Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • Ford California Practice Quotes (David Ragan)

    Ford California Practice Quotes (David Ragan)

    David Ragan, driver of the No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion, piloted his car to the top of the charts in happy hour practice at Auto Club Speedway Saturday afternoon. Ragan, also the top qualifying Ford for Sunday’s race, spoke about how his car looked for Sunday.

    THAT WAS A PRETTY IMPRESSIVE LAP. “Our UPS Ford is pretty fast. It is a credit to Drew and everyone on our UPS team. We got here and I could barely make the first lap on Friday. We worked on it really hard and qualified top-10. Our car is pretty good now. We made a lot of changes during the day today and if the weather doesn’t fool us and the track doesn’t change a whole lot then I feel good about our chances tomorrow.”

    WHAT DO YOU STILL NEED OUT OF YOUR CAR FOR TOMORROW? “I mainly feel we need to get on the throttle a little harder and sooner. I can get into the corner good and our car feels good over the bumps but as I start putting the power down the back tires get out of the track a little bit and I am kind of chasing it. You only have so much groove because that big blue wall is there. I like those walls here because you can see them. If we can just tweak on our car, and that is the good thing because we have a couple teammates that are really fast, so we can adjust on it and at least we can see the leaders when they throw the green flag tomorrow. It feels good to have a fast car out there.”

  • Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – Keys for Success – Auto Club 400

    Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – Keys for Success – Auto Club 400

    Saturday, March 26, 2011 Dodge Motorsports PR Auto Club Speedway Auto Club 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series http://twitter.com/teamdodge www.media.chrysler.com

    Keys for Success: Auto Club 400

    FONTANA, Calif., (March 26, 2011) – Each race weekend, selected Dodge Motorsports engineers, Penske Racing crew chiefs, engineers, drivers or engine specialists give their insight on the ‘Keys for Success’ for the upcoming race. This week, the green flag drops at Auto Club Speedway and the Auto Club 400.

    Track: Auto Club Speedway (race 5 of 36 NASCAR Sprint Cup point events)

    Race: Auto Club 400

    Track Length: 2-mile (200 laps/400 miles)

    Trivia Question: California has hosted 129 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events. What driver posted Dodge’s first Sprint Cup Series win in the Golden State?

    HOWARD COMSTOCK (Dodge Motorsports Engineering – NASCAR Program Manager)

    Spring Race Date: “Cooler weather and a clean track surface provide plenty of grip. It’s going to be much cooler this weekend than recent races here at Fontana and if the track will hold that grip throughout the entire weekend, we’re going to see some fast speeds. That will mean prolonged periods of high RPM for the engines, and that could lead to durability problems.”

    400 vs. 500: “The race is 100 miles shorter and nobody has a book for a 400-mile spring race at Auto Club Speedway. It will be different for the teams to run 400 miles in the spring compared to 400 miles in the fall. Although I don’t think we’ll see fuel mileage problems, there is concern about tire wear. With a cool and clean track surface providing the extra grip and fast speeds, you tend to get concerned about tires.”

    Feel the Force: “Because Auto Club Speedway is a big fast track, common thinking is you need to have the slickest aerodynamics. The fact of the matter is you’ve got to have the most downforce that you can create. You could run a Daytona-style car here that’s very slick and never be able to get around the track because when you go off into that corner at over 200 mph, with little banking, you need downforce.”

    Answer to trivia question: John Soares – 1954 Dodge at Carrell Speedway, Gardena, California

  • CHEVY NSCS AT FONTANA: Montoya Wins Pole; Press Conf Transcript

    CHEVY NSCS AT FONTANA: Montoya Wins Pole; Press Conf Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    AUTO CLUB 400

    AUTO CLUB SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES & PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    March 25, 2011

    Juan Pablo Montoya Wins the Pole at Auto Club Speedway; Team Chevy Drivers Grab Six of Top-10 Starting Positions for the Auto Club 400

    Fontana, Calif (March 25, 2011) – Juan Pablo Montoya put his No. 42 Target Chevrolet on the pole for Sunday’s Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway. It is Montoya’s sixth career pole and his first at the Fontana, California track.

    Team Chevy drivers captured six of the top-10 starting postions for the 200-lap/400-mile race set to start at Noon PT on Sunday.

    Regan Smith, No. 78 Furniture Row Chevrolet, continued his streak of excellent qualifying efforts this season by locking in the fourth starting spot for the fifth race of the 2011 season.

    Tony Stewart, will start his No. 14 Office Depot/Mobil 1 Chevrolet, in the fifth position of the 43-car field.

    Jeff Burton, No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet, was the seventh fastest qualifier. Ryan Newman qualified the No. 39 US Army Chevrolet in ninth place and Mark Martin, No. 5 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet, will roll off 10th.

    A total of 17 Chevrolet drivers will take the green flag on Sunday.

    Denny Hamlin (Toyota) and Joey Logano (Toyota) complete the top-five qualifiers.

    FOX TV, MRN Radio and Sirius NASCAR Radio Channel 128 will provide live broadcast coverage of the Auto Club 400.

    JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET – POLE WINNER PRESS CONFERENCE:

    WHEN YOU CAME FROM F-1 TO NASCAR, WHAT WAS YOUR HARDEST ADJUSTMENT?

    “Just the cars themselves. Racing is racing and anything you do, you just race. It’s not a big difference. It’s just getting used to the size of the car and how much movement there is on the cars. One car the platform is really stiff and it’s very predictable. With this you just turn the wheel and you get movement and things.”

    SO IT’S STILL A LEARNING CURVE?

    “Yeah, that’s a good thing.”

    FOR THE PAST 2 YEARS, YOU GOT IT WRONG IN TURN 4. HOW DIFFERENT WAS IT THIS TIME?

    “I still got it wrong (laughter).”

    REALLY?

    “I didn’t screw-up the exit quite as much because I normally get on the gas too early and I end up washing up to the wall. So I got in the gas and as soon as I felt the rear come around, I lifted. It could have been a little bit faster, but I nailed (Turns) 1 and 2 and that paid off.”

    HOW CONFIDENT ARE YOU FOR SUNDAY?

    “I don’t know. We’ll see. It’s just what the car will give us, you know? It’s hard to say what the car is going to do. I think we’ve got a decent car. We always run good here. But the main thing is we’re in really good position in the points and we’ve got to take advantage of that.”

    ON HIS PRACTICE SESSION

    ‘We went out and we found two ways to screw-up the car and put it back (laughter).”

    WHAT TURNED YOUR QUALIFYING EFFORT AROUND TODAY?

    “I would love to know. I really don’t know. As long as we have the race pace we’ve been having this year, I’ll tell you the truth I don’t mind qualifying in the back. Brian has been making really good calls all year and if you have a good car you can always come back. But always it will make pit selection better and there’s a lot of things that are better by qualifying good. I think you can look after the car more than the race. I think that always helps. What a change? I don’t know. There was a lot less grip in qualifying than there was at the beginning of practice. So I don’t know. He told me everybody was running about the same, so I thought it should be a little bit more for us because my lap in practice at the beginning really sucked.”

    ON RACING AT AUTO CLUB SPEEDWAY

    “I think it’s really cool. It’s really technical and it’s really hard because it’s so wide and there are so many different grooves. It makes life really interesting. You’re going to have people run below the white line and make it work so people are against the fence like myself that make it work. So it’s very technical. If you get it right, it’s really, really fast.”

    REGAN SMITH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 4th:

    YOU SAID YOU MISSED YOUR LINE IN TURN ONE, WHAT HAPPENED? “I just didn’t get to the bottom, that is all there was to it. I thought the lap was horrible. I am honestly really surprised right now. We’ll take it. There are a lot of good cars to go at the end. We struggled a little bit through practice today for a lot of different reasons. The guys did a good job on finding us some speed on this Furniture Row Chevy and for me to miss my marks and still go quicker than practice, I guess that is good.”

    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> .

  • Smith Continues Qualifying Prowess; 4th Fastest in California

    Smith Continues Qualifying Prowess; 4th Fastest in California

    FONTANA, Calif. (March 25, 2011) — Regan Smith posted another strong qualifying effort in his No. 78 Furniture Row Chevrolet.

    By posting the fourth fastest speed in Friday’s time trials at Auto Club Speedway, it marks the fourth time in the first five races of the 2011 season that Smith will have a top-five starting position. He started fifth in the Daytona 500 opener, fifth in Phoenix and third last week in Bristol. The only race he didn’t qualify in the top-five was at Las Vegas where he was 12th fastest. His five-race average starting position is 5.8.

    Smith will start Sunday’s Auto Club 400 from the outside of Row 2, thanks to a fast qualifying lap at the two-mile oval — 39.124 seconds at 184.030 miles per hour.

    “Kudos to our crew chief Pete Rondeau and the entire team — we made a huge recovery from practice,” said Smith, who was 25th fastest in the earlier practice session. “We like this track and it’s time to capitalize on our strong qualifying efforts. Our next step is to work on the car during Saturday’s race-trim practices and get our Furniture Row Chevrolet dialed in for Sunday.”

    The pole winner was Juan Pablo Montoya (184.653 mph). Rounding out the top-five in order were: Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, Smith and Tony Stewart.

    Sunday’s Auto Club 400 will be televised on FOX, beginning with a prerace show at noon MT.

  • JUAN PABLO MONTOYA WINS AUTO CLUB 400 COORS LIGHT POLE

    JUAN PABLO MONTOYA WINS AUTO CLUB 400 COORS LIGHT POLE

    [media-credit name=”Patrick McBride” align=”alignright” width=”285″][/media-credit]JUAN PABLO MONTOYA WINS AUTO CLUB 400 COORS LIGHT POLE

    SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY, Calif. (March 25, 2011) – Juan Pablo Montoya, in the No. 42 Target Chevrolet, captured the Auto Club 400 Coors Light Pole Friday afternoon in qualifying at Auto Club Speedway. Montoya’s 38.99 time earned him his first pole at Auto Club Speedway and his fourth consecutive Top Five start at the track.

    “We went out and found two ways to mess up the car and put it back,” Montoya said. “I think we’ve got a decent car. We always run well here. We’re in really good position in points and we have to take advantage of that.”

    Denny Hamlin, No. 11 FedEx Office Toyota, will join Montoya in the front row posting his first Top 10 start of 2011 and his fifth in 11 races at Auto Club Speedway.

    “It’s been a good day really, just focusing on qualifying,” Hamlin said. “I’ve never really worked so hard to work on just one lap as much as I have this week. Last week we had issues at Bristol and that was because we qualified bad, so we can’t put ourselves in the middle of the pack every week.”

    Joey Logano, No. 20 Home Depot Toyota, took third, earning his third Top 10 start in five races this season.

    “It felt like we weren’t very good after practice,” Logano said. “I was very nervous before qualifying. I didn’t think we’d be top three for sure. I actually thought we’d be like 20th or so but the guys with the Home Depot Center team did a great job at getting it faster and getting the grip on the corners. It still was loose but it was a lot better than I ended practice with.”

    Andy Lally, No. 71 Eco-Fuel Saver Chevrolet, was the fastest qualifying rookie finishing 38th.

    To purchase tickets to the Auto Club Speedway race weekend call 800-944-RACE (7223), log on to om> www.autoclubspeedway.com or visit the Auto Club Speedway Ticket Office.

    About Auto Club Speedway

    Look for some amazing racing when the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series returns to Auto Club Speedway for the Auto Club 400 on March 27. After October’s NSCS race, drivers, media and spectators proclaimed that race as possibly the best ever at Auto Club Speedway- five-wide racing at over 200 mph on the NASCAR circuit!

    Free parking, unbelievable menu items and a full weekend of entertainment, live music and fun await fans in the Speedway’s DiscoverIE FanZone.

    Auto Club 400 tickets start at $35 and AAA members receive Show Your Card & Save discounts, including a special section with half-priced tickets for kids 12 and under. And don’t forget children 12 and under can sign up for the FREE Auto Club Speedway Lefty’s Kids Club membership to receive FREE admission on Friday and Saturday.

    For more information or to purchase tickets call 800-944-RACE (7223), log on to www.autoclubspeedway.com www.autoclubspeedway.com or visit the Auto Club Speedway Ticket Office.

  • TOYOTA NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Post-Qualifying Notes & Quotes Auto Club Speedway

    TOYOTA NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Post-Qualifying Notes & Quotes Auto Club Speedway

    TOYOTA NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Post-Qualifying Notes & Quotes Auto Club Speedway — March 25, 2011

    2nd, DENNY HAMLIN 3rd, JOEY LOGANO 8th, KYLE BUSCH 14th, DAVID REUTIMANN 19th, BRIAN VICKERS 22nd, KASEY KAHNE 25th, CASEY MEARS 26th, MARTIN TRUEX JR. 33rd, MICHAEL MCDOWELL 34th, BOBBY LABONTE 40th, JOE NEMECHEK 41st, TODD BODINE

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Office Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Starting Position: 2nd How was your race car in practice and qualifying? “It’s been a good day. Focusing on qualifying and things like that, I’ve really never worked so hard to work on just one lap before as much as I have this week. I’m trying to get better. Last week we had issues at Bristol and that was because we qualified bad. We can’t put ourselves in the middle of the pack every weekend. We’re trying to slowly work to get better at qualifying and I felt like I’m taking steps to do that.”

    Was your setup similar to your teammate Joey Logano? “We weren’t. I looked just a minute ago and we were really on two different spectrums. It’s tough to say why that is. Usually we’re a little bit different from those guys but we’ve been kind of on our own agenda all day and trying to figure it out. We’ve been the better car in practice, usually but when it comes to qualifying, we’re usually the worse of the Gibbs (Joe Gibbs Racing) cars. We just kind of stay to our own plan today.”

    How much do you think luck plays a role in how some drivers have started this season? “I think the luck plays a factor on the guys that have had a bad start of the season because of wrecks and blown engines. I don’t think it’s luck for the guys who have started off good. You started off good because you’ve ran good these first four races. You’ve been solid, you finished in the top-10 and those are the guys that are in the top-10 in points. That’s not luck, them finishing there. What is bad luck is the guys that have had blown motors and tires and things like that. Is it bad luck because the car wasn’t setup right or what have you. The driver couldn’t control that. Luck plays a factor but it’s different for everyone.”

    Did having a shorter practice play into where you’re starting Sunday’s race? “It’s probably good for me as bad as I am in qualifying. The least amount of practice everyone else had is better in my favor. We had 45 minutes of practice basically, but most 45 minutes are in race trim of the first practice anyway, so you had about the same amount of time in qualifying trim as you would on a regular day, it’s just people had to cut out their race trim to start the day.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 20 Home Depot Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Starting Position: 3rd How was your qualifying run? “It was more surprising than anything else. I didn’t think it was that great of a lap. I had a terrible time getting up to speed coming to the green. Thought that kind of set me up for a bad lap. I had a better (turns) one and two than I had in practice

  • Ford California Cup Qualifying

    Ford California Cup Qualifying

    FORD RACING NOTES AND QUOTES

    Auto Club 400 Qualifying, Page 1 March 25, 2011

    Auto Club Speedway

    Ford Qualifying Results: 6th – David Ragan 11th – Matt Kenseth 13th – Marcos Ambrose 18th – Carl Edwards 20th – AJ Allmendinger 27th – Trevor Bayne 32nd – Greg Biffle 36th – Travis Kvapil 37th – David Gilliland 39th – Ken Schrader 42nd – Tony Raines

    DAVID RAGAN – No. 6 UPS Ford (Qualified 6th) – “It was pretty interesting coming to the green. I thought I had spun our UPS car out. It was loose and I took it a little easy through turn one and two. It did what I needed it to. It was pretty good. It was pretty comfortable when we unloaded. We made quite a few adjustments for this qualifying lap. We lost a little momentum coming to the green. The speed we gave up was from the start finish line.”

    DO YOU ANTICIPATE OTHER DRIVERS HAVING TO GIVE A LITTLE IN ONE AND TWO? “Yeah, you are carrying so much speed getting into one and two. You are 204 or 205 and don’t have a lot of banking. If you miss it just a little bit you slip and slide and move around. Those turns are the most critical two corners here. I feel like it was ugly but we got through there. I am happy with the lap. Hopefully it holds up for a top-10.”

    CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Aflac Ford (Qualified 18th) – “We just needed one more run in practice. We made wholesale changes and took a guess at it. If we had one more stab at it I think we could have been way faster. The car will be good in race trim for sure but we will just have to battle through the field.”

    TRAVIS KVAPIL – No. 38 Long John Silver’s Ford (Qualified 36th) – “I am disappointed. It is the same speed we ran from the first lap on the track today. We thought we made improvements to get more speed for qualifying but we were too free. I could never get back to the gas hard like I needed. As long as these straight-aways are you pay the price on lap time. We will keep working on it. The shortened practice makes it a little tough but we will have time tomorrow and I am optimistic for Sunday.”

    MARCOS AMBROSE – No. 9 DeWalt Ford (Qualified 13th) “We went back to what we did at Vegas a little bit. We gained a little because of that but I don’t think it will be good enough. We are out here early and the track is cooling off so there will be some fast times out there. I am proud of my team, very proud of these guys for believing in me.”

    TREVOR BAYNE – No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford (Qualified 27th) – “I was a little disappointed with it but it is tough going from Nationwide to Cup cars. We see that a lot. They are all going to pack in front of us. Truex just ran a 6.02 and we ran a 6.03. It is that tight all the time. That little bobble messes you up. We were tight in the center and I hit the seam wrong and we lost some speed there. I think we could have run a 40 or 50. We weren’t a pole run for sure but we could have beaten a couple of those guys. We will see where we end up. I don’t know where it will be, maybe 25th or something but we can race and I can’t wait. This place is so weird. I hate practice and qualifying because you have to run the bottom but I love the race because you love the top all day. I can’t wait to get to race time.”

    TONY RAINES – No. 37 Race Fuel Energy Ford (Qualified 42nd) – “We struggled some. We didn’t have much practice today because of the rain and we had some issues with our rear bar that had broken in practice and we weren’t aware of it. We took a shot in the dark and hooked it up for qualifying and the car drove horrible. We have a lot of work to do tomorrow. We have a good group of guys though and we will get there. That short practice and mechanical failure hurt us today and you have days like that. We will rebound though.”

  • Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NSCS Final Qualifying – Auto Club 400

    Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NSCS Final Qualifying – Auto Club 400

    Friday, March 25, 2011

    Dodge Motorsports PR

    Auto Club Speedway Auto Club 400

    Post-Qualifying Quotes

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series http://twitter.com/teamdodge www.media.chrysler.com

    BRAD KESELOWSKI (No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge Charger R/T) Qualified 21st “Just not the lap we were looking for in our Miller Lite Dodge Charger. We unloaded good here and unloaded good in Las Vegas and in qualifying just seemed to struggle. We’re missing a little bit of something. Hopefully we can figure it out before the race tomorrow.”

    KURT BUSCH (No. 22 Auto Club Dodge Charger R/T) Qualified 23rd “We’re still trying to figure out the balance on this Auto Club Dodge Charger. We’re loose one run, tight the next. We’re just struggling with front-end ride quality. There wasn’t a lot of practice time today, so tomorrow’s sessions will be a key in trying to get this car dialed in for the race.”

    ROBBY GORDON (No. 7 SPEED Energy Dodge Charger R/T) Qualified 35th “In practice, we were pretty good with our SPEED Energy Dodge Charger. I think we were 17th. I just got a little bit loose coming off the corner and had to check up a bit which scrubbed way too much time off our lap. When you can’t get through the corner, it just takes too much speed off the straightaway.”

  • CHEVY NSCS AT FONTANA: Tony Stewart Press Conf Transcript

    CHEVY NSCS AT FONTANA: Tony Stewart Press Conf Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    AUTO CLUB 400

    AUTO CLUB SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    March 25, 2011

    TONY STEWART, NO. 14 OFFICE DEPOT/MOBIL 1 CHEVROLET met with media and discussed restrictor plate racing at Daytona and Talladega, the upcoming Martinsville race, the rain and track conditions at Auto Club Speedway, and more. Full Transcript:

    ON PRACTICE

    “We just went in qualifying trim. We actually lost the first five minutes switching over because we were set-up for race trim. So we just switched over and made three runs.”

    IS THAT WHAT EVERYBODY WORKED ON TODAY?

    “I think Darian said there was only one car that he saw that was making more than one lap at a time. And they probably did that for one run and then switched over. So, I’d say from the looks of it, everybody was doing qualifying stuff.”

    HOW WAS THE TRACK?

    “I didn’t have any problems but you don’t know where he (Kyle Busch) was (when he crashed) at and all that. I didn’t see what happened, so I really can’t comment on something I didn’t see.”

    BUT YOU DIDN’T HIT ANY WATER OR SEE ANYTHING?

    “No, we didn’t have any problems that I know of. We didn’t go out until after he (Kyle Busch) had his problems, so we kind of took it a little conservative and stayed off the bottom a little bit further.”

    WHEN YOU HAVE SUCH A SHORT PRACTICE LIKE TODAY, HOW DO YOU GET A FEEL FOR WHAT YOU HAVE IN THE CAR?

    “I’m terrible. I told Darian I apologized to him because I don’t think I did a very good job that session. I like to start off in race trim and get some laps under our belt and then when we switch over for qualifying I feel like I have a better idea of what the track is doing and where I need to be and where my marks are and all that. I didn’t feel like I did a very good job just going in cold turkey.”

    THERE ARE GUYS OUTSIDE THE TOP 20 THAT ARE USUALLY IN THE TOP 10. DO YOU THINK THE NEW POINTS SYSTEMS HAS ANYTHING TO DO WITH THAT?

    “I think the Daytona 500 has a lot to do with that. Normally if somebody had a slow start to the year, you can normally pinpoint it to Daytona or something similar to that and you look at the first two races and there were two big ones (multi-car wrecks) in the first two races. I think there is a reason why there are guys kind of in a bad sport right now.”

    ON BEING TIED IN THE POINT STANDINGS WITH TEAMMATE RYAN NEWMAN

    “It’s definitely a good thing. I don’t think you can look at it and say it’s a telltale sign of what our season is going to be like but it’s always nice to get off to a good start and you don’t feel like you’re playing catch-up right off the bat. It’s like I said, I don’t like being tied (in points) with somebody but, this is a situation where I’m pretty happy to be tied with somebody right now.”

    IS THERE ANYTHING REALLY DIFFERENT WITH THAT TEAM OR IS IT AS JUST AS MUCH AS LUCK RIGHT NOW?

    “They’ve always done a good job but I think they’ve had a little bit of luck go their way this time around and they are definitely running better. They just got off to a really good start and it’s kind of worked that way for both sides. Both of our cars have been good. I think both teams have just been running better. ”

    WHAT’S YOUR UNDERSTANDING OF WEEPERS ON THE TRACK?

    “I’m not an engineer so I don’t understand exactly why it pumps the water out. But there are certain places where, like Pocono is a place, here, those are two places that you know if it rains you’re going to get weepers. Indy used to be that way. I can’t exactly tell you what it is that makes it pump the water up and out of the ground once it gets saturated like that, but it’s just part of it you know. That’s the one variable that none of us can control when we get here and that’s the weather.”

    ON THE CHANGES OVER THE YEARS AT MARTINSVILLE

    “I think the shock technology 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.”

    DOES IT SURPRISE YOU THAT TWO GUYS HAVE DOMINATED THE LAST 9 RACES AT MARTINSVILLE?

    “No, because like I say, I think once those guys know the feel that they want and then know the feel they have to have at the end of happy hour to be good for the race, I think that’s a big factor. We had a run there where we didn’t win a lot of races there but we were very consistent and ran a lot of top three’s and top five’s and I knew exactly how I had to have my balance and the end of the session to be good for the race.”

    HOW WAS YOUR TRIP TO THE ZOO?

    “It rained a lot but it was kind of cool to do that. It was neat being around an 11,000-lb. animal.”

    WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE ANIMAL?

    ‘We hung out with an elephant so that was pretty much it.”

    ON RUNNING A SMALLER RESTRICTOR PLATE AT TALLADEGA NEXT MONTH

    “We’ll be doing the same thing we did at Daytona. I guarantee you right off the bat, that’s exactly what everybody is going to do as soon as they hit the race track is go right back into that mode.”

    INAUDIBLE QUESTION REGARDING TALLADEGA

    “It’s still smooth enough and still fresh enough; it’s not brand new like Daytona was, but I think it still has enough grip that I think guys are still going to be able to do that pretty easily. I think what we saw in February is kind of a result of what the finish was in October at Talladega. You saw those two groups of cars at the end of the race, when the caution came out. And that’s how Harvick won the race. But I think that was kind of the start of what we saw in February. Nobody knew exactly the way it was going to be and that’s going to keep evolving now. That’s a style of racing that’s just going to keep building and growing from here on out.”

    QUESTION INAUDIBLE

    “Anytime Kevin (Harvick) and I and the other guys go and do that; anytime we get in something that has a motor, it’s ultra-competitive. Nobody wants to lose and I can promise you, Harvick, more than anybody I’ve ever met in my life, hates to lose at his own track more than anybody I’ve ever seen.”

    MORE THAN YOU?

    “Yes. More than me.”

    SO IS (CREW CHIEF) DARIAN (GRUBB) IN THE HAULER NOW BASICALLY TRYING TO GUESS WHAT YOU’RE GOING TO HAVE TO DO FOR QUALIFYING?

    “I think we’re actually going to go back to what we started with. The second and third runs didn’t feel as good as the first one so we’re just going to go back to where we started and that’s kind of where it felt the best and we’ll tweak off of that just a little bit.”

    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> .

  • CHEVY NSCS AT CALIFORNIA: Jeff Gordon Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVY NSCS AT CALIFORNIA: Jeff Gordon Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    AUTO CLUB 400

    AUTO CLUB SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    March 25, 2011

    JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET met with members of the media at Auto Club Speedway and discussed practice, qualifying and rivalries and other topics. Full transcript:

    HOW DO YOU DEAL WITH THE FRUSTRATION OF RACING LUCK?: “I guess I have a different opinion. I feel like you control your own luck based on having a fast race car, having a solid team, having good communication. Maybe it doesn’t change all your luck, but it adds to it greatly. I look at Bristol and we were off. We were off on our setup — we salvaged the best finish we could out of it and I was proud of that. That’s why we finished 14th. I look at Daytona and where we finished at Daytona and what I could have done to have prevented getting caught up in that wreck. Some people would look at that as bad luck, I look at it as I could have done a couple things to maybe help. A blown tire at Vegas, I don’t know if that’s bad luck. I feel like there are things that make a tire blow. Sometimes it’s the tire and sometimes it’s you contributing to it. Sometimes it’s both. I guess I’ve always looked at it different. I think you can make your luck better by being a really good race team.”

    HOW WILL THE WEEPERS IN THE TRACK AFFECT YOUR TEAM WITH THE SHORTER PRACTICE SESSION?: “We had so many issues in that short practice that the weepers were the least of our issues. I definitely felt the seams were playing havoc, but if we did our job right then I wouldn’t have to be worried about the seams. I did see how I could have gotten into some water down on the apron and the white line in the middle of three and four and I think that’s what happened to him. The biggest thing is just how limited we were on time. For us, the unfortunate part is that we were off and we needed to make some fairly significant changes and we didn’t have enough time to do that. We’re just kind of rolling the dice for qualifying. Then with the new qualifying line-up, it’s a double whammy. We have to go out early so we’re shortened on time preparing. It’s been a rough morning or day so far for us.”

    SO THE TEAMS THAT ARE STRONGER WILL GET MORE TIME VERSUS THE TEAMS THAT STRUGGLED IN PRACTICE: “It’s important to show up right. We worked so hard to make sure that we got everything right, but sometimes there’s things that you can’t predict. We just missed some things. Sometimes it’s the tiniest little thing that makes a difference. Absolutely. To qualify on the pole and up front these days, what you have to do is you have to be, especially your last run or your last couple runs in practice need to be close. When you go to qualify you have to step it up. You need to be able to go back to your trailer and talk to your crew chief and your team about the fine tuning adjustments that need to be made to go faster, not huge changes.”

    IS IT TOO EARLY FOR THE WILD CARD TO BE PART OF YOUR THINKING?: “We’re not