Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Fontana

    NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Fontana

    Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

    1. Kyle Busch: Busch led 151 of 200 laps at Fontana, but couldn’t hold off the late charges of Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick. Johnson passed Busch with two laps to go, while Harvick slid by the No. 18 Toyota a lap later. Busch finished third, narrowly missing another weekend sweep after taking the Nationwide and Sprint Cup races at Bristol a week earlier.

    “I’m disappointed we didn’t win,” Busch said, “but I can’t complain about a finish. Nor can Denny Hamlin, because he didn’t have one to complain about. I’ll send Denny my condolences via Federal Express, to his new address at the corner of Start and Park. But it’s concerning when engine woes become engine ‘whoa’s.’ Apparently, the engine shop has some bugs to work out. Fans of AMC’s infamous 1970’s subcompact car will be thrilled to hear this, but it seems that Toyota is now making Gremlins.”

    I led ¾ of Sunday’s race, so, for 151 laps, I did what everyone expects of Kyle Busch, and that’s to ‘show my behind.’ That’s called giving the rest of the field a view of the ‘tail end of the lap leader.’”      

    2. Carl Edwards: Edwards finished sixth in the Auto Club 400, posting his fourth top-10 result of the year. It was a solid finish for Edwards, albeit a disappointing one at a track on which he’s consistently been competitive, and gave him the lead in the Sprint Cup point standings. Edwards leads Ryan Newman by nine points.

    “Kevin Harvick wasted no time in passing Jimmie Johnson,” Edwards said. “I hear they’re calling it ‘The Pass.’ And, they’re calling my failure to overtake Kyle Busch at Bristol ‘The Passive.’”

    I still regret not pushing Kyle a little harder at Bristol. Next time, I won’t ‘beat around the Busch.’ I’ve learned a hard lesson in complacence. Next time, when Carl Edwards ‘sees’ an opportunity, Carl Edwards will ‘seize’ that opportunity.”  

    3. Jimmie Johnson: Johnson overtook Kyle Busch on lap 199 in the Auto Club 500, only to see Kevin Harvick slip by on the final turn, stealing the win from Johnson, who had won five times previously at Fontana. Johnson’s runner-up finish advanced him two spots in the Sprint Cup point standings to fifth, 14 points behind Carl Edwards.

    “I guess Jimmy John’s does deliver,” Johnson said, “because I got ‘served’ by Kevin Harvick in the No. 29 Jimmy John’s Chevy. Harvick gave me something to think about, so I guess that makes it ‘food for thought.’ I wonder if he accepts tips. If he does, I’ve got one for him: It happens, but it won’t happen again.”

    But does a last-lap pass make Harvick a contender for the Cup? Not in my eyes. I’ve got five Cup titles propping me up. My lovely wife has one ‘ring’ finger; I’ve got five. My three biggest rivals, Harvick, Kyle Busch, and Carl Edwards, have none. So, until something changes, I’m playing ‘ring around the posers.’ If they want to prove something to me, then they should improve.” 

    I’ve got the field right where I want them. I’m fifth in the standings, and you know how my competitors hate to hear the words ‘fifth’ and ‘Jimmie Johnson’ used together.” 

    4. Kevin Harvick: In fifth with nine laps remaining, Harvick blasted to the front in the final two laps, gaining Jimmie Johnson’s bumper before sling-shotting by the No. 48 in turn 4. Harvick posted his first win of the year, beating Johnson by a .144 margin.

    “I hope this win reaffirms my commitment to dethroning the five-time defending champion,” Harvick said. “I’d like to think I’m seen as a legitimate threat, and I hope that when the No. 29 Chevrolet with ‘Jimmy John’s’ on the hood appeared in Jimmie Johnson’s rear-view mirror, he saw a little bit of ‘himself’ out there.” 

    5. Ryan Newman: Newman finished fifth at Fontana, posting his third top-5 and fourth top-10 result of the year, as the Stewart-Haas Racing duo was again strong. Teammate Tony Stewart finished 13th  after spending much of the day in the top 10. Newman moved up two spots to second in the point standings, and trails Carl Edwards by only 9.

    “I think Stewart-Haas may be the strongest team in NASCAR right now,” Newman said. “Tony and I are talented drivers, and we’re not afraid to say or do whatever necessary to get our point across. You could say Tony and I have and make a formidable pair. And my engineering degree from Purdue University makes me the ‘dynamic’ of the ‘dynamic duo.’ As for Tony, he adamantly disavows any accusations that he’s ever matriculated in his life.” 

    6. Kurt Busch: Busch started 23rd in the Auto Club 500 and gained little ground throughout the duration of the race. The No. 22 Dodge, bearing Auto Club sponsorship, started tight, and the “Double Deuce” never found a remedy despite multiple adjustments. Busch fell from the lead in the point standings to third, ten points behind Carl Edwards.

    “We were stuck in the middle of the pack all day,” Busch said. “Had we been sporting our usual sponsors and paint schemes, it would have been fitting to call us ‘Shell stationary.’”

    But leads in the point standings this early in the season can be fleeting. Of all people, I should know. As a veteran of cosmetic surgery, I can tell you that some things are ‘ear today and gone tomorrow.’ And that’s no joke. Trust me, I know importance of being earnest. However, I don’t know the importance of being ear-less, but I do know the importance of having less ear.”   

    7. Tony Stewart: Stewart ran among the leaders all day at Fontana, chasing front-runner Kyle Busch, who led 151 laps, for much of the race. However, after the final restart, Stewart’s No. 14 Office Depot Chevrolet faded, and he finished a disappointing 13th. He dropped two spots in the point standings to sixth, 17 out of first.

    “We’ve been fast all year,” Stewart said. “We’ve led laps, and we’ve made the right pit calls. We’ve done everything but win. Someone once said, or some someone once misquoted me in Rolling Stone as saying, “Racing is a lot like a visit to the massage parlor—it’s a lot better when there’s a happy ending.”

    8. Paul Menard: Menard scrambled to a 16th-place finish in the Auto Club 400, with tight handling conditions spoiling his chances for a result in the top 10. Menard’s No. 27 Serta/Menard’s Chevrolet stood in ninth for a restart with about 25 laps remaining, but quickly dropped to 16th as the handling deserted him. He fell further back before the race’s last restart,  

    “Despite a lackluster finish,” Menard said, “I’m still proud of my position in the Sprint Cup point standings. I don’t think anyone expected me to be seventh in the points after five races. And, with Serta sponsorship on my car, you could say I’m a real ‘sleeper.’ Apparently, it was enough to wake up my RCR teammates, who’ve been sleeping on the job.”

    9. Matt Kenseth: Kenseth finished fourth in the Auto Club 400, registering his second top-5 result of the year. He’s charged back from a slow start to the season with two consecutive 4th-place finishes, and is now 10th in the point standings, 30 out of first.

    “Carl Edwards has assumed the Sprint Cup points lead,” Kenseth said. “He’s become the unquestioned leader of Roush Fenway Racing, but that doesn’t mean his teammates like it. I like to say he’s the ‘face’ and the ‘ass’ of Roush Fenway.”

    Now, as NASCAR’s unofficial spokesman for bland and boring, and the lead singer of the Mötley Crüe cover band ‘Mätt-ley Crüe, a band known for the hit ‘Mild Side,’ I’m compelled to comment on Sunday’s race. It was 197 laps of low drama, followed by three laps of melodrama. For the first 197 laps, the Auto Club 400 should have been called the ‘Auto Pilot 400.’” 

    10. Kasey Kahne: Kahne posted his third top-10 finish of the year with a ninth at Fontana, backing up an identical ninth at Bristol a week earlier. After a 25th at Daytona, Kahne hasn’t finished outside the top 15, and is now 11th in the points, 30 out of first.

    “I guess it’s true what they say,” Kahne said. “Red Bull does give you wings, because I’ll be taking flight from Red Bull to Hendrick Motorsports at season’s end. It’s common knowledge that when I sign a contract, it’s often scored by the sound of the Beatles ‘Hello Goodbye’ playing in the background.”

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: DALE JR IS A DIE HARD ‘GAMER’ BUT DON’T ASK HIM TO JOIN YOU ON THE ‘SOCIAL NETWORK’

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: DALE JR IS A DIE HARD ‘GAMER’ BUT DON’T ASK HIM TO JOIN YOU ON THE ‘SOCIAL NETWORK’

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignright” width=”276″][/media-credit]For many years now it’s been generally well known that Dale Earnhardt Jr. is a “gamer,” or an avid player of video games. In past interviews he’s admitted to often sitting up much of the night honing his expertise with just about any video game on the market.

    One would think that Earnhardt’s love of this high tech recreational age would include hanging out with his friends on modern day so called “social networks.” It doesn’t. Believe it or not NASCAR’s most popular driver isn’t that fond of the concept and has actually declined opening a “Twitter” account.

    During a recent interview, conducted prior to the start of the NASCAR weekend at the California based Auto Club Speedway, Earnhardt answered the usual questions regarding all aspects of his Hendrick Motorsports racing team. Somehow the topic of video games worked it’s way into the conversation. Earnhardt is one of the Sprint Cup celebrities included in the new racing game “NASCAR, The Video Game 2011.”

    “NASCAR: The Video Game 2011” is the first edition of the NASCAR racing simulator series developed by Eutechnyx and published by Activision. It was released for Playstation and Xbox 360 units last March 29th and will be released for Wii machines on May 24th. It will be the first NASCAR game released since the contract between EA Sports and NASCAR expired. The new game will feature on line races for 16 players. All of the 23 Sprint Cup Series race tracks will be featured in the game. 43 Sprint Cup drivers have been added to the game as well as some other drivers from the Nationwide Series and Camping World Truck Series.

    When asked for his impression of the new video game and what characteristics did they use for his race team, Earnhardt surprisingly said “I don’t know, I haven’t tried it. I don’t have my copy yet. I’m waiting on those guys to tell me where I can go buy it.”

    It seemed a little amazing that Earnhardt would even have to purchase a copy of the new video game especially with his image included in it. Responding to that, he said “well, I was not going to assume that I was going to get a free one but if they wish to send me one, I’ll be glad to try it. I enjoy those kind of things and I’ve got some friends that work at the company in Europe that made it and I was pretty excited to see it. I’m a big longtime EA Sports fan, but I was excited to see a new developer get an opportunity to try the game and try their hand at NASCAR and see what kind of product we could get out there. Hopefully the fans really enjoy it. I’m excited to be a part of it in any way possible. It’s one of my favorite hobbies and I look forward to seeing the job they did.”

    As much as Earnhardt Jr. is up for the challenge of a video game, he never has really developed an appreciation of the so called “social networks” that is the electronic rave these days. Most of his NASCAR contemporaries have “Twitter” accounts and spend a lot of time sending and receiving instant messages.

    When asked why the leader of the “Junior nation” chose not to participate in the “Twitter nation” Earnhardt said “I used to have a My Space Dot Com page and I used to have a “Face Book Dot Com” page; I don’t anymore because it was just too much responsibility. I felt like you had to plug in and be involved with it so much and I just thought that personally I don’t need to do it. I understand it and we utilize the business side of it and it works for JR Motorsports and it helps us there. But, personally, it would be fun for about a month and then I would start to feel like it was a job, where people expected me to do it. I’ve had some other drivers tell me that some of the people aren’t too nice about it. (Laughing) So that part of it, why do I need to put up with it anyway? But, if I don’t have to put up with it, why do I want to bring that into my life?”

    That’s a perfectly logical reason when you’re NASCAR’s most popular driver and you practically live your life in a fish bowl. Despite that Earnhardt hasn’t one hundred percent ruled out using the social network. “I think never say never, but with my experience with “My Space” and “Facebook”, which worked great, I ended up in the end going this isn’t necessary for me. It was fun trying to be cool, and creating your page and being the hipster that you thought you were, but in the end, I needed to get outside and I just needed to get rid of it. It just wasn’t for me, I guess,” he said.

    Can you imagine the “Twitter” followers this man would accumulate in a short amount of time if he did open an account?

    By the way, attention Activision, send this man a copy of your new video game. If he likes it, and he probably will, then he will become the best thing that has ever happened to your marketing plan.

  • Joey Logano and No. 20 Home Depot Team – Martinsville Speedway Advance

    Joey Logano and No. 20 Home Depot Team – Martinsville Speedway Advance

    Joey Logano No. 20 Home Depot Toyota Camry

    Goody’s 500 at Martinsville Speedway

    The Home Depot Team Notes of Interest

    . The Home Depot Team and Joey Logano return to Martinsville Speedway where they earned their best finish of the 2010 season. Logano finished second in the Goody’s 500 one year ago to his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin and went on to earn another top-10 finish in the fall event.

    . About last weekend: It was another tough race for Logano and The Home Depot Team at Auto Club Speedway on Sunday. A solid qualifying effort by Logano put the No. 20 Toyota inside the second row, but an engine change race morning forced Logano to the rear of the field. With track position and clean air a key to success at the two-mile track, Logano battled the handling of the car most of the race. A late-race pass through penalty dropped Logano from the top-15 back to the 25th position when the checkered flag waved.

    . The Home Depot Team is currently 29th in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings following last weekend’s event at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif. The team has accumulated 93 points so far this season and sits 64 points out of the series top 10.

    . Welcome aboard The Home Depot associates from store #6377 from Destin, Fla. The store number will ride along with Logano this weekend on the rear quarter panel of The Home Depot Toyota at Martinsville Speedway.

    . Meet Logano! Fans in the Greensboro, N.C. area can meet Logano at The Home Depot Store on Thursday, March 31 from 6 – 7:30 p.m. The store is located at 4425 Wendover Ave. There will be photo opportunities with the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota and an autograph signing by Logano. Wristbands will be distributed starting at 5 p.m. to the first 700 fans.

    . There are two Virginia natives on The Home Depot crew roster, spotter Mark Robertson and second engineer Mike Lorusso. Robertson hails from Richmond and has been with the No. 20 team since its inception. Lorusso joined the Home Depot Team this season and is from the north east corner of the state in Ashburn.

    . The No. 20 Home Depot Team is taking chassis #303 to the paperclip this weekend for the 500-lap race. This is a new short-track chassis for the team. The back-up chassis is #275 that Logano most recently drove to a sixth-place finish at Martinsville in October.

    . To access information on The Home Depot Team visit: http://www.joegibbsracing.com www.joegibbsracing.com and follow http://twitter.com/homedepotracing twitter.com/homedepotracing, http://twitter.com/joegibbsracing twitter.com/joegibbsracing and http://twitter.com/jlogano twitter.com/jlogano.

    Logano Quotes on Martinsville Speedway:

    “The first race I ran there was tough, but I feel like I’ve gotten so much better. It’s one of those tracks where the more you get used to the type of braking it takes the better off you are. I also know now how I want the balance to be on the car because it’s a tricky track. Typically I’ve been better there on the long runs, but you have to be decent on the short run too or else you lose a ton of spots initially and they are tough to get back. The track and handling changes so much over the course of a run it’s unreal. I just need to stay out of trouble, try not to hit anything and bring home a solid finish.”

    No. 20 Home Depot Team

    Primary Team Members:

    Crew Chief – Greg Zipadelli Car Chief – Jason Shapiro Engine Builder – Mark Cronquist

    Lead Engineer – Jacob Canter Engine Specialist – Michael Johnson Spotter – Mark Robertson

    Tire Specialist – Jerold Shires Shock Specialist – Dusty Boyd Second Engineer – Mike Lorusso

    Mechanics – Scott Geerts, Todd Foster Pit Support – Bill Byrne IT Support – Nathan Boone

    Truck Drivers – Tom McCrimmon, Scott Crowell

    Over-The-Wall Crew Members:

    Jackman – Jason Tate Front Tire Changer – John Royer Front Tire Carrier – Brett Morrell

    Gas Man – John Eicher Rear Tire Changer – Coleman Dallarhide Rear Tire Carrier – Eric Groen

  • There Are Many Great Story Lines To Watch At Martinsville This Weekend

    There Are Many Great Story Lines To Watch At Martinsville This Weekend

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (March 29, 2011) – The story lines headed into this Sunday’s Goody’s Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway is much like the race: there’s so much action you just don’t know where to look.

    Where to start?

    Can Martinsville’s most dominant driver over the past two years, Denny Hamlin rebound this week? He’s won three races in a row at Martinsville, but is struggling in 2011.

    Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing operation has been plagued by engine problems and wound up a dismal 39th at California last week. He is 21st in the points coming into the Goody’s Fast Relief 500, but Martinsville in the spring has been his jumping off point the past few years for a strong climb through the standings.

    Can Kevin Harvick make it two wins in a week on his home track? He won in California last week where he was born, but Martinsville is his new home track, just a half-hour from his home.

    Harvick has Martinsville wins in two divisions, the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and the NASCAR Nationwide Series. Trucks from his race team, Kevin Harvick Inc., have dominated the truck races here the past few seasons. But he does not have a Cup win at Martinsville.

    “We’ve come close, but that doesn’t mean anything. It’s time we stepped up and won one at Martinsville,” Harvick, who is coming off a win last weekend in California.

    Can Paul Menard keep his surprising, storybook season going? He’s seventh in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points this season, and has the best start of any of the Richard Childress Racing teams. His best Martinsville finish is a 15th, but last week said he felt like he had improved on the tight half-mile track.

    And what about Trevor Bayne and the Wood Brothers? Twenty-year-old Bayne won the Daytona 500 for the famed Wood Brothers in February, but the team has hit a rough patch since Daytona. Martinsville is the Wood Brothers home track, and this will be their first race here in several years since they trimmed their schedule.

    They announced just a few hours after Bayne’s Daytona win that they would be coming home for the Goody’s Fast Relief 500. Bayne, who has never raced at Martinsville, will have to qualifying his way into the race, because he is out of the top 25 in points.

    Action begins to pick up at Martinsville on Thursday when the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series teams unload their trucks and equipment in the infield. The NASCAR Sprint Cup haulers enter the infield at 5 p.m. on Thursday.

    Friday is a full day of practice for both divisions, with truck series getting 80 minutes of track time beginning at 11 a.m., followed by 90 minutes of cup practice. The trucks are back on the track at 2:10 followed by happy hour for the cup cars.

    Saturday is another full day on-track with qualifying for the Kroger 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at 10:40 and qualifying for the Goody’s Fast Relief 500 at 12:10 p.m. The Kroger 250 will take the green flag at 2 p.m.

    The Goody’s Fast Relief 500 starts at 1 p.m. on Sunday. Good seats remain for Sunday’s Goody’s Fast Relief 500 and the speedway ticket office has plenty of options to allow easy ticket purchase right up until the start of the race.

    Fans may call 877.RACE.TIX to purchase from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Tickets may also be purchased online by visiting www.martinsvillespeedway.com. Fans may also opt for a print-at-home option when buying tickets.

    The Martinsville Speedway ticket office is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day this week for ticket purchases.

    The Martinsville Speedway ticket office is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day this week for ticket purchases.

  • Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NSCS Race Advance – Martinsville

    Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NSCS Race Advance – Martinsville

    DODGE AT MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY

    • Dodge has 10 wins at Martinsville including three sweeps (1953, 1956 and 1975).

    • Rusty Wallace posted the last Dodge win at Martinsville in the 2004 spring event, one of seven victories for Wallace at the .526-mile track.

    • Kurt Busch (No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge) won at Martinsville in 2002 prior to joining the Dodge Motorsports family.

    • Busch is the only current Dodge driver to earn a pole at Martinsville Speedway (October 2006).

    DODGE HISTORICAL DATA

    • First Dodge NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Win: Lee Petty, 2/1/53, West Palm, Fla., 100 miles, .5-mile track.

    • Last Dodge NASCAR Sprint Cup Win at Martinsville Speedway: Rusty Wallace, 4/28/04, Advanced Auto Parts 500, 68.169 mph avg. speed.

    DODGE NEWS AND NOTES

    • Dodge’s Kurt Busch dropped two positions to third-place in the 2011 NSCS driver standings after his 17th-place finish at Auto Club Speedway last weekend. Busch has not been outside the top-five all season.

    THE DODGE BOYS

    • Dodge has 207 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories. • Dodge’s most recent win came at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Kurt Busch led 252 of 400 laps en route to victory in the 2010 Coca-Cola 600.

    • Dodge claimed two Sprint Cup victories in 2010.

    • Dodge teams have posted 47 wins since the manufacturer’s return to NASCAR’s premier series in 2001 after being out of the sport since 1977.

    • Dodge has posted wins each season since it’s return in 2001 including seven wins twice (2002 and 2006).

    DID YOU KNOW

    • In addition to Martinsville and Richmond, seven other Virginia tracks have hosted Sprint Cup events since the first “strictly stock”, now Sprint Cup, race in 1949.

    • Kurt Busch’s win at the 2002 event at Martinsville was from the 36th starting position, the furthest back a race winner has started.

    • The race winner has come from the first two rows in 60 of the 124 Sprint Cup races at Martinsville.

    • The first NASCAR-sanctioned race at Martinsville was held in 1949. The first 500-lap event was in 1956.

    • Kurt Busch’s best starting position this season was a second at Phoenix; he started third at Daytona.

    FROM THE ENGINEER “Every time the Sprint Cup Series visits Martinsville, we talk about the importance of brakes at the track with the tightest and slowest corners in NASCAR. It’s a big job to slow down 3,450 pound cars 1000 times a race; it works the brake system to its limits. Now in 2011, there’s a new lower fascia in the Sprint Cup Series and along with the new look, a new set of brake cooling ducts. Are they going to be enough to keep the brakes cool for 500 laps at Martinsville? We’ll find out Sunday.” Howard Comstock, Dodge Motorsports Engineering

    FROM THE CREW CHIEF “The good thing about Martinsville is that you don’t have to worry about aerodynamics. It’s the shortest track we visit and it’s all about mechanical grip. In the short time Brad has been at Martinsville, he has shown a great ability to get around the place. Hopefully we can get qualifying in – which is never a guarantee during this weekend – so that we can get a good qualifying spot.” Paul Wolfe, Crew Chief, No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge Charger

    IN CASE YOU MISSED IT • Dodge’s Brad Keselowski earned his only Sprint Cup pole at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in 2010.

    2011 SPRINT CUP SERIES SEASON BEST • Kurt Busch Start: 2nd – Phoenix Finish: 5th – Daytona • Brad Keselowski Start: 9th – Phoenix Finish: 15th – Phoenix • Robby Gordon Start: 30th – Daytona Finish: 16th – Daytona

    MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY BEST • Kurt Busch Start – Pole – 2008 (Oct.) Finish – Win – 2002 (Oct.) • Brad Keselowski Start – 25th – 2010 (Oct.) Finish – 10TH – 2010 (Oct.) • Robby Gordon Start – 11th – 2002 (April) Finish – 20th – 2005 (April)

    DODGE QUOTES “I’ll be the first to admit that the Martinsville races have always been so challenging to me and that goes all the way back through my career. But ever since Steve Addington came aboard as our crew chief at the beginning of last season, things have really begun to turn for the better. Steve deserves so much credit for rallying the troops every week and having our team’s confidence level up for all of these races. I told him when he first joined the team that Martinsville was a weak track for me personally and he vowed back then that we’d work hard together in changing that. I think we’ve already made so much progress, but it’s a case of the numbers just not showing that.” Kurt Busch, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge Charger R/T

    “The biggest thing for me going into my first race at Martinsville was that I tried not to get too intimidated by the track. There are a lot of top-tier drivers that have horror stories about their first race there. I came from a short-track background, racing at tough bullrings like Toledo and Auto City. I told myself that those tracks had fully-prepared me for racing at Martinsville and that I just needed to trust my abilities. We had two good racecars last year too, and that certainly helps. I’m really excited to get back to Martinsville this weekend because I learned a ton in those first two races that will help me this season.” Brad Keselowski, No 2 Miller Lite Dodge Charger R/T

  • Team Lowe’s Racing – Team 48 Martinsville Speedway Preview

    Team Lowe’s Racing – Team 48 Martinsville Speedway Preview

    Team 48 Martinsville Speedway

    VISIT MEDIA.LOWESRACING.COM FOR ALL MEDIA INFORMATION

    INCLUDING TRANSCRIPTS, BIOS, STATS, AND PHOTOS

    JIMMIE JOHNSON

    2011 STARTS: 5 WINS: 0 TOP 5: 3 TOP 10: 3

    CURRENT DRIVER POINT STANDINGS: 5th POINTS BEHIND 1st: 14

    FINISH IN CALIFORNIA: 2ND SPRING 2010 FINISH AT MARTINSVILLE: 9th

    TEAM ROSTERS WILL BE POSTED ON MEDIA.LOWESRACING.COM WHEN AVAILABLE

    RACE NOTES

    Martinsville Speedway

    • Johnson has made 18 Sprint Cup Series starts at Martinsville Speedway, where he has earned six wins, 13 top-five and 17 top-10 finishes.

    • His only finish outside the top ten came in his first start at the .526-mile track in 2002.

    • Johnson, who has won five of the last nine events at Martinsville, has completed 99.4% (8965 of 9019) of competition laps and has led 1551.

    • He has an average start and finish of 11.9 and 5.3.

    Chassis

    • Johnson will pilot brand new chassis No. 653 in Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series event.

    • Backup chassis No. 540 crossed the finish line fifth at Phoenix International Speedway in Nov. 2010.

    JIMMIE JOHNSON QUOTES

    WHERE DO YOU FEEL YOU ARE HEADING TO MARTINSVILLE?:

    “The spring race did not go as we had hoped (last year). The fall race, we ran really well although I guess we didn’t lead a lap. I remember the 29 (Kevin Harvick), the 11 (Denny Hamlin) and us racing real hard all day. I feel like we’re close. We probably don’t have the dominant car that we’ve had there in years past or other teams have caught us. I feel like I should have been second or third, but I don’t recall the end of that run and why we ended up sixth. The track has been good to us and we just need to find a little something there — a little bit goes a long way on that small of a track like that.”

    WHAT IS THE CHALLENGE FOR YOU AT MARTINSVILLE?:

    “For me, it’s just a fun place to race. I encourage friends and family to come to that track and watch. It’s a great snapshot of NASCAR in the old days where you’re right on top of the action whether you’re on pit road or in the grandstands. I just personally enjoy the challenge that track brings and I think it’s a cool venue. Outside of that I guess I’m a competitor and every time I’m in the car I want to win and I want to be as fast as I can.”

    SPRINT CUP SERIES CAREER NOTES

    Career Wins

    • Johnson has 53 wins in his Sprint Cup Series career, his most recent coming at Dover International Speedway on Sept. 26, 2010.

    • The El Cajon, Calif.-native is currently 10th on NASCAR’s all-time wins list, one victory behind Lee Petty.

    • He is second in total wins among active drivers, behind Jeff Gordon (82).

    • Johnson needed only 296 starts to hit the 50 mark. Only three drivers have reached 50 victories quicker – Gordon (232), Darrell Waltrip (278) and David Pearson (293).

    • Johnson has won at least three Cup races a season since he posted his first victory in 2002. He is the only driver in the modern era to win at least three races in each of his first eight full-time seasons.

    • Johnson has won Sprint Cup Series races at all but four (Michigan, Chicago, Watkins Glen, Homestead) of the 22 tracks on which the series competes.

    • Johnson’s 10 wins in 2007 was the highest number recorded in a single season since Jeff Gordon posted 13 victories in 1998.

    • The four-consecutive wins scored by the No. 48 team in the 2007 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup ties a modern-era NASCAR record.

    Career Poles

    • Johnson has collected 25 poles in his Sprint Cup career.

    • The championship driver has earned at least one pole a year since his first full-time season in 2002.

    • He had a career-high six poles in 2008.

    • Johnson’s most recent pole position was at Dover International Speedway on Sept. 24, 2010.

    Career Starts

    • Johnson has finished in the top five in the Sprint Cup Series point standings each year since his first full season in 2002.

    • Johnson is the only driver to qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup every year since the format was adopted in 2004.

    • In 332 Sprint Cup Series starts, Johnson has posted 137 top-five and 206 top-10 finishes.

    • He has a top-five finish at every track on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series circuit.

    • Johnson has led a total of 11,182 laps (of 95,696) in his Sprint Cup career, covering over 128,108 miles.

    • He has finished on the lead lap 257 times.

  • RETURN TO FAMILIAR GROUND FOR GORDON AT MARTINSVILLE?

    RETURN TO FAMILIAR GROUND FOR GORDON AT MARTINSVILLE?

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (March 29, 2011) – With four victories in six races during the early-to-mid 2000’s at Martinsville Speedway, seeing Jeff Gordon in Victory Lane was a staple of the racing at the paper-clip shaped track. Can the seven-time Martinsville race winner return there Sunday in the Goody’s Fast Relief 500?

    The driver of the No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet has posted solid numbers at the 0.526-mile track. Along with seven wins, Gordon has seven poles, 23 top-fives and 29 top-10’s in 36 starts. In fact, he has only four finishes of 12th or worse here in 19 seasons of racing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

    “As you can probably guess, I’m really looking forward to the trip to Martinsville this weekend,” said Gordon, who is currently 16th in the standings and 57 points behind the leader. “It’s a short track with tight racing, so you have to be careful not to overheat your brakes and use up your equipment.

    “It’s seems like all the things I’ve done over the years still apply and still work here. If you’re running well with a good car, you can drive away to hopefully avoid some of the wrecks and things you see that gets drivers into trouble. “But we’re running inches away from each other, so anything is possible.” Gordon enters the 500-lap event with 11 top-five finishes in his last 12 starts at Martinsville with the lone exception being a 20th-place finish last fall. He led 56 laps in that event but was involved in an accident with just over 100 laps to go.

    “We’ll try to learn from last time and try to figure out what we could have done better,” said Gordon, who has led 1,393 more laps than any other active driver here (2,944 – 1,551).

    “We’ll discuss what each car in our stable had in our setup – who was good and who was not – and try to break it down why. “Although we won earlier this year at Phoenix, (new crew chief) Alan (Gustafson) and I have only worked together for five races and a few tests. We’re still learning and our communication is always evolving. When we get to the track, hopefully I’ll provide the necessary information about the car so that he can make the right adjustments during practice and during the race.

    “Because we’re capable of winning Martinsville this year.”

  • Greg Biffle Martinsville Notes and Quotes

    Greg Biffle Martinsville Notes and Quotes

    Biffle on Martinsville: “Well, it’s obvious by looking at my stats that Martinsville has been a tough place for me. We’ve had a few decent runs there but getting your car to turn can make the difference between a fun race at Martinsville and a long day at Martinsville. When the car is turning and you can get off of the corners on the gas, the race at Martinsville can be one of the most fun races of the season but when it won’t turn or your brakes a failing, it is probably my least favorite track on the circuit. I would say our goal this weekend is to leave Martinsville with a top-10 finish.”

    Erwin on Martinsville: “The key this weekend will be to get the car to rotate through the center so the driver can get into the gas as soon as possible coming off of the corner. We have been able to run in the top 10 at Martinsville and we just need to be able to do that this weekend. As always, qualifying well will be extremely important because it is generally easier to stay up front at Martinsville than to get up front at Martinsville.”

    Martinsville Notes

    • Biffle is currently 20th in the Sprint Cup point standings following his 11th-place finish in California.

    • Biffle has an average finish of 23rd from an average starting position of 18.8 at Martinsville Speedway.

    • Biffle will be making his 300th Sprint Cup points race start this weekend in Martinsville.

    • Ryan Dextraze, who was the catchcan guy for the team in 2010 and has been in charge of windshield tear-offs during pit stops this year, will be the gasman for the 3M team this weekend in Martinsville.

    • Visit www.shop3M.com http://www.shop3m.com/ to learn more about all of the innovative products 3M has to offer.

  • CHEVY NSCS AT MARTINSVILLE ONE: TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

    CHEVY NSCS AT MARTINSVILLE ONE: TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

    34-TIME MANUFACTURERS’ CHAMPION – NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

    GOODYS FAST RELIEF 500

    MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY

    MARTINSVILLE, VA

    APRIL 3, 2011

    DID YOU KNOW? Improving fuel economy in the Chevrolet Cruze consists of many small steps, including reducing the energy consumed by the alternator to help make the engine run more efficiently. Officially, it is a patented General Motors technology called Regulated Voltage Control or RVC and is estimated to improves fuel economy on the Cruze by up to 1.5 percent. To a Cruze customer, RVC enables them to get more than eight additional miles of range on every tank of fuel. With RVC, the power that runs from the alternator to the battery is reduced from 14 volts to 12.8 volts under normal driving conditions. This allows the alternator to focus the power on the vehicle’s electrical loads and avoid charging the battery with current it doesn’t need. When the voltage to the battery is reduced, the demand on the alternator is reduced. That in turn reduces the alternator’s pull on the engine, allowing the engine to run more efficiently. With the engine running more efficiently, fuel economy is improved.

    TEAM CHEVY IN NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES (NSCS) COMPETITION:

    . Chevrolet has won 34 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Manufacturers’ Championships

    . Team Chevy drivers have scored 671 wins in NSCS competition

    o 2011 wins – 2

    . In 2010, Jimmie Johnson and the No. 48 Lowe’s Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team scored their unprecedented fifth consecutive drivers’ and owners’ NSCS championships

    CHEVROLET ON THE TRACK-MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY:

    * A Chevrolet driver has won 46 of the 124 NSCS races at Martinsville Speedway

    . Chevy has won 48 poles at Martinsville

    * Team Chevy drivers have scored 226 top-five finishes and 419 top-10 finishes at Martinsville * A Chevrolet has led 23,900 laps (42.6% of 56,087 possible) at Martinsville

    TEAM CHEVY AT MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY – ALBA COLON, NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES PROGRAM MANAGER, GM RACING: “After a great win in California, Team Chevy feels really good about going to Martinsville. Congratulations to Kevin Harvick, Gil Martin, Richard Childress, and the whole No. 29 Budweiser/Jimmy John’s Chevrolet for their fantastic job!

    “Everybody loves short track racing, but let’s be honest; Martinsville is a very challenging track! It has flat, narrow, long straightaways, tight corner radii, tight pit lanes; you name it. You have to have a good handling vehicle and for sure you have to have a good control of it. The racing is really close, and the drivers are always in traffic. That can be a very challenging situation at times. They have to be in their toes during the whole race. Martinsville is definitely a driver’s track.

    “Our GM Racing engineers have been working hand in hand with the team engineers to provide the technology that leads to better handling race cars, which is the key component to be successful at this track. We work on different tools ranging from simulation programs to chassis and components measurement techniques/programs.

    “Chevrolet has a good winning record at Martinsville, and we are looking forward to continuing that tradition on Sunday!”

    TEAM CHEVY FROM THE DRIVER’S SEAT AT MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY:

    RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 HAAS AUTOMATION CHEVROLET – 2ND IN STANDINGS: “I think the competition is still really close I just think those guys have risen to the top at that racetrack, which is entirely unique to anything else we have on the schedule. I think that, in itself, Martinsville being Martinsville is part of it. The other part of it is the drivers have to really modulate that brake pedal, which is another part of it. You can have the best car there and burn the brakes off of it and finish 35th. I have actually blown two tires out, melted the beads on two tires at one time and blew both of them at the same time, which I thought was pretty cool, afterwards. But seriously, we’ve been good there – we have been really good – especially on Fridays, and we seem to start off a little slow on Sundays and end up in the top-five or top-10. I thought last fall was going to be a good race for us had we not lost a gear because we were leading at the time. I think we have made some pretty big gains to try to catch those guys and surpass them, so I think the No. 39 team is looking forward to getting back to a track that has been really good for us.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET – 5TH IN STANDINGS – HAS SIX (6) VICTORIES AT THE .526-MILE MARTINSVILLE OVAL (’04, ’06, ’07 (TWICE), ’08 & ’09): “The spring race (last year) did not go as we had hoped (at Martinsville). The fall race, we ran really well although I guess we didn’t lead a lap. I remember the 29 (Kevin Harvick), the 11 (Denny Hamlin) and us racing real hard all day. I feel like we’re close. We probably don’t have the dominant car that we’ve had there in years past or other teams have caught us. I feel like I should have been second or third, but I don’t recall the end of that run and why we ended up sixth. The track has been good to us and we just need to find a little something there — a little bit goes a long way on that small of a track like that. For me, it’s just a fun place to race. I encourage friends and family to come to that track and watch. It’s a great snapshot of NASCAR in the old days where you’re right on top of the action whether you’re on pit road or in the grandstands. I just personally enjoy the challenge that track brings and I think it’s a cool venue. Outside of that I guess I’m a competitor and every time I’m in the car I want to win and I want to be as fast as I can.”

    TONY STEWART, NO. 14 OFFICE DEPOT/MOBIL 1 CHEVROLET – 6TH IN STANDINGS – HAS WON TWICE (2) AT MARTINSVILLE (’00, ’06): “It’s still that old short track feel. That’s what I like. We run a lot of 1.5-mile tracks during the year and it’s the only place that races like this. We’ve got two half-mile tracks that we race on. This one’s quite a bit different than Bristol, and that’s what makes it fun. You can out-brake guys and you can run the outside if you get a shot. It’s racing the way we all grew up racing. I think the shock technology [is one of the things that has changed the most] and I think it’s like anywhere else where you’re still trying to get the cars to do the same thing. You still have to make them rotate and more so, at Martinsville than anywhere else, you have to, you’re asking the car to accelerate a lot off the corner. That’s the hardest thing. You can always get it to do one or the other, but it’s hard to get them to do both. I think that’s why Martinsville is so difficult. But there are things that drivers figure out that they like and the feel that they like and when you find that you normally have something to shoot for each time you go on the race track. But the technology does change with it, I believe.”

    PAUL MENARD, NO. 27 NIBSO/MENARDS CHEVROLET – 7TH IN STANDINGS: “I’ve struggled at Martinsville in the past. Last year, we actually had two really good races, and the fall of 2009, we ran in the top 10 until a pit stop hurt us. The last three times that I’ve been there, I’ve felt like I had a top-10 car. Things happen at Martinsville that are outside of your control. It’s kind of like a restrictor-plate track – there’s a lot of beating and banging, people not expecting to do it or trying to do it, it’s just apparent with the chain reactions and everyone checking up. You’ll get fenders tore up. You’ll have broken rear gears from wheel spin on exit. There are a lot of things that can happen. You just have to try and minimize all of that and stay out of trouble as best as you can. It’s a very mental race and not as physical as you think. You drive into the corner and you kind lean of against your seat. There’s not a whole lot of load, but it’s very mental. You’re always checking your mirrors to see if anyone is going to dive bomb you, you are constantly trying to protect your inside, and if you get shuffled to the outside, you’re going to get freight-trained. It’s very mental just like a restrictor-plate race track.”

    JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET – 8TH IN STANDINGS: “Martinsville is not as hard as people think. You race and if somebody races hard, you’re going to race hard. It’s a place you don’t want to wreck anybody because payback is really bad there. We have to have respect for each other out there. The Target team keeps doing an amazing job every week and we’re hoping to keep that same momentum going at Martinsville and walk out of there in one piece. It doesn’t take you [too long to learn it]. It is go, brake, turn, go, brake, turn. (SMILES) Is that a good description? To tell you the truth, the first couple of times you go there, it is hard because it is a lot slower than anything you’ve done and because you are going so slow and it is so flat, the car the slides around. It is more like a road course. It is in between a road course and an oval. For me personally, it is not that hard. Just have to make sure the car rolls through the center and put the power down. That is all that matters.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 BUDWEISER CHEVROLET – 9TH IN STANDINGS: “I think as you look at Martinsville, the past finishes haven’t reflected how our cars have run. Last year for both races, we had really good cars. We led a bunch of laps and got a finish we thought we were capable of getting in the second race. I think we finished third or fourth. For us, it’s a fun race track. It’s kind of our home race track, I guess you could say. It’s so close to the shops, and you end up having a lot of people from the shops come and watch. It’s just one of those places that you have to race all day, and you have to try and keep your track position, and all the parts, pieces and fenders on it. It’s a race track that I really enjoy running at. Sooner or later, we’re going to win a race there because we’ve run well there for years.”

    DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 AMP ENERGY/NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET – 12TH IN STANDINGS: “I like Martinsville a lot. There’s something about trying to get around the corner of that place that’s a lot of fun and it’s just an interesting race track. Martinsville is a good short track and there is a little bit of roughness to it. Take a good car there, qualify rather well, use good pit strategy, manage a good race, put yourself in position for a competitive finish. That’s how you short-track race. If the car is strong, get to the front. If you need to work on your car, manage your track position, manage yourself so you don’t lose track position. If you lose track position in them races, it’s really hard to get back.”

    MARK MARTIN, NO. 5 QUAKER STATE/GODADDY.COM CHEVROLET – 14TH IN STANDINGS – WON AT MARTINSVILLE TWICE (’92, ’00): “First, let me say that it’s cool that my 800th start is coming at a track like Martinsville. It’s one of those good old-school racetracks, and that’s pretty fitting, I guess. The biggest difference at Martinsville over other racetracks, competition wise, is that brakes are really, really important there. We don’t run into that a lot at other tracks, so that’s definitely the biggest component of a strong finish there. What makes it unique is straight fairly long straightaways and real sharp type corner. Not many race tracks are quite that extreme on the sharp corners and the long straighaways for the size of the track. Most race tracks are more round than that. So it’s extremely tough on brakes and it is also a race track where you can’t make up much as a driver. You’ve got to pretty much take what your car will give you. If you try to get more it will just hurt you. So from that respect it can be kind of frustrating. You really have to get your car working. From that standpoint it’s like all other race tracks, you make your car handle better than everybody’s you’re going to be the heat. It’s a unique challenge because the corners are so sharp and the straightaways are fairly long for a little race track.”

    JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET – 16TH IN STANDINGS – HAS SEVEN (7) MS VICTORIES, MORE THAN ANY OTHER ACTIVE DRIVER (’96, ’97, ’99, ’03 (TWICE), ’05 (TWICE):” It’s tight racing and it’s a short track. You have to be careful not to overheat the brakes and use up your equipment. I think if you run well and you have a good race car, you can drive away to work yourself through some of the wrecks and things you see that gets guys in trouble. It’s a small, tight race track and we’re running inches away from each other so anything is possible. It’s just trying to learn from what you did the last time, what you had as a setup and what you could have done better. All the conversations that we have with Alan (Gustafson, crew chief) when we prepare for a race and we debrief on the last race, we talk about the next race and we talk a little about the upcoming race. We discuss all those things about what each car in our stable has as a setup, who was good, who was not and try to break it down as to why. That’s all you can do is try to give as much good information as you can to try to make sure you can go there and be sure you were better than you were the last time.”

    CLINT BOWYER, NO. 33 BB&T CHEVROLET – 17TH IN STANDINGS: “I’ve gotten a lot better at Martinsville. I needed to. It was one track that I was terrible at when I first started. You must have a lot of discipline at that facility and there are a lot of things that you do different at a track like that. It was a big learning curve for me. We practiced and worked hard at it. I feel I’ve come a long way and our equipment has also come a long way at Martinsville. Jeff (Burton) had the car to beat down there and I think him and Harvick got into it. I don’t think either one of them won, but they knew we were up there. We run well on the short tracks. Whether it’s our driving styles, our equipment or what we do as a package collectively. It did surprise me a little bit when I first came to Martinsville. I had my head full of confidence and was thinking, ‘we’re going to go out there and do something good’ and was terrible. My first time there, I was really bad. That little Rockingham track that they built was kind of a test track and is very similar to Martinsville so we’ve spent a lot of time there and learned a lot, both me as a driver, and the team figuring out the equipment we needed on the car to be competitive.”

    JEFF BURTON, NO. 31 CATERPILLAR CHEVROLET – 25TH IN STANDINGS – WON AT MARTINSVILLE IN ’97: “We had them beat in the spring there last year. We had (Denny) Hamlin beat. It was a done deal. Then, we cut a right-front tire. He won’t admit we had it done, but he was struggling at that point. The deal was going to get closed out. Then, we went back there in the fall and ran really, really well. We led laps. The last run of the race, we just weren’t as good as what we needed to be. I think we finished ninth. We had a really, really good car. What I look at is I don’t know how you keep from cutting a tire, so I’m not going to worry about that. With the race in the fall, we probably raced a little too hard, a little bit too early and ate the tires off of it. Again, who thinks you’re going to run 100 laps at the end at Martinsville? That’s what happened. We went a full fuel run to end the race at Martinsville. We just don’t ever see that. I was racing thinking another caution was coming out and it didn’t. Again, we had good race cars and I think we can go there and be ultra competitive. I really like Martinsville. I’ve always liked racing there. It’s hard. I think it’s one of the hardest races we run all year. There are a lot of people that hate Martinsville. That’s why I like it. This is the highest form of motorsports in North America. It’s supposed to be hard. This track is hard. I also know that I’ve been there before and won a race and went back there the next year with the same setup and didn’t finish on the lead lap. That track changes more than any track we go to. We have to go there with open eyes, open minds and be willing to change if something isn’t working. I think we have a good basic outline to start with. That won’t be good enough; we’ll have to find a way to make it better.”

    JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 WIDIA CHEVROLET – 28TH IN STANDINGS: “Martinsville is one of my favorite places to race.I love that track! That is one of the few places that I have trouble sleeping Thursday night before the race weekend. It is a really fun track and I can’t wait to get there! I am also looking forward to having a new sponsor on the No. 1 car this weekend with WIDIA. This will be their first time being on the car and they will be bringing a lot of employees and customers to the track, so hopefully we will put on a good show for them.”

    REGAN SMITH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW RACING CHEVROLET – 30thTH IN STANDINGS: Finding rhythm on race day in Martinsville is our first priority. We need to be as strong in race trim as we’ve been in qualifying trim. There was a time last year that our biggest problem was qualifying and starting far back in the field. Judging of how we qualified in the last three races of 2010 and the first five of 2011, the problem appears to be fixed. I was told last week at Fontana that our average starting position this season is 5.8. Yes, we’re happy on Friday, but not on Sunday lately. I rather be happy both days, but if I had to choose one of the days, it definitely would be Sunday. We have some work ahead of us.”

    Chevrolet NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Statistics

    Manufacturers Championships

    Total (1949 – 2010): 34

    First title for Chevrolet: 1958

    Highest number of consecutive titles: 9 (1983 – 91)

    Years Won: 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

    Drivers Championships

    Total (1949 – 2010): 27

    First Chevrolet champion: Buck Baker (1957)

    Highest number of consecutive titles: 6 (1993 – 98) & (2005 – ’10)

    Years Won: 1957, 1960, 1961, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

    Event Victories

    2010 Race Wins: 18

    Record for total race wins in single season: 26 – 2007

    2011 YEAR-TO-DATE STATISTICS:

    Wins: 2

    Poles: 2

    Laps led: 822

    Top-five finishes: 12

    Top-10 finishes: 23

    CHEVROLET IN NASCAR SPRINT CUP CUMULATIVE STATISTICS:

    Total Chevrolet race wins: 671 (1949 – to date) (2,287 possible = 29.3%)

    Poles Won to Date: 611

    Laps Lead to Date: 201,058

    Top-Five Finishes to Date: 3,379

    Top-10 Finishes to Date: 6,905

    Total NASCAR Cup wins by Corporation, 1949 – To-Date

    GM: 1,006

    Chevrolet: 671

    Pontiac: 155

    Oldsmobile: 115

    Buick: 65

    Ford: 701

    Ford: 601

    Mercury: 96

    Lincoln: 4

    Chrysler: 456

    Dodge: 207

    Plymouth: 190

    Chrysler: 59

    Toyota: 34

    About Chevrolet: Founded in Detroit in 1911, Chevrolet celebrates its centennial as a global automotive brand with annual sales of about 4.25 million vehicles in more than 140 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. The Chevrolet portfolio includes iconic performance cars such as Corvette and Camaro; dependable, long-lasting pickups and SUVs such as Silverado and Suburban; and award-winning passenger cars and crossovers such as Spark, Cruze, Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly to gas-free” solutions including Cruze Eco and Volt. Cruze Eco offers 42 mpg highway while Volt offers 35 miles of electric, gasoline-free driving and an additional 344 miles of extended range. Most new Chevrolet models offer OnStar safety, security and convenience technologies including OnStar Hands-Free Calling, Automatic Crash Response and Stolen Vehicle Slowdown. More information regarding Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com ce5&URL=http%3a%2f%2fwww.chevrolet.com%2f> .

  • LABONTE WANTS HISTORY TO REPEAT AT MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY

    LABONTE WANTS HISTORY TO REPEAT AT MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (March 29, 2011) – – On April 14, 2002, Bobby Labonte won his first short track title in dominating fashion during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway with Joe Gibbs Racing.

    On Sunday, he’s hoping history will repeat itself when he races the No. 47 Lance Toyota Camry fielded by JTG Daugherty Racing at the .526-mile oval in the Goody’s Fast Relief 500.

    “Martinsville Speedway is another track that I love and it is going to be a great track for us to go to,” Labonte said. “It’s always nice to go back to a track where you have won before. If we can stay out of harm’s way, we’ll have a shot at it.”

    There is no wonder why Labonte deems Martinsville Speedway as a favorite track on the circuit with accolades, such as, the victory, one pole award, six top-five and 13 top-10 finishes.

    “Martinsville has been a track where I have excelled and I’m confident our short track program is going to be strong,” Labonte said. “JTG Daugherty Racing ran well there last year. Actually, I tested for them before they went to Martinsville when Marcos (Ambrose) qualified second. I drove a car similar to what they had and I was like, ‘Man, this thing is awesome.’ I’m really looking forward to this race.”

    This weekend Labonte is focused on topping his best finish of fourth with JTG Daugherty Racing that occurred in the Daytona 500 season-opener at Daytona International Speedway.

    “Just knowing you’ve got a great opportunity with JTG Daugherty Racing to race to win is a big deal to me,” Labonte said. “We had a great finish at Daytona and a good run at Bristol Motor Speedway (13th) and overall we are laying some good baseline stuff down for our race team. We are also looking at our weaknesses and where we need to improve. We’re going to start picking up more as we get a foundation under our feet.”

    Each week Labonte’s confidence grows while becoming more familiar with his crew chief Frank Kerr and his JTG Daugherty Racing team. This is only their sixth race together and they have earned one top-five, one top-10 and two top-15 finishes.

    “Feeling comfortable in the car is a big key and I’m gaining confidence every weekend,” Labonte said. “The team has some great stuff, great equipment and we have awesome teammates. Our whole crew, Frankie (Frank Kerr), Raymond (Fox) and everyone that works on our Toyota Camry has been great to work with. Sure, we know we are going to be disappointed at times in a race, a finish, a performance, but we will bounce back. We’re very fortunate and we have great sponsors that support our efforts. Every week we’ll keep on working on it to make it better.”

    JTG Daugherty Racing does have some of the best sponsors in the business and this weekend America’s favorite sandwich cracker, Lance® Sandwich Crackers, sponsors the No. 47 Toyota Camry for the first time this season.

    “Lance® Sandwich Crackers, which is based in Charlotte, N.C., is on our Toyota Camry at Martinsville,” Labonte said. “We’re running their scheme also at Darlington Raceway and Charlotte Motor Speedway (October). They are an incredible partner of JTG Daugherty Racing and a favorite brand of mine and my family. We’re looking forward to delivering a solid race for them on Sunday.”

    For more information about Lance Sandwich Crackers visit www.lance.com or the Official Lance Snacks Facebook page at www.Facebook.com/LanceSnacks.

    Live coverage of the Goody’s Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway Sunday, April 3rd airs live on FOX beginning at 1 p.m. ET. MRN Radio starts coverage at 12 p.m. ET.