that the track itself has lost much grip. I really think it’s going to be track temperature. That can be the deciding factor to me to how aggressive we get in the two-car drafting.”

    NEXT WE YOU GO TO KENTUCKY, THE FIRST TIME AT A NEW TRACK IN 10 YEARS, HOW BIG OF A CHALLENGE IS IT GOING THERE? “It has been a while since I’ve tested there so seeing if anything has changed. It’s a new track so we don’t have a lot of data. I mean some of the guys have run there in Nationwide maybe have a little more experience on the track.

    “I think adapting to a track that you are not as familiar with from a driver standpoint as well as the set up, the springs and shocks and combinations, it’s a pretty rough race track, so I think to battle the grip level and getting the car aero-wise to get the most grip out of it but also handling the bumps is probably the biggest challenge from a technical standpoint.”

    YOU TALK ABOUT THE TEST, WHAT WERE YOU GUYS ABLE TO LEARN AND YOU WERE ABLE TO SHARE WITH YOUR TEAMMATES? “Well I wasn’t at the test. Mark Martin was at the test. I was talking about it. We used to test there all the time. It’s the one track that we could test at before it became a Cup track, so I think if we go back to those notes that’s certainly going to give some information but the most valuable would be the tire test that Mark martin did. That’s the most current data that we have with more of the cars and set ups that we are running today. We’ll hopefully get something out of it.”

    SHOULD FANS ONCE AGAIN EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED LIKE A 20-YEAR-OLD WINNER, DO YOU THINK NOW THAT YOU’VE RUN ON THIS TRACK ONCE THAT YOU GUYS HAVE A LITTLE BETTER IDEA OF HOW TO GO ABOUT IT? “We’ve got to give a lot of credit to is with Trevor he survived this race. You might expect veterans do a better job of surviving what was a tough race to adapt to and learn the new way of drafting around he, but he did a great job with that so you give him credit and it’s not going to be any easier this time around to survive and there’s no doubt if you survive this race and all that’s going to be thrown at you anybody can win this race.”

    WHAT IS THE TOUGEST PART ABOUT RACING AT A NEW TRACK? “I guess just the unknowns. Trying to know where you can push the limits, where your car is going to handle the best. What the characteristics of the track have as the race goes on. Does the track get looser in, tighter off or tighter in certain parts of the corner or looser in certain parts of the corner and those are things that maybe some of the nationwide guys will have more experience with and might do a better job when we first get there.”

    WHY DO SMALL CHANGES WITH THE TIRES APPEAR TO HAVE SUCH A BIG IMPACT ON THE HANDLING AND THE SETUP OF THE CARS? “Sometimes even Goodyear doesn’t realize just how critical all of those changes in the tire can be and sometimes it can purely be a compound change. Usually construction changes are the ones that impact us the most and maybe throw us off. They change the balance of the car, they change grip level. Sometimes they change the spring rate of the race car and how it travels in the race track so those small things can be fairly severe not to mention what we did last year, a year ago has changed. We’ve already evolved their set ups and what we’re doing with the cars from a shock and spring and sway bar, set up theory on how we’re going about things has completely changed. That to me is why testing is so critical especially when it comes to tires because everything is evolved very quickly in this sport and the tires have to match up with everything else that is evolving.”

    HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE YOU TO FIGURE OUT HOW THAT TIRE IS GOING TO REACT? “You find out in the race. That’s the downside. It’s a bit of a guessing game. You’re not really sure which direction everything is going to go into. Like in Sonoma for instance, if you had gone through practice I would have told you the car is going to get very loose, drive off is going to be a premium and let’s not worry about the center of the corner as much as drive off. Well that was not the case for us. We made a big mistake in that standpoint. Maybe it paid off for us a little bit in that last run because our car was geared a little more toward that but we really paid the price the first half of that race because I couldn’t get my car to turn into the corner because it just had so little grip in the front. So that tire definitely threw us off and we just had no expectations and no knowledge of which way it was going to go.”

    IS THERE ANY TRACK ON THE CIRCUIT THAT COMPARES TO KENTUCKY THAT YOU MIGHT BE ABLE TO TAKE A SET UP FROM? “I mean every 1.5-mile track has a similarity as far as speed and grip level so you try to maximize that but Kentucky has a lot of grip, it’s just a little big rougher than some of the other tracks but it’s also fairly flat for as much grip as it has and it’s surprising how quickly we get around there. I think that we’ll take a little bit from our Kansas race. I would say that the closest thing we run this year would be Kansas.”

    AS A DRIVER HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE YOU TO GET COMFORTABLE IN A CAR AT A NEW TRACK? It could take you two or three laps or it could take you 100 laps. We’ve got a lot of time that we’re going to be on the track on Thursday. It’s basically going to be a test. That should definitely give us enough time to get close.”

    EACH WEEK I STAND OUT THERE FOR DRIVER INTROS AND I HEAR HOW THE CROWD REACTS, REALLY FOR THE PAST TWO YEARS NOW YOU GET ALMOST ALL CHEERS, WHERE MAYBE FOUR OR FIVE YEARS AGO IT WAS KIND OF THE OPPOSITE REACTION, WHY DO YOU THINK THAT’S CHANGED FOR YOU? “I couldn’t really answer that. I could guess at it you know. I think over a time you earn respect especially if you’re consistent with your action off the track and on the track. So I think I’ve been able to earn a little bit more respect since then and not winning as much. When I look back to early parts of my career, I can remember where I started knocking on the door to get to victory lane and I started hearing more cheers and then we started winning some races and everybody was like, oh that’s awesome we’ve got a new guy to cheer for in victory lane. Then we started winning a lot of races and they were like oh wait a minute, okay now I’m going to kind of draw the line here. You know I’m tired of seeing that Gordon guy win, he’s winning too much. We see that, it happens in our sport. So I would say that probably lasted until 2003 because you go off of 2001 and that might still go a couple of years where people are still feeling that way. I think around 2004 or 2005 you saw the wins drop off, the championship contention drop off and I got older. When I’m on Twitter it’s amazing how often I’ll see somebody that will say I didn’t used to pull for you, my brother, my dad or my mom they pulled for you but I never pulled for you but now I pull for you. I think you’re a good person or like the things you do with charity, I like the way you celebrate your win or whatever it may be. So I think that you have to get back to victory lane to start hearing the cheers again. If you just stop winning and don’t win any more they might respect you but they’re not really going to get excited for you. I think showing that we can win this year and getting back to victory lane has got not only my fans back, excited and motivated but maybe some of the fans that were on the fence or maybe some new fans cheer for us again. That’s my guess.”

    About Chevrolet: Founded in Detroit in 1911, Chevrolet celebrates its centennial as a global automotive brand with annual sales of about 4.25 million vehicles in more than 140 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. The Chevrolet portfolio includes iconic performance cars such as Corvette and Camaro; dependable, long-lasting pickups and SUVs such as Silverado and Suburban; and award-winning passenger cars and crossovers such as Spark, Cruze, Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly to gas-free” solutions including Cruze Eco and Volt. Cruze Eco offers 42 mpg highway while Volt offers 35 miles of electric, gasoline-free driving and an additional 344 miles of extended range. Most new Chevrolet models offer OnStar safety, security and convenience technologies including OnStar Hands-Free Calling, Automatic Crash Response and Stolen Vehicle Slowdown. More information regarding Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com ce5&URL=http%3a%2f%2fwww.chevrolet.com%2f> .

  • Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – Kurt Busch Open Interview – Daytona

    Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – Kurt Busch Open Interview – Daytona

    Friday, June 30, 2011

    www.media.chrysler.com

    www.twitter.com/teamdodge

    Daytona International Speedway Coke Zero 400

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

    Kurt Busch Open Interview

    KURT BUSCH (No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge Charger R/T) YOU GOT YOUR FIRST ROAD COURSE WIN LAST WEEK AT INFINEON, NOW ON TO DAYTONA: “It was a great win for our Shell/Pennzoil Dodge. To be able to bring it home at a road course was event that much sweeter. Neat stuff all the way around with winning. It helps us with padding or creating that insurance policy, so to speak, in making the Chase this year. To get a win over the years and keep adding to that was great. But just the overall team perspective, to win, it’s just great to know that we know that we’re doing the right things on the race car to make it fast. To be able to execute with a perfect plan last week, I think the only two cars to do the two-stop strategy were the Penske cars. It was awesome that we had that fuel mileage and the speed to carry it through and do that.

    “Coming into the Coke Zero 400, it’s a great sponsor of ours with Coca-Cola on the team and we want to try and get a check mark off the list which is to win a restrictor-plate, points-paying race. It’s the same car we ran here at Daytona in February. It was a top-five finishing car. We had a great Speedweeks. Not much has changed with the rules package or throughout the garage area as far as the competition side. So, we’re hoping that we’ll have that strong car like we did back here in February and put our Dodge up front and see what we can do in that two-car draft to bring it on home first this time.”

    WHAT IS YOUR VIEW ON DRIVERS SELF-POLICING WHAT HAPPENS ON THE TRACK? “Road course racing gets tougher every year at Sonoma. At Watkins Glen, we see the packs give a little more appreciation for one another on double-file restarts and not roughing each other up. It seems like at Sonoma it gets rougher and tougher each year. To be up front and stay out of the mayhem, that was a goal of ours. I learned over the years that I could be running fourth or fifth and you’re in a vulnerable spot for someone to take a shot at you. Does it carry over to the next week? It’s always there. Drivers never forget. It seems like each year that you go to those restrictor-plate races that you have your friends that you’re going to draft with and then you have those guys that you’ve had some run-ins with that you don’t necessarily want to draft with. But what ends up happening in this two-car draft scenario is wherever you come out on pit road after a pit stop and if you haven’t teamed-up with someone, you might end up drafting with someone that might be on that list that you don’t like, but you have to do the best that you can do to win. You got to put your differences aside for the short term.”

    WHERE DO YOU STAND ON THE TWO-CAR DRAFT? “It’s necessary right now. To win, you have to have speed in that two-car draft. Anytime that you can tell a driver that he’s going to be four-seconds faster a lap and he’s got a shot at winning, then he has to do that. And so that’s what everybody is doing – this two-car draft. I’m for it. It’s what it takes to win right now. As this track gets older, as Talladega gets older and as we maybe see rules changes come about, we won’t see the two-car draft as prominent. But right now, it is and it’s what it takes to win.”

    CAN YOU TELL US WHO PATRICIA DRISCOLL IS AND HAS YOUR PERFORMANCE AT ALL BEEN AFFECTED BY ANYTHING IN YOUR PERSONAL LIFE THIS YEAR? “There’s been a lot going on behind the scenes. Obviously, when you win people want to take you down and that’s happened this week. I’ve got some notes and things that I’ve put together and all I really want to say about that is that drivers sometimes have a beef with certain media members or different ones of the print or broadcast media. Things are reported, generally speaking. The majority of our journalists are hard working, responsible individuals who like us, are trying to do their jobs the best way that they can. I appreciate that. I also appreciate the fact, until now, the media has been extremely professional in respect to my personal situation with Eva and I. And, although all those in the NASCAR community have been aware, for some time now, that we’re no longer together and that we are legally separated.why do we go through this process? It’s been tough. The upcoming weeks, we’ll work toward formally terminating our marriage. We do so with the most respect for one another and we’ll always be friends. With that, I’m happy to answer any other questions about the racing side of it. It’s just the personal side is just that.

    “There are things going on at the personal level. There are things personal with the team that’s been well documented. Like I’ve said, performance on the track is always the best antidote for putting all that aside. I think the way that we’ve handled the situation of this sport; we’re really good at respecting one another. I’m happy that I’m an athlete in a sport that really cares about writing about our sport versus writing about our personal lives. The other sports get into the professionals lives in a very personal way and I’m glad that I’m in the NASCAR world to work with you guys and to respect that as well. It’s tough. We’re an entity, but I’m still a person.”

    CONVENTIONAL WISDOM BEFORE THE SEASON, WAS IT WAS GOING TO TAKE ONE WIN TO GET INTO THE CHASE; ONLY ONE DRIVER HAS ONE WIN IN SPOTS 11-20. WHAT’S YOUR TAKE ON THAT? “I think over the years we’ve seen guys get into the Chase without wins and that’s what this wild card was meant to do, that the 11th and 12th place group of cars have been running consistent, but we want to see the winner’s in there. We want to put a bonus together for the guys that win. Right now, we’re supporting that No. 2 car as much as we can. We want to see (Brad) Keselowski in that wild card group because he’s got a win, but right now he’s 12 points on the outside looking in. It’s an insurance package to have that one win and right now, we’re ahead of a lot of guys. Even if we start to struggle in points with overall finishes, we still have that one win to boost us ahead of quite a few guys that don’t have those wins.”

    DO YOU THINK THAT YOU CAN GET IN THE WILD CARD BIRTH WITH ONE WIN? “At this point, yes. But the problem is that there is 10 weeks to go and there are 10 opportunities for guys to get that one win. Kevin (Harvick) with his three wins has a great opportunity – he can cruise on easy street. If guys still add up those wins and he doesn’t have those points buffer, it can get interesting pretty quick. Ten weeks to go with one win, we feel pretty solid.”

    WITH THE WIN NOW, IS THERE LESS PRESSURE ON YOUR TEAM? WILL YOU DO ANYTHING DIFFERENT? “There’s a little less pressure, but we’re not going to do anything different to change the game. We still want to win. We want to compete for wins and most importantly, that’s done with competitive cars that are leading laps. It’s been cool the last five weeks to lead the most laps at two events. That definitely gives us the confidence that we’re heading in the right direction. We know that there are still certain areas that we can improve and make ourselves even that much more of a threat once the Chase begins.”

    WHAT WAS THE SPARK THAT TURNED AROUND THE RECENT PERFORMANCE AT PENSKE? “We asked everybody at the roundtable discussion this Tuesday, which was a very positive meeting, from where our meetings were, on what is that one thing. None of us could come up with one thing. It was little bits here and there and everywhere. Even Walt Czarnecki was in the meeting personally and we had some of the other executive who were there to slap high-fives for a great win and a good momentum run right now. There’s just not one thing that we can point at that has helped us improve. It’s been a wide range of things.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON NEW ASPHALT AT DAYTONA VERSUS THE OLD SURFACE? “Last year, it was very interesting with the old surface and still being so focused on handling and making sure that you could keep your car wide open throughout the entire race track. The big bump between turns 1 and 2 was still and issue. It was that old school ‘who can slide it the best’ and this time around, we have that grip in the asphalt still.

    “It’s still fresh. We’ll be able to hold it wide open quite easily. We’ll be connected in that two-car draft. Just coming in today and just working on radios and to have radio communications with other teams has been the big thing instead of sitting there worrying about your setup and what you’re going to bolt on you car for that handling package. Right now, it’s just about raw speed, very different from just 12 months ago.”

    IS THERE A TRACK ON THE CIRCUIT THAT HAS FRUSTRATED YOU AS MUCH AS DAYTONA? “This place has been good for speed and opportunities to win and yet, I’ve still been the bridesmaid three times in the Daytona 500. I haven’t had quite the success in the 400 here. I’m looking forward to it. There’s a track named Martinsville in Virginia that I just struggle at. I just can’t find the one niche there. I won there years and years ago, but since then, it’s just been a struggle trying to find the right amount of turn versus grip. I’d say Martinsville is my toughest track.”