Matt DiBenedetto – No. 95 One Bite Toyota Camry Preview
1000Bulbs.com 500 at Talladega Superspeedway
No. 95 One Bite Toyota Camry Notes:
DIBENEDETTO BY THE NUMBERS: In nine Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career starts at Talladega Superspeedway, Matt DiBenedetto has an average start of 32.6 and an average finish of 27.8. He’s completed 1,578 of 1,712 (92.2 percent) career laps and has led for 21 laps at the 2.66-mile high-banked track.
DiBenedetto’s Career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Stats at Talladega:
Date Event S F Laps Status
05/03/15 GEICO 500 43 18 188/188 Running
10/25/15 CampingWorld.com 500 36 40 177/196 Running
05/01/16 GEICO 500 35 36 98/188 Engine
10/23/16 Hellmann’s 500 35 27 192/192 Running
05/07/17 GEICO 500 26 18 191/191 Running
10/15/17 Alabama 500 31 32 171/188 Parked
04/29/18 GEICO 500 33 19 188/188 Running
10/14/18 1000Bulbs.com 500 27 30 192/193 Running
04/28/19 GEICO 500 26 31 181/188 Crash
Races Wins Top 5s Top 10s Poles
Cumulative 9 0 0 0 0
DiBenedetto’s 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Season Stats:
Starts Wins Top-5’s Top-10’s Poles Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
30 0 3 7 0 152 20.7 18.4
DiBenedetto’s Career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Stats:
Starts Wins Top-5’s Top-10’s Poles Laps Led Avg. Start Avg. Finish
170 0 3 7 0 175 29.3 27.1
From the Driver’s Seat:
Matt DiBenedetto: “Going back to Talladega this weekend, we’ve really been focused on learning how these cars race differently this year with this package. We’ve had a few speedway races now to learn about what works best as far as the moves you make, what’s important for your car, how these cars handle in the pack, and things like that. We’ve just learned what is working now, since when the rules change that drastically on the race cars, it was a learning curve for everyone. Now that we’ve had a chance to study the earlier speedway races, we can hone in on what worked so everyone should be better this coming weekend overall, I’d think. We’re more educated on moves and making line decisions in the pack. Talladega is one of those races that we just study a lot for actually. I just try to race hard, but also smart all day long at Talladega so that you can position yourself to win. This week I add a lot of extra studying to my schedule just so that you can try and be as perfect as I can since every decision we make affects the outcome of our race.”
From the Pit Box:
Mike Wheeler: “I anticipate this weekend being a lot similar to what we had at Daytona in July since the 550 spec is typical of the Daytona and Talladega packages. We learned from the first Talladega race earlier this season where we needed to be when it came to post-race, so we’ll apply a lot of that heading into this coming weekend’s race. I thought that we ran well at the Summer Daytona race, and it’s really the same package as that one for this weekend, except handling doesn’t matter as much at Talladega. Dirty air and traffic can affect your balance pretty well at Talladega though where it can beat your tires up and make you have handling problems later on in a run. If you can run in clean air, it should drive fine, but once you’re five to ten rows back, the dirty air is affecting the tires which then affects the performance over the course of a run. Strategy-wise for this weekend, there’s no real good place to hide there in the field at Talladega. Ultimately, the guys that run up front and can stay within the top-five generally stay out of trouble, but you can also go from fifth to running 25th in the matter of a lap or two there. My game plan for Talladega is always to let these guys race the best they can, and if you get in a wreck, you get in a wreck. I’m not a fan of being the guy that rides around in the back and still gets wrecked. I’d rather try and wreck rather than simply ride around trying to stay out of trouble and still get wrecked. We’ll try our best to get up front and then stay up front this weekend.”
No. 95 Barstool Sports Toyota Camry Team:
Driver: Matt DiBenedetto Crew Chief: Mike Wheeler
Car Chief: Greg Emmer Spotter: Doug Campbell
Engineer: J.R. Houston Engineer: Etienne Cliche
Mechanic: Bill Mares Mechanic: Matt Kimball
Shock Specialist: Sean Studer Mechanic: Zach Marquardt
Tire Specialist: Tony Ramirez Jackman: Charles Thacker
Fueler: Bailey Walker Rear Changer: Deven Youker
Front Changer: Jason Charles Tire Carrier: Chris Hall
Hauler Driver: Damon Lopez Pit Support: Brian Eastland
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