Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • HOORAHS & WAZZUPS: The Charlotte Edition

    HOORAHS & WAZZUPS: The Charlotte Edition

    Over the previous weekend we watched another exciting episode of the comeback of the year. We saw another example of why a championship team may actually have a golden horseshoe inside of their anatomy. We also learned how to adjust a tachometer while driving a race car at a high rate of speed. With those thoughts in mind let’s begin with:

    HOORAH to Jamie McMurray for winning Saturday night’s Bank of America 500 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway. The effort marked the popular driver’s third win of the season and his sixth career Sprint Cup win. McMurray also became the first non Chase driver to win a Cup race since the championship series began.

    When you consider the state of McMurray’s career this time one year ago his racing career is absolutely the big comeback story of the year. Last year the driver was not sure what direction his Sprint Cup career would take. He was the odd man out at Roush Fenway Racing when NASCAR’s team ownership cap, limiting owners to four teams, became effective this year. He was signed by former owner Chip Ganassi to drive the Earnhardt Ganassi Racing Chevrolet for one year. There were reports that the team’s sponsor, Bass Pro Shops, was a little dubious about the arrangement.

    We all know what happened next. McMurray won the Daytona 500 and the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis two of the most prestigious events on the Sprint Cup schedule. Needless to say his team owners are very busy preparing a contract extension and the sponsors are reported to be very happy.

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    This week’s making chicken salad out of chicken do-do HOORAH goes to Jimmie Johnson and his #48 Lowes team. Johnson found himself involved in a solo car spin during the early laps of the Bank Of America 500. Amazingly, good luck followed the spin out. Despite the presence of on coming race traffic, no one hit the Johnson Chevrolet.

    The always stoic Chad Knaus led #48 team remained calm and used pit road to massage their car’s handling and help their driver charge through the field. Johnson wound up with a third place finish and even managed to add some padding to his Chase points lead over championship rivals Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick.

    Several months ago Harvick made a wry observation about this team’s good luck and speculated that they may have golden horseshoes up their backsides. It’s becoming more and more apparent that Harvick may be right.

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    Speaking of Jimmie Johnson, and we will be doing that a lot during the weeks to come, we have three HOORAHS for this week’s NASCAR notable quotable.

    The first one goes to SPEED Channel’s Jimmy Spencer who said “if the #48 teams wins a fifth consecutive championship I’m going to need therapy or least a few cases of beer. Maybe Kurt Busch. (driver of the Miller Lite Dodge), can help me out with that.”

    Another HOORAH goes out to Dave DeSpain, the host of the SPEED Channel’s “Wind Tunnel” who recently invited his viewers to come up with a suitable nickname for Jimmie Johnson. So far my favorite is “J-LOWE” although Jennifer Lopez might have an objection to that.

    Then there’s the matter of the girl friend. Upon learning that Jimmie Johnson padded his points lead following the Charlotte race, “Sweetie” growled “why don’t they just install him in the damn Hall Of Fame right now and be done with it?”

    It’s not that the girl friend is anti Jimmie Johnson. The remark was made out of sheer frustration. “Sweetie” is a card carrying, T shirt wearing, member of the Junior Nation and she was frustrated with spending the better part of three hours watching Dale Earnhardt Junior’s latest mediocre finish.

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    WAZZUP with Johnson’s team mate, Jeff Gordon, who could have used some of that golden horseshoe luck during the Charlotte race? Gordon’s Chevrolet suffered a mysterious loss of power that was later attributed to the voltage regulator not charging the car’s battery system. That resulted in a lengthy pit stop for a battery change. Adding insult to injury was a second pit road situation involving a speeding penalty. The result was an unfortunate 23d place finish.

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    HOORAH to Brad Keselowski for winning Friday night’s Dollar General 300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway. It marked his fifth win of 2010, 11th win in 135 series starts and his second win in the Nationwide Series Car Of Tomorrow. More importantly, Keselowski increased his points lead to a whopping 450 points over second place Carl Edwards. It’s absolutely guaranteed that he will be presenting team owner Roger Penske his first ever national NASCAR title.

    HOORAH to the fourth, and final appearance, of the Nationwide Series’ Car Of Tomorrow of 2010. Once again these racy new cars turned up another highly competitive performance during the Charlotte race while increasing the element of driver safety. This exciting new car will be on the track full time next season.

    WAZZUP with Carl Edwards having to make in car adjustments the old school way? During the Charlotte Nationwide Series event some paper debris lodged itself on the grill of Edwards’ Ford. This in turn created a rise in the engine’s water temperature. But Edwards had a problem reporting the water temperature to his crew chief. That was because the tachometer, attached to the steering column, was blocking the view of the water temperature gauge. While piloting his Ford at speeds of 190 MPH plus, Edwards used his left hand to loosen the tach and then hit it several times until the gauge was moved over to the right. It’s good to know that old school methods still work.

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    Finally this week we have two GOD BLESS items. The first notes the sad passing of Jeff Byrd who succumbed to a lengthy illness last Sunday at the age of 60. Byrd took over the reigns as President and General Manager of the Bristol Motor Speedway and Drag way in 1996. His vision and dedicated hard work was the catalyst that led to Bristol becoming one of the premiere racing facilities in the country. Our condolences go out to Mr. Byrd’s family, friends and fans.

    The second GOD BLESS goes to Chris Economacki, the founder of the famed “National Speed Sport News” who recently celebrated his 90th birthday. Economacki is a true NASCAR icon who played a major role in ushering the sport into its television age.

  • NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Bud Moore

    NASCAR Beginnings Featuring Bud Moore

    Bud Moore was recently announced as an inductee into the second class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

    His reaction was poignant.

    “I’m really thrilled,” Moore said. “You just don’t know how thrilled I really am to be chosen. It is one of the greatest moments of my life.”

    However, on a day intended to honor and celebrate his life’s work, controversy reared its ugly head. There are those who question his inclusion over more well-known names such as drivers Darrell Waltrip and Cale Yarborough.

    There is no standardized template for the perfect Hall of Fame candidate. It’s not as simple as comparing statistics to determine who comes out on top. Each individual’s contributions, both on and off the track, must be considered. For often indefinable reasons, there are always those special few who shape the sport for future generations.

    Bud Moore is one such man.

    Walter M. “Bud” Moore was born on May 25, 1925, in Spartanburg, South Carolina and once described himself as “an old country mechanic who loved to make ‘em run fast.”

    As a young man, he was drafted into the Army and went off to serve his country as an infantryman. Moore returned from World War II as a highly decorated hero with two Bronze Stars and five Purple Hearts.

    He showed that same level of commitment and focus when he began his racing career and was a prominent figure in the early days of NASCAR. When you talk about the founding fathers of NASCAR, you’re talking about Bud Moore.

    He owned and operated a NASCAR team for 37 years and in 959 starts accumulated 63 victories, 43 poles, 298 top-five finishes and 463 top-10s.

    Moore was the crew chief for Buck Baker when Baker won the championship in 1957. He won back to back championships as a car owner with Joe Weatherly in 1962 and 1963. Moore also won a Grand American championship in 1968 with Tiny Lund and a Sports Car Club of America Trans-Am title in 1970 with Parnelli Jones.

    If you take a look at the biggest names in NASCAR history, it’s hard to find anyone who hasn’t driven a Bud Moore car.

    Those drivers include David Pearson, Cale Yarborough, Fireball Roberts, Bobby Alison, Buddy Baker, Billy Wade, Darrell Waltrip, Ricky Rudd, Morgan Shepherd, Dale Earnhardt and more.

    Bud Moore had a front row seat to NASCAR’s future stars.

    “The thing is, a lot of people ask me, who was the best? They all were good,” Moore once said. “Some were better on some racetracks and others were better on others.”

    “Buddy Baker was the best on mile-and-a-half, two-mile racetracks. Bobby Allison was good on all the racetracks, and Dale Earnhardt was just as good, or better.”

    “But those (last) two stand out to me, as far as being drivers on all the tracks. But I can’t pick a favorite. I liked them all.”

    Bud Moore cars have also won at some of NASCAR’s most prestigious tracks.

    Darel Dieringer won the Darlington Southern 500 in 1966. Buddy Baker won three straight races at Talladega in 1975 and 1976 in Moore owned cars. Bobby Allison won the Daytona 500 and the National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1978.

    Bud Moore’s retirement tells a familiar story of talent versus money. After problems finding sponsors, he finally closed his shop and retired from racing in 1999.

    “I spent a bunch of my own money keeping the team alive, keeping the shop and keeping key personnel on board,” Moore said. “Whenever we thought we had a sponsor deal, somebody would say to them, ‘Wait a minute. Why in the world would you spend millions on Bud Moore? We’ll put you on four or five cars for a million.’ If that was you, what would you do? You’d go on four or five cars. So that put us out of business. From 1994 to 1999, there were 23 single-car teams that went out of business.”

    Bud Moore may not have been the popular choice for the NASCAR Hall of Fame but that doesn’t mean that he isn’t the right choice.

    If you don’t believe me, maybe you’ll believe Dale Earnhardt.

    In 1983 Bud Moore predicted that Dale Earnhardt would make NASCAR history.

    “He can do more things with a car than anyone I’ve ever seen. I’ll put it this way, he’s the best I’ve ever seen, and that includes Fireball Roberts and guys like that.”

    When Earnhardt heard what Moore had said, he responded by saying, “It takes more than a driver. You have to have a good team and they’re hard to come by.”

    He went on to say, “I’m glad Bud feels that way. I can also say, I think he’s the best. It’s an honor coming from him considering what he’s seen and the drivers he has seen go by.”

    Awards and Achievements:
    Two Cup championships with Joe Weatherly in 1962 and 1963
    One Grand American championship with Tiny Lund in 1968
    63 career victories
    43 career poles
    Inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association Stock Car Racing Hall of Fame in August 2002
    Inducted into International Motorsports Hall of Fame in April 2009
    Announced as Inductee into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2010, Induction ceremony to be held in May 2011

    Quotes courtesy of darlingtonraceway.com, Todd Shanesy at goupstate.com and Tom Higgins – The Charlotte Observer

  • Returning to what I love best Nascar and Writing

    Returning to what I love best Nascar and Writing

    Returning to what I love best, Nascar and Writing

    We have seasons in our life and that includes our profession as well. Dale, Jr. is no exception. The opposition has already retired Dale, Jr. in their minds. Questioning his career move from DEI to Hendrick and stating that as a driver his best years are behind him now. Only true Dale, Jr. fans know this couldn’t be further from the truth. After a couple years of writing actively for www.speedwaymedia.com I had to leave it for the moment. A divorce, caring for my elderly Uncle and my own personal health issues including surgery to repair 2 small brain aneurysms in July of 2009 caused me to have to stop a hobby I loved writing for my favorite sport! I am back and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. will be too. Remembering our roots and our passion is what keeps one growing and becoming even better than before. With that being said I wanted to post my very first article I wrote in October 2002 and posted as my first article for www.speedwaymedia.com in 2003.

     

    Not Just Another Fan Chasing a Hero

    In a world where everything that glitters is gold, fame fortune and more media attention than anyone can stand. People just want to get close to the drivers, to look at them, to touch them, to get an autograph and have that moment ingrained in their memory forever. What if the driver being the human being that he is, touches another unknown human being through words and wisdom? In the eyes of this unknown person the driver could be Mickey Mouse. All that matters to the fan is the two shares an experience of pain and sadness, and because this driver talked so openly and freely about his pain, he helped someone he didn’t even know who was.

    My story is probably a little different than most. I became a fan of Nascar after the Dayton 500 in 2001 where Dale, Sr. lost his life. Before that Sunday I knew very little about racing. I had never heard of Dale Earnhardt Jr. Over the years, other than the name Petty, I had of Gordon and Earnhardt. I didn’t know much about either one, but I did know if you loved one, you hated the other and visa versa.

    That February evening in 2001, I logged onto Nascar.com for the first time. There was a feature called multimedia and it had Dale, Jr. speaking for the family just hours after his Dad had been killed. Other than being Dale Earnhardt’s son I knew nothing about him until that night. For the days and weeks to come, I followed stories and my heart bled for him and his family. I lost my Mother in May 1999, my relationship with her seemed to be similar to Dale, Jr’s relationship with Dale, Sr.

    During the next several months multimedia featured Dale, Jr. talking mostly about this loss, his grief and how he will make it through the season. I related so to the things he said. How he was dealing with this grief, what got him up in the morning and what got him to the racetrack on weekends. He talked about the things that gave him comfort and would allow him to go on. The interviews he did with Darrell Waltrip were the most comforting for me. I am an only child; I did have the support of friends and even grief support groups.

    Finally, I found someone who felt just like I did. At that time, almost 2 years since my Mother’s death I was still in so much pain. Being able to listen to these interviews on multimedia enabled me to heal. Dale, Jr. couldn’t hear me but I could hear him. I became a Dale Earnhardt Jr. fan not because of his ability to drive a race car but because I had to turned to these videos for support and inspiration. I became on hooked on the human side of Dale, Jr. and will remember him as someone who helped me heal a little more from the death of my Mother.

    Now, nearing the end of the 2002 season I an avid Nascar fan. I cheer for many drivers now. I am a faithful DEI fan but I cheer for other drivers as well. I love the sport, and I have been to several races. The one thing I would like my story to convey is, we never really know how we touch other people. The drivers get to what they love to do, the sponsors get to sell a lot of what the drivers advertise on the cars and the fans get to go to races and have a good time. Sometimes when famous people let their human side show for the world to see, to one unknown person, it may be the answer to prayer and hope that life does go on. (10/2002)

    As I resume and continue my love for writing and Nascar, I will always be proud of my first article and the story it tells. I am grateful to www.speedwaymedia.com, my fellow writers and the fans that support all of us. My hope is my passion for my hobby and the sport will only be the beginning of great things to come. Dale Jr. fans, Hang on because he may be down right now, but he is not out!

  • The Chasers Take Their Battle to Charlotte Motor Speedway

    The Chasers Take Their Battle to Charlotte Motor Speedway

    While Jamie McMurray stole the show with the win, the beast of the southeast took her turn at mixing up the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

    Multiple Chase drivers took a turn in the blender experiencing issues, which has now changed the complexion of the Chase.

    12th: No. 33 Clint Bowyer, 300 points back of points leader Jimmie Johnson

    After a finish of 17th, Clint Bowyer keeps his seat as the last place man in the Sprint Cup Chase for the Championship standings. Bowyer struggled all night with an ill-handling car and even got into a pit road discussion with Johnson. Coming off of pit road, Johnson cut Bowyer off, in Bowyer’s mind, when he was leaving his stall. In return, Bowyer made contact with Johnson before they went back green.

    Bowyer has a long fight ahead of him, something he knew he would have after the 150 points penalty following New Hampshire.

    11th: No. 17 Matt Kenseth, 256 points back of Johnson

    Matt Kenseth had a consistant night as he finished sixth after running in the top 10 for most of the night. Though if Kenseth is going to have a shot at the championship, Kenseth will have to pull off some wins and hope the others run into some misfortunes.

    10th: No. 31 Jeff Burton, 239 points back of Johnson

    After a finish of 20th due to an ill-handling car and a spin, Burton drops back two spots to 10th in points. Burton is known for his consistancy, however like Kenseth, he will have to go above that and hope for some misfortune.

    9th:  No. 2 Kurt Busch, 237 points back of Johnson

    Busch had just a good of night as Burton did as he spun early in the race and was lucky nobody else made contact with him. From that point on, it was all downhill as the team could never get a handle on the car, which resulted in a finish of 30th. This, in return, caused him to drop three spots in the championship standings.

    8th: No. 16 Greg Biffle, 225 points back of Johnson

    With both Busch and Burton having issues, Biffle was able to gain two spots in the standings after finishing fifth. Biffle is known for being good on the mile and a halfs so it’d seem to be no surprise that he was in the top 10 most of the night.

    7th: No. 99 Carl Edwards, 200 points back of Johnson

    Carl Edwards is another Roush ford that had a decent night as he finished 12th to stay seventh in the standings. If Edwards wants to live up to his tough competitor edge and win the title, he’s going to have to pull off some top fives.

    6th: No. 14 Tony Stewart, 177 points back of Johnson

    After recieving damage in an early race incident after slowing down to avoid a wreck, Stewart’s night didn’t get better as he finished 21st and dropped one spot in the standings. Stewart had hopes that he’d be able to get back in the championship picture following his win at Auto Club Speedway. However, this sets him further back and makes the chances of that happening slimmer.

    5th: No. 18 Kyle Busch, 177 points back of Johnson

    After a finish of second, Busch gains four spots in the championship and looks to be entering back into the picture. Last week, Busch wrote himself off saying that he was done after they blew the motor. Following his second place finish, Busch was still disappointed as he felt that he should’ve won after dominating. Truthfully, Busch is going to have to pull off some wins if he wants to gain the points on his fellow competitors as right now, he looks to be just outside of the gate of being in the picture.

    4th: No. 24 Jeff Gordon, 156 points back of Johnson

    Gordon was running in the top 10 and looked to gain points after starting on pole, however alternator issues, which brought on a change of the batteries, caused him to finish 23rd. Gordon is barely in the picture as a swing of 161 points is possible in one race, if all the circumstances fall in place. Though this race also represents Gordon’s luck this year as whenever he seems to be in the spot to get a shot at winning, something happens that causes that chance to disappear.

    3rd: No. 29 Kevin Harvick, 77 points back of Johnson

    After looking to be the most consistant driver following the first 26 races, Harvick now sits third in points after finishing eighth. Harvick has the ability to pull off some wins so it wouldn’t be a surprise if Harvick made the charge.

    2nd: No. 11 Denny Hamlin, 41 points back of Johnson

    After finishing fourth, the disappointment was clear on Hamlin’s face as he knew he fell short of his goal – beating Johnson. Hamlin has officially declared that he is after Johnson and is ready to win the championship so look for these final five races to be exciting.

    1st: No. 48 Jimmie Johnson

    Following the Bank of America 200, Johnson deserves the “biggest comeback” award as a lot of people thought it was going to be a poor finish for the No. 48 team. At the beginning of the race, Johnson had a really loose car, which caused him to spin. Once he was stuck back in traffic, it was thought that he’d be done. However, like many times before, crew chief Chad Knaus pulled out the magic wand and got the car to where it was the quickest car on track. Johnson drove from the back to lead the race for awhile, and then eventually settled for second. Performances like these are what win championships and Johnson proved why he is a four-time champion. Look for the No. 48 team to put out these types of performances from here till Homestead.

    Each week brings a new challenge to the Chase for the Championship drivers and each week, you see drivers that lose hopes to being the 2010 Sprint Cup Champion.

    Next Sunday, the drivers will head to Martinsville Speedway, a tough half mile paperclip. Look for Johnson and Hamlin to battle for the win and the title as they’ve both been battling the track lately to determind whom is king. Although while they’re at it, don’t forget to watch the other 10 as they may sneak in and spoil their party.

  • Surprising and Not Surprising: Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Bank of America 500

    Surprising and Not Surprising: Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Bank of America 500

    Weird things sometimes happen under the lights and NASCAR’s elite Cup Series did not disappoint as they took to the track at night in Charlotte.  Here is what was surprising and not surprising from the halfway point in the Chase, with just five races remaining in the 2010 season.

    Surprising:  For the very first time at Charlotte Motor Speedway since the Chase for the Championship began, a non-Chase driver took the checkered flag and emotionally climbed out of his car to celebrate in Victory Lane.  Jamie McMurray, a driver that has risen to the top in all major races with wins at the Daytona 500, the Brickyard, and now the night race in Charlotte, dedicated his victory to fellow competitor Shane Hmiel, who suffered life-threatening injuries in a serious wreck in a Silver Crown Series qualifying run.  McMurray also thanked his dad, who was in Victory Lane with him for the first time this season, and talked emotionally about the power of prayer and its effect on him and his team this year.

    Not Surprising:  Following closely behind McMurray in the decidedly heated battle for the second place position were none other than four-time champion Jimmie Johnson and admittedly aggressive competitor Kyle Busch.  While Busch won that battle, Johnson perhaps was the true winner, having overcome an early race spin and playing catch up all race long with continual coaching from crew chief Chad Knaus.  Busch had his share of obstacles as well, at one point battling throttle issues.  With Busch’s second place finish, the driver of the No. 18 M&M’s Toyota climbed four positions in the point standings and also broke the record for the number of laps led, in his case now over 4,000 laps led, in NASCAR’s top three series.  Jimmie Johnson, with his third place finish, maintained his standing as points leader, currently 41 points ahead of the second place contender.

    Surprising:  No one could have predicted how many of the Chase contenders would have problems at their home track under the lights.  Kurt Busch, who was going for a Charlotte sweep and history, not only wrecked during practice but also wrecked early in the race.  Tony Stewart also sustained damage to his incredibly unattractive race car after an incident involving his teammate.  After leading the field to the green from the pole position, the other four-time champion Jeff Gordon suffered battery issues, losing power in his principal battery and going a lap down in trying to make the switch to the back up.  Jeff Burton also had issues, causing caution number eight when he slid across teammate Clint Bowyer’s nose and spectacularly spun his car out of contention, finishing 20th.

    Not Surprising:  On the flip side, it was not surprising to yet again see many non-Chase competitors start to find their grooves as the season winds to a close.  In addition to Jamie McMurray in Victory Lane, other non-Chasers also had good runs, including Joey Logano who finished seventh, David Reutimann who came in ninth, and David Ragan who had an unusually good finish in the top ten in his Live United No. 9 Ford. 

    Surprising:   After such stellar runs in Fontana with Tony Stewart in Victory Lane and Ryan Newman finishing fifth, Stewart-Haas Racing had a terrible time back at the home track in Charlotte.  Newman got the worst of it, crashing on lap two of the race, when he got loose, spun and hit the wall.  The incident and the resulting damage relegated the driver to his worst finish in eight races, coming to the checkered flag in the 36th position.  Stewart finished slightly better in the 21st position, but fell a spot in the Chase standings to sixth, now 177 points behind leader Jimmie Johnson.

    Not Surprising:  Denny Hamlin, still in the hunt for this year’s championship, maintained the position of being poised to strike at Johnson for the coveted Sprint Cup.  Hamlin, in his No. 11 FedEx Ground Toyota finished fourth in the Bank of America 500 and remains just 41 points behind Johnson in the Chase for the Championship standings. 

    Surprising:   Strange things happened on pit road during the race at Charlotte, from speeding penalties to burning rubber in the pit boxes.  Seasoned drivers and past champions Kurt Busch and Jeff Gordon both had speeding penalties.  While Busch was coming in hot to get tires after this spin on the track, Gordon was penalized for the second week in a row for being too fast on pit road, relegating him to a miserable 23rd place race finish and undoubtedly jeopardizing any hope for a fifth championship run.

    Not Surprising:   Kevin Harvick had his usual share of problems in the pits, with his crew having failure to perform yet again.  Harvick did, however, overcome them to finish eighth in the race, keeping himself in the championship hunt, in the third position just 77 points shy of leader Johnson.

    Surprising:  In a surprising turn of events, Richard Petty Motorsports driver Kasey Kahne bailed from his No. 9 Budweiser Ford.  Kahne and Sam Hornish tangled on Lap 124, with both suffering severe damage to their race cars.  Kahne took the opportunity to leave the track, citing illness, and J.J. Yeley was enlisted to finish the race, bringing the car home in the 38th position.

    Not Surprising:  Dale Earnhardt, Jr. had another miserable night at the office.  The Hendrick Motorsports driver brought up the rear for his team, finishing 29th and sharing that his car felt like it had “concrete in the front shocks” and that his run was “expletive embarrassing.”

    The Cup Series will head next to the short track at Martinsville, Virginia.  The sixth race of the 10-race Chase, the Tums Fast Relief 500, will run on Sunday, October 24th at 1:00 PM EDT on ESPN.

  • Statement From Martinsville Speedway President W. Clay Campbell On Passing Of Jeff Byrd

    Statement from Martinsville Speedway President W. Clay Campbell on the passing of Bristol Motor Speedway President Jeff Byrd:

    “I’m saddened at the loss our good friend Jeff Byrd. I’ve known Jeff well going back to his days with R.J. Reynolds and Winston. He had such a passion for this business back then and was determined to help take our sport to another level. That determination carried over to his leadership at Bristol Motor Speedway. He was a guy that was just always a pleasure to be around. He had that kind of personality. He will be missed but not forgotten. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family.”

  • Winston-Salem State University Marching Band Set For Martinsville National Anthem

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (October 16, 2010) – The Winston-Salem State University marching band will entertain race fans with its precision marching and music prior to the TUMS Fast Relief 500 next Sunday and then perform a stirring traditional version of the National Anthem.

    Dubbed the “Red Sea Of Sound,” the Winston-Salem State marching band has received national recognition for its performances around the country. The WSSU band has over 150 members and is led by five high-energy drum majors.

    “We are very excited about having the Winston-Salem State band here. I’ve seen them perform and they put on an amazing show,” said Martinsville Speedway President W. Clay Campbell. “Their half-mile march around Martinsville Speedway is going to be pretty exciting. And I think everyone will enjoy and appreciate their traditional version of the National Anthem.”

    The band will perform at noon, entering the track through the fourth-turn cross-over gate and marching clockwise around the track to the start-finish line.

    Winston-Salem State University, located in Winston-Salem, NC, is a historically black university offering baccalaureate and graduate programs to a diverse student population.

    FLYOVER: The flyover for the TUMS Fast Relief 500 will be provided by two F-18s, VFA 83 Rampagers from the U.S. Navy Air Station in Oceana.

    The planes will be flying in a north-south direction, from the third and fourth turns to the first and second turns.

    ROCKIN’ IN PRE-RACE: FATZ, a band that has rocked Southside Virginia for two decades, will be rockin’ on the start-finish line prior to the TUMS Fast Relief 500 Sunday.

    The band, which plays a blend of classic and southern rock with a dash of country thrown in, will perform on the pre-race stage from 10 am. until 12:45 p.m. Sunday.

    Although a local group, they have played on plenty of big stages, opening for acts like Delbert McClinton, Aaron Tippin and Montgomery Gentry.

    SOMETHING FOR THE KIDS: One section of Martinsville Speedway’s display area has again been declared a “Kids Zone” for the TUMS Fast Relief 500 weekend with games, souvenirs and food aimed at the younger crowd.

    The concession items in the Kids Zone will not only be kid favorites, but kid priced. There will be chicken nuggets, hot dogs, cotton candy, chips, fruit cups and Capri Sun juice boxes. Nothing will be over $2.

    There will also be plenty of youth oriented souvenirs … three trailers full. Digger, FOX TV’s racing cartoon star, will have a trailer, along with the Kid’s Stop trailer and the Kidz Rock trailer.

    THE SCHEDULE: The first on-track action at Martinsville Speedway will be a practice session for the Kroger 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at 10 a.m. Friday, kicking off a day full of excitement. It will be followed by practice for the TUMS Fast Relief 500 and another Kroger 200 practice.

    Qualifying for the TUMS Fast Relief 500 is scheduled for 3:10 p.m. Friday with Kroger 200 time trials beginning at 4:40 p.m.

    There will be back-t-back Sprint Cup practice sessions beginning at 10 a.m. Saturday, with the Kroger 200 taking the green flag at 1 p.m.

    The TUMS Fast Relief 500 is set to begin at 1 p.m. Sunday.

    Fan gates open at 9 a.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

    TICKETS: Tickets for the TUMS Fast Relief 500 begin at $25 and range to $77.

    Tickets to the Kroger 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race on October 23 are $30 in advance, $35 on the day of the race, with children 12 and under admitted free.

    Tickets for Farm Bureau Pole Day, which features practice and qualifying for both the Kroger 200 and the TUMS Fast Relief 500, are $15, children 12 and under admitted free.

    Tickets for all events may be purchased by calling 1.877.RACE.TIX or by visiting www.martinsvillespeedway.com online.

  • CHEVY NSCS AT CHARLOTTE TWO: McMurray Wins, Johnson Third; Post Race Press Conf. Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    BANK OF AMERICA 500

    CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    October 16, 2010

     

    Jamie McMurray Wins at Charlotte; Jimmie Johnson Holds 41 Point Lead in Chase Standings

    Concord, NC (October 16, 2010) – Jamie McMurray had the best Chevrolet race car when it counted tonight in the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.  McMurray jumped to the lead in turn one of the final restart of the race on lap 314 and led the final 20 laps of the 334-lap/501-mile race to take his No. 1 Bass Pro Shops/Tracker Boats Chevrolet to victory lane.

    It is the third NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win for McMurray in 2010.  He led three times for a total of 65 laps on the way to his sixth career victory.

    With a third place finish tonight, Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet, maintained his lead in the Chase standings by 41 points with five races remaining in the season. The four-time defending Series’ champion led once tonight for a total of 15 laps.

    Kevin Harvick, No. 29 Shell-Pennzoil Chevrolet, remains third in the standings after finishing eighth in final order tonight.  Harvick is 77 points down to the leader.

    Jeff Gordon, No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet, remains fourth in the standings despite a 23rd place finish at Charlotte. The four-time champion and tonight’s pole sitter suffered an electrical issue mid-way through the race that put him a lap down. He battled back to the lead lap but received a pit road speeding penalty late in the race that dropped him in the final order.

    Tony Stewart, No. 14 Old Spice/Office Depot Chevrolet, finished 21st after battling an ill-handling car for the majority of the race. The two-time champion dropped one position to sixth in the Chase standings.

    Jeff Burton, No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet, also battled handling issues throughout the race to score the 20th place finishing position. He is now 10th in the points order after 31 races.

    Clint Bowyer, No. 33 Cheerios/Hamburger Helper Chevrolet, remains 12th in the standings and finished 17th in tonight’s race.

    Kyle Busch (Toyota) Denny Hamlin (Toyota) and Greg Biffle (Ford) complete the top-five finishers.

    Round six of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup will be October 24, 2010 at Martinsville (VA) Speedway.

     

    JAMIE McMURRAY AND CREW CHIEF, KEVIN MANION, NO. 1 BASS PRO SHOPS/TRACKER BOATS CHEVROLET – WINNER’S PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:

     

    KERRY THARP:  We have in tonight’s Bank of America 500 here at Charlotte Motor Speedway, our race winner Jamie McMurray.  He drives the No. 1 Bass Pro Shops Tracker Boat Chevrolet for Earnhardt Ganassi.  This is his third win of 2010, his sixth NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory, his second victory here at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

                And Jamie, I know that tonight had to be very, very sweet for you.

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Yeah, absolutely.  After coming so close in the 600 earlier in the season, I really felt like anything less than winning this weekend would have been disappointing.  We had such a great car in the spring, and it just wasn’t good enough on the short run.  And tonight it was very similar to that, and as I was catching Kyle towards the end of the race, I thought as long as the caution came out, I could catch him, but I wasn’t sure if I was going to have enough speed to outrun him in 25 or 30 laps.  But man, it was just our night.  Our car was unbelievable those last like 25 or 30 laps.  It was effortless to drive and it had a lot of speed in it.  It was just a really good night for us.

                Q.  In 2002, different circumstances, you were here for Sterling.  To be able to win here now eight years later, was the celebration more intense maybe this time maybe, because in 2002 out of respect for Sterling?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Yeah, it’s completely different.  You know, when I won here in 2002, you’re in a situation where I don’t know that there’s any race car driver wants someone else to get in their car and win, much less a kid that’s never    I had never won on the truck or the Nationwide Series, or the Busch Series at the time.

                So I knew that that was hard on Sterling.  I knew that, as soon as I get in victory lane, I remember telling myself you need to be very gracious and be respectful to Sterling, because this is hard for him.  He’s at home with a broken neck.

                So you know, and you win with another team, it’s not really your team.  So tonight is completely different, because you know, this team    and I talked with Chip about this earlier today about where, you know, his Cup organization was a year ago, and where it is right now and the success that we’ve had.

                And so it’s different circumstances.  I feel this is my team and it’s a team that has been put together over the past 11 months, 12 months, and it’s mine.  And it’s a completely different feeling.

                Q.  Shortly after the race that was being piped in here, you started talking about Daytona and some of the feelings you had and the power of prayer, but unfortunately got cut off.  Could you articulate that again?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  I wanted people to understand that sometimes you see people’s emotions on TV, and I don’t know, I just    I just wanted it to be understood that after the season that I had, or the last four years I had, I found the power of prayer and that it’s something that I really believe in.  And when I got to victory lane in Daytona that’s what I was thinking about.  You know, I was crying, obviously because I was happy, but also because you feel like a prayer has been answered.

                And so that is, as a very powerful thing, and it’s obviously very emotional when you feel like you    I don’t know, that’s a very selfish thing to ask for.  Certainly it’s not the first thing that I pray about every day.  But everyone wants to be successful and you want to do well in life, so when you feel like that’s been answered, it’s emotional.

                And I don’t know, I thought about it the last eight or ten laps.  I was like, you know, if I win this race, Lord, if you don’t throw a caution, is what I said, and I win this race, I’m going to explain to people my feelings and why I felt that way.

                And I think that’s important.  I watch other professional athletes, whether it’s bull riders or basketball players or motorcycle riders, you hear them get out and you hear them thank God and talk about the power of prayer, and I just think that that’s important for people to understand, and understand why my feelings were the way they were.

                And I forgot to thank Sprint and all of the fans in the middle of all that because I got so emotional and tied up in it.

                Q.  Kyle was disappointed that there was a caution, but you feel like you were going to pass him probably without a caution.  Do you think you could have passed him or held him off over those last laps if the race had gone on?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Well, I knew that catching Kyle and passing Kyle would be two different things.  But we were very equal in turns one and two, but I was quite a bit quicker than he was in three and four.  And I knew if I was going to pass him, I would have to clear him in three and four.  I don’t know how fast I was catching him, but I felt like I was catching him fairly fast.  And there were 30 laps left, and when your car starts going away as quick as his was going away, I felt like I was going to be able to pass him.

                You never know.  I was disappointed when the caution came out because I thought that was going to take the chance of winning away from me.  You know, it’s hard, because I mean, for him, he was in the lead and they threw a caution and the next lap he wasn’t.  I understand why he feels the way he did.

                KERRY THARP:  Welcome Kevin Manion, crew chief, talk about the win tonight.

                KEVIN MANION:  Incredible.  Back in the spring, with Chip winning the Indy 500 on that day and when he showed up the pit box started rocking in the spring and I told him, we had a really good shot of winning tonight.  Coming home second with a late race caution in the spring really made us really want to win this race even more.

                Q.  Talk about eight years, how have you changed over the eight years?  It just seems like you’ve grown so much from the guy that was in victory lane just that time ago?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Obviously I’ve grown up a lot in the last eight years.  I’m married and expecting a child.  My life has changed a lot.  I feel like I’m a lot smarter of a racer and I try to put myself in a better position probably than what I did back then.

                And I mean, it’s    I don’t know, that’s a tough question to answer, because you know, you don’t realize, you know, how much you don’t know, and eight or ten years goes by and you realize what you didn’t know then and how much more you know now and how much more you’re going to know in ten years from now.

                So if I didn’t confuse you with all of that; I was trying to make sense.  Certainly quite a bit different as a person and a lot different place in my life.  And I think probably more than anything is I’m appreciative of the sponsors and of the opportunities that I have right now versus 2002.

                Q.  On Thursday Jimmie Johnson was in here and expressed the opinion that Kyle Busch was probably the best driver in the garage when it came to restarts.  Wondering if you might share that opinion, and how you approach that final restart when you were able to get past him.

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Well, my opinion of Kyle, I don’t know that he’s the best on the restarts.  I think Kyle is the best driver in traffic.  When he’s leading a race, or wherever he’s running in the race, he seems to be able to get through traffic better than anybody else, even if he has a tight car or a loose car, he does a better job than anybody else and I noticed that tonight when he was leading and I was running second, he does a really good job.  I watch him in the Truck Series and the Nationwide Series, he’s probably the best at that.

                I don’t know that I’ve paid a lot of attention to the restarts, but restarts have all been really good for me.  And I don’t know why, but I feel like I do a really good job when the tires spin, of not spinning my tires.  And it’s very hard to discipline yourself when you have 900 horsepower to not continue to push the throttle down till they spin.  When they start spinning, you lose a tremendous amount of speed, and it’s very hard when you know victory lane is the difference of spinning the tires and not.

                You know, I went through turns one and two wide open and I got a little bit of a run on Kyle and I heard the spotter say, “He’s still there.  He’s still there.  Clear.”

                And as soon as I heard “Clear,” it’s amazing when his front bumper brakes the plane of your rear bumper, how you feel the car lurch forward, because there’s so much drag when they are side drafting you.  As soon as I heard the spotter say “clear” and I felt that, that’s a pretty good feeling, I promise you.

                Q.  Just wanted to ask about, the situation that is going on with the Hmiel family this week, how important is this as a morale booster to    keeping what is going on with Steve and his family, how important is it to keep things up and moving in the shop when there’s such a trying time going on with a member of the family?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Well, certainly the success that we’ve had this year, Steve Hmiel is a huge part of that and what happened to Shane, I can’t imagine the feeling that Steve and his wife had last week with the serious of an accident as what Shane was involved in.  I know that’s been really tough, and from my side of that, I sent Steve a text and told him, if there’s anything I can do, I’ll go out of my way to help him and do whatever he needs.

                I’ve tried to give him space, because I know that everyone is probably texting him, and anyone who has had something devastating happen, whether it’s good or bad, you know like you’re trying to answer all the texts so you’re being polite and you honestly wish people would just quit sending them.

                So I’ve tried to give Steve his space, and I have kept up with Shane’s progress, whether it’s through people at the race shop or Lisa Hmiel’s Facebook page, she’s been updating that.  And certainly his progress looks like it’s really good.  It seems like it’s all good news coming from her Facebook page.

                But that was a devastating accident and I know that’s really hard on that family, and, you know, Steve has been a huge part of our team’s success this year.  So we certainly want him back, and want Shane to recover 100%.

                Q.  Since you guys are not in the Chase field this year, does that kind of give you guys a little bit more freedom in what you’re going to do in order to try to put yourselves in a position to win?

                KEVIN MANION:  That is a good question.  We definitely have been experimenting outside of our baseline setup the last couple of weeks, last week in California, this week.  Something we are working on.  Just haven’t perfected it.  It did show great promise the other day.  So it does definitely give you a little bit more freedom to experiment, make more riskier calls, fuel mileage and so on, so forth.

                But it also gives us time at the shop to actually take a breath and say, okay, we didn’t make this Chase; all right, it hit.  Now, what do we have to do for the next ten races to still race good, but have a little bit of fun, because as you all know, it’s a very trying and stressful job, including yourselves, coming in here every week and different venues.

                Just a breath of fresh air in lining things up for 2011, maybe ten weeks sooner than the guys concentrating on making a name for themselves at the end of the year.

                Q.  Do you guys kind of scratch your head a little bit and say, how do they always do this?  With Jimmie Johnson particularly tonight, they had a series of things that they had to overcome and yet he still extended his points lead.  What do other drivers think of that and how impressive is that to you that that always seems to happen for him?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Yeah, certainly what they have been able to do is remarkable.  And Jimmie    those are all really good tracks for him.  Actually, every track seems to be a good track for him.  (Laughter).

                But it seems like the final ten races are just exceptional tracks for the 48 team.  And you know what, they just do a better job, it seems like, than the other teams do.  And it’s amazing to me when they have an average car how they are able to adjust on it and get the car better.  The last couple of weeks looking at the 48 car and Happy Hour, I did not think they had been very fast.  The car didn’t look like it had a lot of speed in it or consistent, but Jimmie is a really good driver and puts himself in position, and it always seems like they make the right decision.

                Q.  You put together a winning modified with Ryan Newman; is having success in that series and this series, giving you overall confidence as a crew chief that you are kind of doing this thing right?  And Jamie, you said you came in second in the 600 and nothing less than winning was going to be good enough and you came back second in Talladega; when you go back in a couple weeks is anything less than winning going to be a disappointment, too?

                KEVIN MANION:  As far as the ability, it takes great people in your organization to win.  It just not a one man band.

                But for winning in the modifieds, that’s just fun for us.  I couldn’t do it without Gary and Russell and a couple of the other guys, and our sponsors.

                And far as the Cup side, it’s a total team effort.  The Indy win, we can chalk up Ryan helping us a lot.  They tire tested out there and won.  It takes a total team effort all around you, and you are only as good as the people you are working with and the drivers you’ve got.

                But winning races gives you confidence no matter what.  So it’s a win/win for sure.

                Q.  I know you were not    you said it didn’t bother you all that much about not making the Chase considering everything you’ve accomplished this season, but when you look at what you’ve accomplished, how do you look at, or have you even started looking at next season?  Does what you have already done get you really excited about starting off again next season, or do you try to still relish perhaps even some more wins before this season’s over?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  I really haven’t thought about next year.  You know, just working on the remainder of this season, and I just    I don’t know, I don’t think you should put the cart in front of the horse.  You take this one week at a time.  And we have so many different kind of racetracks coming up:  Like Martinsville next week and Talladega, mile and a half tracks, Phoenix, there’s so much different stuff coming up; I really have not put much thought into next season.

                I feel really good obviously about our mile and a half stuff.  We have a really good package to that and like Bono said, we are testing some other stuff that is a fair amount different, and I think if we can get that to work, then that’s probably going to be an advantage for us next season.

                So we are kind of working on that, but at the same time, we have got some stuff, really reliable stuff that really doesn’t seem to have a lot of speed in it.  So working on that right now.

                Q.  When are you going to be signed for next season and what’s the hang up?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  I can’t remember Chip’s exact answer but I think when it’s ready to talk about that, I’ll talk about that    just kidding.

                We are really close on that.  It’s not that I don’t want to talk about it.  It’s just there’s really not anything to discuss right now, and hopefully it will all be done soon.  And when that is, we can kind of talk about it then.  I’m not trying to be a butt hole to you, I just don’t really have anything to say about it.

                KEVIN MANION:  It’s coming across like that.

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  Sorry  

                Q.  (No mic.)

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  No, it’s not at all.  It just kind of a slow process to get all of that ironed out and working on a multi year deal with everybody, so just have to wait until we get all that done.  You can see Rod.  He’s on the left hand side if you would like to ask any other questions.

                Q.  If you were in the Chase, if you were there, and you were 155 points behind right now, would you think maybe it’s over for me?  If you were 155 behind with  

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  No.  Because Talladega still has to be run.  And I think Talladega can take out ten Chasers, that’s my opinion.  So I think until you get through Talladega, then, no, I think everybody is still in it.

                Q.  I’m going to discuss this year quickly.  You have had one hell of a year.  What is the best moment of your year?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  For me, I think the last lap at Indy, because even though    it’s just different at Indy.  That’s a race that every team puts so much work into, and not that they don’t all the other races and not that it’s not the Daytona 500; but Indy is just one of those races, it’s in the middle of the year and everyone puts so much work in it to build this beautiful race car and there’s so much extra little detail that goes into that and everybody wants to win that race.  You just always hear everybody talk about that.

                And it takes 50 seconds to go around there, and the last 50 seconds at Indy was probably just one of the coolest things ever for me, to like savor that and know that it’s going to happen.

                Q.  People say a lot of times a driver will get too much of the blame when things are not going well and too much of the credit when things are going well.  For as strong of a season as you’ve had, are you different as a driver from two years ago?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  No, I don’t think I’m any different.  I think I’m in the right situation, and certainly Bono and Randall and Kevin, everybody, everybody there, I mean, we just have a very good working relationship.

                And I get asked the question a lot of what’s different here versus Roush.  And I would tell you that I have been asked that a lot, and I never really had an answer for it.  But I have thought about it a lot, and I think the difference is is that we don’t run the same stuff as the 42 car.  And it doesn’t matter what they have it.

                We do what we feel is right for our team, and we stray away from maybe what they have every once in awhile and we do what’s best for us.  And that wasn’t something that you could really do at Roush.  You had to kind of stay within the bubble or not get out of the box, because if you did, you got chastised after the race.

                So we just do what’s right for us, and I think that’s what makes the biggest difference.

                Q.  On the heels of what Jamie just said, Bono, as a four car team, Ganassi struggled a bit to find that success, but this year perhaps the best year in Ganassi’s NASCAR history as a two car team.  What’s different now than just a year or two ago?

                JAMIE McMURRAY:  I can only speak for the last couple of years from the merger, but I think two teams is not bad.  You know, sometimes you get four    I guess only relate it to like kids.  I have one child.  If I had two, man, I don’t know what I would do, you know what I mean.

                But the two teams, they really work good together.  Brian and I have a great working relationship.  We have been friends since the Nationwide days and we raced hard there, and I think our teams are just really    they really along.  It’s a small number.  You know, going from the four car team and then going down to three and then going down to two, you obviously have to lay people off unfortunately, and you get smaller, but when you get smaller, you also get leaner.   You can hand choose the guys you want on your teams and you put your best people in the best positions and let them do their job.  That’s one thing I noticed about Chip’s organization is he has a person for every job and he let’s them people do them jobs and do them to their best ability.

                I think everything at Chip’s shop is working and it’s working correctly and engineering, I tell Chip this, engineering is a little dysfunctional but it works tremendously good, you know what I mean.

                So I think just the two car team works for us better than four.  Less people goofing off.  It’s right under your nose.  You know exactly what’s happening.

                KERRY THARP:  Congratulations tonight on the victory.  You’ve had a super year.  Thank you.

                FastScripts by ASAP Sports …

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET – Finished 3rd

    POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:

    KERRY THARP:  We will role into our post race for tonight’s Bank of America 500. 

                Our third place finisher, and continues to maintain his points lead in the 2010 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup with a 41 point lead right now over Denny Hamlin is Jimmie Johnson.  Jimmie, talk about your run out there this evening, and how you thought things unfolded for the 48 team.

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  The finish was great.  But man, the first half of the race was a disaster for us.

                We felt like we were going to be loose, but we really thought we had the car close enough to maintain and kind of run it Top 10, Top 15, and we probably did that have.  There was a stop early where everybody took two and we took four and went back out, late 20s or something.  And at that point I was lined up behind Bobby Labonte, and his car was real slow and he was backing up, and probably five or six cars got by.

                And as soon as I went on outside to get around, I went on the entry into turn one and as soon as I did that, the car started to step out and turned around on me off of turn two.

                At that point I had been there before; I hit that inside wall in the spring.  Tried a few things with the steering wheel and pushing the clutch in, and on and off the brake, and had the momentum change and swing back from the inside wall and didn’t hit it, fortunately.

                From there we got some tires on it of a couple stops and got rolling again.  We made some adjustments there to tighten the car up, which let me kind of get comfortable again.  And then right after that, luckily we had some long green flag runs where the condition we had with the loose car, over a 40 , 50 lap run, my car would come in and be really strong.  Those long green flag runs in the middle helped us get a lot of track position back, a couple good stops.

                Then I think the track cooled down enough and came to us probably the three quarter mark, and at that point, it was on and we were just on and racing away.

                Q.  Given the issues you had early on, are you happy with the run or still more frustrated given the circumstances?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I’m so relieved.  I’m glad to be sitting in here in third spot and leading the points.  It’s amazing what goes through your mind when you’re sliding sideways on the back straightaway.   I saw my hard work for the year and dreams of being a five time champion go away, and fortunately I got the car turned away from the inside wall.  At that point kind of scared me straight.  Like, okay, just stay smooth, we can salvage a decent finish out of today.  Maybe we don’t win, maybe we don’t be in the Top 5, but I know we can get a good finish out of this if we can keep our composure and we did.

                Q.  Kind of along those same lines, I imagine your competitors are sitting here going, what is it going to take?  I mean, at what point you were 37th and you had two or three things happen tonight, do you look back at this and think, this is the magic, this is the intangible, what is it you are able to overcome all of these things?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Tonight is a night that reminds me of the last four years and what made this team champions.  I hope that tonight’s performance leads us to a championship.

                There’s obviously a lot of racing left.  No telling what’s going to happen.  But when we looked back, I hope we are the champions and I hope we look back and say that Charlotte was the key point for us in the championship battle.  We kept our composure.

                I think in the summer months, the issue we had with the car at the start of the race and the spin, frustration would have gotten the best of us and we would have taken ourselves out of contention for a good run.  Tonight the team stayed in it:  I did, Chad did, Earl kept us calm, pit stops were there.  Everything worked right and everybody stayed focused.  I hope we look back on say it was a big night.

                Q.  This touches along the line of what Holly was saying, but it seems like you have experiences like this not just this season or not this Chase; but do you ever feel no matter what happens on the track, that something can’t be done to fix it?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  What’s that now?

                Q.  Do you ever feel no matter what, something bad that happens on the track, that you guys can’t find some way to fix it or at least make it better?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  In years past, there has been segments of a season where, yeah, I’ve had that confidence.  Coming into the Chase, I didn’t have that confidence.  I didn’t think we were in that position, and maybe that’s what everyone was kind of noticing and thought we were vulnerable because of that.

                I know we are capable of it, and I think tonight we proved to ourselves more than anything that we can come back and fight through issues and still get a good finish.

                So I think tonight helps our team build confidence, and we’ll hopefully have this fight in us through the rest of the season.

                Q.  41 points back is Denny Hamlin, obviously last year a mistake and injured failures took him out of the Chase; what do you see different out of him a year later that may have to be a dogfight the next few weeks with him?  What’s different with him and how does that challenge you now?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Man, I guess he had a good run at California, to look at really where we are so far.

                Last year’s Chase, he had a lot of great performances, and as you pointed out, a few issues that took him out of the running.

                This year he is doing what he did last year and doing a great job.  I was hopeful that he was going to get away and not see a black car with that colorful hood on it, and I kept looking in the mirror tonight and there he was, there he was.  He did a great job tonight hanging on.

                Q.  Inaudible.

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Definitely.

                Q.  Given the fact that you and Denny have separated yourselves a little bit from the guys behind you, are you relishing the prospect of going to Martinsville, a place that you and he have dominated over the last four years and maybe going head to head with him there?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah, I mean, Martinsville is such a fun racetrack.  I really think, kind of the way it looks right now, he’s good at Martinsville, we are, Talladega is a crapshoot.  Texas, I think he finished first there and I was second in the spring.  Go to Phoenix, it’s a great track for both of us.  Go to Homestead, I think he won there last year.  We ran really strong all night long and then came home, Top 5 or something if I remember right.

                So I think both teams are going to have speed and I think it’s going to boil down to mistakes at this point.  Those guys are doing a great job, solid on pit road, solid on equipment and so on.  I think it’s going to boil down to mistakes.

                Q.  This is kind of, you’re going to tell me, how can I predict, but you and Denny have won last eight races at Martinsville.  Is anyone going to be in contention next week besides the two of you?  Is it going to be sort of the battle between the two championship contenders?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  We ran tenth all day in the spring race.  I can’t even remember who was up there fighting for it.  Burton?  The RCR cars are usually pretty quick there, and Kevin has come along well at that track, and the Cup stuff has been hit and miss for him.  I expect the RCR cars; and I remember Clint being real strong.  But again, we ran so    for our standards, we ran so bad there in the spring that I didn’t got a good look up front.  I know Mark ran really well.  I know he’s excited to go back.

                We were trying some stuff the first time there, and we are not going back with the same style car.  We went to Little Rock earlier this week and made some laps, and feel like we have got a good place to start, and go back with what we know and race from there.  Really, that’s what the 5 had when we were there in the spring, and they did a great job with it.

                Q.  Early in the Chase you’ve had a couple situations on pit line where your pit crews lost you a little bit, and tonight it seemed like they were really busting off good stops one after the other.  Do you think that has really given them a boost going forward, and did you guys make any changes before you got into tonight?

                JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah, I mean, not running as good as we needed to during the summer months, I think that the pressure we feel on pit road, that’s the part where I think we got hurt the most from having a slow summer is not having those guys against the fastest crew guys every stop.  They did a great job through the summer months, but when you are running 15th or 20th or whatever we were doing, flopping around in the middle of the pack it’s easy to look good on pit road at that point.

                When you get up front and you’re against these Gibbs guys, and even the 24 has got a really fast pit crew    and our guys are really fast, but they just haven’t been pushed.  It’s one thing to operate at 8/10ths and be nice and smooth.  But when you’re at 10/10ths at every stop, there’s a certain rhythm to that.  I felt bad that we were not better in the summer to put them in that pressure situation to come into the Chase ready.

                Tonight we had a couple hiccups but they did a good job, and at the end of the race when it counted, they reeled off really good stops.

                KERRY THARP:  Jimmie, thank you and we’ll see you at Martinsville.

                FastScripts by ASAP Sports …

    About Chevrolet: Chevrolet is a global automotive brand, with annual sales of about 3.5 million vehicles in more than 130 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. In the U.S., the Chevrolet portfolio includes: iconic performance cars, such as Corvette and Camaro; dependable, long lasting pickups and SUVs, such as Silverado and Suburban; and award-winning passenger cars and crossovers, such as Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly to gas-free” solutions including the Cruze Eco and Volt, both arriving in late 2010. Cruze Eco will offer up to 40 mpg highway while the Chevrolet Volt will offer up to 40 miles of electric, gas-free driving and an additional 300 miles of extended range (based on GM testing; official EPA estimates not yet available). Most new Chevrolet models offer OnStar safety, security, and convenience technologies including OnStar Hands-Free Calling, Automatic Crash Response, and Stolen Vehicle Slowdown. More information regarding Chevrolet models, fuel solutions, and OnStar availability can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • FORD RACING NOTES AND QUOTES – Bank of America 500

    GREG BIFFLE – No. 16 3M Ford Fusion (Finished 5th) – “It was a really good night. The Scotch Blue 3M Ford Fusion ran really good. We didn’t qualify very well, so we had to work our way to the front.

    Then we made a pretty big change and had to restart all the way at the back and got all the way back into the top five. I’m just real happy for Jamie McMurray. He used to drive for us and was short on wins, but he’s doing a great job.”

    CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion (Finished 12th) – “We were just never very fast. There was one run where we were really good, but the rest of the time we were in the same position we’ve been here for the last couple years. We just weren’t very fast. I thought Bob had a good strategy. We tried a bunch of things. He made good adjustments, but fundamentally there’s something wrong with the way we set our Fusion up for this place. It’s frustrating because I know we can run better than that. I know what I need the car to do, we just can’t get it to do it. That’s pretty frustrating.”

    MATT KENSETH – No. 17 Crown Royal Black Ford Fusion (Finished 6th) – “The highlight was where we finished the last lap because that was the best we ran all night. We started the race incredibly far off and had to make a lot of pit stops and adjustments. The guys did a really good job recovering from where we were to get a decent finish. I don’t know what they changed, but we were so loose when the race started that we couldn’t run at all. There were some other cars that were, too. The 48 obviously was when he spun out, and the 2 and some of the others were off too. It took us pretty much the whole race to get enough adjustments to get it snugged up a little bit.”

    WE SAW SOME ONE-CAR SPINS. WHAT CAUSES SOMETHING LIKE THAT? “It’s a cold track and it’s getting a little older, but you’re still on a hard tire. You’ve got to be loose in order to be fast around here, but it’s a really, really fine edge – much finer than most tracks with this tire and asphalt combination. You’ve got to have enough grip to be able to stand in the gas, but you can’t be pushing either, so it’s hard to get it right.”

    FOUR ROUSH FENWAY CARS IN THE TOP 12. A GOOD TEAM NIGHT. “Yeah, that’s good. We had good runs going at California, if we all wouldn’t have had problems, and the Kansas we had our problems, and Dover, but lately we’ve cars that could run in the top 10, which is encouraging, we just haven’t got the finishes and that’s disappointing. It’s nice to get the finish tonight. I wish I had the last few also, but it’s nice to get the finish and hopefully we can continue that.”

    DREW BLICKENSDERFER, Crew Chief – No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion – “It’s good.

    The thing is that the difference between running 17th a lot of weeks or running eighth or ninth is the right decision at the end of the race or a great pit stop or something so small. It seems like it’s so small, but it’s hard to overcome. To be able to overcome starting towards the back and work our way toward the front all night long was a good run for us.”

    WHAT HAVE YOU DONE IN THESE FIRST FEW WEEKS TO HELP TURN THINGS AROUND WITH THIS TEAM? “I think the most important thing is giving David some confidence. I’m not a miracle worker and I’m not doing anything that’s different than anybody else would do, I’m just a different guy and it might have lit a spark under David.

    Maybe being closer in age to David, we communicate differently than the way he has in the past, but I think he’s got some confidence. We unload fast. We practice fast and I see a little pep in his step now.”

    DO YOU LIKE WHAT YOU SEE IN THIS TEAM WITH FIVE RACES TO GO?

    “Yeah, we’re getting better and that’s the main thing. You have to get better every single week. You have to be able to prove that when you run 15th, that wasn’t good enough and you can run 10th. That’s what we’ve done. We’ve had top 15 cars in all but one of the weeks I’ve been here and of those top 15 cars, we need to be able to be at the top end of that and tonight we were able to do that.”

    DAVID RAGAN – No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion (Finished 10th) – “It was a great run. I think we may have even had a better car than 10th, but, all in all, it was a pretty good night. It seems like a lot of things we needed to do right went how they were supposed to. We’ve had some real good cars the last couple of weeks and it’s good for United Way and UPS to finish in the top 10. Hopefully, this is some good momentum we can carry with us into next week.”

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

    Kyle Busch (second) was the highest finishing Camry driver in Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.   Denny Hamlin (fourth), Joey Logano (seventh) and David Reutimann (ninth) also finished in the top-10 in the 334-lap race at the 1.5-mile oval.   Other Toyota drivers in the field included Martin Truex Jr. (15th), Marcos Ambrose (16th), Reed Sorenson (18th), Scott Speed (19th), Robby Gordon (33rd) and Jeff Green (41st).   Hamlin remains second in the unofficial NSCS point standings and trails current leader Jimmie Johnson by 41 points after five events in the 10-race 2010 Chase for the Sprint Cup championship playoff.  Busch gained four spots to fifth-place – 177 points behind Johnson.

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  2nd How was Jamie McMurray able to pass you after you were so strong early in the race? “He (Jamie McMurray) was faster than me and he beat us.  Nothing to it but that.  Just didn’t quite have it at the end.  I gave it up two nights in a row.” Did Joe Gibbs put tonight’s race into perspective for you at the end of the race? “Nobody can put it in perspective right now.  It’s very, very disappointing.  Had the best car all night and gave it up.  Just flat out gave it away and it’s real, real frustrating to not come out of here with a win at a track that I have yet to win at and have been so fast at.  Then again tonight was really fast.  I’m sorry to all the guys, I mean everybody at Joe Gibbs Racing, everybody in the engine shop, chassis shop – it’s my job to come out here and get a win for these guys and I’m the one behind the wheel ultimately and didn’t make the right adjustments and gave it up.” How disappointed are you with your finish tonight? “It’s very tough and it’s very, very frustrating and disappointing.  I gave it all I had, but (Jamie) McMurray was just better than me and I’m sorry to all my guys.  I didn’t give up any, but we just didn’t have the right changes.  Apparently I didn’t communicate enough right or something.  I’m the one behind the wheel ultimately making the sacrifice and we didn’t have enough.” How was your race overall tonight? “It was a really great race for us.  The car was phenomenal all night, one of our best cars we’ve ever had.  And being able to drive through people, get up back towards the front and stuff at a difficult racetrack to pass at and everything, this was a great run, a surprising run – the run that is we are supposed to have and the runs we are supposed to make happen.  You know, it was a great feeling there all up until about 20 to go when we got a caution and then got beat on the caution and then in the ensuing laps to the end.  Just very, very frustrating.  I can’t say enough about all of my guys and everybody that works, as hard as they work and do such a great job that they do.  It’s just very, very frustrating and you know, I apologize to everybody at Joe Gibbs Racing for just not being able to bring it home tonight.  Apparently didn’t have the right adjustment in the car at the end.   Perfect example, two nights in a row, didn’t quite find what it took last night into tonight.” What are you more frustrated with, the caution, or the restart? “ And the restart, just trying to get going there, Jamie (McMurray) got a good restart, and I don’t know if he got pushed from Jimmie (Johnson) or not, but he had a good run, good momentum getting into turn one.  Then I got there and my car pushed up to the race track and got to the plate and he was already gone, nothing I could do.  Couldn’t even stay to his outside.” What was going on with your throttle early in the race? “It was sticking for some reason, not sure why.  We have had a cable drive system I have not liked since I came to Joe Gibbs Racing, I don’t know what happened to the mechanism but something apparently got wedged in there for a while and I was able to work it free.  It came back to normal.  Took it, about, I don’t know, 50 laps or some, but got it back normal.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Ground Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  4th How would you summarize your race tonight? “It was a battle.  We were stuck from like third to fifth all day and just couldn’t get it quite right.  There was some stuff that we put in our car that we just needed to fine tune a little bit.  Didn’t have enough time to work on it during practice, but I think we have a good direction from here on out.  We kept them in our sights, but that’s all we could do.  We were a little bit off today, but it’s important that we get solid top-five finishes like this.” How do you feel being second in the points following this race? “Better than I was last year, that’s all I know.  We’re going to a great track for us – Martinsville and then Talladega’s going to be, who knows.  In this race last year I blew up and last time I wrecked so I’m ahead of pace.” Are you happy with your finish today? “I’m happy with our day – a top-five.  You look at our average finish over these last few weeks and we’ve been up and down and some people think mediocre, but that’s been good enough to win the championship for probably two or three or four of the last four years.  He’s (Jimmie Johnson) going to do what he’s going to do and run up front, we just have to do what we have to do and try to win races.  I’m not disappointed at all – I’m proud of our FedEx team for fighting today.  We started in the back, we came from the (Ryan) Newman spin in the front at the beginning of the race.  Not too disappointed and frankly I feel like he’s in our sights.  He’s eight positions in one race in front of us and that can be overcome pretty easily.” Is it frustrating that Jimmie Johnson still finished ahead of you in tonight’s race? “He’s (Jimmie Johnson) a champion and I’m not.  He’s figured this stuff out and he’s got a great team as well as we do, but I haven’t hit the ‘go’ button yet and I feel like there’s still more left with our team.  I’m minimizing my risk right now and I feel like if I’m going to have a shot to win this thing when we get to Homestead, I’ve got to minimize those risks.  I can’t be sticking it three-wide on restarts and things like that.  People do and I don’t.  I take a little more conservative approach and it cost me five points here and there every couple races, but the main thing is that I’m not racing my way out of this thing these first five races.” Were you pleased that Kyle Busch was able to keep Jimmie Johnson behind him at the finish? “I was hoping that they (Kyle Busch and Jimmie Johnson) would battle a little bit more because the more they battled, the closer I got to them.  I just needed them to check up just a little bit more and I could have got to them.  We got killed on that restart and once again on the long run we were running the 48 (Johnson) down, but that caution came out and it really killed us at the end.” Did you think you and Kyle Busch would get a better restart on the final one? “I thought I was going to be second coming off of turn two, but for some reason that restart the bottom lane took off much better than the top and that hadn’t happened all day long.  My car was a little loose and I couldn’t get it working up there on the restart and it just cost us a spot.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 20 Home Depot Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position:  7th How was your car tonight? “The car was pretty good, we just fought track position all night.  We ran in the top-three in the first part of the race and I thought we were going to be all right.  We took two tires one time that got us back there.  Had stuff on the grille and tried to get it off and messed around with that a little bit.  We had one bad pit stop that got us back there too.  Every time we started fighting our way back up there we had something put us back there again.  That made it a little bit of a struggle for us.  It was a good run.  We had a good car.  I felt like we had a better car than where we finished.  We just fought all day to get what we had.”

    DAVID REUTIMANN, No. 00 Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Finishing Position:  9th How was your race tonight? “We just struggled with the balance of the Aaron’s Dream Machine all night.  Rodney Childers (crew chief) and the guys worked hard on pit road and making the changes, but we just went back and forth from tight to loose.  We could never get the balance.  We got a top-10 finish out of the deal, which I’m proud of, but I wish we could’ve just hit the balance one time to get up there and fight with those guys.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 56 NAPA / Susan G. Komen Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Finishing Position:  15th How was your race tonight? “We ran in the top 10 all night.  It’s disappointing to finish in 15th.  We were way too tight on the final run.  We are continuing to try and figure out what we need to do to get the strong finishes.  We just have more work to do.”

    MARCOS AMBROSE, No. 47 Lance/Tom’s Toyota Camry, JTG-Daugherty Racing Finishing Position:  16th

    REED SORENSON, No. 83 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Finishing Position:  18th

    SCOTT SPEED, No. 82 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Finishing Position:  19th

    ROBBY GORDON, No. 7 Extenze Toyota Camry, Robby Gordon Motorsports Finishing Position:  33rd

    JEFF GREEN, No. 64 Little Joe’s Autos Toyota Camry, Gunselman Motorsports Finishing Position:  41st