Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • Harvick Gets to Keep His Pole Position at Richmond

    Harvick Gets to Keep His Pole Position at Richmond

    Kevin Harvick earned the pole for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 in Friday night’s Busch Pole Qualifying at Richmond Raceway, and he gets to keep it.

    Why’s that?

    Four of the top 10 qualifiers will have to start from the rear of the field after failing pre-race inspection Saturday afternoon — Erik Jones (qualified second), Chase Elliott (seventh), Daniel Suarez (ninth) and Jimmie Johnson (10th). They all will have to start from the rear of the field for Saturday’s race.

    “Eyes forward and let’s get to work,” said Johnson on Twitter after being asked his thoughts on starting from the rear.

    But the drama of failed inspections didn’t stop there. Aric Almirola (qualified 15th), Denny Hamlin (18th), Matt Tifft (20th), and Joey Gase (36th) all failed inspection and will have their cars moved to the back of the pack when the green flag waves later tonight.

    Additionally, Elliott, Hamlin and Tifft all failed a second time, resulting in a crew member ejected from each team. All eight drivers that failed inspection will start between 30th and 37th positions.

    Since Richmond is a night race, NASCAR impounds all the Monster Energy Cup Series cars until the garage is opened again on Saturday for inspection. Single failures result in disallowed qualifying times, and the team is set to start at the end of the field for the race. Multiple failures result in increased penalties against the team.

    So the updated results from qualifying are as follows. Harvick is still on pole with a time of 21.722 seconds. Kurt Busch is now the new face on the front row and will start second, 0.075 seconds off the pace. Joey Logano, last weekend’s short track winner, Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. with his best start of the season, round out the top five. Austin Dillon, Chris Buescher, Brad Keselowski, Paul Menard and Kyle Larson complete the updated top 10 qualifying results.

    The green flag is set to wave shortly after 7:30 p.m ET tonight.

  • CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    RICHMOND RACEWAY
    TOYOTA OWNERS 400
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    APRIL 12, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Kurt Busch, No. 1 Global Poker Camaro ZL1
    7th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1
    8th Austin Dillon, No. 3 AAA Camaro ZL1
    10th Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
    11th Chris Buescher, No. 38 Scott Comfort Plus

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    2nd Eric Jones (Toyota)
    3rd Kurt Busch (Chevrolet)
    4th Joey Logano (Ford)
    5th Kyle Busch (Toyota)

    The Toyota Owners 400 is scheduled to begin on Saturday evening, April 13 at 7:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 GLOBAL POKER CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 3rd:
    “I thought it was three good runs. The car had a good bit of rear grip to it, which has been our struggle, so I’m really happy that today’s practice run and the qualifying runs today showed us that the car’s got the grip level. Now we just need to make sure the balance stays with it.

    “We’re just trying to be more consistent and not have any weak areas. And, I think the changes they made, we’re trying to adjust to the weaker areas. So, that should help us.

    ON THE QUALIFYING FORMAT
    “It really wasn’t much different. It’s a short track. The problem is the 1.5-mile tracks.”

    DID YOU LEARN ENOUGH IN THE ONLY PRACTICE WE HAD TODAY?
    “We’ll do what we can. With the way the set-up was, you always hope that doesn’t burn off the right rear tire too soon.

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 7th
    ON THE QUALIFYING FORMAT
    “It was great. It was quick, like it should be. We weren’t sitting around for 45 minutes.”

    YOU LIKED THE 5 MINUTES?
    “Absolutely.”

    YOU COULD GET DOWN
    “And, get it done.”

    AND IF YOU SCREW-UP, YOU DON’T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT WHETHER YOU GO OUT AGAIN OR NOT
    “You’re done. I like it. I’m all for it.”

    DID YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHAT YOU HAD FOR QUALIFYING
    “We didn’t make a qualifying run with that second practice being rained out, which I’m sure nobody did. As you can see, the same crowd is still fast. The same good driver’s teams are still going to be the ones to beat tomorrow night.”

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 AAA COATINGS CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 8th
    WAS 5 MINUTES ENOUGH?
    “I had enough time. I think at some of these places it’ll get really wild because the bigger the track you’re just going to be lined-up behind people. So, yeah. I think 10 minutes was enough time, personally. But, five minutes worked today because of the track, I thought. I don’t think anybody really got messed up. I had a good line. I waited for the chaos to ensue. I went into the second group and I had plenty of gap. I definitely had to watch people coming off the track, but that was about it. I’m just really proud of our qualifying effort. It’s the best qualifying effort our AAA team has had here. Last year we qualified like 28th and 26th and drove up into the top 10 and finished 6th. So, we’re starting 8th and that’s going to mean a lot for my brake pedal. I don’t have to wear it out at the beginning of the race.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 10th
    ON HIS QUALIFYING EFFORT
    “Yeah, not bad. With an impound procedure and knowing what the racing is going to do, I think we’re sitting pretty good with our set-up.”

    WAS 5 MINUTES ENOUGH?
    “I’ve been doing this so long and there have been so many games, I’ll play this game.”

    DO YOU LIKE THIS GAME?
    “I would assume it’s a better product for television and ultimately we need to worry about the show that’s being put on. The 15 minute sessions or whatever it was with three minutes of cars on track probably wasn’t the best thing to sit-back and watch at home (laughs)”

    DID YOU RUN TODAY?
    “Yes, I had a short run today.”

    WHAT’S SHORT?
    “Four miles and a real low heart rate. Tomorrow off and two on Sunday and let it rip on Monday.”

    DO YOU HAVE BUTTERFLIES OR ENTHUSIASM AS THE BOSTON MARATHON APPROACHES?
    “I started to get nervous watching the weather. And then I decided, the hell with it (laughter). I can’t control it. And if I have a car race on Sunday and a Marathon on Monday, it’s just going to be a better story. So, at this point, I’ve run nearly 800 miles since the start of the New Year. And looking at 26.2 (miles) doesn’t seem like a big deal at this point (laughs), so I’m ready. I love to be prepared and ready for anything and everything I do and I’m ready for that.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 MCDONALD’S CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 14th
    “Obviously it had rained, so there was no rubber on the track. I think being the first cars out made a difference. And then, I just felt tighter each run or each lap, and then the second round there I was just a little too tight in the center to roll speed. So, I had the feeling I’d be that way once the track got some rubber and sure enough, we were just a little too tight.”

    HOW MUCH MORE STRESSFUL OR MORE INTERESTING WAS THE 5-MINUTE QUALIFYING?
    “It didn’t make a difference to me because we were pitted towards the Turn 1 side of things, so we were the third car in line so I could just roll right out. But, I’m sure if we were on the backside of that order, it would have been more stressful. So, yeah, it didn’t make a difference for me.

    “I think the format is good. We’ve had too much time in that first round and I think it just gets a little hectic maybe for a track like this where there’s not much room. But, I think shorter is better.”
    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Kevin Harvick wins unofficial Busch Pole at Richmond Raceway

    Kevin Harvick wins unofficial Busch Pole at Richmond Raceway

    Reid Spencer | NASCAR Wire Service

    RICHMOND, Va. – Where the short tracks are concerned, Kevin Harvick and his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing team appeared to have turned a corner.

    And on Friday afternoon at Richmond Raceway, Harvick got through the corners better than everyone else in winning the unofficial pole position for Saturday’s Toyota Owners 400 at the .75-mile track (7:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

    The unofficial Busch Pole Award was Harvick’s third at Richmond, his second of the season and the 27th of his career, setting up a showdown with the Joe Gibbs Racing and Team Penske cars that have monopolized Victory Lane in the first eight Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series events of the season.

    RELATED: Unofficial qualifying results

    Harvick posted a lap at 124.298 mph (21.722 seconds) to edge Erik Jones (124.081 mph) for the top starting spot by .038 seconds. The front-row start will be Jones’ first of the season.

    Kurt Busch qualified third at 123.870 mph, a dramatic improvement over his 2019 average starting position of 20.1. Joey Logano and Kyle Busch completed the top five.

    “The cars definitely had a little fall-off,” Harvick said. “I was just really just managing the fall-off and just trying to be consistent with the laps, but stickers (new tires) were definitely faster in the first round than they were in the second and third round.”

    Harvick was sixth in the first round, second to Kyle Busch in the second round and first with the pole at stake. Martin Truex Jr., Chase Elliott, Austin Dillon, Daniel Suarez and Jimmie Johnson earned positions six through 10 on the grid, respectively.

    For the first time, NASCAR limited each round to five minutes, with seven minutes between, condensing the entire qualifying session to 29 minutes. For Jones, who had a pit stall near the exit from pit road, the time limits weren’t an issue.

    “Short tracks, I think it’s fine,” Jones said. “It’s a little hectic in the first round and even in the second round, but it’s easy for me to say. We had a great pit stall being first out. I could just roll out, and here it doesn’t benefit you to wait so you just roll out and get your lap in.”

    RHarvick was fast last week at Bristol, only to have his prospects crushed by a pre-race penalty for multiple inspection failures and an early loose wheel that forced an unplanned pit stop. But at Richmond on Saturday, he’ll be leading the field to green.

    Nevertheless, there are plenty of unknowns, including a new Goodyear tire combination.

    “As you look at this place, this is really one of those places where you kind of have to go off of what happened last time,” Harvick said. “New tire, so you don’t really know exactly what the cars are going to do deep into runs as far as how bad they will push, will the get looser.

    “What conditions will you be fighting? We wind up guessing a number of times when they change the tires like this, because you don’t know what to anticipate.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Kevin Harvick Pole Winner Press Conference)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Kevin Harvick Pole Winner Press Conference)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, April 12, 2019
    EVENT: Toyota Owners 400 Qualifying

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Mobil 1 Ford Mustang — POLE WINNER PRESS CONFERENCE

    LAST YEAR AT THIS TIME YOU WERE THE BIGGEST OF THE BIG THREE. DO YOU THINK YOU HAVE GOTTEN TO THE POINT TO GET BACK IN VICTORY LANE? “Not sure. We are doing all we can.”

    DO YOU FEEL LIKE WITH THE SPEED YOU SHOWED LAST WEEK AT BRISTOL AND TODAY THAT YOU GUYS HAVE TURNED A CORNER TO SOME EXTENT? “We haven’t raced yet, so we will find out tomorrow.”

    TALK ABOUT THE QUALIFYING AND WHAT LED TO YOU FEELING LIKE YOU NAILED THE POLE? “For me, all three rounds went really good. We had a good race practice for a 30-lap run there at the beginning of practice. Obviously it rained out the second practice. They did a good job with the car and I didn’t really know but the second lap ended up being our fastest lap. I just over drove the car probably the second and third lap. The first lap was probably the smoothest lap for me. I felt like I needed to roll a little more speed and wound up rolling too much speed and it wound up being too much brake. The cars had a little fall off from a time standpoint and I think it was really just managing the fall off and be consistent with the laps. Stickers were definitely faster in the first round than they were the second and third round.”

    DID YOU LIKE THE FIVE MINUTE ROUNDS? “I just race by whatever they tell me we are supposed to do.”

    ARE YOU OKAY WITH REALLY JUST ONE RUN PER ROUND? IS THAT OKAY WITH YOU? “It doesn’t matter if it is okay by me or not because I don’t make the rules.”

    DID YOU FEEL A DIFFERENT SENSE OF URGENCY WITH THIS FORMAT? “It was really just more congestion. I think when you come to a place like this with everyone running three or four laps, it is hard to get 40 cars going in the first round, or however many cars are here, 35 or 40 or whatever it is. To get those cars to run three or four laps, you run into traffic and it becomes more congested than it probably needs to be in the first round. The second and third rounds were fine.”

    DID YOU LEARN ENOUGH WITH JUST ONE PRACTICE FOR RACE CONDITIONS TOMORROW NIGHT? “I hope so. We will find out tomorrow. As you look at this place, this is really one of those places where you kind of have to go off of what happened last time. New tire, so you don’t really know exactly what the cars are going to do deep into runs as far as how bad they will push, will the get looser. What conditions will you be fighting? We wind up guessing a number of times when they change the tires like this because you don’t know what to anticipate. A lot of the changes you see in the sport, once you get done changing the rules on the cars come from Goodyear because of the fact that they change the tires all the time from a compound, construction and sidewalls. This is one of the places they change them a lot. I really don’t know exactly what we are shooting for so you kind of go off past knowledge of what you think you need to do with the car from a balance standpoint. You really don’t know until you get 50-60 laps into the first run and hopefully have an idea of where to go and that it isn’t so bad that you can’t adjust on your car.”

    LOOKING AHEAD TO TALLADEGA BECAUSE OF THE UNCERTAINTIES WITH THE DIFFERENT PACKAGE — “I am at Richmond, I have no comments on Talladega. I have no idea. You just show up and see how it develops. That is really all you can do is show up for a weekend and see how it develops and go from there but right now we are just worried about Richmond.”

  • Toyota MENCS Richmond Raceway – Qualifying Recap

    Toyota MENCS Richmond Raceway – Qualifying Recap

    Toyota Racing Post-Qualifying Report
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Richmond Raceway – April 12, 2019

    TOYOTA STARTING POSITIONS
    1st, Kevin Harvick*
    2nd, ERIK JONES
    3rd, Kurt Busch*
    4th, Joey Logano*
    5th, KYLE BUSCH
    6th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    18th, DENNY HAMLIN
    27th, MATT DIBENEDETTO
    36th, JOEY GASE
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    ERIK JONES, No. 20 DeWalt Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Qualifying Position: 2nd

    Is this a qualifying format you think could work or is it a, ‘wait and see what happens in two weeks situation?’

    “You probably have it right there, see what happens in two weeks. Short tracks, I think it’s fine. It’s a little hectic in the first round and even in the second round, but it’s easy for me to say. We had a great pit stall being first out. I could just roll out and here it doesn’t benefit you to wait so you just roll out and get your lap in. Other than that, I don’t know. I don’t think it’s going to solve any mile-and-a-half issues having a short round for sure.”

    Could it penalize you on a short track depending on your pit stall from qualifying draw?

    “It could. I would say that if I was down at the end of pit road, I might not have the same sentiment about it. I think if you’re fast, I don’t know where the others were starting on pit road that are in the top-12, but I think if you’re fast you’re going to find a way either way no matter if you have to wait or if you can go right away.”

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Qualifying Position: 5th

    Talk us through qualifying and what you thought of the new format.

    It’s a hurry. It’s hectic that’s for sure. The biggest thing is there’s no time for reruns anymore. You’ve kind of got what you got. If you mess up or your car is off balance or whatever, you’re pretty much screwed.”

    Doesn’t the new qualifying format benefit really good drivers or really good teams and drivers that can adapt?

    “I think it benefits the good crew chiefs more than anything. Them having a good understanding and a good guess to give you what you need for qualifying for that first round.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR, No. 19 Auto Owners Insurance Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Qualifying Position: 6th

    How was the new qualifying format today?

    “It wasn’t a huge deal here. Some tracks they get to be a lot bigger deal. It was fine. We luckily got out there and got us a clean lap in each round. I think that was really the main concern especially the first round. It’s a lot of cars to get out there in five minutes and you just don’t want to get held up by anybody. We found a good spot. We rolled right out. Luckily our draw on pit road was good enough. We were 11th I think in line so we were able to get out there in that first wave which was good. They were all good cars in front of us.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Ground Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Qualifying Position: 18th

    “Well the track definitely changed. With the rain it was a clean race track so anybody that’s pitted at the front of pit road’s got a huge advantage because they can go out. We were dead last here on pit road. We had to wait on everyone to go and by then it gets rubbered up – the track really changes and slows down. That and with the compressed round one, we only have five minutes to go. We were late to go out in the first round. That made us late to start our tire pressures and then had to go in the second round. The time crunch…we couldn’t get out there early in round two and that really kind of deteriorated the handling of our car. Overall, we felt pretty happy with it in race trim, but we’ll battle from 18th with this FedEx Camry and see if we can’t win tomorrow.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Media Availability)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Media Availability)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, April 12, 2019
    EVENT: Toyota Owners 400 Media Availability

    RICKY STENHOUSE JR., No. 17 Fifth Third Bank Ford Mustang — TALLADEGA IS NEXT WEEK, HOW MUCH DO YOU LOOK FORWARD TO THAT FROM A RACING STANDPOINT? HOW MANY FRIENDS DO YOU THINK YOU’LL HAVE? “It felt like when we won our races at Daytona and Talladega we didn’t have any friends either. When you have a fast car — back in the day I felt like you had a lot of friends when you had a fast car but now if you have a fast car they want to shuffle you out so they don’t have to contend with you. Now going into speedways a lot of times you can do a lot of things on your own at Talladega and Daytona now. As much as all of us have learned with side drafting, I am interested to see how this package is going to draft. It will be different than what we have been running so it is what it is. We will go out there and do what we can and try to get a win. I always feel confident going there. First off, we have to get through Richmond and kind of get our stuff back on track. We have had a rough couple of weeks on the race track. Hopefully we can have a solid weekend here and get things rolling before we get to Talladega.”

    WHAT HAS IT BEEN LIKE WORKING WITH RYAN (NEWMAN) THIS YEAR? “We started the year off strong on the 17. I think Ryan and the 6 team were just struggling to get on the same page with each other. Now that they have some races under their belt, I think they are on the same page. They had a really strong run at Bristol last weekend and were decent at Texas. We both struggled at Martinsville a lot more than what we wanted. It felt like we had a really good Sunny D Ford last week and didn’t get to show anything for it with our early incident there. The dynamic between the teams is really good. The dynamic with Ryan and myself has been what it needs to be in teammates and I think they way he thinks and talks about and goes through a race and a weekend has been beneficial to me. I think we are going to continue to get better.”

    YOU GUYS HAVE GELLED PRETTY WELL? “Yeah, we have a lot in common. We were friends off the race track before we were teammates and have a lot of the same interests. I think that always helps things go smoothly.”

    MATT YOCUM TWEETED A PICTURE OF YOU. WHAT IS THE STORY BEHIND THAT? “Yeah, I don’t know what year that was. Probably 2004 I would assume. I started racing sprint cars in 2003. I believe that was my second year running. Yeah, very old picture. I would appreciate it if he didn’t put that out there.”

    THERE HAS BEEN TALK OF POTENTIAL WITH THE PACKAGE AT TALLADEGA OF SOME KIND OF TANDEM DRAFTING. IS THAT SOMETHING YOU THINK IS POSSIBLE? “I haven’t put much thought into it yet. I am wondering how the side draft will work. That is more of what I was referring to and just how those runs are going to be different. How you can get different runs on cars and ultimately what you can do when you are out front to maintain the lead. That is what our speedway racing has turned into, get to the top five and if you are in the top two of each lane, bottom or top, how do you stay there. I think a lot of people have it figured out now but now that the package is going to change, is that still going to be something easy or capable of doing? Obviously the tandem, I don’t know how that is going to work or not. I assume it is still illegal, right? I don’t know. Somebody will find out.”

    DO YOU SENSE THE TIRES WILL WEAR OUT FASTER HERE THAN IT DID LAST WEEKEND AT BRISTOL? “Yeah, I doubt there will be different pit strategies. I think when the caution comes out here you will want tires. I think so far in that one practice that we had, I think the tires are falling off a little bit less than what they did in the two races last year but no doubt when the caution comes out you are going to want tires. That definitely made Bristol kind of cool and interesting toward the end of the race with the way the right side didn’t wear at all. You wanted left sides but could probably go the whole race changing the right sides once or twice. The left sides you wanted new tires. Here at Richmond I think you will see everybody electing for tires.”

    WAS THERE SOMETHING THAT CLICKED FOR YOU AT RESTRICTOR PLATE TRACKS? “I think our package got better. For the longest time in my Cup career I felt like we got decent finishes but we never really contended for wins. We always put ourselves in the right position to get a top-10 and that is kind of where we hung out. We missed wrecks and had good pit strategies and things like that and put ourselves in position. It wasn’t until we really made our speedway program better, faster, cars handling better with speed that I felt like we stepped our game up that much more and were able to put ourselves in position to contend for wins and really have confidence going in to every speedway race knowing that we have a chance to win. Jimmy Fennig has done a great job with that and it is something that any time I am in the shop, we are always kind of kicking it around what he is learning and what we are going to be bringing to the race track if he is confident with it. It has been cool to see him take on that project and run with it. Now we need to elevate our short track and mile-and-a-half programs to the standard that our speedway cars are and then we will be where we need to be.”

    DOES IT HELP TO HAVE SOMEONE AS AGGRESSIVE AS BRIAN PATTIE CALLING THE SHOTS FOR YOU AS WELL? “Yeah, it definitely helps. Now in the speedway races I feel like it is not just about the car or what you can do with it on the track but it is about strategy and track position and when you are going to make your last pit stop so that you can make that last pit stop before everybody else and keep that track position. Pattie is definitely not scared to roll the dice and see what strategy works. We have had some really interesting strategies here at Richmond that have paid out for us. Definitely cool to have Brian on the box. I feel like I have gone a few races where I have kind of questioned what he wants and that tends to be bad for us when I start questioning so I just revert back to letting him do what he wants to do.”

    DO YOU HAVE A PICK FOR THE MASTERS? “I think earlier in the year I picked Tiger to win. I don’t know. I am definitely going from here straight to my bus to watch it.”

    HOW DO YOU BALANCE DRIVING AGGRESSIVELY HERE AND WALK THAT FINE LINE AT A SHORT TRACK? “I don’t know. I just worry about that later. I think for me, I drive aggressive when our cars are capable of running up front and putting us in a position to have a good finish. If we are running 20th, I am not that aggressive. I feel like I do pick and choose when I turn it up or down if we have a car capable of running in the top-five or top-10 or winning then I will be aggressive and worry about things later. If we don’t have something that is very good and capable of running up front then I will probably just chill.”

    HOW DO YOU PREPARE FOR THE RACE THIS WEEKEND? “For us it is about looking at notes. A lot of drivers like to rewatch races. We look at what has changed with the cars and what that is going to do to our race car and what it will make it drive like and what the lap time is going to be like. If they changed the construction of the tire and things like that. For us at Roush Fenway Racing, what we struggled with, we look back at Phoenix and we struggled with the brake package there and didn’t have it quite right. We worked on brakes coming into this weekend.”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THE NEW QUALIFYING FORMAT FOR THIS WEEKEND? “It will be chaotic. To have only five minutes for all the cars to go out on the race track is going to be difficult. As drivers and teams, thinking back to Bristol last week, We didn’t want to be first out because of the solution on the bottom of the race track. It is better once it gets a little heat in it and cars get on it, so we all wait. Then coming into Richmond, we all want to wait a little bit because normally there is a lot of rubber on the race track from practice so we want cars to go out and pick that rubber up and the track picks up speed. There are different reasons why we all sit and wait to go out. At the 1.5 mile tracks you didn’t want to be first, you wanted to draft. Every track is unique. Now I don’t think it will be that big of a deal if we get to qualify because the rain will have washed all the rubber off the track. If the Xfinity cars qualify it won’t be that much rubber put down so I don’t think you will see cars waiting to go out as much as if we would have had a full day of practices and then qualifying with no track conditions changing.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Harvick Puts Mustang on Pole at Richmond)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Harvick Puts Mustang on Pole at Richmond)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, April 12, 2019
    EVENT: Toyota Owners 400 Qualifying

    FORD QUALIFYING RESULTS
    1st – Kevin Harvick
    4th – Joey Logano
    9th – Daniel Suarez
    12th – Brad Keselowski
    13th – Paul Menard
    15th – Aric Almirola
    16th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    20th – Matt Tifft
    21st – Clint Bowyer
    22nd – David Ragan
    25th – Michael McDowell
    29th — Ryan Blaney
    31st — Ryan Newman
    34th — Jeb Burton

    MATT TIFFT, No. 36 The Pete Store Ford Mustang (Qualified 20th)

    “That is our first time this year we have made the second round. That was big for us. We feel like we unloaded decent today. We got to loose in the second round to get the time we needed there. I feel like we could have been a little better there if we had gotten more grip. It has been pretty decent so far. We ran well at Phoenix, another flat track, so hoping to build on that and have another good weekend here.”

    RICKY STENHOUSE JR., No. 17 Fifth Third Bank Ford Mustang (Qualified 16th)

    “We all knew that the track was going to be really fast to start. There was no rubber on it. Every time at Richmond in practice if you are the first 10 cars out you are always fast. Luckily we had a good draw for the first run out and that really helped us and benefited us to be in the top-five in the first round. The second round we just missed it. We weren’t great in practice. I knew at some point we would slide back a little. We were hoping to make the final round but we just missed it a little bit. We were a little too tight.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford Mustang (Qualified 4th)

    WHAT DID YOU THINK OF THE FIVE MINUTE CLOCK? “It was short. I think here it is not really a necessary thing because cars wanted to go out early and it doesn’t allow teams to cool off and go back out in the same round to improve their time. I think you actually kind of lose a little bit of the drama of a car going back out and can that car knock the car that is on the bubble out. There is no time to cool off and do that. By the time you run two or three laps you have killed maybe two minutes. You come in and cool off and it takes two or three-minutes and you are out of time. It doesn’t add up to do that. I thought it was okay. It didn’t bother us.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL YOU ARE FOR THE RACE? “I think we are good. I think we are pretty good. I think we have something to race with. Not much practice on the long runs but from what I felt, I think we are close.”

    DANIEL SUAREZ, No. 41 Haas Automation Ford Mustang (Qualified 9th)

    “I felt like that went okay. I felt like the car is a little faster than what we just showed. We just got a little too tight there at the end and loose on exit which is normal. Everyone is chasing something different. I feel like the speed of the car is pretty good so far today and I feel like we are a little better. Hopefully we can show that tomorrow night.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield Get Grilling Ford Mustang (Qualified 15th)

    “I don’t think it was any more frantic. Obviously it was a little bit more compact and not as much of an opportunity to get spread out and get a clean lap. There were definitely a lot of cars on the race track at one time. Obviously we still run by ourselves here. It is a short track and we want clean air and we want to be able to get a clean lap. I thought this was pretty status quo as far as qualifying is concerned.”

    PAUL MENARD, No. 21 Menards/Maytag Ford Mustang (Qualified 13th)

    “The way the sport used to be you would do one lap and you either made it or you didn’t. You screwed up the one lap or you didn’t. The five-minute rounds, it is nice having it like that again and having that one opportunity to go out. You have to make sure you hit all your marks. There are no redo’s. I thought it was cool.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Alliance Truck Parts Ford Mustang (Qualified 12th)

    “I had no problem with the format. It is going to have strengths and weaknesses. Tracks where it is good and tracks where it is bad. It is hard to put a one-size fits all package on this, that is for sure and optimize it. I thought today went pretty well though. I think this can work on short tracks. It seems good.”

    DID YOU HAVE ANY ISSUES WITH CARS IN THE WAY? “No. it was a little crowded but not bad.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 MoneyLion Ford Mustang (Qualified 29th)

    “No grip. That was the biggest thing. The race track had no rubber on it from all the rain and we waited to be one of the last cars out and that didn’t work out too well. That is the way it goes. I thought the race car was good today. Hopefully we can drive up through the field and get a win for MoneyLion and Ford.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Roush Performance Ford Mustang (Qualified 31st)

    WAS IT SPEED OR DID YOU NOT GET A CLEAN LAP? “Little bit of both. It actually drove pretty good and we typically lack some short run speed here. At least I do with the setup that we run. We will take the

  • CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: William Byron Breakout Highlights

    CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: William Byron Breakout Highlights

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    RICHMOND RACEWAY
    TOYOTA OWNERS 400
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    APRIL 12, 2019

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 met with media in a breakout session at Richmond Raceway. Select Highlights:

    ON RICHMOND AFTER PRACTICE:
    “The car doesn’t drive that much different here, at least for us. It feels like that same Richmond. It’s very slick, long-runs, tire wear is really high, so we’re just trying to make sure. To me, this thing feels the closest thing to Pensacola where I raced in the Super Late models; it’s a very similar place.”

    WHAT HAS (CREW CHIEF) CHAD KNAUS TAUGHT YOU? AND WHAT HAVE YOU TAUGHT HIM?
    “That’s a good question. I don’t know if I’ve taught him anything really, but he is very intense and very focused. I think that’s a good thing. It kind of keeps everything going in the right direction. He works really hard. I feel like I talk to him more than I do, or I have, any other crew chief that I’ve worked with I think, during the week and getting to the race track. So, I think that’s all good.”

    YOU HAVEN’T HAD THE FINISHES YOU’VE WANTED BUT YOU HAVE TO BE ENCOURAGED AT LEAST BY THE PERFORMANCE AND THE SPEED
    “It’s been better. Qualifying has been better for us the last couple of weeks. Texas was a better result. So, I mean I think it’ll hopefully improve. We’ve still got some work to do. But hopefully, as we get to Kansas and some of these places, we can improve, for sure.”

    WHY IS CHAD KNAUS THE ONE YOU TALK TO THE MOST THROUGHOUT THE WEEK?
    “Gosh, I think he’s just trying to figure out ways that we can improve the cars and also the communication. When you’re not where you want to be, you definitely have to communicate a lot more to get there. He’s not shy of giving me a call and asking my opinion on stuff and vice versa.”

    DO YOU EVER STRUGGLE WITH CONFIDENCE? AND IF SO, WHAT DO YOU DO EASE THE TENSION?
    “It would be great to get in something and win. It’s been a while since I’ve won, so that’s definitely hard because race car drivers need to win. But, I think that honestly, I do other things whether it’s going to the karting track or i-racing or just anything that I can do to get in a car and win or have a good result. But yeah, you’ve ultimately got to know you’re doing all you can and keep going in that direction.”

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: Chris Buescher Breakout Highlights

    CHEVY MENCS AT Richmond 1: Chris Buescher Breakout Highlights

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    RICHMOND RACEWAY
    TOYOTA OWNERS 400
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    APRIL 12, 2019

    CHRIS BUESCHER, NO. 47 SCOTT COMFORT PLUS CAMARO ZL1 met with media in a breakout session at Richmond Raceway. Select Highlights:

    HOW GOOD WAS BRISTOL AND HOW TOUGH WAS BRISTOL?
    ‘It was good until it wasn’t. So, what a heartbreaker. That was a really good day for us. To be at a home track for Bush’s for us to have a solid day going, realistically we could have been a top 5. We were around the No. 1 (Kurt Busch) car all day. That one hurts, for sure. To run that good all day and work our way up there from qualifying and you’ll have that. It’s a bummer. But at the same time, our pit crew did a fantastic job all day. We were up there with teams we’re not around every week and we didn’t lose spots on pit road. I’m very proud of them. You win together and you lose together and that one we lost and that one hurts. But, It was a good momentum day for us.

    “Even here. We showed up here at Richmond off the truck with really good speed. I’ll be the first to tell you this is not my favorite race track. And so that was pleasantly surprising for me. I really wanted to get that final practice in. That wasn’t in my control. We’re hoping for qualifying here and to kind of get a game plan or an idea of where we are and then get a game plan for the race.”

    WERE YOU IN RACE TRIM OR QUALIFYING TRIM THIS MORNING?
    “Race trim. With the impound stuff, it’s pretty minimal change anyway. At the beginning of first practice we planned on taping up. And that’s really about all we do.”

    DO YOU HAVE THE SAME EXPECTATIONS HERE THAT YOU DID AT BRISTOL LAST WEEK, GIVEN THE PRACTICE?
    “No. I am pleasantly surprised with how practice went, and I shouldn’t say I’m shocked. We ran a lot better at Phoenix than we have in the past. This one had kind of compared to that race track for me through the years. And all of our group was really excited coming into this. They’ve worked really hard to find something different. And, we showed up with something and we had speed. We’re trying to make it hold on a little longer, which is always something you’re looking for here at Richmond. We didn’t get a chance to test that. From a speed aspect, with everyone mocking up a little bit, I don’t know where we are but we have good speed out of our Scott Comfort Camaro ZL1. So, I would like to qualify to get a little bit of improvement and then also get an idea for the race. We did make some more changes to try and find something that would hold on better.”

    HAVE YOU NOTICED A DIFFERENCE WITH THE HENDRICK RELATIONSHIP?
    “We’ve had our relationship with them and the motor program this season has been good. We took all the power away at the same time that we were getting different stuff. There’s no real back-to-back comparison. But the communication lines have been really good. It kind of got us involved with just one organization and it helps. We have our pit crew coming through Hendrick Motorsports, through our engine, and some of the other support that we get. It does make just a cleaner line of communication, and that’s been really good. And, I think we’ve had good speed this season. There’s not doubt about it. We’ve picked up five spots consistently from where we were at this time last year. So, that’s a good pick-up over the off-season. And that’s not just due to that relationship. That’s due to a lot of hard work back at the shop and everybody at JTG Daugherty Racing working really hard to plan for this different rules package that we have now and I think they did a terrific job of finding us something that’s more competitive and it’s our job to fine-tune it from here.”

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Ryan Blaney, Paul Menard & Aric Almirola Media Availability)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Richmond (Ryan Blaney, Paul Menard & Aric Almirola Media Availability)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, April 12, 2019
    EVENT: Toyota Owners 400 Media Availability

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 MoneyLion Ford Mustang — WHAT IS THIS ABOUT YOU BEING TOO NICE? “Who has been saying that? I didn’t see that. I don’t know. What am I too nice about? I don’t think you can be too nice.”

    I GUESS ON THE RACE TRACK? “Oh, well, I guess I will start being a jerk then. Make everybody happy. I race everybody the way they race me. I race well with a lot of people. There is time for racing hard. I race really hard. I don’t really know what too nice is. Cause I am not running over people? I put Newman in the fence? Does that make me nice? Maybe I will start being mean. I don’t want to hear anybody complaining about me being too mean then.”

    YOU LAUNCHED THE RYAN BLANEY FAMILY FOUNDATION TODAY? “We did. That is pretty cool to finally get rolling. We have been working on that for eight months, nine months. By the time we got it to the point where we figured out what we wanted to do and a couple companies we wanted to partner with. The Alzheimer’s Association people have been really great to get to know them. Everybody starts foundations for something that is personal to them. That is personal to me. My grandfather on my dad’s side got really sick with it 10-12 years ago and ended up passing away. It is something we can do. The Gateway Bronco thing is going to be really unique. It was nice to sit down with those guys and discuss it. There are so many cool people and companies that are helping us out. Ford is giving us their charity slot at Barrett Jackson which will be great. PPG and Discount Tire and Body Armour, they have a really great deal going on at the Chicago race where families can sign up and get their names of family members who have it on the deck lid. That is cool to see them be a part of it. We have a couple more things lined up that I am excited to do and try to help some people out on the back end. That is the main goal. It is a cause for something and hopefully we can do our part and try to figure it out. It is one of those diseases that nobody knows much about and not a lot has been done about it. I know they are working hard at it but it is hard to figure out. I am excited about the future with that and helping out in a little way.”

    HAVE YOU EVER HAD A PIT ROAD SPEEDING ISSUE? IS IT JUST RISK VERSUS REWARD? “I think a lot of the times Denny has been able to overcome that. The deal at Texas he ended up winning the race. Does it work out most of the time? No. Most of the time it hurts you but that time it worked out. Speeding on pit road, yeah, you can gain spots on pit road by maximizing you speed limit. If the limit is 50 and you are running 49.8 down pit road you will maybe gain a little bit of time. People always look at pit crew and pit stops and that is a big part of it but getting on and off pit road is big too. Your mph average down pit road is big. I have always been one to give a little bit on pit road. If it is two-tenths, I will give it just to not have that penalty. Everyone speeds on pit road, it is just going to happen. Some drivers are very aggressive at it and some will give up a couple tenths. Look at guys that can do it great, you will get caught with speeding if you are pushing it to the limits. That is something I have actually wanted to get more aggressive on and if it bites you it bites you.”

    DOESN’T THAT START AT THE SHOP THOUGH WITH THE TEAM DECIDING HOW FAR THEY WANT YOU TO GO? “Yeah, it starts with the engineers. The dash we run now is all lights and things like that. It has gotten a lot better. When the digital dashes first came out, I feel like you saw a lot more pit road penalties speeding because the dashes were jump and not smooth and now the software is way better and you can be a little more accurate with it. The way I run it is dots. One red dot is 49.7 or 49.8. You have a little to gain and some to give. That is something that you see a lot of teams right now over the past few years that they do pit road speeds during practice. You see a lot of cars going down pit road. If we qualify on Friday and race Sunday, they will start off Saturday practice in their box and work on getting in and out. That is something you work on at the shop and tweak all weekend. We bumped mine up a little here this weekend. This place is tough, and Bristol. When they have curves, you can run faster in the curves. That part is something we really like to do to try to maximize that deal. It starts at the shop each week and goes through the weekend.”

    BOTH OF YOUR PENSKE TEAMMATES HAVE WON. IS THAT JUST YOU NOT SEALING THE DEAL OR IS IT AN OVERALL LACK OF PERFORMANCE COMPARED TO THOSE GUYS? “I don’t think it is an overall lack of performance. We just have to finish races a little better. That goes all around, from me to working on the car throughout the race, me knowing how to finish these races and knowing what to ask for. It is a full deal and so hard to finish out these races. Sometimes you win with the best car and sometimes you win with the fifth best car. I feel like our cars have had speed enough to win all year. Some races haven’t gone our way where I felt like we had the best cars to win the race and just dumb luck happened and not being able to seal it out and some race we faded toward the end and didn’t make the right adjustments. Our speed is there, it is just a matter of fine tuning to figure out what we need to do at the end.”

    THE FIRST TIME YOU GO TO A PLACE LIKE TALLADEGA, HOW DO YOU KNOW WHEN YOU HAVE HIT YOUR COMFORT LEVEL THERE? “I feel like you learn every time you go back. Just learning new things and stuff like that. If they make a change to the car, how you draft is different. I remember my first Cup race at Talladega was in 2014. I ran trucks at superspeedways but the Cup stuff is way different. You have a lot more people who know what they are doing and they are more used to it. It is just overwhelming at first. The biggest thing is just knowing what are the right moves to make. You just don’t know. You can watch film but until you are in the race car out there with 39 other people you don’t know. You don’t know what is right and what is wrong. I feel like we have gotten a decent grasp on it as far as when you take runs, when to go with somebody and when not to go. When to block each lane. It will be different in a couple weeks because the rules are way different and you will see way different drafting I think. When you feel like you have a decent grasp on it the draft changes and you almost have to relearn it all over again. It takes a while. Even the first 1.5 mile track I went to, I was lost. It is just such a big race track and you just don’t know what to do in those situations because you have never experienced it. It just takes time to figure it out.”

    DOES IT HELP THAT TEAM PENSKE HAS SUCH A GOOD SUPERSPEEDWAY PACKAGE? “Some of it is that. If your cars are really fast it is a little easier to make moves and pull them off. At the same time, if you don’t really know what you are doing — in 2014 when I ran Talladega, Brad and Joey already had a bunch of speedway wins and our cars were fast and I ran up front a lot of that race but I didn’t really know what to do when I got there are how to pick my way through the pack. You can have a great car but if you don’t have experience you don’t know when to go and when to no. It takes time to figure out and know when to get runs and when to lay back and how the air is pushing you around. That just takes a lot of time. A lot of the best guys, they can pick it up within a few years but it takes a little while to get comfortable with it and have confidence in yourself and your spotter to get those “clear by two inches” situations at the end of the race or any part of the race for that matter.”

    PAUL MENARD, No. 21 Menards/Maytag Ford Mustang

    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE RACE THIS WEEKEND? “The track is in good shape and the tires fall off here. The surface is old and we have a lot of horsepower back. It is going to be a good race.”

    IS THERE A REASON, FOR THE LAYPERSON, WHY YOU WOULDN’T RUN THE TRACTION COMPOUND HERE? “Because it is a great race track to begin with. It has a bottom groove, a middle groove and an outside groove. It is a 3⁄4 mile, fairly flat track but we can get up to the fence during races and that is something that you don’t have at Martinsville and Bristol the preferred groove is up by the fence. They made the bottom groove come in. Here you have a lot more options.”

    HOW WOULD YOU GAUGE 2019 SO FAR? “Up and down. We had a good run at Bristol and have had some good runs but haven’t had the finishes. The whole rules package and everything is a lot different than anything we have done before, both to setup for and to drive. It is a lot different.”

    WHAT ARE YOU THINKING FOR TALLADEGA? “Talladega is going to be different with the big downforce, smaller plates, I don’t really know. I haven’t thought that far ahead yet. We have an off weekend in between I think.”

    WHAT CAN YOU BRING FROM BRISTOL AND TRANSLATE TO HERE IF ANYTHING? “It is totally different. It is a lot different race track. Concrete versus asphalt. Multi-grooves versus pretty narrow groove. A lot different animal. This is kind of a truer short track where you want mechanical grip in the car. Bristol is pretty damn fast still.”

    HOW IS THE CHEMISTRY WITH GREG? “It has been good. We have a notebook now and we can go to these race tracks and look back and what we did last year and try to improve. That is something we didn’t have last year. We didn’t have a notebook. Now we have notes to go through both races and see what we did in practice and how the track reacted with sun or clouds and we can make changes accordingly.”

    ARE YOU GUYS LEANING ON PENSKE OR DOES THE 21 TEAM KIND OF DO THEIR OWN THING? “We get a lot of support from them for sure. At the end of the day it is up to Greg and myself and our engineers to figure out what to put in the car. We know a lot about what those guys are doing, and we use them for sure as a big tool.”

    BACK TO TALLADEGA, YOU HAVE NEVER HAD MORE THAN 400 HORSEPOWER, SO THERE WILL BE MORE THAN YOU HAVE EVER HAD WHEN WE GO THERE. “Yeah, I have no idea how it is going to race. There is talk that the tandem might come into play. The big restriction with tandem racing is cooling. Our radiators and things aren’t made, the spec radiators don’t have the cooling we had a few years ago when we did the tandem. I think you will see people get to people’s bumpers and push as long as they can.”

    HAVE YOU STARTED THINKING ABOUT YOUR LONG-TERM FUTURE IN THE SPORT? “I don’t have many more years left, that is for sure. I really don’t have an answer for you as to when or where to call it a day. It has been a part of my life for a long time. I hope to always stay involved on some level, whatever that is.”

    YOU LOOK LIKE YOU ARE HAVING FUN IN A GOOD SITUATION WITH THE ONE-ON-ONE KIND OF DEAL WITH THE WOOD BROTHERS: “Yeah, I have said it a thousand times. They are really good people and a lot of fun to work with and we have a lot of resources we can draw from Team Penske so it is kind of the best of both worlds. We have a small team that is very personalized with a lot of support from a larger team that we can draw from.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield Get Grilling Ford Mustang

    IN HINDSIGHT, WAS IT A MISTAKE TO TAKE THE CAR BEHIND THE WALL LAST WEEKEND? “We wouldn’t have been able to finish anyway. They jacked it up on pit road and saw that the right-front suspension was KO’d and so they made the decision to go behind the wall. We were going to have to go behind the wall to fix it anyway. Not knowing if running one lap and not really anybody getting up to speed, we thought it was okay to go behind the wall and fix it because nobody had really made a lap up to speed so there wasn’t “minimum speed requirement”, but it was going to take way more than five minutes to fix the right-front suspension.”

    DID YOU TALK TO WILLIAM BYRON ABOUT THE INCIDENT? “Yeah, we talked on Monday. The lesson learned is that the bottom of the race track, the PJ1, when it sits overnight and they reapplied it Sunday morning, we saw in our practice that it is really slippery and slick. You have to kind of tip-toe around down there until it gets heat and then it gains a lot of traction and actually becomes a more preferred groove. When it is cold and you are one of the first cars in it, it is really slippery. I thought, and he agreed obviously, the pace that he was running to try and run in that PJ1 that early in the race was just too fast and his car couldn’t hold it and they were loose and probably on low air pressure and all those things. The cars are a handful to drive. He got down into turn one and his car got really loose and we touched, and I wrecked. I think it is kind of a byproduct of that particular race track with them applying the PJ1 on the bottom. I think William being in that position, and I sympathize with him, he was starting on the front row and their year hasn’t been great so taking off on the front row you want to run up front and you go into the race thinking you are going to run up front all day and have good pit stops and execute all day. When you fire off on the start and are already losing three or four spots, you start to panic even if it is the first lap. I think he just made a mistake. We talked about it Monday and we are good.”

    A LOT OF THESE KIDS DON’T HAVE YOUR EXPERIENCE OR SHORT TRACK EXPERIENCE. MOST OF THEIR TRAINING HAS COME ON SIMULATORS AND SUCH, THAT DOESN’T SEEM TO PREPARE THEM FOR ON-TRACK SITUATIONS. IT FEELS LIKE IT MAY BE PROBLEMATIC MOVING FORWARD AS MORE OF THESE KIDS COME UP AND HAVEN’T REALLY PAID THEIR DUES: “Yes. So, here is what I will say to that. I think growing up short track racing, especially for me, I can’t speak for everybody, but for me I know that I was a teenage kid doing short track racing. I got a lot of “life lessons” and racing lessons from the peers that I raced with that were in their 30’s and 40’s and 50’s. Racing down in Florida against Wayne and Dick Anderson and Mike Fritz and the Cope brothers, all these guys that had raced Busch series back then and ASA and a lot of those things. They were the guys. Racing at New Smyrna during speedweeks against Junior Hanley and all of these guys that were really, really well-known big-name short track racers and me being a teenage kid racing against those guys and having them come up and talk to me and me going up and talking to them and asking them questions. I learned a lot. I gained a lot of experience based on them sharing with me or coming over and scolding me and ripping my ass. Either way I learned from it. So, I will say that has been somewhat lost in the racing community. Growing up and racing on a computer and doing all those things and video games and a lot of that stuff is certainly a lot different than real world experience. When you wreck on the simulator you can restart it. When you wreck on the simulator it doesn’t hurt. When you wreck on the simulator nobody comes over and chews you out.”

    EVEN IF I WAS A NEW DRIVER AND DIDN’T HAVE MUCH EXPERIENCE, IT ISN’T SOMETHING I WOULD PROBABLY LEARN AT A SHORT TRACK RIGHT? THAT ISN’T REALLY APPLIED AT SHORT TRACKS IS IT? “In all fairness, it is really just something that comes with situational awareness. You go back and you watch last year’s race. You go back and you do all those things and you study and look and learn and see those things and you kind of draw conclusions and even base some assumptions based on what you learned and what you see. Me and William have talked, and we are good. And I am not by any means harping on William. He is a great race car driver. He is a champion of our sport in the Xfinity series. I think he is a great race car driver who just made a mistake and that happens. It is part of it. Unfortunately, I was just on the wrong end of that deal. Life goes on. I think the thing I was most upset about was that I know how hard we have worked at the beginning part of the season and we have been extremely consistent and ran up front and been a top-10, top-five car almost every single weekend. Going into the race at Bristol I thought we would be as well. We saw that with how well my teammates ran. Bowyer led laps and was really fast. Harvick probably had the fastest car on the race track and had a lot of different situations they had to overcome. I felt like we were comparable to them in practice. I knew going into that race that we had a good car that maybe had a shot to win, but for sure that we would run top-10, top-five. To have that end on lap one and end that streak, we had six top-10’s in a row and thought Bristol was another opportunity to run really well and fifth in points, only a few points out of third, I thought we were on the right trajectory. To have that happen and leave Bristol and now be ninth in points, that was the toughest pill of all of it to swallow.”

    FOR HERE THIS WEEKEND, WHAT IS YOUR MINDSET COMING HERE? YOUR STRATEGY FOR TOMORROW NIGHT? “I think Richmond is one of those places almost like Bristol where you have to come here with the mindset of going off of a notebook. This place changes so much from practice and it is hot and the sun it out to night time, under the lights, cooled down, long runs. In practice, the most you run is 20 or 30 laps at a time on a set of tires and then you fire off the race and certain times in the race we will run a whole stage without a caution. Just knowing and preparing for that, you really rely on the notebook and go off of history. I think this weekend is going to be very similar. I don’t think, for us at least, that we really learned a whole lot in practice. A lot of what you will race, setup wise and things, are going to be based on history.”