Author: Official Release

  • Timothy Peters; Red Horse Racing To Meet Air Force’s Red Horse Squadron In Las Vegas

    TIMOTHY PETERS QUICK FACTS

    Las Vegas Motor Speedway

    Smith’s Food and Drug Stores 350

    September 25, 2010

    · Peters at Las Vegas…The Smith’s Food and Drug Stores 350 will mark Timothy Peters’ third career start at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Last year, Peters started from the 24th spot and raced his way to a fifth place finish, marking his first top-10 at the Nevada track.

    · Red Horse Racing Meets Red Horse Squadron…The #17 and #7 Red Horse Racing teams will be heading over to Nellis Air Force Base on Friday morning to meet with the Air Force’s own, Red Horse Squadron (RHUSAF). The group is a civil engineering unit that will be deploying in October. The Red Horse Squadron will be showing the RHR crew what they do on missions. RHUSAF’s motto is Semper Ducimus, which translates to “we always lead.” Peters hopes to make that his personal motto on Saturday night. The RHUSAF flag will also be flying on the #17 pit box during the race. That flag has flown during combat in 18 different countries and will fly for the last time on Saturday night before being laid to rest as a gift to the Commander of the RHUSAF upon his retirement.

    · Peters To Run Late Model Race On Off Weekend…Timothy Peters will be busy on his first off weekend in October. He will be heading over to his home track, Martinsville Speedway to run the Virginia Is For Lovers 300, (formerly called the Baileys 300) Late Model Stock Car Race. Peters won the event in 2005 and will be going for his second grandfather clock trophy on Sunday October 3rd.

    · Air Force Red Horse Squadron On the Hood At Las Vegas…The RHUSAF logo will adorn the hood and TV panel of the #17 in the Smith’s Food and Drug Stores 300. Several members of the unit will also be in the pits as guests of Red Horse Racing. Wiss Also On Board… Wiss® cutting products have been earning a reputation for craftsmanship and long life since 1848. Go to any race garage or pit toolbox and chances are you’ll find several pairs of Wiss Metalmaster® compound action snips … they’ve been the preferred brand with sheet metal pros for over 50 years. The wide Wiss product line now includes snips, scissors, industrial shears, utility knives, and HVAC tools … all with famous Wiss quality built in.

    Timothy Peters on racing at Las Vegas Motor Speedway “ I like Las Vegas Motor Speedway a lot. It’s probably because we had a good run there and finished top-five last year. We just need to keep the momentum on our side. We are aware of the points battle but as a team we are really focusing on getting more wins before the season is over. We will be going for the win each week but also need to make sure we are not doing anything stupid and we can still get the top-five and top-10 finishes we need. I’m very honored to have the Red Horse Squadron on board with us this week. We are looking forward to seeing what they do at Nellis and then showing them what we do at the track.”

    Jeff Hensley on racing at Las Vegas Motor Speedway “Vegas is a special place for me because I was able to visit Victory Lane there in 2006. I would love to get this team back there. We are taking our Chicago truck and it ran really well that night, we were in the top-five all night until we lost the engine. That gives me a lot of confidence this truck will be good again this weekend and we can hopefully get us another win.”

    Equipment Information Timothy Peters will compete with chassis #85 in The Smith’s Food and Drug Stores 350 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. This chassis was last raced at Chicagoland Speedway where Peters started 15th and finished 21st due to an engine failure.

    Timothy Peters Seeks Sponsorship Partner Peters is still seeking sponsorship for his #17 Toyota Tundra. Red Horse Racing is currently running the #17 without primary sponsorship. For more information on sponsorship opportunities please contact Tom DeLoach at 704-662-0039.

  • Ken Schrader Truck Series Advance: Las Vegas Motor Speedway

    WELCOME BACK SCHRADER: Ken Schrader will return to the No. 2 Chevrolet Silverado for this weekend’s race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway (LVMS). The Smith’s Food & Drug Stores 350 will mark Schrader’s sixth Truck Series start for Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) in 2010. In his five previous starts for the team, Schrader has five consecutive top-10 finishes, including two top fives at Texas Motor Speedway in May and Iowa Speedway in July. Schrader has an average start of 8.6 and an average finish of 7.6 in KHI equipment this season.

    STILL A WINNER: Schrader has been close to visiting victory lane in the Truck Series this year, but is still looking to close the deal and take the checkered flag in the No. 2 Kroger Chevrolet. However, Schrader has been a winner many times over in 2010. In addition to his part-time Truck Series schedule, Schrader has run over 60 short-track races this season in Late Models and Modifieds, winning a dozen of them at 11 different tracks. Additionally, he has run one Sprint Cup Series race, one Nationwide Series race, and competed in two ARCA Racing Series events as well, bringing his total to more than 70 races in 2010. That is the equivalent of running the complete Truck Series schedule 2.8 times in nine months.

    TURNING BLUE: The No. 2 Chevrolet Silverado will be turning blue with a brand new paint scheme for LVMS. For the first time, longtime partner Kroger will take the spotlight as primary sponsor of the No. 2 in Las Vegas. Kroger’s West Coast retail operation and race sponsor Smith’s Food & Drug Stores will also be represented on the truck’s tonneau cover in support of the entitlement.

    THOUGHTS FROM THE DRIVER: Ken Schrader

    What are your thoughts going into the race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway?

    “I always look forward to going to Las Vegas Motor Speedway. It’s a beautiful facility and a great town to have a race in. I feel really good about everything the No. 2 team has done this season, so I know we’ll have a great performance there. I’m also very excited to be representing Kroger and their partner, Smith’s Food & Drug Stores, so hopefully we can keep our top-10 streak alive and get a win for them while we’re at it.”

    PREVIOUS RACE RECAP: With new sponsor JEGS.com on board as primary sponsor, Kevin Harvick battled hard for 175 laps with eventual race winner Kyle Busch to finish third in TheRaceDayRaffleSeries.com 175 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

    CHASSIS HISTORY: The No. 2 team will utilize chassis No. 042 this weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Chassis No. 042 was most recently driven by Schrader to a 10th-place finish at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway in August. Chassis No. 42 has been driven to victory lane twice in 2010, once by KHI co-owner Kevin Harvick at Atlanta Motor Speedway in March and once by Elliott Sadler in his first-career Truck Series win at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway.

    ARE YOU A FOLLOWER? Twitter users can now keep up-to-date with Kevin Harvick Inc.’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Teams by following at http://twitter.com/KHI_TruckSeries. In addition, you can follow KHI’s Nationwide Series team at http://twitter.com /KHI_NNS. Want more from KHI? Follow KHI’s co-owners Kevin and DeLana Harvick at http://twitter.com/kevinharvick and http://twitter.com/delanaharvick.

    MEDIA ACCESS: Members of the media can now log on to www.kevinharvickinc.com to gain access to press kit information online. For more information, please email Jessica Trippy at KHI: jtrippy@kevinharvickinc.com.

    About Kevin Harvick Inc.

    Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI), established in 2001 by Kevin and DeLana Harvick, is an 80,000 sq. ft. facility located in Kernersville, N.C. Home of the 2009 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship team, KHI enters 2010 in its seventh full year of competition with two full-time Truck Series teams and one full-time Nationwide Series team. Four-time Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday returns to the helm of the No. 33 Truck team looking for his fifth title and third championship for KHI (2009 and 2007), while Sprint Cup series stars Kevin Harvick and Elliott Sadler guide the No. 2 Truck team. Two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series champion Harvick will again shine as the lead driver of the No. 33 Nationwide Series team as he continues to make his mark in motorsports and establish KHI as one of the top teams in NASCAR competition. For more information about KHI and its teams, please visit www.KevinHarvickInc.com.

  • Kevin Harvick No. 33 Kevin Harvick 10th Anniversary Fan Club Chevrolet Impala Team Race Preview

    LOOKING FOR NO. 1: As Kevin Harvick makes his 16th-career Nationwide Series start this week at Dover (Del.) International Speedway, he looks to record his first-career Nationwide Series win at the ‘Monster Mile.’ Behind the wheel of the No. 33 Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) Kevin Harvick 10th Anniversay Fan Club car, Harvick will attempt to improve upon his current record of three poles, two top-five and eight top-10 finishes. He has completed 98.1 percent of laps attempted (2957 of 3014 laps) and led 290 laps.

    Harvick will make his 20th-career Cup Series start at the famous one-mile track when he climbs behind the wheel of the No. 29 Richard Childress Racing (RCR) Chevrolet on Sunday. In 19 previous Cup Series starts, he has two top-five and seven top-10 starts, completing 98.2 percent of laps attempted (7464 of 7604 laps) and has led 134 total laps.

    THANK YOU FOR 10 GREAT YEARS! This weekend Harvick will carry a unique paint scheme as the Kevin Harvick Fan Club celebrates 10 years of having some of the most loyal fans in NASCAR. The paint scheme centers around a unique Fan Club Anniversary logo, along with details for this year’s Fan Club Gathering to be held on October 17, 2010 at Kevin Harvick Inc.(KHI) in Kernersville, North Carolina. This year’s event will feature live entertainment from The Chris Lane band, a dunking booth sponsored by Rheem, KHI Idol, KHI shop tours, a Corn Hole Tournament, a Big Wheel Race with sponsor Jimmy John’s and much more!

    For more information or to join the Kevin Harvick Fan Club, visit www.kevinharvick.com. Replica diecasts of this special paint scheme can also be purchased from Happy’s E-shop by visiting www.kevinharvick.com.

    BEFORE THE RACE: QUOTES WITH DRIVER KEVIN HARVICK:

    This weekend you are driving the No. 33 car with the 10th Anniversary of the Kevin Harvick Fan Club represented. Can you talk about this special paint scheme? “This car is really neat and is our way of thanking the fans for 10 great years. NASCAR fans are so loyal and stick with us through the good and the bad, and that is no different for my fans. I have some of the best fans around and they’ve been with me for my Nationwide Series championships, my Daytona 500 win and continue to stick with me as I continue to build my career. This is just a really neat way to celebrate 10 years of the Kevin Harvick Fan Club.”

    Describe Dover International Speedway. “Dover is an extremely fast track. You really need to concentrate the entire race just to make sure you don’t get caught up in someone else’s mistake. The track is very narrow with a lot of banking, which makes for some great side-by-side racing. This track is one of the toughest places on our circuit to pass. You also need to have a good qualifying run since pit road is very small and narrow, which can cause you to lose a lot of valuable positions during a routine pit stop.”

    Is it hard to avoid accidents when they happen at Dover? “Things happen really fast. There really isn’t a lot you can do. But, you can usually tell when something is getting ready to happen in front of you. The real trouble spots are driving in too deep under someone getting in and washing up, getting a bad push or getting loose off the corners. The track is self cleaning with all the banking so it’s hard to get out of the way if you are in the groove and it all starts coming down the hill.”

    CHASSIS HISTORY: This weekend the No. 33 team will unload chassis No. 055 for team co-owner Kevin Harvick at the ‘Monster Mile’ of Dover International Speedway. This chassis was last on track at Bristol(Tenn.) Motor Speedway with Elliott Sadler. Sadler won the pole position, led 21 laps and finished fourth. In addition to Bristol, this chassis was run at Iowa Speedway where Harvick started the race from the seventh position and finished solidly in second place. Prior to Iowa, this chassis was on track at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway where Harvick started the race from the 18th position and finished sixth and in the rain-delayed race at Texas Motor Speedway in April, Harvick piloted the then brand-new chassis from the16th position to fifth.

    PREVIOUS RACE RECAP: Most recently, the Nationwide Series competed at Richmond (Va.) International Raceway for 250 laps of action under the lights. Showcasing the Nationwide Series new car for the third of four times this season, Harvick scored his third pole of the season and 22nd of his Nationwide Series career. Dominating the race, Harvick went on to lead a race high of 170 of the 250-scheduled laps and secured his third Nationwide Series win of the season for his 37th-career Nationwide Series win. The win marked his fifth Nationwide Series win at Richmond and tied Harvick with Mark Martin for the most career Nationwide Series wins at the 0.75-mile track. The win was the first time that Harvick has won a Nationwide Series race from the pole position in a KHI car.

    ARE YOU A FOLLOWER? Twitter users can now keep up-to-date with Kevin Harvick Inc.’s NASCAR Nationwide Series by following @KHI_NNS. In addition, you can follow KHI’s Truck Series teams @KHI_TruckSeries. Want more from KHI? Follow KHI’s co-owners Kevin and DeLana Harvick @KevinHarvick and @DeLanaHarvick.

    ONLINE MEDIA KITS: Media members can now access KHI media kits online at KevinHarvickInc.com. Included on the site are driver bios, driver and team images, KHI history and statistics, team profiles and schedules. Please contact Alicia Deal (adeal@kevinharvickinc.com) at KHI for access to the new site.

    Kevin Harvick

    Nationwide Stats at Dover

    Year No. Team Start Finish

    2010 33 KHI 10 6

    2009 33 KHI 5 13

    2008 33 KHI 6 28

    2008 33 KHI 13 17

    2007 77 KHI 29 7

    2006 21 RCR 24 3

    2006 21 RCR 1 13

    2005 21 RCR 2 29

    2004 21 RCR 6 6

    2004 21 RCR 13 6

    2003 21 RCR 1 9

    2001 2 RCR 4 14

    2001 2 RCR 2 3

    2000 2 RCR 12 22

    2000 2 RCR 1 6

    *KHI: Kevin Harvick Inc.

    *RCR: Richard Childress Racing

    About Kevin Harvick Inc.:

    Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI), established in 2001 by Kevin and DeLana Harvick, is an 80,000 sq. ft. facility located in Kernersville, N.C. Home of the 2009 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship team, KHI enters 2010 in its seventh full year of competition with two full-time Truck Series teams and one full-time Nationwide Series team. Four-time Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday returns to the helm of the No. 33 Truck team looking for his fifth title and third championship for KHI (2009 and 2007), while Sprint Cup series stars Kevin Harvick and Elliott Sadler guide the No. 2 Truck team. Two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series champion Harvick will again shine as the lead driver of the No. 33 Nationwide Series team as he continues to make his mark in motorsports and establish KHI as one of the top teams in NASCAR competition. For more information about KHI and its teams, please visit www.KevinHarvickInc.com.

  • Ron Hornaday Advance: Las Vegas Motor Speedway Advance

    ROLLING SNAKE EYES FOR THE FIRST TIME: Ron Hornaday is the winningest driver in the Truck Series with 46 career wins to date. However, in nine attempts at Las Vegas Motor Speedway he has yet to put a tally in the win column. Las Vegas joins Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway, Martinsville (Va.) Speedway, Michigan International Raceway, Iowa Speedway, Pocono (Pa.) International Raceway, Chicagoland Speedway and Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway as the only tracks on the current Truck Series schedule in which Hornaday has not recorded a win.

    EPIC BATTLES: Although Hornaday has not recorded a win at the 1.5-mile D-shaped oval, he has experienced some epic championship battles on the hallowed grounds of famous sin city. His first ever Truck Series championship was decided at the final race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in 1996. Two years later he found himself in the same situation, this time fighting rival Jack Sprague and it came down to the final laps. Sprague won the race, and Hornaday finished second to take the title by a mere three points. To this day, it is still the closest championship title race in Truck Series history.

    AUCTIONEER: While in Las Vegas, Hornaday and fellow Truck Series competitor Mike Skinner will make their way to the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino to attend a live taping of Barrett- Jackson. The Barrett-Jackson Auction Company was established in 1971 and is headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona. Barrett-Jackson specializes in providing products and services to classic and collector car owners, astute collectors and automotive enthusiasts around the world.

    TO THE LEFT, TO THE LEFT: According to NASCAR’s Loop Data statistics no other driver has made more passes in turns one and two at Las Vegas Motor Speedway than Hornaday. When making his way up through the field, Hornaday’s corners of choice for moving past competitors are the first two, and he has made 50 passes in these two turns over the last five Las Vegas Motor Speedway Truck Series events.

    Notes from the Professor: Quotes from Ron Hornaday:

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON GOING TO LAS VEGAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY?

    “I have come really close to winning at Vegas and this year we have a really good shot at it. We have run pretty well at the 1.5-mile tracks. I really would like to mark this one off my list, since this will mark my 10th visit to the track.”

    WHERE DOES LAS VEGAS RANK AMONG ALL THE TRACKS THE TRUCK SERIES VISITS?

    “Las Vegas is a special place. I always say that my favorite race tracks are the ones I win at, but this one ranks up there very close. I have been so fortunate in my racing career. In the mid to late 90’s, Sprague and I had a good battle going. I won the first championship, then he won one, then I won my second. The cool part was every year I won the championship he won the race here in Vegas. I have some really good memories from there.”

    CHASSIS HISTORY: The No. 33 E-Z-GO team will take chassis No. 047 to Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Chassis No. 047 is a brand-new chassis which has not yet seen a lap of competition.

    PREVIOUS RACE RECAP: Last weekend at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Hornaday and the No. 33 team recorded a 24th-place finish following a late-race tangle with a lapped truck where Hornaday sustained left-front fender damage. Following the incident, Hornaday and Timothy Peters got together on the race track, sending Hornaday into the outside retaining wall, ending the day for the No. 33 truck.

    ARE YOU A FOLLOWER? Twitter users can now keep up-to-date with Kevin Harvick Inc.’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series teams by following at http://twitter.com/KHI_TruckSeries. In addition, you can follow KHI’s Nationwide Series team at http://twitter.com /KHI_NNS. Want more from KHI? Follow KHI’s co-owners Kevin and DeLana Harvick at http://twitter.com/kevinharvick and http://twitter.com/delanaharvick.

    MEDIA ACCESS: Members of the media can now log on to www.kevinharvickinc.com to gain access to press kit information online. For more information, please email Jessica Stroupe at KHI: jstroupe@kevinharvickinc.com. .

    About E-Z-GO

    E-Z-GO, a Textron Inc. company, is a leading manufacturer of golf cars, utility and personal transportation vehicles. Products sold under the E-Z-GO brand include RXV® and TXT® fleet golf cars, Freedom® RXV and Freedom TXT personal golf cars, ST personal utility vehicles, Shuttle personnel carriers, and MPT turf-maintenance vehicles. E-Z-GO also produces the Cushman® line of heavy-duty material carriers.

    E-Z-GO is the preferred golf car fleet provider for many of the world’s most revered golf courses, clubs and resorts. E-Z-GO is also the golf car of choice of nine of the nation’s ten largest course-management companies. E-Z-GO boasts the largest sales and service network in the industry, with more factory branch locations and independent distributors than any other manufacturer of golf cars and utility vehicles.

    Founded in 1954 in Augusta, Ga., E-Z-GO became part of Textron Inc. in 1960.

    About Textron

    Textron Inc. is a multi-industry company that leverages its global network of aircraft, defense, industrial and finance businesses to provide customers with innovative solutions and services. Textron in known around the world for its powerful brands such as Bell Helicopter, Cessna Aircraft Company, Jacobsen, Kautex, Lycoming, E-Z-GO, Greenlee, and Textron Systems. More information is available at www.textron.com.

    About Kevin Harvick Inc.:

    Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI), established in 2001 by Kevin and DeLana Harvick, is an 80,000 sq. ft. facility located in Kernersville, N.C. Home of the 2009 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship team, KHI enters 2010 in its seventh full year of competition with two full-time Truck Series teams and one full-time Nationwide Series team. Four-time Truck Series champion Ron Hornaday returns to the helm of the No. 33 Truck team looking for his fifth title and third championship for KHI (2009 and 2007), while Sprint Cup series stars Kevin Harvick and Elliott Sadler guide the No. 2 Truck team. Two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series champion Harvick will again shine as the lead driver of the No. 33 Nationwide Series team as he continues to make his mark in motorsports and establish KHI as one of the top teams in NASCAR competition. For more information about KHI and its teams, please visit www.KevinHarvickInc.com.

  • Jason White Hangs On for Fourteenth at Magic Mile

    Loudon, NH – September 18, 2010. Some days just don’t seem to go as planned. Saturday at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway was one of those days for NASCAR Camping World Truck Series driver Jason White. Jason was looking forward to the series annual visit to the flat one-mile track, but when the dust settled, he and the SS Green Light Racing team are glad to be heading to Las Vegas next week.

    The Virginia native survived several close calls on the track including a spin to finish fourteenth in the TheRaceDayRaffleSeries.com 175 and posted his twelfth lead-lap finish of the 2010 campaign, the most of his NCWTS career.

    White qualified the GunBroker.com No. 23 Chevy nineteenth in the morning multi-truck qualifying session with a lap of 30.48 seconds at just under 125 mph.

    Jason picked up several positions early in the race, moving into the top-fifteen by lap ten before dropping back several positions. Cup regulars Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick were running away from the field and put Jason a lap down on lap thirty-nine. The pair had lapped all but the top eleven trucks when a caution flew on lap 62 for debris on the track.

    White would line up behind teammate David Starr on the restart. The pair was racing hard for the fifteenth position when Jason went low with two wheels on the apron to try to move around his teammate when his GunBroker.com No. 23 broke loose and spun. Luckily no other trucks made contact and Jason held his Chevy Silverado off the wall and continued on to the attention of the SS Green Light Racing crew.

    Shortly after the restart there was more excitement for the SS Green Light team when Starr was spun-out by another truck right in front of Jason’s Chevy who narrowly avoided contact and earned the “Lucky Dog” award to return to the lead lap.

    Jason would stay in the top-fifteen for the second half of the race, but his GunBroker.com Chevy did not have the speed to make a move toward the front of the field and finished the 175-lap race in fourteenth place. It was White’s thirteenth top-fifteen finish of the season.

    Kyle Busch led 156 of the 175 laps to win his fifth NCWTS race of the 2010 season.

    White maintained tenth in NCWTS point standings behind leader Todd Bodine. Jason is 118 points behind SS Green Light Racing teammate David Starr who is in ninth.

    The next race for Jason White and the SS Green Light team is the Smiths 350 at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Saturday, September 25th.

    For more information on SS Green Light Racing visit www.SSRacingonline.com or email: pr@ssracingonline.com.

  • CHEVY NSCS AT NEW HAMPSHIRE TWO: Post Race Quotes & McMurray Press Conf Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    SYLVANIA 300

    NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER POST RACE QUOTES & PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    SEPTEMBER 19, 2010

     

    CLINT BOWYER, NO. 33 CHEERIOS/HAMBURGER HELPER CHEVROLET, RACE WINNER:

    ON THE UPS AND DOWNS OF YOUR DAY: “You know I don’t know what happened to our car there halfway through the race; the carburetor started missing.  I couldn’t get going on restarts, but it actually worked in my favor you know once the run got in.  I hate it for Tony [Stewart].  You hate win races like that but I tell you we’ve lost a couple here this year.  Just so proud of Shane Wilson, all the guys on this Cheerios/Hamburger Helper Chevrolet.  Fourteen years General Mills has been in this sport and I finally got them a win.  BB&T, The Hartford, everybody that is involved on this—Coca-Cola, Richard [Childress]; this is awesome.  I just had a feeling that this race felt like back in 2007 and we did it again.”

    YOU SAID THAT YOU CAN’T GO RUN HIM DOWN AND SAVE FUEL AT THE SAME TIME.  WHAT WAS THAT LIKE?  “It’s terrible you want to go and I thought I could run him down, but I was just using so much fuel through the middle of the corner that I had to back it down.  I could tell in his voice.  You can always tell, once you get that relationship with somebody, you can tell in his voice how nervous he was and he sounded pretty nervous.” 

    YOU COME INTO THE CHASE 12TH AND NOW YOU’VE JUMPED TO SECOND, JUST 35 POINTS OUT THE LEAD.  WHAT HAS THIS WON DONE FOR YOUR CHAMPIONSHIP RUN?  “It’s just momentum and that was exactly what this team needed.  The confidence, momentum—everything that a first win brings—the first race of the Chase, this couldn’t have come at a better time.  I’m excited.  Second in points, let’s go get ‘em!  Thank you to Sprint and the fans that came out; that was a hell of a crowd and a great race.  Thank you.”

     JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 MCDONALD’S CHEVROLET, FINISHED 3RD: “It was a really good day for us, though.  I had a solid weekend and I think this is statistically my worst track so it’s really good for us to come in here and have a solid run. When I passed the 14 for the lead, really thought I was going to be able to drive away.  I ran a couple laps there and opened up about ten cars and I drove into turn one and the splitter started crashing the ground, I’m really looking forward to Dover.”

    DALE EARNHARDT, JR. NO. 88 AMP ENERGY/NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET, FINISHED 4TH: ON HIS RACE: “The setbacks we had today hurt us a lot. I want to thank AMP Energy and National Guard and the team, they worked really hard. We unloaded a great car, they did a good job preparing it at the shop. We worked on it all weekend. It was pretty good in practice and we approved on it a little bit. We had an eighth place finish last time and felt like we were really fast and competitive all day long. We can’t qualify very good here, but once we get in race trim, we just kind of go to the front or get near the front.

    “It felt like we had a top-10 car and we had the jack-stop break and had to go to the back and then a miscommunication with the No. 78 (Regan Smith) on pit that cost us a half of a lap under green, just battling back from that stuff. Track position was what we needed at the end, we didn’t have it.

    “We were able to start on the outside and gain some spots on some guys that were a little bit slower than us and get back to where we needed to be. I think if we had the track position, we were as fast as the No. 14 (Tony Stewart) at times and the No. 1 (Jamie McMurray) and all those guys that were up there battling for it at the end. We just needed the track position. The No. 33 (Clint Bowyer) had everybody covered. I don’t know if anybody would have been able to hold him off. He was pretty fast all day.”

     

    KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 SHELL-PENNZOIL CHEVROLET, FINISHED 5TH:

    YOU GUYS REBOUNDED AND GOT YOURSELF A TOP-FIVE FINISH.  THAT’S WHAT YOU HAVE TO DO TO WIN A CHAMPIONSHIP ISN’T IT “We didn’t have a great day today.  We didn’t have a great weekend honestly and to be able to come out of here with a top-five says a lot about everybody on this Shell-Pennzoil team.   So we will just keep fighting and if we keep doing that on our bad days……we will be in good shape.”

    “Congratulations to the whole 33 team.  That’s awesome for them.  We had an eventful day.  Track position was critical, and we fought it all day long.  We were too tight in the center, and then we adjusted too far, and our Shell-Pennzoil Chevrolet was just loose.  But we hung in there, we battled, and we came away with a top-five finish.  We need to get better, and we will.  With how the day unfolded, I am happy.”

    JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DUPONT/NATIONAL GUARD FACEBOOK CHEVROLET – Finished 6th:

    YOU WERE REALLY PATIENT. TAKE US THROUGH YOUR DAY AND GIVE US YOUR THOUGHTS GOING FORWARD

    “I think that’s taking advantage of our experience of being in the Chase and being in championships in the past. We just fought it out. That’s what we do best. We just never give up. I thought (crew chief) Steve Letarte called an awesome race.

    “We probably could have made an adjustment that last time we came in to do a gas and go, because I was a little bit tight on that run but there at the end we just didn’t quite have the car but still sixth, and we didn’t want to gamble on the fuel like those other guys did. We gave up a couple of spots on the track but made them back up with fuel.”

    YOU JUMPED UP THREE SPOTS IN THE POINTS TO FIFTH, LOOKING AHEAD TO DOVER HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT YOUR CHANCES?

    “Well, you know, I was hoping we were not going to lose any more points to somebody like (Denny) Hamlin and close the gap overall to first, but we lost some to him; but I felt like we made some big gains. It was just a really solid day for us and that’s what we need to do.”

    A PRETTY SOLID DAY TO GET THIS THING ROLLING  

    “It was. It wasn’t our best day but I felt like we really brought the No. 24 car home in the best position we possibly could. We had some high hopes when we got up there to third or fourth; even to second at one time, but I think Steve (Letarte) called a great race. He didn’t want to risk the fuel and it just wasn’t worth it. We did a gas and go and probably just needed to make one adjustment on that last set of tires; we got real tight there at the end, but when those guys didn’t make it on fuel it definitely made us feel that much better about the call that Steve made and come home sixth. It was still a good points day for us.”

    YOU MENTIONED YESTERDAY THAT YOU CAN’T WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP HERE, BUT YOU CAN CERTAINLY LOSE IT. YOU DID A GREAT JOB HERE TODAY

    “Well, I felt like our goal coming out of here was a top five. We ended up sixth, so we’re close. It’s not our best track in the Chase and we finished better than we did, well I guess better than the last time we were here, but we still finished really solid and we’re looking forward to going to Dover and some other tracks that we feel like are stronger for us.”

    SEEMED LIKE THE THEME WAS TAKING CHANCES WITH FUEL OR WITH RUNNING INTO ONE ANOTHER
    “I think that’s just sort of what happens with the Chase. I think everybody gets excited and the intensity builds up and it pushes guys to be a little bit more risky. But for us, we realize that we still have nine more races to go. I just don’t think you can win it here this weekend. You’ve got to make sure that you get everything out of your car and your team and we did that today.”

    DID IT SEEM LIKE THERE WAS A LOT OF WILD DRIVING OUT THERE OR OVER-DRIVING, OR DOES THIS TRACK JUST LEND ITSELF TO THAT?

    “It’s a tricky place on restarts. And it’s very tough to pass. I saw some guys fighting hard for position like what we see is pretty typical on double-file restarts, but you’ve got to realize that a lot of those guys that were battling were Chase contenders. And I think that maybe sometimes they pushed a little bit too hard.”

    DOES IT PAY OFF MORE TO BE CAUTIOUS IN YOUR ESTIMATION, WHETHER IT’S WITH THE FUEL OR TAKING CHANCES IN THE TURNS?

    “Well, I don’t think we played it cautious today. I just feel like Steve looked at whether or not it was worth gambling. That’s what we do every weekend, you know? We came into this race this weekend saying we can certainly lose this championship this weekend; we can’t necessarily win it. We’ve got to go and grind it out and work hard and put out that kind of effort for 10 weeks. That’s what’s going to win the championship for us. I feel like that’s the race that we really played today.”

    DID CLINT BOWYER HAVE THE BEST CAR ALL DAY? WAS THERE EVER ANY QUESTION ABOUT THAT?

    ‘Oh, yeah; yeah. He was strong. Obviously Tony (Stewart) had it, had he not run out of fuel. So he had a strong car but wow, Clint was really fast. I’m proud of him. I like Clint a lot. I think he’s a great race car driver and a really good guy. He earned this one today. They worked hard to get here and he was fast all weekend. It kind of reminds me of a few years ago when he won this race in ’07.

    “We know the Childress cars are going to be tough and I think this is probably the strongest track in the final 10 and this might give him some momentum to be even stronger for the next nine (races), but we’ve got to look at the ones that are strong for us too.”

    DID YOU LEARN ANYTHING ABOUT THE FIELD IN ITS ENTIRETY TODAY ABOUT THE WAY THIS ARE MOVING FORWARD?

    “It’s one race, man. There is a lot more racing left to go. We’ve seen all this stuff in the Chase before. It’s still fun to talk about. To me it’s not anything out of the ordinary.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON AND TONY STEWART ENDED UP BACK IN THE PACK, BUT THEY DIDN’T LOSE THE CHASE TODAY

    “Teams like the No. 48 are so good at rebounding; you can’t ever count those guys out. For us, our strengths are how consistent we are. And we haven’t won a race yet this year. So while we’re trying to win races in these final 10, we can’t necessarily just expect it to happen; maybe like some other guys might be feeling. So we can’t afford to go out there and have a 25th place finish today.”

    IF YOU WERE TONY STEWART, HOW TOUGH IS THAT TO OVERCOME?

    “Yeah, that’s pretty tough to overcome. I’m sure he’s disappointed. I know they’ll go back and look at all the details and data from the race and figure out whether that was a risk worth taking.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 US ARMY CHEVROLET, FINISHED 8TH:

    TALK ABOUT YOUR DAY: “We’re proud of the effort today considering we put ourselves in a hole by qualifying 24th,” said Newman. “Tony (Gibson, crew chief) got together with the team after yesterday’s practice and made some quality changes to the car. The U.S. Army Chevrolet was strong all day and the pit crew was solid. The guys were on it and it was nice to come out of the pits and gain some spots today. We took a gamble early by taking two tires on our first pit stop to get track position and it paid off.

    “It was just a solid performance today by our U.S. Army team.”

    JEFF BURTON, NO 31 CATERPILLAR CHEVROLET, FINISHED 15TH (RAN OUT OF FUEL AT END): ON THE RACE: “We weren’t very good yesterday and they did a great job making the car better. We just came up a little short. We thought we were good (on fuel). We saved on it under all the cautions and the first 3/4 of that run, I was saving too. We just didn’t get as good of fuel mileage on that last run as we had been getting. It is what it is.”

     

    TONY STEWART, NO. 14 OFFICE DEPOT/OLD SPICE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 24TH (RAN OUT OF FUEL AT END):

     A LAP AWAY FROM INCREDIBLE WEEKEND, YOUR EMOTIONS?  “I’m not happy, that’s for sure, but we went down swinging. It’s hard to lose one that way but at the same time it was fun racing Clint like that. He was definitely the fastest car and congratulations to those guys.  It’s a tough way to start the Chase but I’m proud of my guys. Darian (Grubb, crew chief) kept swinging at it all day and finally on that last set of tires we got it halfway decent.

    YOU WERE GREAT IN QUALIFYING, FAST IN HAPPY HOUR AND SEEMINGLY UNBEATABLE ON RACE DAY, IF YOU HAD THE CALL TO DO OVER, WOULD YOU?  “Yeah I would have settled for second. If you exactly how much gas you have it would be different, but you never know. It’s part of the sport, always has been. It’s what makes it exciting when you never know until the last lap what’s going to happen.”

     MENTALLY WHERE ARE YOU AS FAR AS THE CHASE? CAN YOU WIN THIS? “Who knows? There is so much that can happen in nine races. I promise you this: This Old Spice/Office Depot Chevy team is not going to give up. We’ll do the best we can and give it our best shot.”

    CAN YOU PUT IT IN WORDS WHAT THAT WAS LIKE? “Yeah, it sucks. It wasn’t much fun. Congratulations to Clint and those guys. He had a great car all day. He did a good job of saving fuel and I didn’t do a good job.”

    TALK ABOUT THE GOOD THAT CAME OUT OF TODAY:  “It’s kind of hard to find some.” 

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/JOHNS MANVILLE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 25TH:

    NOT THE KIND OF DAY YOU WANTED: “No, it wasn’t. On that one restart, we just got turned around and got some damage that we had to pit and stuff. But, it is the way it is. We showed up today, we did what we could. We had a decent car today and ran in the top-five and top-ten but just didn’t end up finishing there.  We’ll go home and get back to work and go after it again next week”

    JAMIE MCMURRAY NO. 1 MACDONALD’S CHEVROLET – FINISHED 3RD

    POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:

    KERRY THARP: Let’s roll into our post race press conference for today’s SYLVANIA 300, first race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and we are joined up front by our third place finisher, Jamie McMurray, who drives the No. 1 McDonald’s Chevrolet for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing.

                KERRY THARP:    Jamie, certainly you led some laps, had an outstanding race car, and just a continuance of a very solid season for you.

                JAMIE McMURRAY: Yeah, when I passed the 14 for the lead, really thought I was going to be able to drive away.  I ran a couple laps there and opened up about ten cars and I drove into turn one and the splitter started crashing the ground, so just going to assume that a bump stop or something maybe failed and just let the car over travel, and the whole last run, I couldn’t use    I couldn’t really use any brakes.  If I pushed on the brake hard at all, it would make the splitter crash into the ground.

                So it was a really good day for us, though.  I had a solid weekend and I think this is statistically my worst track so it’s really good for us to come in here and have a solid run.

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  You can’t ask me about Denny (Hamlin), either, okay.  You can ask me anything you want, just not about Denny.  (Laughter).

                Q.  Knowing what you know about how far you guys can go on fuel at this place, Clint went 92 laps on his final tank.  Is that astounding or plausible?  How does that number strike you?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  I know he went 92 laps but 20 under the caution; and I know before the race we talked about 75 laps under green.  I would say he was really close to being out.

                Q.  Can you talk about the intensity of the restarts?  We saw a lot of three wide racing and seems like things have picked up from your perspective.

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  I only started outside the Top 3 on one restart.  Most restarts I started on the outside of the front row.

                So it’s a lot different when you start in the first couple of rows because guys are willing to give and take a little bit.  I did have one restart in 25th, and it’s significantly different.  The thing about this racetrack is that you race on the apron at certain points in the race.

                However, on the restarts, this is like the worst track that we go to for getting    for like getting the car going.  I mean, you saw two or three guys spin out Friday just leaving the pits because it’s so slick, and when the inside guy enters on the apron, it’s really hard to hang on to your car.  So it’s different than what you see at Pocono when people talk about wild restarts.  Here, it’s just hard to keep the car underneath you.           

                Q.  You were right up there in front and you had Chase people around you all day; do you have to separate the fact that they are in the Chase and just race your race?  Is it too much to think about to say you have to be careful around him or you can race him hard?  Do you just have to say, I just have to race?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Yeah, honestly you probably can be more aggressive around the Chase guys because they are thinking differently than what the guys are that are not in the Chase.  But really, I didn’t    you know, over the last few years, you don’t think about that until it comes down to the last two or three races.

                There’s a ton of racing left.  I know you guys, there’s only ten left, but a lot can happen, even in two or three races.  So really until it gets down until the last couple of races; I don’t pay a tremendous amount of attention to that.

                Q.  You were quoted as saying I guess before the Chase, you would gladly trade your two big wins this season with Clint for that 12th Chase spot.  Given how he won today, would you still make that trade for a win in the Chase, and this result for you being as good as it was, does it make it bittersweet for you?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  What I said was that I wouldn’t trade winning those races to be in the Chase and finish tenth and I still would not trade those two wins to be in the Chase right now.  It’s a really big deal to win those two races.  To win Loudon is a big deal, but it’s still not the Daytona 500 or the Brickyard 400.

                Q.  Or to be in the Chase?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  No, still wouldn’t.

                Q.  How confident is your team for next year?  You guys are really on a roll and you just missed it, and today you proved that you belong perhaps in the Chase.

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Yeah, we just were really inconsistent earlier in the year and the last couple of weekends we became a lot more consistent.  We did not have a good car at Richmond at all and we still fin 17th; where earlier in the year we would have finished 25th to 30th and that certainly would have put us in the Chase.

                We have done a good job, for me, of staying out of trouble and we have had good cars all year long.  I know Denny (Hamlin) is not looking forward to Dover but for me, that’s my favorite track to get to go to.  We ran really well there in the spring, so certainly running well here, I can’t wait to get to Dover on Friday. 

                Q.  You probably worked just as hard the first year you broke into Cup, but given the year that you’re having, can you share the emotions that you have from when you first started out to what you’re feeling this year, having such a great year?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  My first year, certainly filling in for Sterling (Marlin), that was tough to get into somebody’s car that had led the points up till the Kansas race.  It’s an awkward position to be put in and then to go out and the win at Charlotte    and I don’t know if you guys remember, but they put a cell phone with Sterling on the other end while I was on national TV and me on the other end.

                And that’s a really tough position to be put in.  That’s hard for any driver to get out of their car, but for a young guy to get in your car and win immediately, that’s just    I mean, that’s tough.  That was odd for Sterling and for me.  Certainly the racing is a lot different now than what it was in 2002 or 2003.  I remember the restarts, being able to pass five or six guys on the outside of every restart and some of the guys that had been around for a long time, whether it was Rusty or Mark or those guys yelling at you after the race, just hang on until we get strung out.  And now, when they have, you can’t hardly pass anybody on a restart now because everybody goes so fast and so hard, it’s a lot different than it was then.

                KERRY THARP:  Great first race in the Chase.  Good luck next week.

                FastScripts by ASAP Sports …

    About Chevrolet: Chevrolet is a global automotive brand, with annual sales of about 3.5 million vehicles in more than 130 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. In the U.S., 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 Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly to gas-free” solutions including the Cruze Eco and Volt, both arriving in late 2010. Cruze Eco will offer up to 40 mpg highway while the Chevrolet Volt will offer up to 40 miles of electric, gas-free driving and an additional 300 miles of extended range (based on GM testing; official EPA estimates not yet available). 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, fuel solutions, and OnStar availability can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • TOYOTA NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Post-Race Notes & Quotes New Hampshire Motor Speedway

    Denny Hamlin (second) was the highest finishing Camry driver in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) race at Hew Hampshire Motor Speedway.  

    David Reutimann (seventh) and Kyle Busch (ninth) also recorded top-10 results for Toyota at the one-mile oval in Loudon, N.H.  

    Other Camry drivers in the field included Martin Truex Jr. (20th), Robby Gordon (26th), Reed Sorenson (27th), Marcos Ambrose (30th), Joey Logano (35th), Scott Speed (36th), Casey Mears (38th), Joe Nemechek (40th), Mike Bliss (41st) and Landon Cassill (42nd).  

    Hamlin maintains the unofficial points lead with a 35 point advantage over second-place and race-winner Clint Bowyer after race one of 10 in the 2010 Chase for the Sprint Cup playoff.  Fellow Camry driver and JGR teammate, Busch is fourth (-62 points).

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Small Business Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  2nd How was your car after the spin? “Yeah, our car was good.  We just fought restarts all day.  It took us half the race or three quarters of the race, actually, to get up front to the two, three or four and then as soon as we got there, we got spun.  So it was so frustrating on my part to have to battle back from 22nd there with 80 (laps) to go.  And just Mike (Ford, crew chief) worked on the car and got it super fast there at the end.  I was just trying to make those guys run as hard as I could, but it wasn’t enough.” Were you surprised with the amount of gambling going on in this race? “I was very surprised, really, to see how aggressive guys were on restarts.  It is such a balance, because you’ve got guys like Jamie (McMurray) that are like, ‘win, win, win, win,’ and we’re like, ‘you know, I just don’t want to get hit on restarts.’  I’m just trying to not get run over and whatnot.  So it’s a balance out there.  And this is one of the toughest tracks to have restarts.  So I was really worried about this track in particular, getting out of here unscathed, and we didn’t, but we just battled back right there.   So overall it was pretty surprising to me to see really how aggressive it was. Are you disappointed you didn’t win or satisfied that you leave with the points lead? “The 33 (Clint Bowyer) had a really good car today, the 1 (Jamie McMurray), the 14 (Tony Stewart).  Those three cars I felt like were the best cars all day.  We never really got to show where our car was at.  As soon as we got to the top three is when we got spun.  We clawed and scratched our way to the front all day to get in position with 80 to go to go for a win.  Luckily, it’s a double-edged sword, it made us come in, we had to get fuel and get tires and it gave us the fuel for the end.  Typically, our Toyota gets really good gas mileage, so I knew we were going to be fine on fuel right there at the end.  Top-six was where I wanted to leave this day, and so first mission accomplished.” Could you have won today’s race? “I needed one more lap.  We gained a ton right there.  It’s tough to say, once he (Tony Stewart) ran out of fuel — the way they were running, I’m not sure how much they were conserving if any, but our cars with a really fast the last run, and obviously the fastest car on the track, but yeah, it was — I guess Carl (Edwards) just got loose.  He hit us and we saved it, and I moved way up the track, because, you know, just in case somebody else was up under there, and then he just hit us a ton again.” How does this finish affect your confidence for the remainder of the Chase? “It’s good.  It gives me somewhat of a buffer at Dover.  We all know how Dover is for me.  We’ve just got to minimize a bad day again at Dover next week.  That’s our goal.  You’ve got to set a number, a number that you’re satisfied with, and try to reach that goal at Dover next week.  So the good news is we finished I think third or fourth there in the spring which is a heck of a lot better than 22nd and two laps down last year in the Chase race.  Just if we can get past Dover, we’ve got a lot of really good tracks for us.” How do you think you’ll perform at Dover after finishing second at New Hampshire? “The number in which I hope to run just moved up like five spots.  So that’s just what we have to do.  And it’s not that we just run bad at Dover every time, it’s just every time I went there, I either wrecked or broke something or ran terrible.  So with the exception of the spring, that’s about the only good run I’ve had there, so, yeah, we do shift our expectations based off of this week.”

    DAVID REUTIMANN, No. 00 TUMS Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Finishing Position:  7th Are you satisfied with a seventh-place finish? “That was ugly, but I’ll take it.  To struggle the way we did today and still come out of here with a seventh-place finish is pretty amazing.  Our TUMS Toyota was loose in and off all day and really couldn’t get a handle on it.  Rodney (Childers, crew chief) and Dax (Gerringer, race engineer) really did a great job working on our fuel and pit strategy.  We took a pretty big gamble by staying out toward the end and not pitting, but with the way the cautions worked out it was pretty good — we saved fuel and picked up a top-10.  I can’t thank our team enough for the job they did today and TUMS for their support.”

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  9th How was your race? “Where do I begin, I don’t know.  I guess I’ll start with yesterday.  I thought I was driving the car right and apparently I didn’t set the car up right.  We were about two-tenths off yesterday and I thought it was just a factor of those guys getting more speed out of their cars.  In essence it was off.  We just didn’t get it setup right.  It was mainly my fault.  You know the guys fought hard and Dave (Rogers, crew chief) made some good calls.  Any time that we got speed off the corner and then we missed it in the center of the corner — any time we got speed through the middle, we couldn’t get down the straightaways.  We were battling back and forth with tight and loose.  We just got what we could out of it today.  Fortunately our bad day right now is ninth versus some other guys.” What happened when you spun and were hit from behind? “Both wrecks, there was a time when someone spun out in front of me but Jimmie Johnson never saw it and drove over the back of me and spun me out the second time.  It’s just a product of not being able to see I reckon.  Unfortunately we had to battle back and fight back through there.  We were the best to recover of our spin but that was it.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 56 NAPA AUTO PARTS Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Finishing Position:  20th

    ROBBY GORDON, No. 7 SpeedFactory.TV Toyota Camry, Robby Gordon Motorsports Finishing Position:  26th

    REED SORENSON, No. 83 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Finishing Position:  27th

    MARCOS AMBROSE, No. 47 Kingsford/Bush’s Baked Beans Toyota Camry, JTG-Daugherty Racing Finishing Position:  31st

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 20 Home Depot Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  35th

    SCOTT SPEED, No. 82 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Finishing Position:  36th

    CASEY MEARS, No. 13 GEICO Toyota Camry, Germain Racing Finishing Position:  38th

    JOE NEMECHEK, No. 87 Toyota Camry, NEMCO Motorsports Finishing Position:  40th

    MIKE BLISS, No. 55 Toyota Camry, PRISM Motorsports Finishing Position:  41st

    LANDON CASSILL, No. 64 Little Joe’s Autos Toyota Camry, Gunselman Motorsports Finishing Position:  42nd

  • Dodge Post-Race Quotes — New Hampshire

    Sunday, September 19, 2010

    New Hampshire Motor Speedway

    Dodge Motorsports PR

    Sylvania 300

    Post-Race Quotes

    www.media.chrysler.com

    KURT BUSCH (No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge Charger) Finished 13th

    “I feel like we had a rough day with our Miller Lite Dodge Charger; maybe I was overdriving it. I got into Turn 1 a couple of times over my head, trying to get what seemed to be a sixth to a 10th-place car up into the top five. I almost clipped (Jeff) Burton once, just trying to drive in there and ended up getting (Joey) Logano. I apologize for that. I was just over driving. I wasn’t quite in the zone. I wasn’t quite feeling it today. We survived. We needed to have a good day today and not just survive.”

    ANY IDEA WHY YOU WEREN’T IN “THE ZONE” TODAY? IS IT THE PRESSURE OF THE CHASE? “It’s just trying to carry a car on your back that’s only good for eighth-place. I should have settled for eighth. I wanted more. I wanted a good finish today and when you do that, when you stretch yourself thin, you get in trouble. That’s what happened today.”

    STEVE ADDINGTON (Crew Chief, No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge Charger) “I didn’t think what we were going to be that bad when we started the day with the Miller Lite Dodge. We have to work on our stuff. We have to work on our front ends to get them to turn better. We have to free the back of the car up. Kurt just got loose a couple of times and spun. That cost us. That’s not Kurt Busch-style.”

    IS TODAY ONE OF THOSE DAYS THAT YOU WILL LOOK BACK ON AND BE HAPPY WITH A 13TH AFTER WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN WORSE? “I think so. When you spin out once and about spin out again and come back and get a top-13 out of it, that was amazing. You have to point to the driver for that. He drove his butt off those last 50 laps.”

    SAM HORNISH JR (No. 77 Mobil 1 Dodge Charger) Finished 10th “We’ve gone through a lot of different things trying to figure out why we haven’t been able to run as well as we did last year. We didn’t have a great run today, but we did what we need to do. I passed about six cars on a restart to get back in position for the lucky dog. It took about 30 laps before we finally got the caution. The Mobil 1 Dodge was pretty good today. It just wasn’t as good as we needed it to be at the end. We were way too tight the last couple of runs. I think if it had played out without those last two restarts, we would have had a top-five car. Every time you bunch everybody back up and are on older tires, it’s hard to get going again. Since we started using the spoiler, we’ve had problems in the middle of the race and had to battle just to get the track position back. We need to work together and not let that happen, get us down and have to battle back.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI (No. 12 AAA Dodge Charger) Finished 18th “We had a lot of speed for qualifying, but not a lot of speed in race trim, not the speed that we needed. We were probably a 15th place car and then lost some spots there at the end. We had a good qualifying effort. It’s disappointing we didn’t capitalize on it. We qualified well and raced OK the first half of the race. It just didn’t’ work out for us toward the end of the race.”

  • Ford Loudon Post-Race Quotes

    CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion (Finished 10th) – ON HIS 10th PLACE FINISH  “The car ran well. Everyone was about the same speed. I just got loose under Denny (Hamlin). The first time I chattered the rear tires all day and I took him out. He probably had the car to beat. I am proud of my team and the Aflac Ford Fusion was really good, it was just unfortunate that we had that situation out there.”

    MATT KENSETH – No. 17 Crown Royal Ford Fusion (Finished 14th)  – ON HIS 14TH PLACE FINISH  “Our Crown Royal Ford was just tight in the middle and needed help turning in the front today.  The guys made adjustments all race long but we just didn’t run very well. We got caught up in that wreck, had a lot of damage to the car, and it was just a really long day for us.”

    AJ ALLMENDINGER – No. 43 Best Buy Ford Fusion (Finished 8th)  – ON HIS 8TH PLACE FINISH  “It was something we weren’t pushing. We just ran out two laps earlier than we expected and that put us behind. The car was good all day, it just was so hard because we were back there in traffic and it is so hard to fight back. At the end we were pretty good. We were stuck behind Carl and racing him clean.  We were trying to help him out as much as possible on points. If I could have gotten around him clean I would have done it. The last two or three laps I was just trying to not force the issue. It felt like if we could have gotten around him then we might have been able to run up to seventh or eighth with what happened out there.  We had a real good car. It was just something that happened. The car was fast though and it was a solid weekend all around. We definitely have things to work on, but it was a lot better than we have been.”

    MIKE SHIPLETT, Crew Chief, No. 43 Best Buy Ford Fusion – FUEL MILEAGE WAS AN ISSUE FOR YOU AND FOR GUYS AT THE END OF THIS RACE  “Yeah, fuel mileage is usually something that happens at this track, we just have to figure out what happened to us on that second pit stop there when we ran out of gas. We will just go back and try to figure out what happened.” 

    ARE YOU SURPRISED THAT IT CAME INTO PLAY AT THE END WITH THE CHASE GUYS? “No, they are just trying to win races and get the most points they can, so I am not surprised by that at all.”

     
    DAVID RAGAN – No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion (Finished 22nd) – “We just lost all of our track position when we stayed out on old tires but I felt like that was the right move early on in the race to try and stay up in the top 10 or top 15. It turned out to be a long run and we just really fought an ill-handling car that entire run. After that, we worked on trying to get our UPS Ford to turn better. We made it a little better, but we were already too far behind. If a couple of different things could have taken place during the race, we could have finished up in the top 15, but we just weren’t good enough when it counted.”

  • Kevin Harvick Scores Third-Place Finish in Door-To-Door Race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway

    LOUDON, N.H.  (September 19, 2010) – It was a 175-lap drag race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, where Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) co-owner Kevin Harvick earned a third-place finish with new sponsor JEGS.com on board the No. 2 Chevrolet Silverado. Harvick battled door-to-door for the lead with the No. 18 of Kyle Busch throughout the 185.15-mile race, but the JEGS.com machine was too tight at the end, and Harvick came just shy of a victory.

    “We had a good day despite the fact that we didn’t get the win today,” said Harvick. “We put on a really good show with the No. 18, and we were evenly matched throughout the race. We were a little tighter than I wanted to be at the end and I just couldn’t get by him. I’m really glad we were able to give JEGS.com a great showing today, even though it wasn’t the result we wanted.”

    After qualifying on the outside pole for TheRaceDayRaffleSeries.com 175, Harvick took the green flag and immediately shot into the lead by the completion of lap one, but was passed by polesitter Busch by the time the yellow flag waved for the first time for a spin on lap three. Too early to consider pitting, Harvick remained on the track and restarted in second on lap six.

    For the next 40 laps, Harvick and Busch would battle hard, running side-by-side and lap times within hundredths of a second of each other, but it wasn’t until lap 46 that Harvick overtook Busch for the top spot. Only one lap later, Busch reclaimed the lead, and the two would swap positions until the second caution flag waved for debris on lap 63.

    Harvick relayed to crew chief Butch Hylton that the truck was turning a little too tightly in the center of the corners, and Hylton called the No. 2 to pit road for four tires, fuel and a track-bar adjustment. Restarting in second on lap 67, Harvick took the lead once again, but relinquished it by the time a spin on the backstretch brought out the yellow on lap 72. Hylton encouraged Harvick, observing that the No. 2 was faster than the No. 18 in many places on the racetrack, and the team opted to remain on the track when the caution flag waved two more times in quick succession on laps 81 and 86.

    When green-flag racing resumed on lap 92, so did the door-to-door drag racing between Harvick and Busch. Harvick briefly took the lead once again, but relinquished it after only one lap. The trucks ran side-by-side until the yellow waved on lap 129, and Hylton called Harvick into the pits for what would be their final stop of the race. With Harvick stating that the truck was still tight in the center and exit of the turns, Hylton opted for four tires, an air-pressure adjustment and fuel. The No. 2 pit crew made a very fast pit stop, allowing Harvick to beat Busch off of pit road and restart the race from the lead on lap 132.

    Immediately after the restart, Harvick, Busch and KHI teammate Ron Hornaday went three wide for the lead, but the JEGS.com Chevrolet was still too tight and slipped into the second position. The yellow flag was displayed on lap 160 for a spin, and Harvick took the lead for the final time following the restart on lap 164, but Busch quickly reclaimed the position and the No. 2 lost another spot to the No. 31 of James Buescher one lap later. The caution flag waved for the final time on lap 170, setting up the field for a green-white-checkered finish when racing resumed on lap 173. The three lead trucks were closely matched until the checkered flag flew, but Harvick remained in the third position when he crossed the finish line.

    The No. 18 of Busch visited victory lane, with Buescher in second, Matt Crafton in fourth and Austin Dillon rounding out the top five. The No. 2 remains fourth in the Owner’s Point Standings, now 302 points out of first place.

    The Truck Series hits the track again on Saturday, September 25th for the Smith’s Food & Drug Stores 350 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway where Ken Schrader will be behind the wheel of the No. 2 truck. The race can be seen live on SPEED at 9:00 p.m. ET.