Month: June 2011

  • 3 AMIGOS TEQUILA PARTNERS WITH MIS TO BE “OFFICIAL TEQUILA OF MIS”

    3 AMIGOS TEQUILA PARTNERS WITH MIS TO BE “OFFICIAL TEQUILA OF MIS”

    BROOKLYN, Mich. (June 15, 2011) — It’s signed and official! Michigan International Speedway officials have announced a partnership with 3 Amigos Tequila today.

    3 Amigos Tequila will be the “Official Tequila of MIS” beginning with this weekend’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 race weekend.

    “We’re pleased to partner with 3 Amigos Tequila and have them here during our upcoming race weekend,” MIS President Roger Curtis said. “We’ve had great relationships with beer and liquor companies over the years, so it’s fitting that 3 Amigos Tequila sees value in partnering with us for the 2011 season.”

    3 Amigos Tequila was founded by Arizona resident Santiago Gonzalez and his family in 2007. The product is made from agave grown at his family’s farm in Mexico. The tequila is distilled and bottled in Mexico before being brought to the United States for distribution.

    “3 Amigos is very excited to partner with Michigan International Speedway to introduce our brand to your great fans,” J. Smoke Wallin, Chairman & CEO of Paddington & Pelican Brands.  He continued, “We know how serious the Michigan fans are about auto racing, and we take our tequila just as seriously – it will be a perfect match!”

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series tickets for the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 on Sunday and the NSCS 400 on August 21, both weekends featuring 3 Amigos Tequila, are now on sale and as low as $39. Visit mispeedway.com or call the MIS ticket hotline at 800-354-1010 today to take advantage of great pricing for 2011 events at MIS.

    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.

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

    About The Paddington Corporation The Paddington Corporation has a rich history in the branded spirits business. Today’s Paddington Corporation is a brand marketer, incubator and instigator. Its first brand of this century is 3 Amigos 100% agave hand crafted tequila.  www.paddingtonbrands.com

    About Pelican Brands Pelican Brands manages a portfolio of owned and agency premiere import & craft beers, artisanal spirits and fine wines. Pelican Brands’ team and partners have extensive experience in the global beverage and consumer packaged goods industries. A Pelican Brands led investment group recently acquired Napa Smith Brewery & Winery. Pelican Brands is headquartered in Carmel, IN, with offices in the United Kingdom and Napa, CA and a sales team covering the U.S. market and select international markets. www.pelican-brands.com and on Facebook http://on.fb.me/afmdBU And follow us on Twitter @pelicanbrands

    About 3 Amigos Tequila Tequila 3 Amigos is made by the Gonzalez family. 3 Amigos Tequila is grown and made in Tepatitlan, Jalisco, Mexico, located in the highlands of the state of Jalisco. Los Altos red rich soil, and high incline land produces the finest Weber Blue Agave. 3 Amigos Tequila is a young company with deep roots going back generations of growing blue agave for some of the finest tequila companies. 3 Amigos tequila is now rolling out around the US and will be available in your market soon. Visit us online at http://3amigostequila.com/html/casa.html or join us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/3-Amigos-Tequila/94710159983 where we will continue to update availability.

    Michigan International Speedway – 2011 Schedule

    Thursday, June 16      Race Fest in Downtown Brooklyn – 1:00 p.m.–10:00 p.m. Friday, June 17           ARCA Racing Series RainEater Wiper Blades 200 Saturday, June 18      NASCAR Nationwide Series Alliance Truck Parts 250 Sunday, June 19        NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400

    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!

  • Jeff Gordon Teleconference Transcript – Infineon Raceway

    Toyota/Save Mart 350 Teleconference Tuesday, June 14, 2011 Jeff Gordon (Driver of the No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet)

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Jeff Gordon took part in a teleconference with Northern California media in advance of the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway, June 24-26.  A transcript of the teleconference is below:

    Jeff, thanks so much for joining the Northern California media on today’s call. JG: Yeah, absolutely. It’s a pleasure. Really looking forward to coming out to Sonoma. As always, it’s around my daughter Ella’s birthday. So last year she wasn’t able to come out because Leo was being born shortly after in August, so it’s going to be great having the family out there and what a great track and the success we’ve had. So we certainly are looking forward to it.

    Jeff, before we get started on talking about the upcoming race, maybe you can fill us in on your involvement in the movie Cars 2 and your role in there?  Maybe you can give us a little update on what that’s going to be all about. JG: Yeah, it’s been a busy day promoting that here today actually, but what an amazing experience just being involved with the Cars 2 movie legacy with what they’re building here.  Actually John Lasseter from Pixar, who’s a huge race fan and comes out to the Sonoma races every year, I was able to get in touch with him last year around this same time and we started talking about being a part of Cars 2, and I just can’t believe it’s all worked out the way it has. I mean, it was probably a week or two after the conversation and he’s presenting Jeff Gorvette to me and my potential role. So it’s not a big one, but it sure is something I’m very proud of and excited about as a racecar driver being able to be the voice of a cool car and especially as a parent. So, yeah, I can’t wait for it to come out June 24.

    It’s been a while since we’ve seen you in the Wine Country Winner’s Circle in Sonoma. I know you’ve won the most races and the most poles there, but lately you haven’t visited Victory Circle. What’s it going to take to get you there? JG: You know, I’ll say this and I really mean it, I mean we have struggled on the road courses in recent years and it’s not something that we’ve been accustomed to and it’s not something we like, so we’ve been working really hard at making improvements there and we actually tested at a road course back East, Mid-Ohio, and I’m hoping that that test will definitely get us closer to where we need to be to be more competitive out in Sonoma. Just haven’t been able to get the balance right there and find the speed that we need, so hopefully we have that this time.

    How tough is it to drive Infineon Raceway in Sonoma? JG: Well, it’s a very challenging race track. It’s one that you really struggle between being aggressive and being patient. On a road course, you typically really want to attack the breaking zones. But Sonoma, with the elevation changes and the off cambered turns, it’s one of those tracks where you have to be very careful at over attacking and you can drive it too hard.  And plus setting up the car, there’s some fast sections as well as some very technical sections, so getting the car right for that track is extremely challenging as well as driving it.

    Just from 2008 through last year, you had one win total. This year you already have two. What’s been the first thing that goes through your mind when you think ‘Why are we having success this year so far as opposed to the last couple years?’  In terms of getting in the Winner Circle, what is the difference? JG: Well, I mean, if you look at especially last year, we had a lot of second place finishes. So, I think that some slipped away from us, sometimes the cautions don’t fall the right way for you. I mean I think of  Martinsville last year, I mean we were 50 feet from getting the white flag and the caution came out, so I think we ran really well last year.  But I think if you go to Victory Lane, it’s either meant to be or it’s not meant to be and so for us last year it just wasn’t meant to be.  And with all the changes that Rick Hendrick called for over the offseason, I think that they’re definitely working out very well. I think you look at the chemistry between (Dale Earnhardt) Junior and Steve (Letarte) and Mark (Martin) and Lance (McGrew) and me and Alan (Gustafson), it’s been fantastic. So I’ve always wanted to work with Alan, known him for a long time as he’s worked at Hendrick Motorsports and he’s a very talented crew chief with a great group of guys around him, so I just look at the confidence that they have in me and that I have in them.  And we haven’t always been great this year and yet we’ve won two races, so I feel like we’ve turned the corner on our mile-and-a-half program. Our short track program has been there through the offseason and early on and now I think we’ve got to continue with the intermediate tracks like this weekend in Michigan and then really step up our road-course program. And I think if we can do that, we’re a complete team that can definitely get ourselves solidly in the Chase.

    Where were you when you realized stock car racing should be your career? JG: Well it certainly wasn’t in Vallejo. When I grew up in Vallejo, all I wanted to do was race open-wheel cars. I grew up racing quarter midgets all around the Bay Area and throughout the state and racing to me was my life since age five; and I love to go to Baylands (Raceway Park) and even Vallejo Speedway back when they had a dirt track, West Capital.  I mean all around there watching the sprint car drivers and races. So that was to me my focus was there and then Indianapolis, the Indianapolis 500, and I moved back to Indiana just out of Freshman year in high school and I think doing all the racing that I did all around the Midwest racing sprint cars, midgets… A friend of mine, Larry Newburgh, who unfortunately isn’t with us anymore, but he’s the one that really came to me with the idea and said: “I know you’re focused on trying to go open-wheel racing, but have you thought about NASCAR?  You should at least think about it.” And that was the first time that I really had and I went down south and drove a stock car at a driving school and fell in love with it. From that moment on, that’s what I wanted to do. Again, when things are meant to be, they’re meant to be. And from that moment on, amazing things just fell in place and I think that it fell in place for a reason.

    Give us a little behind the scenes of this Cars thing. Give us a little bit about your role before that movie comes out. JG: Yeah, so I play Jeff Gorvette. I mean the movie is completely different from the first movie. Obviously Lightning McQueen and Mater and some of his buddies are in there and I’m one of his new buddies, but it’s an international spy thriller this time so they go all over the world and so there’s a lot of international flair from the car side of it and the voices that you’ll hear as well as some other racecar drivers. My role is fairly small, but still was a blast. Going into the studio, working with John Lasseter is just — he’s a genius and getting to know him and his family, but working with him on this was an experience that I’ll never forget. I haven’t even seen the movie. I saw some clips, but looking forward to seeing the movie. On Monday, we’re going to get to go to a screening, so I can’t wait for that. Unfortunately, we’re going to miss the premiere, but at least I’ll get to see the screening before it comes out in theaters.

    Jeff, do you get to see the video clip that you’re doing the sound for or do you do the sound and they add the animation later? JG: John (Lasseter) showed some clips that they were working on that were very rough cut, but it did not have Jeff Gorvette in it. It was more things with I believe Mater and Lightning McQueen. And if you’ve seen some of the trailers where they show the boat in the ocean, he had some of that. But, no, when I was in the studio, it was purely John painting a picture in my mind through explaining the scene to me and then trying to emulate what he was looking for and then me sometimes just either doing it repetitively or trying to copy some things that he was doing. It’s amazing because he definitely put me in that scene even though I had no idea what it looked like. I enjoyed it immensely. It was great.

    NASCAR’s made a lot of changes in the last few years, and one of them this year is getting the ethanol in the tanks. Have you noticed any difference with the ethanol, and what do you think of it? JG: I guess if you talk to the engine builders, they would probably be able to explain further. From inside the car, no, not really. We’ve been trying to throw around some ideas on weather and how it’s affecting the fuel and how it burns in the engine and whether or not we’re able to maintain the power like if the humidity changes or temperature changes in the air, and those have always been a challenge. But with the ethanol, it’s just a little bit different and so just the way that the fuel burns is slightly different, so adjusting around that. But from a performance standpoint, I would say “no difference.” So it’s great that NASCAR’s taken this step and I see us moving more in this direction moving forward to do things that are better for the environment, which I think is important to everybody.

    What other changes has NASCAR made in the last few years that you really like? JG: Well I think obviously safer barriers is something we’re seeing more and more around all the racetracks, so from a safety standpoint that’s important to all of us. This past weekend, we saw shifting come back at Pocono and I was certainly happy to see that, and it worked very well for us as well. The new nose on the car this year, I really like. I think the cars look better and they seem to be performing a little bit better as well in traffic, so I think they continue to learn just like we do and implement some changes as we go.

    I noticed after Sunday’s race, you had to answer a couple questions about almost being 40 years old now, but do these wins at this stage of your career maybe mean a little bit more to you than maybe they did 10 or 15 years ago? JG: Oh absolutely, and I don’t know if it’s just because I’m getting older and I can  appreciate these things more because I think most people do as they get older…  And I’m not old. I’m not saying I’m old, it’s just I have been doing this a long time and if you talked to me through the mid-, late-’90s, I mean we were racking up a lot of wins, and we just haven’t won as much in recent years. So I think half of it is that I am getting a little older and appreciating things a lot more.  I’m a dad and a husband and just I think looking at life in general in a different perspective and light because of being a parent. And then looking back throughout my career and the fact that I haven’t won as much, I think definitely allows me to appreciate the wins more. I work harder at trying to get those wins these days than I ever have before and I certainly don’t take them for granted.

    You touched on this a little bit earlier, but obviously things are going pretty well at Hendrick Motorsports these days. Is this the way you guys felt it should’ve been right from the beginning with all four drivers being competitive, especially with the way Junior struggled the last couple years? Is this the way you guys thought it would be? JG: Well, you always hope that. The more competitive each of your teammates can be, the better overall your organization is and the better chance you have of getting all four cars in the Chase and battling for the championship and sometimes you got to mix it up. I think people don’t realize that it’s more than just equipment or the product you put out there on the racetrack, it’s such a team sport and it’s about chemistry and people believing in one another and building the car to fit your style, and that’s hard to do.  You go all the way back to us, a four-time championship team, do you make other teams follow what you’re doing?  Then Jimmie Johnson comes along, wins five in a row. Do you just try to do what they’re doing?  And you got to be careful. There’s great things to learn from them, but you also have to go out and do things in the way they work for you, and I think we’re really getting better and better at that all the time.

    Do you notice anything maybe a little bit different about Dale Earnhardt Jr. these days as opposed to maybe the last couple years? Is there anything specifically that’s led him to have a better start this year? JG: Well I think all drivers will tell you when they’re going through tough times, because I’ve been there, and then things start going well, they’ll tell you they didn’t really change anything they’re doing. It’s just for whatever reason the chemistry is there, the confidence is there and great performances and consistently good performances build that confidence in one another. And I think a lot of credit goes to Steve Letarte. I mean he’s a really sharp guy and he’s got a heck of a personality on him and I think that has really worked well with Junior’s personality and I think they just blend well together and have good chemistry, and I’m really glad that it’s working out well for them and that things are working out well for us with Alan also.

    As a guy who’s been obviously been around the sport for a long time, we’ve seen a lot of skirmishes between drivers and even an owner and a driver recently, I mean is that kind of stuff good for the sport?  I mean is any publicity good publicity from your standpoint? JG: Well I think in some ways, yeah. I mean I think if you look at the history of our sport and what built it up to what it is today.  I think there’s a lot of interesting storylines whether it’s pit strategy and fuel mileage or somebody struggling and coming from the back to the front or whether it’s controversy like we’ve seen not only this year but recent years with people really bringing their frustration out and letting that get the best of them and, shoot, I’ve been a part of that myself. So I think it just shows the passion that we all have, and I think it certainly creates something good to write about and talk about on TV and that never hurts.

    You’re tied now for third all time with 84 wins, tied with Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip. Talk about what it means to be amongst the best ever in this sport in terms of the length of your career? JG: It means so much to me.  Right now, I am so like –  – I mean even today, I was in two debriefs about the race on Sunday with Alan and our engineers, then I was in a debrief after that with all four drivers and crew chiefs and when I’m not doing that, I’m either testing or I’m with the family, I just haven’t been able to take the time to truly reflect on all the amazing things I’ve accomplished in my career. I’m so thankful and so appreciative, but to put it in words I think is so hard for me right now because I don’t get that time to sit down and go: ‘Wow, and this is what it means to me,’ and I look forward to that day and I certainly hope I’m not done. But I look forward to that day where I really can reflect and truly be able to either write it down so I don’t forgot it or put it into the words so I can truly express it because I was a kid growing up racing in Vallejo. I hoped one day I got a chance to race at Indy or do something special, but I didn’t believe it was going to happen. So to now look back on it and win three Daytona 500s and four Brickyard 400s and the Championships and all the wins, it just blows me away and it really humbles me because I never thought that I would achieve this kind of success.  In my, what, 19th season in Cup Series, here I’m still able to put some wins together. That’s awesome.

    Of your five wins in Infineon Raceway, it seems to me that it’s such a tight race course that getting the poles is almost as important as a win.  Talk about all the poles that you’ve won there and I think you won three of the races that you were on the pole, so I’d say that’s a pretty good record in itself too. JG: I would say unlike about every track that we go to, and that’s the difference between ovals and road courses, is that I don’t think it’s ever been more important to start up front and qualify up front than on the road courses, and I would definitely say that especially at Sonoma. But that’s been a huge part of our success at Sonoma is qualifying and we really have to qualify much better this time. That’s something we have not done a good enough job of in recent years and I think that, again, to me that’s half of the success you’re going to have at Sonoma is having a great qualifying effort.

    Earlier you talked about what it was like to grow up in Vallejo and race at the local tracks. You mentioned West Capital, the old track in West Sacramento, but you also raced in Rio Linda and some of the quarter-midget tracks. Talk a little bit more specifically about the Sacramento area for our fans out here, what it was like as a kid growing up in these small dustbowls and kicking butt. JG: The first track I ever went to was Rio Linda.  I mean the very first time I ever drove a racecar was at the Vallejo Fair Grounds. My stepdad, John Bickford, just took me out there and we went around the gravel and the next step was we went to Rio Linda, so that was the track that I really got started with and I’m I pretty sure I won my first race there. I never raced at West Capital, but I watched Sprint Car races there. But to me, quarter-midget racing is an awesome way to get started in racing, and I did some go-kart racing, but to me quarter midgets, especially because they’re on ovals, really taught me about being the racecar driver that I am today and I mean it was in the Sacramento area, even further north up near Eureka and then down further south. You go all the way down to Pomona and Visalia and of course around the Bay Area and Baylands and Hayward, but to me Rio Linda is where it all really got started, and I was so thankful to be a part of saving that racetrack. I heard that there was a chance it was going to go away and I did everything that I could to try to keep it there because I think it’s vital to kids growing up in that area, not only for entertainment but for future racecar drivers in our sport.

    How old were you when you first had that victory when you started racing? JG: Well I started racing there when I was five, and I’m guessing that the win came somewhere between five and six.  My stepfather put it in my blood, so I’m thankful for that. He’s been a huge part of keeping the racing going through all these years. So he and my mom, I couldn’t thank them enough for introducing me to it, but the sacrifices they made to keep me in it was huge.

    Was there ever a time when you kind of felt burnt out?  Like maybe 14/15-year-old, you hear these stories these year-round sports guys, football players, basketball players, they just get burnt out.  Was there ever a time in your career as a young driver that you said, “You know what, I want to do something else?” JG: I don’t know if I ever thought I wanted to do something else, but there was no doubt there were moments in my life that, like thinking back to people having birthday parties on the weekends that I was missing out on, my prom or graduation from high school, there were moments where I was like, “Man, I wish I was doing what other kids are doing.” But I look back on it now and I think my parents were really smart and recognizing certain things that they said, “Okay, we need to take some time off and do this.”  I mean one summer we took off and we did waterskiing. Now my family, they’re all about competition, so everything we did was very competitive, even waterskiing, but it always came back to racing and I never got tired of racing. I always loved going to the racetrack. But there were times when I wanted to do other regular things and I got the chance to do enough of it and now I look back and I’m thankful I put as much effort and time into racing as I did or I wouldn’t be where I am.

    Jeff, we were speaking earlier about how Infineon Raceway is a difficult track and it’s been awhile since you’ve been in the Winner’s Circle, but I was wondering if you still feel any kind of advantage or extra motivation with it being a sort of homecoming for you? JG: It is a very special time for me in Sonoma. It’s just magical when I’m there from having my daughter’s birthday party that we do every year out there, as I mentioned earlier, my biological father and other family I get to see that I don’t get to see very often, friends that I went to elementary school with, friends I raced with out there, so it’s a very, very special time and plus the racing has been extremely good at the track too. So it’s just, we come out there, we thoroughly enjoy the weather, the wine country, and then reminiscing with friends and family and then get to go to the racetrack and hopefully experience going to Victory Lane again because we’ve been able to do it a number of times out there. And my wife and I also announced our engagement out there, so there’s no doubt it’s probably my favorite weekend of racing regardless of what happens on the racetrack, but I will say that because of all those fun activities and things that are going on, it puts me in an incredibly positive frame of mind going into that race on Sunday. I’ll never forgot when Ingrid and I did announce our engagement and I — this is not something that I do, I feel like I’m a very low-key, humble guy when it comes racing, especially, and the morning of the race after Ingrid and I announced our engagement, I’ll never forgot calling Steve Letarte, who’s my crew chief at that time, and I said, “Buddy, we’re going to win this race today.”  And it was just me being on this incredible high because of the time that I had that weekend and I just felt so positive and I get that feeling just about every time we’re out there because of all these great moments.

  • Hot Blooded …. Summer Heat and Nascar

    Hot Blooded …. Summer Heat and Nascar

    In Charlotte, Greg Biffle’s driver cooling system failed. It didn’t fail mid race. It failed from the pace laps. Instead of blowing cooler air, it was blowing straight hot air. Biffle stated, “It was literally burning the side of my head.” It was estimated by his crew chief Greg Irwin that the temperature of the air he was breathing was upwards of 120 degrees. “He actually was running with his visor open so it was a little cooler than ambient temperature of the car.”

    Robin Pemberton, director of competition for NASCAR said, “The ambient temperature in the car on race day is in the mid 100’s. Higher on the floor boards. The actual driver environment temperature is less because of cooling devices in the car.”

    To get an idea of the level heat of in the floor board of the car, in 1994, Darrell Waltrip got in his car and threw a sharpie marker on the floor board at Dover Delaware. At the end of the race he tried to pick it up for post race only to find it had melted to the floor board.

    Carl Edwards stated he knew that he was not the only driver that was going down the straight away with his heels up off the floor board because his heels were burning. But he feels that the issue is not so much the effect of the heat on the driver but the effect of the heat on the car and the track surface. He stated that if you have a car that is not driving well or handling well and you are uncomfortable you are less patient with the car and yourself and competitors.

    The floor boards have typically been a problem causing burns to feet and heels. Dale Jarrett and Darrell Waltrip have both reported 3rd degree burns to their feet on hot days in a stock car.  More recently, Brian Vickers burned his foot and his butt at Bristol because of an exhaust problem. In fact, one of the most common injuries in NASCAR is the driver’s feet being burned by the heat coming from the engine and the exhaust system which is right under the cockpit of the race car. Most drivers wear a protective boot over their shoes to help prevent burns to the feet and heels.

    The driver’s cooling system lowers the temperature of the air that the driver’s are breathing by 20 – 30 degrees according to Kurt Busch. “But as the temperature rises in the car, the hoses become heat soaked and that raises the temperature some. I liken it to sitting in a hot tub with just my head sticking out.” Busch said.

    Juan Pablo Montoya is not a big supporter of the cooling system, “We use water bottles with lots of ice and change it out every stop. But it’s just hot, no matter what you do.”

    “The brakes are hot, gears are hot, the transmission is hot and that all transfers to the driver” added Jeff Burton.

    The driver’s Koolbox, as it is aptly named, is a 5.2 lb instrument of relief. The box mounts behind the seat and pulls air in from the outside of the car. Aaron Edwards of CompuTech the manufacturer of the Koolbox that 50 percent of the teams in Sprint Cup use states, “The unit cools the air that goes into the driver’s helmet 30 degrees below the ambient temperature. It has a control box that they can adjust the air flow. The faster the air flow the less cool the air is. On high speed it cools the air about 20 – 25 degrees.” The box is thermal electric and has a filter that protects drivers from the debris that might be sucked in with the outside air that is pushed to the driver by way of fans.

    Decision-making becomes muddled in extreme heat – that can be a deadly game at 200 mph.

    “I had cold chills,” Buddy Baker remembered of the Southern 500 in 1986. “I knew if it was 107 degrees (outside) and 137 in the car and I had cold chills, something was wrong. I was lucky enough to finish the race and after the race I step out and the ‘cold’ air hit me and I went right to the ground.”

    Baker continued, “If you’re really hot and confused, you don’t make great judgment calls.”

    Hydration was an afterthought in the beginning of big-time stock car racing, when men would race in street clothes – maybe with an inadequate helmet – and lean an arm out of an open window. It got hotter inside the cars when tight-fitting cockpits with carbon fiber seats developed. Engine heat accumulated around drivers wearing full face helmets, gloves and multi layer fire suits. Baker, the 1980 Daytona 500 winner who competed at NASCAR’s top level from 1959 to 1992, saw some improvements during his time racing, but nothing like what drivers have now.

    “We had Dixie cups with a little bit of icy water in it and nine out of 10 times when they tried to give it to you, of course the tire man would knock it out of somebody’s hand and you’d go, “I’m going to kill somebody if I don’t get something to drink pretty soon.” You might have to go another 100 miles before you even thought of getting another drink of water,” Baker said.

    “We just kind of had to live with it from pit stop to pit stop, and then of course we had the opportunity to run with just a little bottle behind the seat and what would happen would be water would go down the tube and it would heat up and you’d take a sip of it and it would be like scalding hot water.”

    “You felt pretty crappy going home on Sunday night and Monday you felt pretty bad and about Tuesday afternoon you started feeling really normal again,”  Buddy Baker remembered. “It took its toll on us.”

    Drivers now utilize a hydration system within the car. Called G.I.D.S. (Gatorade In-car Drinking System) More than half of the field utilizes this three-quart insulated bladder which is attached to the frame of the car, allowing a battery-powered pump to supply fluid on demand through a tube with a bite-down nozzle that inserts into the helmet.

    “That thing,” Five time champion Jimmie Johnson stated, “is a life saver.”

    In the hot summer months teams have a hydration officer who keeps fluids iced and available to team and driver. The large trash can is stocked with ice water, Gatorade, and some sodas. “The biggest mover at this point is water and Gatorade. Some guys will drink the soda in the morning to wake up if they don’t drink coffee. But we do everything we can do to make it easy for them to stay hydrated.” stated the hydration officer of the day for the 24 HMS team.

    Its long been known by emergency workers, police, fire and ambulance that as the heat rises, and the longer the heat socks in the more aggressive people become. The more violent crime we see. The lack of judgment becomes evident. The Coca Cola 600 was the longest race of the year. This year it was the hottest thus far. Although, we saw no outbursts the damage that Greg Biffle could have sustained was huge.

    The heat factor would go up again in Kansas, this time with more obvious results. After the truck race a physical altercation took place between Richard Childress and Kyle Busch in the Camping World Truck Garage. The incident was apparently sparked by after race contact between Busch and RCR driver Joey Coulter. The normally mild mannered Childress struck Busch when in his own words, “I let my passion get away from me.”

    Even Dale Earnhardt Jr stated, “I was fine until I got out of the car there.” Earnhardt Jr staggered leaving the car and was helped to the pit wall for a few minutes before heading to the media center for post race interviews. He sat on the end of the dais and did a TV spot with ESPN’s Marty Smith before climbing the stairs to the stage for questions from the media. The flushed Earnhardt stated when asked how long it would take him to recover from the heat,”I will be ok tomorrow afternoon. But I am just going lay around by the pool and enjoy a vodka or two.”

    The physical issues from extreme heat exposure range from heat stroke, to heart damage and lung damage. If you stop and think about what happens if you heat a drinking straw, it gets soft eventually it stretches. In the human body this is called an aneurysm or a bubble in the wall of a blood vessel.  The bubble is caused by a thinning of the vessel wall. The vessel may stay bubbled without issues for years. Or it may rupture. Rupture causes internal bleeding which would be difficult to impossible to control depending on the size of the vessel.

    Heat issues create a lack of focus and attention. The hotter we get, the more uncomfortable we become and we begin to focus on the heat and how uncomfortable we are and it compounds until finally our focus and attention is not on the task at hand but instead how uncomfortable we are in our environment. It’s a natural defense mechanism meant to make us change our environmental conditions.

    Prolonged breathing of extreme hot air can cause drying and damage to the bronchial passage ways. You see evidence of this in children who have asthma that is triggered by extreme cold or extreme hot. People with respiratory conditions such as Emphysema and COPD are advised to avoid extremes in temperature for this reason. Heat dries the passages and can result in cracking or bleeding. Cold can result in hardening and a lack of expansion also making it difficult to breathe.

    The hotter we become the less resistance we have to things like Carbon Monoxide poisoning. Carbon Monoxide poisoning is a huge risk in any type of motorized racing because of the fumes created by the combustion engine.

    The creators of the KoolBox have added an attachment to the existing unit that filters 95% of the carbon monoxide in the air out. “The catalyst is good for about 3 races before it begins to breakdown,” Aaron Edwards said. At that time it must be replaced with a refill pack provided by CompuTech.

    Rapid cooling procedures such as ice water soaked towels to the back of the neck or ice packs placed over the heart inside uniforms, although necessary can have dire effects as well. Everything from shock to stroke can result. Rapid cooling can also cause Blood clots. One must question how much the extremes in temperature and cooling played in say for example Brian Vickers difficulties last year.

    Newly repaved tracks like Daytona also contribute heavily to the heat factor. The black asphalt holds heat rather than reflects it away like lighter and older pavement. Concrete tracks reflect the most heat but it reflects the heat upwards towards the car and driver.

    Hot summer risks pose more risks to our drivers than just racing accidents. With the risks of heat frustration and exhaustion, carbon monoxide poisoning the drivers in all three of NASCAR’s touring series face huge obstacles that are more dangerous to their future’s and lives than just winning a race.

    Although the solution seems simple enough, run night races in the heat of the summer months, logistically that is not possible. Not all the tracks have lights and the light systems to light tracks like Charlotte and Bristol are prohibitive in cost with out many years of budgeting and planning.

    In 1992 when Charlotte Motor Speedway installed their fixed lighting the price tag was 1.7 million dollars. The 1,200-fixture permanent lighting system developed by MUSCO Lighting of Oskaloosa, Iowa, is a revolutionary lighting process using mirrors to simulate daylight without glare, shadows or obtrusive light poles. Daytona International Speedway reports that it costs 240 dollars an hour to operate their lighting system.

    Many tracks are adding lights including the most recent Kansas Speedway. Although, the lights were not ready to be utilized at the tracks most recent date, the lights are in place and functional. Night races have larger response from fans. Most night races are reported as sell outs by the tracks that host them. The reasons seem obvious; it gives the fans another travel day to be back at work on Monday. It’s cooler. And the lights take us back to the old school racing where the sport got its roots.

    As we head into the hottest part of the summer and tracks that are known to be the hottest on the circuit, drivers and teams will continue to battle the heat. They will test lighter weight uniforms, lighter color uniforms, and bigger and better Koolbox systems. All of which will help them to maintain their health, both physically and mentally in stifling 160 degree heat.

    They will hyper hydrate in preparation for the 10 to 16 lb weight loss, that drivers typically experience on Sunday. They will utilize the assistance of Gatorade’s G.I.D.S. and their teams Hydration officer in order to maintain their focus and cognitive ability.

    All of this will take place under the watchful eye of NASCAR’s medical team and governing officials.

    When the P.A. announcer calls their name from the driver’s introduction stage, there will be no thoughts of heat or its possible effects. There will not be even the slightest of concerns in regards to hydration. The only thoughts on the drivers minds will be crossing the finish line first and racing 42 other guys for that spot. One can only hope that the cheering fans in the stands and those waiting anxiously at home realize the risks their heroes take when the summer sun beats down on the greatest racing series in the world.

    Special Thanks to: Robin Pemberton, Aaron Edwards of CompuTech, and all the drivers that graciously addressed this issue and offered their insights.

  • NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Pocono

    NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Pocono

    Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

    1. Carl Edwards: Edwards dropped a valve 58 laps in to the 5-Hour Energy 500, ending the day early for the No. 99 Kellogg’s/Cheez-It Ford. He finished 37th, by far his worst finish of the year, but remained in front of the  point standings lead, six ahead of Jimmie Johnson.

    “I started with eight cylinders,” Edwards said. “Then there were seven. And that led to six, points, that is, in my lead in the Sprint Cup standings. And look who’s behind me. Jimmie Johnson, winner of five Cup championships. He finished fourth on Sunday. I was running third when my valve broke. Johnson is at number two in the standings. I guess that makes him the one to beat.

    “You may have seen me in the TNT booth after my engine blew, and it’s clear I’m a natural at broadcasting. Whether behind the wheel or in front of a monitor, I’ve got no problem with ‘exposure,’ which is obviously the case when I’m ‘showing my parts’ on national television.”

    2. Jimmie Johnson: Johnson finished a strong fourth at Pocono, posting his fourth top-5 result of the year and taking a chunk out of Carl Edwards points lead. Johnson entered the race 40 behind Edwards; he now trails by only six as the series heads to Michigan.

    “As NASCAR’s five time defending champion,” Johnson said, “and arguably the sport’s best driver, I often wonder if I can get any bigger. Well, the answer is ‘yes,’ in Edwards’ rear-view mirror.

    “I like my position. I’ve got a rival blowing an engine, and rival’s car owner blowing a gasket. Heck, when the Sprint Cup points leader is in the broadcast booth yucking it up with the TNT crew during the race, I can only consider that a good thing for me and every other driver trailing him. Edwards is a ‘show off.’ He put on a ‘show’ off the track. While it may be good for his broadcast aspirations, as a contender for the Cup, he’s all ‘talk.’”

    3. Dale Earnhardt, Jr.: Earnhardt scored his fourth-straight top-10 finish of the year, posting a sixth in the 5-Hour Energy 500 at Pocono, rounding out a trifecta of Hendrick Motorsports cars in the top 10. Jeff Gordon took first, while Jimmie Johnson finished fourth. Earnhardt improved one spot in the point standings to third, and trails Carl Edwards by 10.

    “Had the No. 88 Amp Energy Chevrolet won the 5-Hour Energy 500,” Earnhardt said, “there would have been a huge conflict of interest in victory lane. Amp Energy Drink is the industry leader among energy drinks. They play second to no one. I wish I could say the same.

    “If we keep running this consistently, the wins will come. 107 races is a long spell to go without a victory, and if I fail to win at Michigan, I’ll then be fighting a three-year victory drought. That’s when Junior Nation becomes ‘Junior Stag-Nation.”

    4. Kevin Harvick: Harvick toyed early with RCR nemesis Kyle Busch, drawing a warning from NASCAR, but otherwise took care of business at Pocono, finishing fifth. Harvick held on the fourth in the point standings, and now trails Carl Edwards, who finished 37th, by 11.

    “I did indeed try to force Busch down the track on the long straightaway,” Harvick admitted. “I figured Kyle needed a good ‘straight left’ after Richard Childress delivered a ‘straight right’ last week. Of course, Kyle did nothing about it. We’ve all heard of Morgan Freeman ‘Driving Miss Daisy’ around Atlanta. Now you’ve heard of Kevin Harvick ‘Driving Mr. Pansy’ down the track.”

    5. Kyle Busch: Busch finished third at Pocono, following big brother Kurt, who finished second, across the finish line. But that was where the good news ended. Kyle Busch’s No. 18 M&M Toyota failed a post-race inspection, which found his front end too low. NASCAR penalized Busch six championship driver points, while Joe Gibbs lost six owner points, and crew chief Dave Rogers was fined $25,000.

    “That’s just great,” Busch said. “One week, I’m decked by Richard Childress. The next, I’m docked by NASCAR. It appears I got ‘served’ by both. According to NASCAR, the left front of the vehicle was 1/16 inch too low, which is outside the tolerance. I’m not surprised, because I’m rarely inside anyone’s tolerance.

    “Harvick certainly puts the ‘ass’ in ‘harass.’ He just doesn’t know when to stop. He certainly doesn’t need to fight Richard Childress’ fights for him. Childress can take care of himself just as well as he took care of me. But I have to thank Harvick for teaching me a valuable lesson—that I’m the bigger man.”

    6. Kurt Busch: Busch won his second straight pole, topping the charts in Saturday qualifying for the 5-Hour Energy 500. Busch led 37 laps on Sunday, but couldn’t get near Jeff Gordon’s No. 24 down the stretch, and settled for the runner-up spot, his best finish of the year.

    “It would have been more fitting,” Busch said, “had Kyle finished second and I finished third. That way, I could have said, for once, that I had Kyle’s back.”

    7. Matt Kenseth: Kenseth came home eighth at Pocono, earning his seventh top-10 of the year and fourth in the last five races. He remained seventh in the Sprint Cup point standings, and trails Carl Edwards by 44.

    “Don’t let Carl Edwards’ broadcast persona fool you,” Kenseth said. “Television-friendly is where the friendly stops.

    “As you may know, my car was sponsored in part this week by Affliction Clothing, apparel favored by several mixed martial arts fighters and those who emulate them. It’s quite on odd pairing, since I probably rank somewhere between Kyle Busch and a sleeping kitten on the toughness scale. Affliction and I have a unique relationship unlike any other between a sponsor and driver: I’m forbidden to wear the product.”

    8. Jeff Gordon: Gordon took charge over the final 50 laps at Pocono, pulling away for his second win this year and 84th career triumph, which tied him with Darrell Waltrip and Bobby Allison for third on the all-time list. Gordon jumped two spots in the point standings to 11th, 81 out of first.

    “With the new wildcard berths,” Gordon said, “two wins all but guarantees a spot in the Chase For The Cup. Let this be a warning to everyone: I think this win is a clear indication that a fifth Sprint Cup is not out of the question. That may not have been the case in 2010. Last year, when I vowed to ‘go for 5,’ many assumed I was declaring my allegiance to Jimmie Johnson’s quest for his fifth Cup title.”

    9. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin led 76 of the first 101 laps in the 5-Hour Energy 500, but a flat tire on lap 161 ended his dominance and left him scrambling to make up ground over the final 39 laps. He remained on the lead lap and finished 19th, ending a run of three straight top 10’s. Hamlin dropped one spot in the point standings to 12th, 84 out of first.

    “The No. 11 Fed Ex Ground Toyota had the field covered,” Hamlin said, “until the flat tire ruined my day. But that didn’t stop me from quoting emerging color commentary personality Carl Edwards when I said to my crew, ‘It’s air time!’

    10. Clint Bowyer: Bowyer, who won The Prelude To The Dream last Wednesday, finished 16th at Pocono, struggling with handling on the two-mile tri-oval. Bowyer did, however, improve one spot to eighth in the point standings, and now is 73 out of first.

    “My name may be ‘Clint,’” Bowyer said, “but I am by no means ‘The Enforcer.’ That would be Kevin Harvick, who, like our boss Richard Childress, takes matters into his own hands. Harvick has an uncanny ability to get into any driver’s head. According to Kevin, it’s particularly easy to get into Kyle Busch’s head, because there’s so much room.”

  • Tommy Baldwin Racing NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Advance: Michigan International Speedway

    Tommy Baldwin Racing NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Advance: Michigan International Speedway

    Race: Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series: 15 of 36

    Track: Michigan International Speedway

    Track Length: 2 miles

    Date: June 19, 2011

    Blaney will hit the 2-mile Brooklyn, Mich., track in the No. 36 Tommy Baldwin Racing (TBR) Chevrolet for the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 this weekend at Michigan International Speedway.

    TBR AT MICHIGAN – The Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 will mark TBR’s second start at the 2-mile speedway. Mike Skinner drove in the team’s lone start. He started 43rd and finished 41st with a vibration.

    BLANEY AT MICHIGAN – Blaney will make his 21st start at Michigan International Speedway this weekend. In his 20 career-starts, he tallied two top-10 starts and three top-10 finishes. The Buckeye Bullet scored his best finish of sixth twice (August 2001 and 2007). Tommy Baldwin called the shots to his sixth-place finish in 2007. He drove to his best start of fourth in June 2001.

    ALL IN THE FAMILY – As Father’s Day is celebrated on Sunday, Baldwin and Blaney will celebrate participating in the sport they love. Both Baldwin and Blaney owe their passion of racing to their racer dads, and both continue to pass that passion down to the next generation. Baldwin’s father, Tom Baldwin, was a well-known Modified racer in the Northeast. Baldwin’s oldest son, Tommy Baldwin III, is following in his father’s footsteps working in the TBR shop. Blaney grew up watching his father, Lou Blaney, race the dirt tracks of the northern Ohio and western Pennsylvania for four decades. Blaney’s son, Ryan, got behind the wheel at a young age and recently made his NASCAR debut in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East.

    BLANEY GOES 3-WIDE – Blaney will be featured on Fox Sports’ show 3-wide this week. The show, set to air on Friday, June 17th, will focus on Blaney’s dirt track background and racing with his son Ryan. Tune into msn.foxsports.com/video/shows/3-wide on Friday to catch the Father’s Day feature.

    KIDS EAT FREE – TBR will compete to feed America’s families again this weekend, as Golden Corral returns to the No. 36 Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet. If the No. 36 TBR Chevrolet finishes in the top-10 in the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400, kids eat free (with an adult purchase) on Monday, June 20th. Golden Corral will also donate $5,000 to the DAV.

    INDIANA WHOLESALE OFFICES – Indiana Wholesale Offices host wholesale car dealers in the state of Indiana. The Merrillville-based company consults individuals on how to receive a wholesale license that will allow that dealer to operate anywhere in the United States. Indiana Wholesale Offices is a state approved hosting facility that exceeds the state of Indiana’s requirements. The company provides entrepreneurs the ability to create a business with low startup costs and monthly overhead. The Indiana-based company will be featured on the rear quarter panel of the No. 36 TBR Chevrolet, as well as the pit wall. For more information, visit www.GetAuctionAccess.com.

    CHASSIS NO. 78 – Blaney will pilot the No. 78 chassis this weekend at Michigan International Speedway. TBR previously ran the chassis at Kansas Speedway, Richmond International Raceway, Martinsville Speedway and Phoenix International Raceway. Blaney drove the No. 78 chassis to TBR’s best finish of 13th at Richmond International Raceway earlier this season.

    LAST RACE RECAP: 5-HOUR ENERGY 500 –Blaney started from the 40th spot, and the TBR team worked on the No. 36 Golden Corral Chevrolet throughout the day to improve the handling of the racecar in the 5-Hour Energy 500. The Hartford, Ohio native drove the Golden Corral Chevrolet to a 26th-place finish at Pocono Raceway.

    IN THE POINTS – The No. 36 Golden Corral Chevrolet held onto the 32nd position in NSCS Owner Points and extended the team’s lead over 36th place to 50 points. Blaney also held onto the 31st spot in NSCS Driver Points and gained on 30th place. He is now 18 points behind David Gilliland.

    LIGHTHOUSE MISSION – The Lighthouse Mission logo debuted on the No. 36 Golden Corral Chevrolet at Daytona International Speedway and will be present for the entire 2011 season. TBR has teamed up to help the Long Island based-charity build awareness and raise funds for Lighthouse Mission. For more information on Lighthouse Mission, visit www.lighthousemission.net.

    KEEPING UP WITH TBR – Keep up with TBR by following twitter.com/TBR_Racing and facebook.com/TBR.HBR.

    Dave Blaney Quotes:

    ON THE RACING AT MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY – “Michigan is one of my favorite tracks. It’s the closest track to where I grew up in Ohio, so I see more people that I know when we go there. It’s a very cool racetrack. You can run all over there three-wide, so it’s a lot of fun for drivers. The race is very unpredictable. Most of the time it ends up being a fuel mileage race but it seems to get rain shortened a lot, as well as good finishes. We’ve been working on the setups and improving each week, so hopefully that shows on the track.”

    Tommy Baldwin Quotes:

    ON MICHIGAN – “I really like Michigan. It has a lot of lanes, which leads to good racing action. The race can turn into a drag race or fuel-mileage race. You have to play your cards right during the race to be there at the end. I’m looking forward to finally racing there after two years.”

    About Tommy Baldwin Racing:

    Tommy Baldwin Racing was formed in 2009 by NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Crew Chief Tommy Baldwin. Baldwin utilized a slumping economy to open a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team with a stringent budget. The team competed in two full seasons with multiple drivers behind the wheel of the No. 36 Chevrolet and improved in the standings each year.

    Based in Mooresville, N.C., TBR will compete in the full NASCAR Sprint Cup schedule in 2011 with NASCAR veteran Dave Blaney piloting the No. 36 Golden Corral Chevrolet. Looking to improve on-track performance, TBR found success early in the 2011 season with partners Golden Corral, Big Red and Accell Construction. TBR’s driver development program, Heinke-Baldwin Racing, will also compete in various NASCAR series in 2011.

    For more information on Tommy Baldwin Racing, visit tommybaldwinracing.com or follow us on Facebook, facebook.com/TBR.HBR, and Twitter, twitter.com/TBR_Racing.

  • LABONTE PROMOTES RAINEATER WIPER BLADES ON HIS JTG DAUGHERTY RACING TOYOTA AT MICHIGAN

    LABONTE PROMOTES RAINEATER WIPER BLADES ON HIS JTG DAUGHERTY RACING TOYOTA AT MICHIGAN

    BROOKLYN, Mich. (June 15, 2011) – – For the first time during the 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, RainEater Wiper Blades is proud to sponsor Bobby Labonte and the No. 47 Toyota Camry JTG Daugherty Racing team in the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 at Michigan International Speedway (MIS) on Sunday.

    RainEater’s involvement in motorsports is quite simple. It is to build and expose their brand to millions of loyal race fans while also generating awareness of their high quality wiper blades and driving traffic to their growing list of retail partners. RainEater Wiper Blades are available at more than 1,500 locations nationwide.

    “RainEater is using NASCAR as a platform to help grow their business rapidly,” Labonte said. “They believe in high quality, expert design and engineering, which is totally relatable to our industry. They are performance driven too. To find out where to purchase RainEater products, go to . We’re looking forward to representing them at Michigan this weekend.”

    RainEater Wiper Blades selected Michigan International Speedway to showcase their brand as they are also the title sponsor of the ARCA Racing Series event (RainEater Wiper Blades 200). MIS is a massive venue with rich history. Cale Yarborough won the first NASCAR race at the speedway on June 15, 1969. Labonte’s history at Michigan since 1991 includes three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories, nine top-five, 16 top-10 finishes and four pole awards at the two-mile D-shaped oval.

    “I have had success at Michigan and I always like going back there,” Labonte said. “I love the place because it becomes a wide race track throughout the event, which should lead to passing. It is difficult to pass in general and it is not any easier there, but it does give you just some opportunities to try it.”

    Labonte also likes the fact that the event is a 400-mile race.

    “400 miles is the right distance for a track like Michigan,” Labonte continued. “I think it’s good for the drivers and for the fans in the stands. Also, it can be a fuel mileage race and also still be about handling and engine. Everything has to work its best. ”

    With 14 races in the books, there have been nine different winners including two first-time winners. Labonte and his JTG Daugherty Racing team are trying to turn their luck around to be in contention for the next opportunity.

    “We’ve had our challenges at tracks this year where aero comes into play,” Labonte said. “So far this season, we have run 20-something at some places where we expected to finish better. We have noticed areas that need improvement and we are addressing the issues to make it better.”

    Live coverage of the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 on Sunday airs on TNT beginning at 1 p.m. ET. MRN and Sirius XM will also air the event.

  • Earnhardt Jr. To Raffle Very Own 2011 Chevrolet Camaro Convertible

    Earnhardt Jr. To Raffle Very Own 2011 Chevrolet Camaro Convertible

    Earnhardt Jr. To Raffle Very Own 2011 Chevrolet Camaro Convertible Tickets available for $25 at www.WinDaleJrsRide.com

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (Wednesday, June 15, 2011) – Earlier this year Dale Earnhardt Jr. traveled to General Motors’ assembly plant in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada, not only to take ownership of a brand new 2011 Chevrolet Camaro Convertible but also drive it off the line in grand debut of its heavily anticipated arrival. Amid cheering workers and flashing cameras, Earnhardt Jr. climbed behind the wheel of his victory-red Camaro with black rally stripes – only the third one ever made – and helped introduce it to a world ready to embrace the new style Camaro.

    Now as part of a fundraising drive for The Dale Jr. Foundation, Earnhardt Jr. is giving away his 2011 Camaro Convertible with the purchase of a $25 raffle ticket at

  • Commitment Propels Smith, Furniture Row Racing to New Heights

    Commitment Propels Smith, Furniture Row Racing to New Heights

    Commitment Propels Smith, Furniture Row Racing to New Heights  

    DENVER, Colo. (June 15, 2011) — On their way to Michigan International Speedway for this weekend’s Sprint Cup race, Regan Smith and the Furniture Row Racing team took a detour to southeastern Virginia to test their road-racing cars at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) in preparation for next week’s road-course eventy in Sonoma, Calif.  

    “Because our team is based in Denver, Colorado that doesn’t mean we can’t do the same things as the teams based in North Carolina,” said Smith. “The ownership and management at Furniture Row are deeply committed to putting the best product on the track week in and week out. Testing at VIR is only one small example of that commitment and the team guys are equally dedicated. As a driver it’s a great feeling to know that you have this kind of support.”

    Smith knows that when he gets strapped into his No. 78 Furniture Row Chevrolet for Sunday’s Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 that the potential is there to compete up front.

    After the first 14 races of the season he has claimed one win (Darlington), one top-five and three top 10s. He has qualified in the top-five in 50 percent of the races and ranks second in starting average with a 9.571. Carl Edwards leads with a starting average of 9.357.

    “Our recent 15th-place finish in Pocono was decent, but as I have said in the past, we’re just okay with top 15s, we want to have results in the top-10 and top-five. Though we’re making steady progress, we need to get stronger if we want to get in the top-20 in points and have a possible wild card spot in the Chase.” 

    With his one victory this season, Smith could land a wild card Chase berth based on NASCAR’s new criteria for making the post-season lineup. But in order for Smith to take advantage of the victory he needs to be positioned in the top-20 in points.

    “We gained some ground last week by picking off two positions,” noted Smith, who is currently 27th in points, 47 shy of the coveted top-20 ranking. “We know it’s doable, but we can’t afford the big mistakes or the big crashes.”

    The two-mile Michigan track is a facility where Smith and the Furniture Row team feel they can make up ground, barring any unexpected issues.

    “Michigan is a track where I truly feel we can produce a strong performance,” explained Smith. “It’s wide and you can pass there. Last year we had solid performances at MIS but didn’t get the finishes (21st and 23rd) that our Furniture Row Chevrolet deserved. It’s time to change that and come away with a strong finish and a bunch of Sprint Cup driver points.”

  • Carl Edwards- Alliance Parts 250 Advance

    Carl Edwards- Alliance Parts 250 Advance

    Carl Edwards–AllianceTruck Parts 250 Advance

    Team:           No. 60 Fastenal Ford Mustang

    Crew Chief:  Mike Beam

    Chassis:       RK-672 – primary – last ran in Dover-Finished first.                      RK–596 – backup – new Nationwide chassis

    Edwards, NNS Michigan International Speedway :

    Date Event Name St Fin Laps Money Status Led Aug. 20, 2005 Domino’s Pizza 250 3 3 125/125  $27,776.00  running 1 Aug. 19, 2006 Carfax 250 3 23 127/128  $17,300.00  crash 31 Aug. 18, 2007 Carfax 250 15 28 124/125  $22,225.00  running 0 Aug. 16, 2008 Carfax 250 1 1 125/125  $55,895.00  running 71 Aug. 15, 2009 Carfax 250 7 40 2/125  $17,460.00  crash 0 Aug. 14, 2010 Carfax 250 14 2 125/125  $37,600.00  running 19

                          Races         Wins    Top-5s      Top-10s      Poles      Led            Money            Cumulative        6                  1          3            3     1        122         $178,256

    QUOTES

    Carl Edwards on racing at Michigan International Speedway:

    “I’m very excited to go to a great track like Michigan for Ford and Roush Fenway.  I love racing on the wide surface and it takes a combination of car and crew to make it all work there.  Our Fastenal Team is bringing a car that we have huge confidence in and we are going there to win.”

    Crew chief Mike Beam on racing at Michigan International Speedway:

    “We are bringing the same car that we won with at Dover . We feel confident that we can take this No. 60 Fastenal Ford back to victory lane. The past couple of races have been won on fuel mileage and Michigan is another track where fuel mileage and pit strategy are a factor.”

    FAST FACTS     

    * So far in 2011, Edwards has three wins, eight top-fives, and ten top-10s.     

    * Edwards’ captured his 32nd career NASCAR Nationwide win at Dover International Speedway.     

    * Edwards has captured four Coors Light pole awards so far in the 2011 Nationwide Series season.

  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. may find luck in the Irish Hills of Michigan

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. may find luck in the Irish Hills of Michigan

    NASCAR’s most popular driver hitting his stride as he returns to the place he last won —Michigan International Speedway in June 2008

    BROOKLYN, Mich. (June 15, 2011) ­— After a strong start to the 2011 season, Dale Earnhardt Jr. may find that a return to Michigan International Speedway might also mean a return to Gatorade Victory Lane.

    For those that don’t remember, his last NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win was at MIS in June 2008, 107 races ago.

    Earnhardt Jr. has been very consistent the past several weeks, climbing to third in the points standings. This consistency is what is giving Earnhardt Jr. confidence for a win, which could come at MIS this weekend during the Father’s Day Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 on Sunday.

    After the Kansas race two weeks ago, Earnhardt Jr. felt confident in himself and his car.

    “We shouldn’t have run second today,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “We’ve got a fast car, so we can be fast.”

    After consecutive second place finishes the previous two weeks, Earnhardt Jr. finished sixth at Pocono. His top-10 finish at Pocono capped off a great weekend for Hendrick Motorsports, which saw Jeff Gordon take the checkered flag and Jimmie Johnson finishing fourth.

    Earnhardt Jr. has eight top-10 finishes in 14 races this year. He had a total of eight top-10 showings all of last season. With the Irish Hills looming, he also has five top-10 finishes in the last nine races at MIS.

    “I’m really happy to be running well and being up front,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “It’s surely a difference from the last couple of years, so I feel fortunate and feel lucky to be able to compete.”

    Earnhardt Jr. is doing more than just competing, he’s racing well. After an impressive start and the feel that a victory is on the horizon, perhaps he will finally break the streak in the Irish Hills of Michigan.

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series tickets for the Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 on Sunday and NSCS 400 on August 21 are on sale and as low as $39. Visit www.MISpeedway.com or call the MIS ticket hotline at 800-354-1010 today to take advantage of great pricing for 2011 events at MIS.

    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.

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

    Michigan International Speedway – 2011 Schedule

    Thursday, June 16      Race Fest in Downtown Brooklyn – 1:00 p.m.–10:00 p.m. Friday, June 17           ARCA Racing Series RainEater Wiper Blades 200 Saturday, June 18      NASCAR Nationwide Series Alliance Truck Parts 250 Sunday, June 19         NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400

    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!