Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • Late Pit Call Propels Menard To Sixth Place At Bristol

    Late Pit Call Propels Menard To Sixth Place At Bristol

    Paul Menard capitalized on crew chief Greg Erwin’s call to stay on the track during the race’s final caution period and came away with a season-best sixth-place finish in Sunday’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway.

    Erwin’s call, which vaulted Menard and his No. 21 Menards/Sylvania Ford Mustang from 13th place to fourth heading into the 14-lap dash to the finish line, was just one of several tactical decisions that kept the No. 21 team in the running for a strong finish in Sunday’s race.

    Menard started the 500-lapper from ninth place, and the team used a similar stay-on-the-track strategy at the end of Stage One to finish that segment in eighth place, thereby earning three Stage points.

    The team used the wave-around late in the second stage to regain a lost lap.

    In the final segment of the race, Erwin again called for the wave-around during a caution period with just over 80 laps left to run.

    That decision worked out in the Menard/Sylvania team’s favor as well, with another caution flag putting Menard back on the same pit sequence as the race leaders.

    He was running outside the top 10 when the caution flag flew at Lap 486 of 500 for a spin by Kyle Larson.

    Erwin’s decision to stay on the track boosted Menard to fourth place for the restart and paved the way for his sixth-place finish, which moved him up two positions in the points standings to 19th place, just four points behind Ricky Stenhouse Jr., who holds the 16th and final spot in the Playoff standings.

    Menard said it was a great Bristol weekend all around, other than a minor mistake he made on a pit stop.

    “We qualified really well and had good track position from the start,” he said. “I messed up our first pit stop and got us behind. I went to neutral to stop and it popped into third, so I killed the car. I put us behind doing that, and track position is so important.”

    Menard also praised Erwin’s decision to not pit in the closing laps.

    “Greg made a good call to stay out and we came home with a top 10,” he said.

    Menard said the race was a good one from his perspective, thanks in large part to the preparation of the racing surface.

    “I felt there were more options than normal,” he said. “That PJ1 [traction compound] stayed pretty much the whole race, where normally that goes away and you’re just going to the top, so I thought we had more options.”

    Eddie Wood said Menard, Erwin and the pit crew had their best days of the young season.

    “Paul did some great driving, especially on old tires,” he said. “The pit crew never made a mistake, and Greg made great calls all day.

    “He used the wave-around twice to get us back on the lead lap, and his last-second call to not pit at the end was his best decision of the day.”

    Menard and the No. 21 team return to the track next Saturday night at Richmond Raceway.

    ###

    Menards

    A family owned company started in 1958, Menards is headquartered in Eau Claire, WI. Menards has more than 300 retail stores located throughout the Midwest in the states of IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, MI, MN, MO, NE, ND, OH, SD, WI and WY. Menards is known throughout the home improvement industry as the low price leader. It’s famous slogan “Save Big Money at Menards” is widely known and easy to remember. For more information, visit Menards.com, like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter, Instagram or Pinterest.

    Wood Brothers Racing

    Wood Brothers Racing was formed in 1950 in Stuart, Va., by Hall of Famer Glen Wood. Wood Brothers Racing is the oldest active team and one of the winningest teams in NASCAR history. Since its founding, the team won 99 races (including at least one race in every decade for the last seven decades) and 120 poles in NASCAR’s top-tier series. Fielding only Ford products for its entire history, the Wood Brothers own the longest association of any motorsports team with a single manufacturer. Glen’s brother, Leonard, is known for inventing the modern pit stop. The team currently runs the Ford Mustang driven by Paul Menard in the famous No. 21 racer.

  • Toyota MENCS Bristol Motor Speedway Recap

    Toyota MENCS Bristol Motor Speedway Recap

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Bristol Motor Speedway
    Race 8 of 36 – 266.5 miles, 500 laps
    April 7, 2019

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, KYLE BUSCH
    2nd, Kurt Busch*
    3rd, Joey Logano*
    4th, Ryan Blaney*
    5th, DENNY HAMLIN
    12th, MATT DIBENEDETTO
    17th, MARTIN TRUEX JR
    24th, ERIK JONES
    35th, TIMMY HILL
    *non-Toyota driver

    Camry driver Kyle Busch collected his third Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) victory in Sunday afternoon’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway.

    After being involved in an on-track incident on Lap 1, Busch drove to the front of the field during the final stage and led 71 laps (of 500) before going on to capture his eighth MENCS win at Bristol Motor Speedway.
    Denny Hamlin (fifth) also finished in the top 10 with his No. 11 Toyota Camry.

    Toyota drivers swept both races at Bristol this weekend with Christopher Bell the winner of Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series event and Busch the winner on Sunday.

    It’s the third time this season that Toyota drivers have swept a race weekend and the second-consecutive Toyota race weekend sweep following wins at Texas Motor Speedway last weekend.

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 Snickers Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Finishing Position: 1st

    What was your confidence level when you decided to stay out with 20 to go?

    “I don’t know. We’re crazy. We just do what we do, try to win. It’s pretty awesome to be able to snooker those guys, get our win today here at Bristol. Love this place. It was fun to battle out the brother there at the end. I know we didn’t quite get side‑by‑side racing it out. I saw him working the top. I’m like, I better go. I got up there, was able to make some ground. Man, just awesome to be here in front of this crowd, here at Bristol Motor Speedway. The Skittles Camry wasn’t the best today, but we made the most of not having the best and got everything we needed here at the end.”

    What does it mean to have won here eight times?

    “It ain’t 12, that’s for sure. So I got more to go. We’re getting there and it’s fun. It’s the most (among) active driver(s), I guess. I think I heard that. But, you know, there’s a lot more years left hopefully.”

    How much did it feel like you had to overcome today at Bristol?

    “I felt like we had to overcome a lot especially there just on the

    short runs. We just didn’t have the burst-off speed that we needed for the first 30-40 laps. It kind of seemed after that we could maintain with a bunch of those guys and then we could kind of run those guys back down just a little bit. It was hit or miss a little for us today and this weekend. We thought we had a pretty good car in second practice yesterday and going into the race. We just didn’t quite have the speed. We just didn’t show exactly what we needed there.”

    Were you worried that you stayed out on that last caution when a lot of the field made pit stops?

    “Yes and no. I’ve seen that game played both sides. I’ve seen it work more times than not. When the guys stay out you have a better opportunity to be able to go for the win. It kind of fell into our hands there being able to lead the restart, being able to get Kurt (Busch) to not spin his tires and get up second – it’s a good run for us Busch brothers to come home 1-2.”

    How special is this victory?

    “I mean it’s good. I love winning at Bristol. You love winning everywhere. It’s nice to continue to bounty up some of those bonus points for the playoffs.”

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

    Finishing Position: 5th

    Talk about your fifth-place finish today at Bristol Motor Speedway.

    “We struggled today. We just didn’t really have the car that we needed to go out there and compete. It was just a little bit off. We kind of hung around that 10th to 13th place all day and then we just got it closer there at the end and that’s when we kind of made a charge towards the front – that and some good strategy. I screwed up our strategy on pit lane. We’ll get it cleaned up. Just got to work through all the kinks and clean stuff up. We didn’t have a race-winning car. Top-five finish with a car that probably shouldn’t have been there is a good day.”

  • Busch captures his eighth win at Bristol

    Busch captures his eighth win at Bristol

    Kyle Busch continued his hot streak at Bristol Motor Speedway in the Food City 500 on Sunday. Busch captured his eighth win at the track and his 54th career Monster Energy Cup Series win.

    Although Busch won the race, he did not dominate the race. Busch was spun out by Ricky Stenhouse Jr. on the second lap of the race. A late caution flag with 22 laps remaining and the right decision by the crew to stay out, gave him the lead for his third victory of the season and the eighth top-10 finish in 2019.

    “It’s pretty awesome to be able to snooker those guys, get our win today here at Bristol,” Busch said. “I love this place.

    “It was fun to battle (with) the brother there at the end. I know we didn’t quite get the side-by-side racing it out; I saw him looking at the top. I’m like, ‘I better go.’ I got up there, was able to make some ground.”

    This win also continues Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) and Team Penske drivers dominating this season. Busch and teammate Denny Hamlin have combined to win five races for JGR while Keselowski and teammate Logano have won the other three.

    Busch held off brother Kurt Busch in the final laps. Older brother Kurt, wanted the win but he finished second and posted his 19th top-10 finish in 37 races at Bristol.

    “I really wanted to beat him. I was going to wreck him. I wanted to stay close enough so that when we took the white I was going to just drive straight into [turn 3 and 4]. He’s already won, I figured he could give a little love to his brother,” Kurt Busch said.

    Kyle Busch leads the series point standings by 27 points over Hamlin.

    Joey Logano finished third, Ryan Blaney fourth and Hamlin finished fifth.

    Blaney led three times for 158 laps (the most laps) and captured his fourth top-five finish in the last five races.

    “I need to get better as the track rubbers out. Joey (Logano) is really good at it. I thought he had the best car. The track rubbers in and I just need to do something different there,” Blaney said.

    Brad Keselowski finished 18th after being black flagged for not being in the right starting position when the race restarted with 14 laps to go. Keselowski was running second behind teammate Logano when the final caution came out on lap 479. NASCAR officials ruled that Keselowski lined up incorrectly and issued a pass-thru penalty.

    “Nobody could figure out the lineup. There wasn’t enough communication and it was just a tough deal.” Keselowski said.

    Monster Energy Cup Series Race Number 8
    Race Results for the 59th Annual Food City 500 – Sunday, April 7, 2019
    Bristol Motor Speedway – Bristol, TN – 0.533 – Mile Concrete
    Total Race Length – 500 Laps – 266.5 Miles

    FinStrNoDriverTeamLapsS1PosS2PosPtsStatus
    11718Kyle BuschSkittles Toyota5006551Running
    2271Kurt BuschMonster Energy Chevrolet5000640Running
    3722Joey LoganoAutotrader Ford5004151Running
    4312Ryan BlaneyPPG Ford5007246Running
    5511Denny HamlinFedEx Freight Toyota5000032Running
    6921Paul MenardMenards/Sylvania Ford5008034Running
    7814Clint BowyerHaas Automation Ford5002842Running
    82041Daniel SuarezHaas Automation Ford50001030Running
    9116Ryan NewmanWyndham Rewards Ford5000336Running
    101048Jimmie JohnsonAlly Chevrolet5005033Running
    1119Chase ElliottNAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet50010027Running
    122195Matt DiBenedettoLFR Pro League Toyota5000025Running
    13134Kevin HarvickHunt Brothers Pizza Ford5000024Running
    14153Austin DillonSymbicort Chevrolet5000925Running
    152413Ty DillonGEICO Chevrolet5001032Running
    16224William ByronAxalta Chevrolet5000021Running
    172319Martin Truex Jr.Auto Owners Insurance Toyota4999022Running
    18122Brad KeselowskiDiscount Tire Ford4993434Running
    191642Kyle LarsonCredit One Bank Chevrolet4990018Running
    202843Bubba WallaceBlue-Emu Chevrolet4990017Running
    212238David RaganMDS Transport Ford4980016Running
    222537Chris BuescherBush’s Beans Chevrolet4980719Running
    231488Alex BowmanNationwide Chevrolet4970014Running
    24420Erik JonesCRAFTSMAN Racing for a Miracle Toyota4970013Running
    253047Ryan Preece #Kroger Chevrolet4960012Running
    26310Landon CassillStarCom Fiber Chevrolet4950011Running
    272936Matt Tifft #Surface Sunscreen/Tunity Ford4940010Running
    281834Michael McDowellLove’s Travel Stops Ford493009Running
    293715Ross Chastain(i)Rim Riderz Chevrolet491000Running
    30268Daniel Hemric #Caterpillar/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet490007Running
    313452Bayley Currey #Belmont Classic Cars Chevrolet488000Running
    323677Quin HouffFALCI Adaptve Motorsports Chevrolet476005Running
    331917Ricky Stenhouse Jr.SunnyD Ford395004Running
    343232Corey LaJoieDUDE Wipes Ford308003Accident
    353566* Timmy Hill(i)Toyota239000Suspension
    363351Gray Gaulding(i)Jacob Companies Ford142000Engine
    37610Aric AlmirolaSHAZAM!/Smithfield Ford3001Accident
  • Team Penske Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Bristol

    Team Penske Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – Bristol

    Team Penske Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Race Report

    Track: Bristol Motor Speedway
    Race: Food City 500
    Date: April 7, 2019

    ____________________________________

    No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – Brad Keselowski
    Start: 12th
    Stage 1: 3rd
    Stage 2: 4th
    Finish: 18th
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 499/500
    Laps Led: 40
    Driver Point Standings (behind first): 5th (-90)

    Notes:

    A late-race penalty sidetracked Brad Keselowski’s chances for a possible victory Sunday afternoon at Bristol Motor Speedway. Keselowski was running second behind teammate Joey Logano when the 11th and final caution slowed the pace on lap 479. Crew chief Paul Wolfe made the call for right-side tires on lap 481, with Keselowski returning to the track in fifth position for the restart – or so he thought. NASCAR officials ruled that Keselowski lined up incorrectly for the restart, issuing a pass-thru penalty on lap 486. He served the penalty on lap 490, 10 laps from the finish of the 500-lap race. The process cost Keselowski a lap to the leaders and left him with an 18th-place finish.

    The bitter turn of events for the Discount Tire team spoiled an otherwise good afternoon. Keselowski started 12th but was running fourth as Stage 1 drew to a close. He pitted on lap 120 during the third caution, but speedy service on the pit lane put him fourth for the restart with two laps left in the opening segment. He finished fourth when Stage 1 concluded on lap 125 and didn’t pit during the stage caution, moving into the lead on lap 130.

    The driver of the Discount Tire Ford Mustang led the next 15 laps before settling into second-place behind teammate Joey Logano. Keselowski pitted under caution on lap 215 for four tires and restarted second when the race went green. He drifted back to fourth-place when Stage 2 concluded on lap 250, needing a longer run to run well. Keselowski pitted twice during the stage caution (once for four tires and once for a loose left-front lugs), shuffling him back to 18th for the restart on lap 261.

    Fortunately for the Discount Tire team, they got the long run they needed to make up the lost distance. Keselowski powered his way through traffic, climbing into the top-10 by lap 329. He was up to seventh-place when the eighth caution slowed the pace on lap 376. Keselowski got four tires on lap 378, restarted seventh when the race went green on lap 382.

    He was seventh when the caution waved on lap 414. Wolfe made the call for right-side tires when the pit lane opened, moving Keselowski up to fourth for the restart on lap 422. He patiently ran second behind Kyle Busch until he grabbed the lead on lap 445, holding the top spot until Logano wrestled it away on lap 470.

    The eleventh and final caution of the race set up one last round of stops on lap 481. Keselowski again got right-side tires and appeared to be fifth in line for the restart, but that wasn’t the case. The driver of the Discount Tire Ford did gain one position in the MENCS driver standings, moving up to fifth-place, 90 points behind the leader.

    Quote: “Nobody could figure out the lineup. There wasn’t enough communication and it was just a tough deal.”

    ________________________________________________

    No. 12 PPG Ford Mustang – Ryan Blaney
    Start: 4th
    Stage 1: 7th
    Stage 2: 2nd
    Finish: 4th
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 500/500
    Laps Led: 158 (Most Laps Led)
    Driver Point Standings (behind first): 6th (-96)

    Notes:

    · Ryan Blaney capped-off strong weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway with a fourth-place finish in Sunday’s Food City 500, his first top-five in eight starts at the .533-mile speedway. Blaney led the most laps in the race (three times for 158 laps) and grabbed his fourth top-five finish in the last five Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races.

    · Blaney started fourth and quickly moved up to second-place during the first 40 laps. He reported the balance of his No. 12 PPG Ford Fusion was loose on entry, center and in the middle of the corners. The first round of pit service came during the second caution on lap 41, with crew chief Jeremy Bullins making the call for four tires, fuel and an air pressure adjustment.

    · Blaney restarted and grabbed the lead from Erik Jones on lap 59. He led the next 58 laps, until the handling of his PPG Ford began to go away. He relinquished the lead to Clint Bowyer on lap 118, just before prior to the caution coming out on lap 119. Blaney pitted on lap 120 for four tires, fuel and a larger air pressure adjustment to help with his PPG Ford that got too tight in the center of the turns. Several cars chose not to pit during the yellow, opting to remain on-track in hopes of scoring stage points. Blaney restarted near the bottom of the top-10 but used his fresher tires to drive back to seventh when Stage 1 finished on lap 125.

    · Penske teammates Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski dominated Stage 2, leading 121 laps. Blaney reported the PPG Ford Fusion lost rear security and slid the nose especially on the bottom lane. Bullins opted to make a larger adjustment during a pit stop under caution on lap 215, making both an air pressure and wedge adjustment. The changes helped Blaney to finish second to teammate Logano when segment ended on lap 250. Quick pit service during the stage caution gave Blaney the lead on lap 256.

    · The driver of the PPG Ford Mustang led next 97 laps, but late in the run he radioed his team that he couldn’t get his car to rotate well in the center of the corner. Eventually both Logano and Bowyer found their way around Blaney, shuffling him back to third position. A pit stop under caution on lap 377 saw the No. 12 team make more adjustments to help Blaney turn better in the corners. When the race restarted, the driver of the No. 12 Ford Mustang reported for the first time the car started on the splitter. A stop on lap 416 under caution saw the PPG crew go back on the wedge adjustment.

    · Blaney would ride in fourth position behind Logano, Keselowski and Kyle Busch, until the final caution of the race came out on lap 479. He made his final stop on lap 481 for four tires. Several cars opted to remain track for the final dash to the finish. Blaney used the fresh tires to claw his way through traffic and back to fourth position when the checkered flag waived.

    Quote: “I need to get better as the track rubbers out. Joey (Logano) is really good at it. I thought he had the best car. The track rubbers in and I just need to do something different there. Not a bad day overall for the PPG Ford. We were up there all race and just tried to keep up with the track. The track was really racy today from bottom to top and I thought it put on a really good show.”

    ___________________________________________

    No. 22 Autotrader Ford Mustang – Joey Logano
    Start: 7th
    Stage 1: 4th
    Stage 2: 1st – (Third stage win of 2019)
    Finish: 3rd
    Status: Running
    Laps Completed: 500/500
    Laps Led: 146
    Point Standings (behind first): 3rd (-35)

    Notes:

    · Joey Logano started seventh in Sunday’s Food City 500 in the No. 22 Autotrader Ford Mustang. Logano moved inside the top-five by lap 15, setting his sights on the leaders. He reported his Mustang fired-off tight, but then slowly started to build loose as the laps clicked off and rubber accumulated on the concrete half-mile. An early caution on lap 39 allowed Logano to pit for four tires and an air pressure adjustment.

    · Logano used the changes to his advantage, moving up to third position, where he ran for the majority of the remaining laps in the first stage. The third caution came out on lap 119, six laps from the finish of the first stage. Most of the leaders pitted, including Logano, who received four tires and an air pressure adjustment to help loosen up the Autotrader Ford Mustang. The green came out with two laps remaining in the opening segment. Logano finished fourth when Stage 1 concluded on lap 125.

    · Logano powered into the lead early in Stage 2, grabbing the lead from teammate Brad Keselowski on lap 145, and building up a four-second advantage before reaching lapped traffic with 65 laps to go in the stage. A caution on lap 214 brought the leaders to pit road and Logano’s team would make an air pressure adjustment to help the tight condition. The changes worked and Logano claimed his third stage win of 2019 when the segment concluded on lap 250.

    · During the stage break, the No. 22 team pitted and once again made an air pressure adjustment after Logano reported the handling on his No. 22 Mustang had gone to the free side during the run. The Autotrader Ford Mustang restarted second when the race went green on lap 261.

    · Just before the eighth caution at lap 376, Logano lost the lead to Clint Bowyer. During the yellow flag, Logano reported that his No. 12 Ford was now tight, so crew chief Todd Gordon called for an air pressure adjustment. Logano lined up third for the restart on lap 382.

    · Logano battled teammate Brad Keselowski, claiming the lead on lap 470. The final caution on lap 479 split the strategy among the leaders. The No. 22 team pitted for four tires while others chose to remain on the track or get two. Logano restarted eighth 14 laps from the finish and was able to rally to third-place before the checkered flag. He led 146 laps in his Ford Mustang on the way to his fourth top-five finish of the 2019 season.

    Quote: “Right at the end there I thought when we got by the No. 2 (Keselowski) I said, ‘If I can just hold him off that’s the pass for the win.’ I was pretty confident we were going to be able to do that for 15 laps and then the caution came out. What do you do? Do you pit? Do you stay out? You know a few of them are going to stay out. By the time I got to third those cars were so far ahead of me I was stuck and was not going to get to them. It stinks when you have the fastest car and don’t win, but it’s a team sport and it takes every piece to make it work. We had the car part figured out today, we just missed it on some other ends and just have to keep fighting hard. We got a stage win and led a lot of laps, but you want to win at Bristol so bad. Bristol is the coolest track.”

  • Transcript: Kyle Busch, Joe Gibbs and Adam Stevens

    Transcript: Kyle Busch, Joe Gibbs and Adam Stevens

    An interview with:

    KYLE BUSCH
    ADAM STEVENS
    JOE GIBBS

    THE MODERATOR: We are joined now by our race winning owner, Coach Joe Gibbs, and our race winning crew chief, Adam Stevens.

    Coach, that got pretty exciting. Tell us your thoughts on today’s win.

    JOE GIBBS: I just admire Adam and the team and Kyle. As everybody knows, we had to overcome a lot today. I think Adam can kind of talk about the car at the end. That early spin, kind of look at that and say, Oh, my gosh, our day is going to end early.

    I think with Adam and Kyle, they have a way of fighting through adversity, doing a great job. Adam told Kyle right off the bat, Hey, the car is not really hurt. I think it probably took something away from the car, but they just did a great job fighting all day.

    I think obviously the caution at the end there really helped us. I think we were a short run type car at the end. It just shows you how hard Bristol is. We had so many things happen to our cars today. We had loose wheels with Martin, loose wheels with Erik. Denny, obviously speeding on pit road. A lot can happen at this racetrack. It’s very hard to win here.

    It’s a thrill for us. For Coy, we had our whole family here. I say ‘our whole family’. We had Jackson and Miller, two grandsons here. Coy obviously for our family. Everybody is excited. Obviously for Mars, a huge deal for Skittles, for Norm at Interstate, and obviously for Toyota.

    THE MODERATOR: Adam, three wins now for you on the season. Headed to a track that you swept both races last year. You’re in a pretty good spot right now.

    ADAM STEVENS: Yeah, you know, we’ve been pretty – what’s the word here – close all year. This was probably about the worst car I gave him to go race with this year. This new tire combination, aero package threw off our old setup. We didn’t make a lot of headway in practice. We weren’t as good as we hoped to be.

    We got some good tracks coming up. Hopefully we can get back on our horse, give him something he can race with a little closer next week.

    THE MODERATOR: We’ll open it up to questions.

    Q. Adam, the final decision to go out and take the lead, was it a no-brainer for you?

    ADAM STEVENS: I mean, it was a no-brainer for us. It took us so long to fire on tires, but beyond that there was a quick caution after our last stop. I think the back six or seven came about 20 laps on tires or something. They had no reason to pit. If we gave them the lead, they were just going to take it.

    I didn’t see us restarting behind those guys and behind the two that were already in front of us, being able to finish any closer to the front than what we already were.

    We were just going to take our chances. I didn’t think we would inherit the lead. I thought maybe one of them would come. But they both came. That made it a little bit easier on us.

    Q. How do you keep this team from becoming complacent over the next few weeks?

    JOE GIBBS: Well, I don’t see Kyle or Adam being complacent, I really don’t. I think they’re driven. I think our Playoff system, the way it is right now, I got to tell you, I think it’s great that we have segment racing. Those points can carry over. If you are really after it, like they are, then you could wind up with enough points, that’s the goal, wind up with enough points that it can really carry you into the Playoffs.

    It’s a big deal for us. I think our guys, they’ll continue to fight. Everybody knows how competitive it is up here. It’s hard to win. Each one of these you really cherish. I think the point thing is huge for our racing now that we have segment racing. I think it keeps everybody up on the wheel.

    ADAM STEVENS: I mean, I echo what he said. I don’t think complacency is in my vocabulary or Kyle’s vocabulary or anybody on this team that I’ve hired. I can tell you that.

    If there’s a trophy and a checkered flag, we’re working 80 or 90 hours a week, away from our families for three or four days a week, we don’t come out here to ride around. We get paid to win. Coach gives us the equipment to win. We have Kyle Busch driving our car. That’s what we intend to do.

    Q. During the broadcast, they mentioned Kyle Busch with a top-10 finish today is the first driver in 27 years to start the season with a top-10 finish in the first eight races.

    JOE GIBBS: That’s great.

    ADAM STEVENS: That’s pretty cool. In one of the prerace shows, interviewing Kyle, I heard them mention that. I thought that was pretty neat. Any time Kyle can scratch his name in the record book, he likes to do that, for sure.

    Just a testament to the preparation and execution of the whole team, and a little bit of luck, too. Anything can go wrong and take you out of a race. We sped on pit road, that could easily have been a last stop instead of mid race or early race stop. Any one little thing can happen.

    That streak will come to an end, hopefully not next week, but it definitely will at some point.

    Q. Adam, I think we know how Kyle can be on the radio. After the lap one incident, how tough was it or was it that difficult to be able to keep him calm with the damage, knowing that could have set you back all day?

    ADAM STEVENS: No, it wasn’t tough at all. He was fine on the radio today. In general, I can probably only think of one or two times that wasn’t the case. Like I said, he’s no different than the rest of us. We came here to win. Sometimes those circumstances can change that situation.

    That particular circumstance just cost us some track position. Thankfully we didn’t take a shot to a wheel or to the axle or something that was going to do some serious damage. I don’t think it impacted our day too poorly other than having to go to the back.

    This race, I don’t know what it is about this spring race in Bristol, tear a lot of stuff up here. A lot of people make a lot of mistakes. Sometimes you end up with a winner that you didn’t expect. I would say today was no different.

    Q. Obviously we saw Kyle get to 200 a few weeks ago. Today he ties Lee Petty for the Cup Series win list. Does he continue to keep impressing you, I don’t want to say defying everything that’s put in his way, but keeps doing what he does?

    JOE GIBBS: I think we’ve kind of talked about this because he’s got off to such a good start. The 200 wins. He has a way about him. He does not get complacent at any time. He gets mad. I think Friday he was kind of upset some. I normally call him and talk to him. I tried to stay as far away from him as I can because he will vent to me, too. I get called names from time to time.

    I think his competitive spirit, he’s one of those athletes that when he’s around the racetrack, things don’t go well, he gets upset. I think it’s because it means a lot to him. Then I think you see that show up on race day. His competitive spirit I think is something we kind of all admire and we’re kind of used to. I think it says a lot about his competitive spirit.

    Already mentioned Jackson and Miller, my two grand-boys were here with their buddies in the back. It was their responsibility, the race today. We’re in good shape. I try to get them over there with the Monster girls, but to be quite truthful, they said, They’re out of our league (laughter).

    Q. Adam, what would you attribute so many loose wheels today to? Do you have any idea what was going on there?

    ADAM STEVENS: Generally you see a little bit more of that on the concrete tracks. There’s a lot of grip. It’s hard on the wheels. You’re loading and unloading a lot here.

    Beyond that, there’s a lot more high frequency vibration that probably tends to shake some things loose. If you get them tight, they don’t come loose. I don’t know if guys were in a hurry trying to make up track position because it’s so hard to pass. But that’s about all I could tell you.

    Q. You have Gabehart as one of the Cup crew chiefs. Your greatest competition may be under your own roof again. How do you handle that?

    ADAM STEVENS: It’s been that way for years, it seems like. Trading paint with our teammates, sharing notes all at the same time. It’s not something that we haven’t done before, and we’ll continue to do.

    THE MODERATOR: We’re joined by our race winning driver, Kyle Busch.

    We’ll keep going with questions.

    Q. This is a strange weekend in that the industry honored Darrell Waltrip, the winningest driver here. Kyle comes out as the winner. This whole mystical storyline, because Kyle wins everything these days. Are you feeling this might be part of something magical?

    JOE GIBBS: That’s for me?

    Q. Yes.

    JOE GIBBS: I just think you never get complacent in pro sports. Certainly we don’t I know around our place. It’s so hard to stay up there. That’s the hardest thing in pro sports. It was the hardest thing in the NFL. It’s the hardest thing over here.

    These race teams here are the most competitive racing teams in the world. They come bouncing back. So I don’t think he can afford to get complacent. I think our group, I know they’re going to work hard.

    I appreciate everybody back at the race shop. I think Kyle and Adam will both tell you we have people there that are super competitive, working extremely hard. We try to put banners up on Tuesdays and Mondays, honor them, get them in there.

    I think our whole team, you win with your people. I think we got great people. I really appreciate that. The Lord has blessed us with a bunch of great guys. They’re very competitive and smart.

    I think this thing runs in cycles. Kyle has kind of defied things because he’s won so much. Hopefully we can keep that going.

    Q. Erik Jones mentioned several times this week he’s working on an extension. Can you comment on that? Where that puts Christopher Bell?

    JOE GIBBS: I think for us, you don’t comment much on the future other than to say Christopher has a place with us long-term, and so does Erik. That’s our goal. That’s what we’ll keep working on. It’s great to have young people coming, young talent. It’s very important for us. We all know that.

    Q. Adam, correct me if I’m wrong, but I think I heard you come over the radio after Kyle sustained the damage and say it might help you guys. In that moment, were you very calm? Did it actually help you in the long run?

    ADAM STEVENS: I don’t recall saying that.

    The way that we received the damage, we got hit pretty square on the bumper cover. It kind of shoved it up and forward. That would not be an aero detriment. The quarter panel was loose. Could have changed the balance in the car in an unfavorable way.

    If we were off after the damage, it was because we weren’t very good, I don’t think it was because of the damage.

    Q. Kyle, I know you’ve been answering a lot of these types of questions lately. What does it mean to tie Lee Petty, move behind Rusty Wallace?

    KYLE BUSCH: I’ll say it again. It’s pretty cool to have the opportunity to go out there and win these races. When you win these races, the numbers will just continue to add up. The addition of that, getting to Lee Petty, I mean, you’re starting to get into some really heavy company that’s at the top 10 of the all-time wins list of our series and our sport.

    I feel as though I’ve just done my fair share and have been with some amazing people over the years that have gotten me to this number thus far. We’ll just keep going.

    Q. Following the race we were talking to Kurt, he said he told you he was going to wreck you if he could have got to you. Where did he tell you that?

    KYLE BUSCH: He told me in Victory Lane. I told him, You can’t tell people you’re going to wreck them before you do it because when roles are reversed that person is going to wreck you because you already told them you were going to wreck them. So I guess if I’m ever running second to Kurt, I’m going to wreck him (laughter).

    I don’t know. I’m glad it didn’t turn out that way and he couldn’t get to me because I certainly wouldn’t have wanted to be in that situation. I’m glad I could finally hit my marks halfway decent and drive away a few more inches towards the end of the race.

    I think he was trying really hard. I seen him get crossed up in my mirror a couple of times off of two. I think he got in the fence. It gave me that extra gap to bring it home.

    Q. (No microphone.)

    KYLE BUSCH: I’m sure he did.

    Q. Was the Cry Me a River comment directed at your brother?

    KYLE BUSCH: No. Why would it be at him? No.

    Q. What was it in regards to?

    KYLE BUSCH: C’mon. Anybody else? Does anybody else know? Nobody? Oh, my God. Haters, really.

    What was the comment?

    Q. Cry Me a River.

    KYLE BUSCH: I was coming to the checkered flag, I said Cry Me a River. I didn’t say the word ‘haters’. I wanted to make it to where I didn’t have to say the word but I have to because obviously nobody understood what the hell it meant.

    Q. (No microphone.)

    KYLE BUSCH: Now I can tell him Cry Me a River.

    Q. Adam, Kyle said in Victory Lane that he feels as if even though you have three wins, Penske might still be the championship favorites. What is your take on that? Is that where the battle is right now?

    ADAM STEVENS: I would hesitate to pick who’s best right now. I mean, they’ve had us covered today. We weren’t very good, like I’ve said a dozen times already.

    I don’t think being fast in the first seven or eight races of the year really means that you’re going to go to Homestead and wear everybody out. Certainly their program is in a good spot. I think we’re in a good spot.

    I think if we do our jobs, hit it right, we can run with anybody. I don’t expect that will be different when we get down to the Playoffs.

    Q. Kyle, in races where you’ve finished with your brother 1-2, you’re 2-0 against him now. Is that fun to be able to race Kurt for a win down the stretch like that? What’s going through your mind?

    KYLE BUSCH: I mean, it doesn’t matter who it is. You’re just focused on trying to get away. We had a way better long long-run car today than we did short-run car. I knew if I could just get some gap, some space, I’d probably use up a little bit of that gap in the first three laps for the next five.

    I was hoping we would start to stretch back out. With the amount of laps we had on our tires, you would think we were in long-run mode with how far we’d gone on tires. If you fire back off on restarts, you’re kind of back earlier than mid run, I’d say, just with air pressure buildups and everything else. You’re just playing it out, trying to run hard.

    Again, regardless of who is behind you, that’s what you’re trying to do. To see him in my mirror, to see him closing in on me, I was like, Surely I can’t lose this one to my brother.

    He gave it one hell of a fight. What’s crazy is I think I won the spring race last year, then he won the fall race, then I won the spring race. Three in a row for the Busch brothers?

    Q. It’s four.

    KYLE BUSCH: Because I won the previous fall? That’s pretty funny. I didn’t know that.

    Q. They all run together.

    KYLE BUSCH: They do. Busch and Bristol, sounds familiar.

    Yeah, I mean, just a great show. They weren’t very good in practice this weekend. I didn’t expect them to be there where they were. Time and time again, they never cease to impress this year. They’re running good.

    THE MODERATOR: Gentlemen, congratulations on the win. We’ll see you next week in Richmond.

    FastScripts by ASAP Sports

  • RCR Post Race Report – Food City 500

    RCR Post Race Report – Food City 500

    Austin Dillon and the SYMBICORT® (budesonide/formoterol fumarate dihydrate) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 Team Battle to 14th-Place Finish in War of Attrition at Bristol Motor Speedway

    Finish: 14th
    Start: 15th
    Points: 18th

    “What a battle at the last great coliseum today. Our SYMBICORT® (budesonide/formoterol fumarate dihydrate) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 was pretty good throughout Friday and Saturday, but we knew we needed just a little bit more in order to have a shot on Sunday. My crew chief, Danny Stockman, and the No. 3 team made a few setup changes for the race that didn’t work in our favor, unfortunately. Sometimes you have to take a gamble, and it just didn’t pan out in this case. Even though we didn’t have the best-handling car, we were able to maintain and stay on the lead lap. It was a war of attrition, really, just staying up there. At one point in time we got the car decent, even though it was really tight. Towards the end of the race I hit the wall because we got the rear too free. It damaged our car a little bit. We tried to get some track position back, but it didn’t work out. All-in-all, for what we had, I’ll take a 14th-place finish.” -Austin Dillon

    Daniel Hemric’s Bristol Cup Debut Hits Snag When Caterpillar/ Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet is Spun Early

    Finish: 30th
    Start: 26th
    Points: 29th

    “Man, what a day. We knew going into today’s race we had a tall task ahead of us, but a few things in the opening stage made it an even tougher day. When the first caution of the race happened, I had slowed down but got hit from behind and received damage to the nose of the No. 8 Caterpillar/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet Camaro ZL1. The pit crew did a good job making the necessary repairs, and we were logging some laps in the top 20 when we just got hit from behind by the No. 15, spun and backed into the wall. That hurt the handling of the car pretty bad, and it was all I could do to hang on for the rest of the day. This was definitely a frustrating race, but the crew never gave up all weekend and made the most of the situation. Here’s hoping we find some good luck soon. We just need a clean race, and that is the goal next weekend in Richmond.” -Daniel Hemric

  • CHEVY MENCS AT Bristol 1: Post-Race Notes & Quotes

    CHEVY MENCS AT Bristol 1: Post-Race Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    BRISTOL MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    FOOD CITY 500
    TEAM CHEVY RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    APRIL 7, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER

    2nd Kurt Busch, No. 1 Monster Energy Camaro ZL!
    10th Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
    11th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1
    14th Austin Dillon, No. 3 Symbicort Camaro ZL1
    15th Ty Dillon, No. 13 GEICO Camaro ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER

    1st Kyle Busch (Toyota)
    2nd Kurt Busch (Chevrolet)
    3rd Joey Logano (Ford)
    4th Ryan Blaney (Ford)
    5th Denny Hamlin (Toyota)

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season continues next weekend at Richmond Raceway with the Toyota Owners 400 on Saturday evening, April 13th at 7:30 p.m. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 2nd
    ON THE RESTART, YOU STARTED RIGHT NEXT TO YOUR BROTHER (KYLE, RACE WINNER). TAKE US THROUGH THE RACE AND ESPECIALLY THE LAST RESTART
    “It was tough battling our No. 1 Chevy. The Monster Energy team is doing a good job. But that one was tough. I really wanted to beat him. I was going to wreck him (laughter). I was wanting to stay close enough so that when we took the white, I was just going to drive straight into (Turns) 3 and 4; I mean he’s already won. I figured he could give a little love to his brother, but no. I wanted that one bad. I feel like him right now. I’m like ugh, I’m mad because I didn’t win.

    “But, this car, we’re struggling on qualifying and we struggle on taking off. And, I just can’t get the right rear to grip until it gets heat in it. And, it’s hard to be patient when you’re running for the win on old tires. So, I’m happy that we were in position to do it, this group of guys. We’re not quite ready to win yet, but that was close. And I was going to wreck my little brother to win today. But with three laps to go, I just stepped out in Turn 1 and I wasn’t close enough after that. But, thanks to (crew chief) Matt McCall and everybody at Ganassi. This No. 1 Monster Chevy is fast. We’ve just got to fine-tune it all.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 10th
    ON HIS RACE AND IMPROVEMENT: “We did make a jump in our performance so I hope we can find another chunk that quickly that will put us in that top-five mix consistently. I think we are going to right way and I am very optimistic about that, so I am very thankful and grateful for that. We will celebrate these small victories and get ready for the big one.”

    WHAT IS IT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR? “It is more grip in the center of the corner. We can get the balance on either side, which was what we had at the beginning of the year. But we just have two-tenths of speed in the car. I’m not sure there is such a thing as free speed, but if there is such a thing, I will take it and we’d be right there in the mix.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 11th
    “Definitely not what we started out hoping for. We got turned late in the race, that was about it. We fell behind from there. Had a great car, even without the power steering.”

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 SYMBICORT CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 14th
    “We had a struggle with our Camaro all day. It wasn’t ever really good but somehow we maintained, stayed on the lead lap. More attrition, working hard to stay up there. At one point we got the car pretty decent. The car was pretty tight, but it was decent. There at the end I hit the wall because we had the rear to free. It damaged it. So through all that, 14th is 14th. But I’ll take it.”

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 15th
    ON HIS RACE AND HIS STAGE WIN: “That was huge for our team, to go head-to-head with the top teams is huge for GEICO and Germain Racing. That was a really cool moment, something we are really proud of. We are proud of the direction we are going with our race team. We are going to keep getting better for Chevrolet, GEICO and Germain Racing. I’m really proud of how we are doing with our Camaro.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 CREDIT ONE BANK – Finished 19th
    “Not much up to it. We had a loose wheel and we had to come down pit road and lost two laps. Then we had an uncontrolled tire. Had a penalty for that and lost a lap. We fought back to get on the lead lap and then had a right front tire going down, so we lost a lap and finished a lap down. Not much to show for how quick our Camaro was today.”

    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: Six Fords Post Top-10 Finishes at Bristol

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Six Fords Post Top-10 Finishes at Bristol

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Sunday, April 7, 2019
    EVENT: Food City 500

    Ford Finishing Results:
    3rd – Joey Logano
    4th – Ryan Blaney
    6th – Paul Menard
    7th – Clint Bowyer
    8th – Daniel Suarez
    9th – Ryan Newman
    13th – Kevin Harvick
    18th – Brad Keselowski
    21st – David Ragan
    27th – Matt Tifft
    28th – Michael McDowell
    33rd – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    34th – Corey LaJoie
    37th – Aric Almirola

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 SHAZAM/Smithfield Ford Mustang – “The 24 just got loose under me. He struggled to get going on the initial start. He spun his tires and then was just loose and out of control that whole first lap. When we went down in turn one he lost it under me and wiped us out. I’m pretty frustrated. You work all weekend, all week getting ready for the event and to make it one lap is kind of uncalled for, so I’m disappointed, frustrated, but life goes on. We’ll go to Richmond.”

    CAN YOU EXPLAIN HOW THAT HAPPENS WHEN THE RACE HAD JUST STARTED? “Honestly, I think some of it is inexperience on William’s part. I think he started to panic because he started to lose spots on the start because he spun his tires on the start, and probably a little bit over his head with the tire pressures and everything not coming up and he just lost it. He got loose underneath me, lost it and ran right into the side of us and wrecked us. Part of that comes with experience, I guess, but, either way, it doesn’t change the outcome for us today.”

    SO YOU’RE NOT SO MUCH MAD AS YOU ARE FRUSTRATED ABOUT IT? “Of course I’m mad, but it’s not gonna do any good to yell and scream at you guys.”

    OR AT WILLIAM. “Yeah, he’s still out there racing. I’m not.”

    IS THE TRACK SLICK? “That PJ1 on the bottom groove is a little bit slick to get going, but he didn’t even make an attempt to make it to the PJ1. He tried to run above it, which that area is really slick as well, so I think he probably just made a bad decision and unfortunately I was the victim of his mistake.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Autotrader Ford Mustang – “Right at the end there I thought when we got by the 2 I said, ‘If I can just hold him off that’s the pass for the win.’ I was pretty confident we were gonna be able to do that for 15 laps or so and then the caution came out and what do you do? Do you pit? Do you stay out? You know a few of them are gonna stay out. It’s really hard to pass and by the time I got to third those cars were so far ahead of me I was stuck and was not going to get to them. It stinks when you have the fastest car and don’t win, but it’s a team sport and it takes every piece to make it work. We had the car part figured out today, we just missed it on some other ends and just have to keep fighting hard. We got a stage win and that was nice, and led a lot of laps, but you want to win at Bristol so bad. Bristol is the coolest track. You see the start-finish line and think you’re gonna get it, but things happen quick here.”

    WAS IT A NO-WIN SITUATION THERE AT THE END? “I think so. The last thing you want is a caution with 15 to 20 to go at Bristol and you’re the leader because you know everyone is gonna make their decision off of what you do. If you stay out, you’ve got to expect half the field is gonna pit, maybe more. If you come in, five or six stayed, so it’s just part of the game.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – WHAT HAPPENED ON THAT FINAL RESTART? “Nobody could figure out the lineup. There wasn’t enough communication and it was just a tough deal.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 PPG Ford Mustang – “I need to get better as the track kind of rubbers out. Joey is really good at it. I thought he had the best car, probably. The track rubbers in and I just need to do something different there. Overall, not a bad day. We were up there all race and just tried to keep up with the track. The track was really racy today from bottom to top. I thought it put on a really good show.”

    HOW ABOUT THE BACK AND FORTH WITH NEWMAN? YOU HAD A LAUGH WITH HIM ABOUT IT. “Yeah, I put him in the fence off of two on accident. I tried to clear him myself. Just racing hard on a restart and my spotter said he was still out there, but I stayed on the gas trying to clear him myself. I fenced him and I felt bad about that. He got me back. He fenced me off the frontstretch, so that’s hard racing. Me and Ryan have always raced each other really good. I’ve looked up to him for a long time and it’s nice you can have a laugh about it and joke about it and not be pissed about it, so it was my fault. I just tried to clear myself.”

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 Haas Automation Ford Mustang – “We had a good car, it’s just horribly disappointing. You get that close. Long runs were my strong suit. I couldn’t take off all day long. Some of those things made sense. We were down a little bit on air and it took a little bit of time for them to come in. The problem is when you balance around that and you just pump the air-pressure up, then it doesn’t work either and you don’t handle there. It’s just disappointing.”

    THE DEAL WITH THE 22 WAS IT JUST RACING? “Yeah, it was. He was racing me pretty hard. I could get under him. I saw that I could get under him and he would diamond it and just didn’t leave me much room there. It’s time to race. There’s no question about it. We just barely touched and it must have cut the valve stem out of it or something and hit it just right. Maybe his fender caught it or something, I don’t know. That’s about typical luck for here. You’re damned if you do, damned if you don’t. We put ourselves in position. Our Stewart-Haas Ford was good, our Haas Automation car. I wanted to get that thing in victory lane. It’s such a good-looking car. I think it’s racy looking. I appreciate Gene and the opportunity, I just didn’t get it done.”

    DO YOU FEEL THE SHR CARS ARE CATCHING UP TO PENSKE AND GIBBS? “We’ve got work to do. We know that. This is a different beast – a different short track is a different beast. Early on, those Penske cars have more speed. You see that on restarts and stuff like that. My strong suit, just like last week, was long runs. We just slowly kept picking them away. You could see that on restarts. I couldn’t take off worth a damn, but I could really come on strong on the big end of a run.”

    PAUL MENARD, No. 21 Menards/Sylvania Ford Mustang – “We qualified really well and had good track position from the start. I messed up our first pit stop and got us behind. I went to neutral to stop and it popped into third, so I killed the car. I put us behind doing that and track position is so important. Greg made a good call to stay out and came home with a top 10.”

    HOW WOULD YOU LABEL THIS RACE? “I felt there was more options than normal. That PJ1 stayed pretty much the whole race, where normally that goes away and you’re just going to the top, so I thought we had more options.”

    WHAT DO YOU EXPECT AT RICHMOND? “It’s a totally different track. I don’t know if they’re going to lay any PJ1 down for that track. I hope they don’t for that track, it widens out as it is. We struggle at Richmond really bad. Bristol is one of our better tracks and Richmond is one of our worse tracks, so we’re gonna do a lot of studying this week.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Wyndham Rewards Ford Mustang – “It was a good run for us. We had a car better than what we finished. I’m not sure what the call was on pit road there with the penalty, but then I don’t know why we ended up having to start fifth when we were actually sixth. It was a penalty to be moved up a spot, but a good run for our Wyndham Rewards Ford. The guys did a good job today, we just don’t have the total result to show for it, but it’s definitely and improvement and I’m proud of them.”

    DANIEL SUAREZ, No. 41 Haas Automation Ford Mustang – “Today was difficult. We made a lot of mistakes that we were lucky to overcome and finish in the top 10. I’m proud of that. We have to keep better, but it’s kind of good that we’re making these mistakes now so we can clean them up and be stronger in the second part of the season.”

    YOUR TEAM SHOWED SOME REAL FORTITUDE TODAY TO BOUNCE BACK. “We have a very good team. We have great race cars and it’s always good to perform well. Today, we had a lot of speed. I felt like we had top five speed at times and when we’re not very good we have top 10 speed and that’s where we ended up, so after all of those mistakes it was still a decent day.”

  • CHEVY MENCS AT Bristol 1: Jimmie Johnson Post Final Practice Media Q & A Transcript

    CHEVY MENCS AT Bristol 1: Jimmie Johnson Post Final Practice Media Q & A Transcript

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    BRISTOL MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    FOOD CITY 500
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    APRIL 6, 2019

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1, met with members of the media at Bristol Motor Speedway following Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice for the Food City 500. Johnson was second fastest in the session.

    THIS HAS NOT ALWAYS BEEN ONE OF YOUR BEST TRACKS, BUT DO YOU HAVE MORE CONFIDENCE NOW AFTR THIS WEEKEND HAS GONE SO WELL SO FAR?
    “I needed race laps and race practice to kind of find my groove here. Our short-run speed, I think is good. And even yesterday after qualifying, I think it shows that we are working in the right areas and even uncovering some stuff that Chad and I couldn’t here from a short-run stand point. It is probably unfair to say that because he qualified second. I think our cars are just getting better, and we are gaining more confidence in that.

    “I anticipated that I would run well here in race trim and that went really good. I popped off a fast lap which I think was impressive so we are excited.”

    IS THERE SOME MOMENTUM WITH HENDRICK NOW THAT IT SEEMS LIKE YOU GUYS ARE MOVING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION?
    “Without a doubt internally a little bit of sunshine helps a ton. To have various little marks along the way – even before Texas we were starting to seeing some stuff internally. The No. 9 (Chase Elliott – Hendrick Motorsports teammate) ran good at Martinsville and we learned a lot from that as weird as that might seem. We had a good run at Phoenix. So we are putting some stuff together. But I’m still trying to keep myself under control and not be overly excited until we get three or four races under our belt that unload to reload with a solid weekend. We did that at Texas and we have started that way here.”

    WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM CHASE?
    “Car stuff. Car parts. At times you need to be aggressive and put new stuff on the car. Then there are other times when you know there is a proven component or proven product that you just need to stay the course with. I don’t envy the crew chief position, or others positions when you have drivers saying we need more, we need more…we need something new. What we have is not working. So we put in all new sometimes. That is what we did at Martinsville. New wasn’t the thing to do. There are proven things that that we should have stayed to course with. We are tying to figure that out. When to be aggressive and when not to…it sucks.”

    ARE YOU ALL TRYING SOMMETHING DIFFERENT OR ALL THE SAME? AWARE OF WHAT WAS WRONG WITH THE NO. 88 (ALEX BOWMAN)?
    “I wasn’t aware, but I knew we were similar to the No. 9 (Chase Elliott) but I wasn’t sure where the other cars were. I heard the No. 88 was making changes going more toward our direction. With that cold practice this morning, and knowing Greg (Ives, crew chief), he probably wanted to try something different just to get some data. As long as it took to start off practice, and as good as were running, I assume, but I’m just speculating, but I assume they discussed that
    “thing” we were talking about. Is it time to be aggressive here or not? It’s just tough to know when to do that.””

    IS THERE A TEMPTATION TO JUST OVERLY EXPERIMENT?
    “Well simultaneously we have the aero group working on stuff. The vehicle dynamics group working on stuff. There is just stuff and ideas that are coming through the system and becoming readily available. Things that look good in sim (simulator) and we are oh, well, okay, We are putting that in!! We still have to go prove it in race conditions. That is one thing simulation can not do. What the track is going to do when it rubbers up. And honestly in a lot of cases what it is like in traffic. That is all speculation. We don’t have any simulation that replicate what goes on in dirty air. We’ve been learning a lot.”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK THE RACE IS GOING TO BE LIKE?
    “I think it really depends on how fast the grip strip fades. Today with the heat, I’ll think you’ll have two lanes, but the bottom will eventually fade and the top will be where those guys finish long runs on. Tomorrow we will be on the bottom until it starts to fade. If it is overcast and cold, it is going to take longer for the top to come in. I think heat, and how long the grip stays on the bottom. I think those are two variables to consider.

    DO YOU THINK IT WILL HALF ON THE RACE WILL BE ON THE BOTTOM AND THEN CHANGE?
    “I think cloud cover will play a role. Right now some guys got to the top and running pretty well. I think the sun is going to play a role. Then it is monkey see, monkey do. You don’t want to be the first guy. You don’t want to be the first one up there, but after you see (Kyle) Larson up there for a few laps, you say okay let’s give it a try. Then the whole field goes. The big things I am going to pay attention to are if the top is sunny, I will go earlier. And see what is there.”

    ON RUNNING THE BOSTON MARATHON:
    “I’m feeling good. I still have a few more tough workouts. The tapered schedule, you don’t want to feel your best until the day of the marathon. Factoring in this race as the most physical one, and the Richmond is pretty tough as well, and never having run a full marathon, I’m not sure how I am supposed to feel. I still have to swim and run today, I’m testing the system. I love being coached, but it is tricky with the racing. Especially these two tracks short tracks.”

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  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Logano Top Happy Hour Practice Chart at Bristol

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Logano Top Happy Hour Practice Chart at Bristol

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Saturday, April 6, 2019
    EVENT: Food City 500 Final Practice

    Joey Logano, driver of the No. 22 Autotrader Ford Mustang, posted the fastest single-lap speed in today’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Happy Hour practice at Bristol Motor Speedway. Logano, who qualified seventh for tomorrow’s scheduled Food City 500, spoke about practice and how the track is changing.

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Autotrader Ford Mustang – HOW WAS PRACTICE? “Pretty good, apparently. We’ve got decent speed in our Autotrader Mustang. It seems like it’s got some good short-run speed. That’s where the big number shows up. I haven’t looked at the lap tracker to see where it falls off to, but just being around the cars that I was around it seemed like I can move around and keep decent pace and I think that’s what Bristol is all about these days is being able to have a car that’s versatile to where you can run up top when you have to, run the bottom when you have to and run everywhere in between when you’re in traffic. Those are the cars that usually succeed in the race, so I feel like I have that in my car right now. That being said, everything can change in a matter of seconds here as this XFINITY race rolls off and the top comes in and more rubber lays into the track. That can change some things up pretty quick, but I do feel like I’ve got a good piece right now.”

    DOES THE TRACK FEEL MUCH DIFFERENT TO YOU? “The track always is a little different when we come here, just depending on how they apply the track bite, PJ1, grippy stuff. What do you guys call it this week? Call it whatever you want to call it, it’s a little stickier on the bottom still, so that stuff only lasts for a certain period of time before a lot of rubber sticks to it and it kind of gets rough and becomes very challenging to run down there. You’re gonna have a lot of those games tomorrow. I’m sure the bottom is gonna be tough on the start of the race until it gets heat in the PJ1 and activates it and then the bottom is gonna roll for a while until it clumps up and then the top is gonna start rolling and then the top is gonna clump up and then you just have to find a lane that works best for your car. That’s what’s fun about Bristol. I love it. It’s always changing. I’m sure the dirt guys probably love it because the track is always changing.”

    HOW DO YOU KEEP ONE GUY FROM CHECKING OUT LIKE MARTINSVILLE? “I hope I check out tomorrow, but I’ve got to get there first. I think you get a good car up front that can control his pace, especially at a place like Martinsville. This is a lot different than Martinsville. At Martinsville if you get lead you get more air cooling your brakes, you can run the pace that you want to and on the long run you’re there and you have everything cooler than the guy that was chasing you the whole time and you’re able to drive away and stay doing that. That’s part of short track racing. If you’re smart about how you’re up front, you can stay up there for a long time if your car is good. Is there an advantage to leading? Of course there is always an advantage leading, no matter where you are, no matter what form of motorsports there’s an advantage to leading. The thing is here though the advantage is probably cut down some because you have traffic within the first 20 laps of a run you’re gonna catch – maybe even sooner than that with some of the back markers. You’re gonna catch them pretty quick, so that clean air advantage that you have will go away and that will keep the second, third, fifth-place cars all closer.”

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes

    Page 2

    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)

    Saturday, April 6, 2019

    EVENT: Food City 500 Final Practice

    JOEY LOGANO CONTINUED — DO YOU THINK THE BOTTOM WILL LAST FOR HALF THE RACE? SHORTER THAN THAT? LONGER THAN THAT? “Weather and long runs. It all kind of depends. If there are cautions, the bottom will last longer. If we fire off with a 50-lap green flag run, I expect that we’d move up pretty quick in that run, which is fine. That’s good. Right there at the end of practice it seemed like the top and the bottom were pretty equal, so for there right now you assume when you get 40 cars out there we’re all in it the same time laying down hot rubber, it’s gonna happen pretty quick to where the preferred is gonna be up top. But that will change as soon as the caution comes out the bottom will be fast again. When you’re setting your car up right now, those are the things we need to think about. We want to be good on a short run because it could come down to that. We’ve seen Bristol come down to a green-white-checker, so you’ve got to be good for that. You’ve got to be good for the 15-lap marker when everyone is kind of rolling the wall and then you’ve got to be good after that where it seems like it really clumps up and you’ve got to have something that’s able to get out of that rubber and run maybe the middle of the race track. Those are the things you’ve got to figure out right now.”

    THE BUSCH BROTHERS ARE GOOD HERE. YOU’RE GOOD HERE. DO YOU KNOW WHAT THEY DO AND DO YOU STUDY THAT? “It’s interesting. I think Bristol is one of those race tracks where you can have three or four different styles and be successful. It just depends on what state the track is in. Yesterday, watching qualifying I was looking at what Blaney was doing and I was like, “Oh my gosh, it’s so different than what I’m doing.’ And he was gonna be successful doing it. Obviously, he was really fast yesterday. And Chase is doing something very similar to him, and now as the we’ve gone into a race type track and not qualifying, my style seems to be coming back to me, so I’ve got to work on qualifying here a little bit and how to carry the speed that they carry on Friday. It’s fun because there’s a point in the race that the way Harvick drives is better than everybody’s and then there’s a point where I think my style is better than anybody’s, and you just hope that the point where you’re best is at the end of the race.”

    IS IT TOO EARLY IN THE SEASON TO BE TRYING STUFF IN PREPARATION FOR THE PLAYOFFS? “I think we’re always trying new things. You kind of have to because if you don’t, you’re gonna get passed. I think we’re always evolving. Are we doing anything so far out of the box that it’s risky? I don’t believe so. I wouldn’t know, but I don’t believe so. But the risky pieces might come from strategy and things like that. If you’ve got two wins in the bank, finishing fifth or sixth what does that do for you? You might as well go for the win or finish 15th. You might as well go for that move.”