Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • Ford Loudon Qualifying

    Ford Racing Qualifying Order:

    10th – Carl Edwards, Roush Fenway Racing

    6th – AJ Allmendinger, Richard Petty Motorsports

    8th – Paul Menard, Richard Petty Motorsports

    21st – Kasey Kahne, Richard Petty Motorsports

    33rd – Matt Kenseth, Roush Fenway Racing

    14th – Greg Biffle, Roush Fenway Racing

    11th – David Ragan, Roush Fenway Racing

    19th – Elliott Sadler, Richard Petty Motorsports

    40th – Travis Kvapil, Front Row Motorsports

    39th – David Gilliand, Front Row Motorsports

    42nd – Tony Raines, Front Row Motorsports

    DNQ – Jeff Green, Latitude 41 Motorsports

    KASEY KAHNE – No. 9 Budweiser Ford Fusion (Qualified 21st) “It wasn’t very good. After I took the checkered it felt really loose in one and two. The front tires wouldn’t come in on either lap so I was waiting on that. I tried to scrub them in on the straightaways but I needed one more lap I guess.” DO YOU THINK GOING FIRST WAS A DISADVANTAGE? “Well we struggled with those same things in practice. I feel like we have a good Budweiser Ford for race day.”

    GREG BIFFLE – No. 16 3M Ford Fusion (Qualified 14th) “We are just trying to get a hold of this race track in qualifying trim. We probably needed to arc it into one and two a little better. I should have rolled across there to carry more speed. That is a tough lap because the majority of guys will probably be in the 50’s and 60’s so that is going to put us pretty far back in the qualifying order. We will just have to work really hard on Sunday.”

    PAUL MENARD – No. 98 Menards Ford Fusion (Qualified 8th) “It was good. We picked up dim practice and I think the track is hotter right now. We will see how it holds up. We helped the front end turn a little bit between practice and qualifying. We gave up too much off of turn four. Overall I’m pretty happy with it.”

    CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion (Qualified 10th) “I wasn’t as fast as I wanted to be on the second lap. Our Aflac Fusion was good. I just didn’t put together the perfect lap. This is one of the toughest places to qualify. I’ve never done that well qualifying here but I think this will be a top-10 and that will be just fine. That will be a good start and now we can go work on race trim which is totally different. Long laps are going to be really important.”

    FORD RACING NOTES AND QUOTES Sylvania 300 Qualifying, Page 2

    September 17, 2010 New Hampshire Motor Speedway

    DAVID RAGAN – No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion (Qualified 11th) – “Our UPS Ford was pretty close when we unloaded this weekend. It’s probably the best we’ve ever unloaded here in New Hampshire. We took a lot from what the No. 9 ran here in the Spring. I would have like to have picked up a little more, but that should be close to a top-10 or top-15 starting spot. Our car seems to be good. It will be back to normal happy hour sessions on Saturday and hopefully we’ll have some time to work on it for race trim.”

    A.J. ALLMENDINGER – No. 43 Best Buy Ford Fusion (Qualified 6th) “I am mad at myself for that. I don’t know if the sun hurt us a little bit or what, but I got in the middle of three and four and got a little bit tight. The times are so close. I probably lost a chance at pole right there. I guess if I am fifth and mad about it then things aren’t that bad.” YOU WERE PRETTY QUICK IN RACE TRIM, HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT SUNDAY? “The car is really good. I really thought we had a chance at pole there. I think the weather hurt us just a touch. If I had just hooked the line a little better in three and four we would have had a good shot at it. The car is really good which is what I am frustrated about. I think we had a chance to be really good there and be on pole. We have had two really good solid weeks in a row on flat tracks and I think we are even better in race trim, so we will go from there.”

  • CHEVY NSCS AT NEW HAMPSHIRE TWO: Jeff Gordon Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    SYLVANIA 300

    NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    SEPTEMBER 17, 2010

    JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DUPONT/NATIONAL GUARD FACEBOOK CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and discussed outlook for the weekend at NHMS, approach to the Chase, sponsorship, momentum in Chase and other topics. Full transcript:

    TALK ABOUT YOUR OUTLOOK COMING INTO NEW HAMPSHIRE AS THE EIGHTH SEED IN THE CHASE: “It certainly is always a good thing to start the Chase off right, build some momentum. I guess maybe for us being a little bit further back (in points), I mean 60 points back is certainly not insurmountable but you are going to have to put 10 solid weeks together for sure. That all starts here at New Hampshire.”

    CAN THERE BE A SLEEPER IN THIS CHASE AND IF THERE COULD BE, WHO DO YOU THINK IT MIGHT BE? “The way I look at is I feel like there are 12 guys that can win it. Anybody can get on a streak. I feel like all of these teams are solid, good teams, good drivers. I don’t really see a sleeper. I feel like us, Bowyer, Burton, any of the guys that haven’t won races yet to this point I guess, if you were going to consider anybody a sleeper, I would think that the media would think that these guys aren’t really going to be the ones to beat. “

    WHAT DID LOU HOLTZ SAY TO YOU, WHAT PROFOUND WORDS OF WISDOM DID OR MOTIVATION DID YOU GET FROM HIM YESTERDAY? “Man you lost me already with the profound words (LAUGHS). (SMILES) Probably nothing I can talk about here. We spent some time with him in the green room yesterday. There is no question why he is such a great coach. It seems like all the great football coaches are these incredible motivators that just have a way with words and the way that they think. Him being one of the greatest of all time coaches out there, you could spend hours listening to him and all the things that he had to say. I would kind of like to keep those moments to myself. You saw the rest on ESPN.”

    HAS THE SPONSORSHIP THING BEEN DISCOURAGING FOR YOU WITH NOT HAVING DUPONT THE WHOLE SEASON AND THE WALMART THING, ARE YOU SURPRISED THAT A DRIVER OF YOUR CALIBER IS EVEN IN THIS POSITION? “I’ll be honest, as a driver, it’s not something that I put a lot of thought into. I mean, I certainly would like to see us with a sponsor that could be really good for our organization. Good for the sport and good marketing and wants to be a part of our program and get behind it. Right now, my focus is on driving and trying to go out there and be as good as we can be in the Chase. That is pretty much the message that has been sent to me through Rick (Hendrick) is don’t worry about it. We have got a lot of people working hard on it and it’ll come together. The Walmart thing was a little disappointing because I feel like everybody was wanting to see that company in this sport for a long time and we would have loved to have represented them. But, I’m so excited to be involved with DuPont and Pepsi and sponsors that we have had for a number of years. I think we still have some things that are going to come together.”

    HOW MUCH HAS CHANGED IN YOUR APPROACH TO DRIVING FROM YOUR FIRST YEAR TO NOW? “Well, I mean, throw out the first year. In ’93, I had no clue, I had no confidence or no regiment. I was just being thrown into it and just didn’t know what to expect and my head was just spinning off my head trying to keep up with everything I was learning. In ’94 things settled down a little bit. For me, I have always approached racing one race at a time. I’ve never looked too far ahead. I’ve always tried to be in the moment when I am trying that car. I am trying to focus on what it takes to make the car go as fast as I possibly can right there. I don’t think about tomorrow. That is just the way. Now, that is not my personal life. In my personal life, I worried like crazy about what is happening tomorrow, but in racing, I’ve always just focused one lap, one race at a time. I don’t feel like that has changed a whole lot. That first year might have been a little bit different, in ’93. I feel like I have stayed pretty consistent with that over the years and it has worked well for us so I try not to change it.”

    WHEN THEY ANNOUNCED THE INITIAL CHASE IN 2003 AND THEN IT DEBUTED IN 2004, DID YOU THINK OH, THIS IS GREAT. 10 RACES, I CAN WIN THESE THINGS. OR, DID YOU THINK WITH ONLY HAVING 10 RACES IT WAS GOING TO BE TOUGHER TO WIN CHAMPIONSHIPS? “I was not looking forward to that change from the beginning. When I first heard about it and I think maybe Mike Helton was the first one who sort of threw the idea out there to me. And I laughed and I said, ‘Ah, that’s never going to happen’. Then I think I saw Brian France somewhere down the road and he told me it was going to happen, and I was like, oh my gosh. At that point, I wasn’t thinking whether it was good for the sport or not, I was just purely being selfish and thinking how’s it going to work for us? And my strong suit is consistency over a lot of tracks. I think the first thing that came into my mind was the 10 tracks that close out the season. They’ve never been my best tracks. New Hampshire has been pretty good but Phoenix is not a good track for me. Homestead is not necessarily a good track for me. Texas. So we’ve had to work really, really hard at being better at those 10 tracks. So we’ve put a lot more effort into it because to me that’s really the most important thing now about the season. It’s not really anything other than those 10 tracks. You want to go to other tracks and try to run well and try to get the bonus points and win the races but what you really want is to build your program up so in those final 10 races at those 10 tracks you’re awesome. So I don’t like that it comes down to that but that’s the way it is. And it’s a real big challenge. I think it’s more difficult, certainly for me, I feel like it’s more difficult to win it this way than any other way. I like that challenge. That’s just the way our sport is going to be from now on. So we have to figure out how to win it under that format.”

    WITH THIS FORMAT AND WITH THIS GROUP, CAN SOMEBODY LOSE THIS CHASE THIS SUNDAY? “Well, (crew chief) Steve Letarte and I have talked a lot about this. I think he’s put it best that you can’t win the championship this weekend, but you can certainly lose it. I think all you have to do is self destruct and you’ll make some big mistakes and come out of here; what will really hurt you is to have a really bad finish in the first Chase race it’s really hard to rebound from that because you still have Martinsville and you still have Talladega and these tracks that chances are good you could get caught up in something. You want to try to get a few races in. You know that you’re going to have a bad week. It seems like everybody always does. But you don’t want to start it off that way because then that means you have to put nine really good ones together.”

    NINE YEARS AGO WAS THE LAST TIME YOU WON A CHAMPIONSHIP. WHAT WOULD IT MEAN TO YOU TO WIN A FIFTH CHAMPIONSHIP THIS YEAR? “Well, it’s not a fifth championship. I know that’s what the stats and the records would show but it’s really a first championship because with the points change, to me the history is different. I don’t compare these championships even if I wanted, to what I won before. It’s equally or more prestigious today. That’s the part that makes you want to go out there and get it. This is the sport we’re in. This is what we live for. And there’s nothing sweeter, nothing more difficult than to win the championship. We’re proud to be in the Chase with that shot at it. I think we’ve got a really strong team this year. We’ve shown that all year long. And we’ve got to step it up in these final ten and to hoist that trophy really, to me, would just be the ultimate. To be at this point in my career, knowing how long it’s been since we’ve won a championship and a race, that’s how you appreciate those moments more than you ever have before. So I can’t even describe the words what it would mean to win this championship. But I don’t compare it to the other ones.”

    SO MUCH HAS BEEN MADE ABOUT JIMMIE JOHNSON THE LAST FOUR YEARS, AND CERTAINLY YOUR POST-SEASON SUCCESS. CAN YOU TALK ABOUT DENNY HAMLIN AND THE SUCCESS HE’S HAD THIS YEAR, AND THE MOMENTUM HE BRINGS INTO THE CHASE? “Yeah, he looks really, really strong. I really go back to last year at the end of the season and I felt like they had the team to beat. They had their issues that took them out of championship contention. It looked to me like they were building their team and their momentum for this year. With him winning six races and with him being strong in Atlanta; and winning at Richmond, I don’t think anybody has more momentum than that team does right now.”

    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 New Hampshire Advance

    Carl Edwards, driver of the No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion, enters the Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway ninth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup point standings, 60 points behind new leader Denny Hamlin. In 12 NSCS starts at NHMS, Edwards has achieved two top-five and two top-10 finishes. Edwards’ best finish at Loudon is second place, captured in July of 2006. In 26 starts this season, Edwards has accumulated six top-five and 14 top-10 finishes, as well as two poles. Edwards talked with members of the media about this upcoming race, the Chase and the Race of Champions.

    THERE IS A GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU OVER THE NEXT 10 RACES ISN’T THERE? “Yeah, there is a great opportunity for us. This first practice was great. I believe we were the fastest in first practice. We had a little trouble with timing and scoring, so I am not certain of that. I think that qualifying is going to be very important here. We focused on it today. Track position is going to be important. It is very difficult to pass. The way we have run the last couple of weeks I feel very confident for our chances to get a good start to the Chase here at Loudon.” LOOKING AT THE 10 TRACKS, IS TALLADEGA THE ONE YOU FEAR THE MOST BECAUSE OF THE UNCERTAINTY? “I think everyone fears Talladega the most, you know what I mean? It is because of the uncertainty and because anything can happen. That can go two ways though. You can also look at that place as an opportunity. If you play it smart and maybe have a little bit of luck you can gain ground on people there. It could go either way. For that reason, Talladega is kind of a wash. It makes you nervous, but you never know. The one that worries me a little bit is this one because we’ve had an up and down record. Charlotte worries me the most. For some reason, we have run very well on the mile-and-a-half’s but with that one, the way the tire works with the race track, we’ve had days we were just terrible. That is the one that, performance wise, I am most worried about.” ARE THERE ANY DISADVANTAGES TO HAVING TEAMMATES IN THE CHASE AND IS THIS THE MOST OPEN COMPETITION FOR THE CHASE YOU’VE SEEN? “The disadvantage, the only one, to having teammates in the Chase is if you start to get competitive too much with your teammates. You are all competing for the same thing. At the beginning of this, all of us want to get a jump on the other one. As long as we can keep that healthy competition, then it is good. I think the advantage is that we’ve struggled for so long that we’ve kind of built a better bond as teammates in the shop and on the race track. I think that all three of us being out there gives us a chance to work together all weekend from start to finish. I think that is good.”

    YOU MENTIONED HOW HARD IT IS TO PASS HERE BUT IN JUNE WE SAY GUYS RUN FULL LAPS SIDE BY SIDE. HOW DO YOU RECONCILE THOSE TWO FACTS? “Well, that is just it. You run full laps side by side because you can’t complete the pass. It looks good, but boy it is hard to pass. So let’s say you were out there running around and I was two-tenths of a second faster, which is pretty good, and I caught you. I could pull next to you and then you can make it really hard on me to get by. From a distance that looks like a good race, but what we are doing right then is slowing ourselves down and I would be negating my two-tenths that I had on you and maybe the guy in front of you. That is the struggle we have out there. It looks good, but man it is tough to actually make ground up through the field.” SOME OF THE CHASE GUYS ARE ADAMENTLY OPPOSED TO SEPARATE POINT SYSTEM FOR CHASE GUYS. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE POINTS SYSTEM? “Everything that you do there will be an unintended consequence or the potential for one. So if we have our own point system separate from the other guys, then that give you the opportunity to have someone really benefit and not someone else, based on chance. If I run 12th at this race and 11 guys in front of me are Chase guys, then yeah I am the 12th slowest Chase guy. If I run 43rd and everyone else runs one to 11, then I don’t know if I really deserve to be counted as right behind that 11th place guy. You have a chance to have a guy that runs a way better average year finish behind a guy because of the way it shook out statistically. I think the way it is is fine as long as we are all competing under the same rules it will be good. The Chase by itself automatically gives the opportunity for someone to win that maybe was not the strongest team that year. I think once you add more it is going farther down that slope.” IF SOMEBODY LEADS 150 LAPS HERE SUNDAY AND WINS THE RACE BY THREE SECONDS, HOW DOES THAT IMPACT EVERYONE ELSE IN THE CHASE? IS IT A DOWNER GOING FORWARD EMOTIONALLY OR MENTALLY? “If it happened here it would be frustrating. I sure would like to lead by that much and win, that would be good. I think that everyone knows that the meat of the Chase is mile-and-a-half tracks like Dover and California. We know that if someone goes to the first mile-and-a-half track and does that, then that is a little scary. Here the only thing that is really going to relate to is turns three and four at Phoenix. You definitely want to get a good start, but I don’t think anyone can set the tone of the Chase here, just because it is kind of a unique track.” EVERYONE IS GUNNING FOR JIMMIE. WHY COULD YOU BE THAT GUY TO KNOCK HIM OFF THIS YEAR? “I think that we have proven over the last 10 weeks that we can score more points than anyone in the series, and that is what it is going to take. Jimmie did a good job last week of explaining that you have to have something to hang your hat on going into this thing. You either have to have wins or you have to have been very consistent. You have to have some sort of thing to build your team around. That is what we are building our hopes on, the fact that we have shown over an extended period that we can score better average finishes than everyone else. Now we just have to go do that. That is what I am counting on, the ability to go do that.” DO YOU TAKE THE FIRST THREE OR SO CHASE RACES AND TAKE THEM MORE CAUTIOSLY TO YOU DON’T GET BEHIND? IS THERE A POINT WHERE YOU GO AFTER IT? “That is a tough call to make. I have thought that way and then I started thinking that maybe it is better to go out here and try to gain something the first few races and take advantage of everyone being cautious. The bottom line is you don’t want to be behind after these first few races. I think you have to drive aggressively and take chances up to the point where you are wrecking or doing something really silly like running out of fuel. If you don’t then someone else is and they will be the guy leading after three races. It is a really fine balance between not wanting to go easy but also you can’t really screw up. I still haven’t decided how I am going to do it.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE ROC IN GERMANY NEXT MONTH? “It is going to be fun. We are going to Dueseldorf with Travis Pastrana. I got to talk to him for the first time about it live last night on ESPN. I was a little shocked that his excitement level was that unlike other forms of motorsports they let you into the wall one time on each run at the Race of Champions. I was like ‘Travis, that is not how we need to approach this.’ He is a very fun guy and he is a living legend and it will be fun to go race alongside of him and represent the United States. He is an extremely accomplished Rally racer and I think I will learn some things. Really it is just really fun. You guys should go over there if anyone wants to go cover it. It is a neat event. Sebastian Loeb, Michael Schumacker and a bunch of guys will be there. We had a good time the last time I was there and it is just different cars and a different environment. It is in the soccer stadium which I think has a retractable roof and I think it is the biggest one in the world. It will be fun. It is an honor to go do it and hopefully we can go win.” HOW DOES IT WORK EXACTLY? “The Race of Champions itself is an individual event and then they have the countries compete against one another in a points elimination thing. We will be racing for America and then racing for ourselves.” IN THIS SEASON OF ‘BOYS HAVE AT IT’, IF SOMEBODY THAT IS NOT A CHASE CONTENDER GETS A PAYBACK ON A CHASE CONTENDER, HOW SHOULD NASCAR VIEW THAT AND SHOULD NASCAR TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION IF THERE IS TO BE ANY KIND OF PENALTY THAT IT IS A CHASE GUY AND IT COULD IMPACT A CHAMPIONSHIP? “I think that you just have to look at every situation and I think NASCAR does a pretty good job of that. I don’t see that really happening. I think we’ve all shown that we race pretty well together and even when we do have issues, we have been able to kind of compartmentalize those or keep them isolated to one track or something. That has been pretty good. I don’t really see that happening. I think that it will be fine.” IF IT DOES HAPPEN, SHOULD IT BE A CONSIDERATION THAT A CHASE GUY IS INVOLVED? “I just can’t see somebody really doing that, you know what I mean? But you never know. I mean heck, I guess we will just see what happens and deal with it if it happens. I don’t think it will though.”

    Matt Kenseth, driver of the No. 17 Crown Royal Ford Fusion, enters the first Chase race of 2010 in 11th position and starts at a track where he has earned five top-five finishes and 11 top-10 finishes in his career. Kenseth has yet to win a race at NHMS, but does own a runner-up finish that came in 2004 and has led 88 laps here in his career. Kenseth talked about NHMS and the Chase.

    WHAT IS YOUR OUTLOOK FOR SUNDAY’S RACE? “Well I will probably have a little better idea after tomorrow’s practice. I thought we had a pretty good day today in our race trim. We seem to be a little faster than we have been in here. Our car seems a little better than it was last time. It was more like what we had last weekend. I feel good about it. We are all in the same spot right now. We have to see how qualifying goes and go from there.” IS THERE A TRACK IN THE CHASE THAT PARTICULARLY CONCERNS YOU? “All of them really. We haven’t had particularly great results here at this track lately. This one is probably front of my mind right now. I think you have to perform well every week and certainly Talladega is probably the biggest wild card race, but this one is on the front of my mind right now. Hopefully we can get through here with a decent finish and then we will have confidence going into Dover, more than the rest of the race tracks. You still have to get it done every week.” YOU HAVE A NEW CHASIS FOR THIS RACE, IS THAT NORMAL AND DID YOU ALWAYS DO THAT IN YOUR OTHER TIMES HERE FOR THE CHASE? “No, I am not worried about it. I don’t recall if we ever had a brand new car here before or not. Since Jimmy has been here he has tried to build the cars the way he wanted to do it and make them better. Last week was our first week with one of those new cars. It seemed to be better, even though we didn’t get the finish we were hoping for. We performed at times in Richmond much better than we have actually since they went to the COT car. There is one time we drove up into the top-five which is better than we have been. We feel they are better cars and we have four of them built that we will rotate throughout the Chase to use the final 10 weeks. We feel like they are a lot better than what we had a couple months ago and we are trying to bring our best stuff.” WERE THESE CARS MADE JUST FOR THE CHASE? “It is just the timing of it with Jimmy coming on kind of late. I think that if he would have been there in November, I don’t know. We probably still would have had newer cars about this time of year because you are always trying to evolve and make things better. We have made small changes and we think we have made things better to get our better stuff when it counts.” WHY ARE YOU NOT WORRIED ABOUT IT? “If you look at our last season and a half it isn’t like we have won a race and have a few cars that we really run exceptional with. If that was the case, which we used to have some cars like that back in the day that we were real comfortable with and real fast, if we had cars like that we would maybe rethink that a little bit. We really don’t have even one cars that we like really a lot better than others. Jimmy has worked really hard on these new cars the last couple of months. Getting them in the wind tunnel and making them lighter and stronger. We really feel like even though they haven’t been on the race track , these are the best pieces we have in our shop.”

    WHAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES TO HAVING TEAMMATES IN THE CHASE FIELD AND ARE THERE ANY DISADVANTAGES? AND IS THIS THE MOST COMPETIVE CHASE FIELD? “For me, having three teammates, I don’t think it really matters whether they are in the Chase or not. I think that we work together exactly the same. Being a teammate isn’t really necessarily about Sunday. It is about the rest of the week. It is about today and comparing information and comparing our cars. Talking about how we approach the track and how changes felt. Working together and when we get belted in on Sunday, it is every man for himself. It is one against 42 at that point. Certainly you realize who your teammates are out there and you try not to do something dumb around them, but you race them how you race everybody else. You try to beat those guys. You are racing those guys for position and points. We share the same amount of information and put in the same effort to helping whether we are all in the Chase or just one of us. As far as the Chase field, that is hard to say. I think we will have a better idea in a few weeks. It is a talented field with a lot of great teams. Each year with the rule changes I think the field keeps getting more competitive and closer to the same speed each season.” IF SOMEONE WINS AND DOMINATES THE DAY SUNDAY, DOES IT THROW THE REST OF YOU INTO PANIC THAT SOMEONE IS DOMINANT THE FIRST TIME OUT OF THE CHUTE? “No. Ten races is a lot of racing. The championship isn’t going to be won or lost here at New Hampshire. If your performance is good enough to be a legitimate contender throughout 10 weeks then one race isn’t going to make or break you. I don’t think anybody want to be behind. All 12 guys want to be leading the points when they leave here obviously, but I don’t think one race is enough to panic.” THIS IS YOUR THIRD CREW CHIEF, IS IT A GOOD THING THAT MAYBE YOU ARE HITTING YOUR STRIDE WITH JIMMY GOING INTO THE CHASE? HAS IT GELLED AT THE RIGHT TIME FOR YOU GUYS? “I hope so. I have known Jimmy for a long time and we have always gotten along well. We worked together in the Nationwide series and I used to follow him around when he was Mark’s (Martin) crew chief. I used to follow him around and bug him and ask Jimmy a million questions. We have known each other for a long time and we get along fine. I think our chemistry is fine. Jimmy is one of those guys that never rests. He is always trying to figure out how to make the cars faster and better. That is one of the things I really like about him. It is never good enough. He is always trying to make the stuff faster.”

    Greg Biffle, driver of the No. 16 3M Ford Fusion, are in the seventh position in the new Chase standings heading into the first Chase race of 2010 this weekend. The No. 16 is 50 points behind leader Denny Hamlin and have a 10-point lead over positions eight through 12. Biffle’s first Cup Series start came at New Hampshire in 2002 when he drove the No. 55 car owned by Andy Petree. Biffle took time to talk to media members Friday about his car this weekend and his Chase prospects.

    YOU GOT OUT OF THE CHUTE REALLY QUICK HERE A FEW YEARS AGO AND WON THE FIRST TWO RACES IN THE CHASE. CAN YOU DO THAT AGAIN? “I think we are capable of doing it again. We came of the truck pretty decent and kept picking up speed. We switched over the qualifying trim and the car was real good. We got some ideas going back to race trim what we will try a little different for tomorrow. I think we have as good a chance as anybody to win here Sunday.” YOU HAVE THREE ROUSH CARS IN THE CHASE AND THEN DAVID RAGAN. DOES HE BECOME THE TEST BED ESSENTIALLY FOR THE COMPANY DURING THESE FINAL 10 AND WHAT YOU GET OUT OF HIM; CAN IT BE AS RELIABLE AS WHAT YOU GET FROM MATT AND CARL? “David’s performance has picked up tremendously since we changed this front suspension. Maybe if there are engine things or stuff like that they they might try. The other thing we have are the four RPM cars. We’ve got those guys over there that can be trying things. They are the same cars and same engines, same everything. We are looking at those guys to help us a little bit. I think it is kind of a collective effort between the whole organization, both RPM and our side.” IS DOVER ONE OF THE TRACKS THAT COULD SURPRISE FOLKS AS FAR AS MINDING YOUR P’S AND Q’S AND SECONDLY, AT KANSAS, HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT YOUR INTERMEDIATE TRACK STUFF? “I feel really strong about our mile-and-a-half program. We were really good at Michigan, Pocono and Kansas. We were good in Indy and Chicago. All those places we were super fast and it felt like the cars were driving well. Dover is one of my favorite places to go. I have a couple wins there and a bunch of top-fives. I am looking forward to going back there. This weekend, so far so good. The car is pretty decent. I think we ended up in the top-10 in practice there. Hopefully grab a top-10 qualifying spot. I think we have the same opportunity as all these guys here this weekend.” WITH STRONG TEAM TIES TO BOSTON, CAN YOU TALK ABOUT SOME OF THE FUN STUFF YOU HAVE DONE HERE, DRIVING THE DUCK, WORKING A DUNKIN DONUTS DRIVE THROUGH? “Yeah, I have had a lot of fun so far. They told us we were going on a duck tour and I was thinking I have seen a lot of ducks in my life. I wasn’t sure what we would be looking at. Come to find out it is a vehicle that takes you around Boston. Then the vehicle goes in the water as well. I learned a lot. I found out what a duck tour was and I recommend it highly for people that get an opportunity. It handled great, but not very fast so don’t be in a hurry to get anywhere. This morning, if any of you stopped by Dunkin’ Donuts I was working the drive thru. I stopped to get some coffee and I got behind there and packaged up some donuts and made some coffee. Being partners with Fenway sports group based in this area allowed us to have a lot of fun in the area. I got some free coffee out of the deal which is what I was mainly interested in. It was a lot of fun.”

    DOES THIS CHASE SET ITSELF UP TO BE DIFFERENT IN THAT NOBODY COMES IN WITH ANY TRUE MOMENTUM AND COULD THIS BE THE CHASE THAT 11 PEOPLE LOSE? “Yeah, it really does. A lot of people have asked me who my pick is or who the favorite is besides me. You have to put all the names in a basket and draw one out because it is a lottery draw at this point to me. I couldn’t pick one guy over the other for who I think is going to win this thing. It is as close as I have ever seen it competition wise. You look at the speed charts on the weekend and where everybody is running, it is going to be like that for 10 weeks. I think it is going to be the guy that has the least amount of mistakes or the least amount of damage. Damage control on the race track will be a big part. The guy that salvages a 13th place finish somewhere where things are going bad, versus finishing 23rd or worse is what is going to be the guy that wins it. The guy that can minimize the down side versus winning four or five of these things.” SIMPLE THINGS LIKE A LUG NUT AT TEXAS, WHICH COST YOU A CHAMPIONSHIP. COULD IT COME DOWN TO SOMETHING LIKE THAT? “Yeah, definitely. It could come down to a pit stop. In Atlanta we got a lug nut behind the wheel and we went from running fifth to the back of the pack and then got in an accident. Any of those things can happen. Texas in 2005 I had a loose wheel and lost a lap when I came in and there were no more cautions. There can be heart break as well. That is the damage I talked about on the downside. The guy that minimizes that, a guy that gets a flat, comes in, gets a lucky dog and finishes 13th. That is the kind of championship caliber drive it is going to take.” SOME OF THE DRIVERS HAVE SAID THAT YOU CAN’T WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP HERE AND YOU CAN’T LOSE IT HERE. IF YOU SUBSCRIBE TO THAT THEORY, WHEN DOES THIS CHASE REALLY START IN YOUR MIND? “I think that we all have our own opinion about it. My opinion is that you can lose the championship here. This race. If you do something boneheaded and back into a fence and finish 38th or 40th then you have a ways to go. I think that come Homestead, you lose it by 35, 40 or 50 points, you could say ‘Well, I made a mistake at Loudon and that was the race that cost it.’ We tend to look at the later races. For instance, the 39 not getting in to the Chase because he didn’t run well enough at Richmond. What about in the middle of the season when he did whatever? That one race cost him a chance to be in the Chase. You can pick any one of these 10 and say that it was the reason why you didn’t win the championship. It can’t be won here either. I won the first two in 2008 and I finished third in points. It can’t be won here, but you can certainly lose it.”

  • CHEVY NSCS AT NEW HAMPSHIRE TWO: Tony Stewart Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    SYLVANIA 300

    NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    SEPTEMBER 17, 2010

    TONY STEWART, NO. 14 OFFICE DEPOT/OLD SPICE CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and discussed racing at New Hampshire, his approach to the Chase, sponsorships and other topics. Full transcript:

    HOW LIKELY IS IT THAT A MAN CAN WIN FIVE STRAIGHT RACES? “If anybody can do it, that’s the team (Jimmie Johnson, No. 48) that can do it. But I think this is probably the best shot that 11 guys have had in four years to keep those guys from doing that. It’s the most competitive Chase field we’ve ever had. It’s really anybody’s game right now. There is a lot of racing that has to go on. There are a lot of variables out of our control each week. It’s no different today. They have just as good a shot this year as they’ve had the last four years of winning a championship. It’s not whether they can do it five times in a row. It’s can they do it this year? That’s the big thing.”

    WHEN YOU WON THE TITLE IN 2005, YOU DID IT WITHOUT WINNING A RACE IN THE CHASE. WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER ABOUT THAT CHASE? WHAT STANDS OUT?

    “Gosh, I couldn’t even tell you who ran second that year. I don’t even know who we were racing. The thing that I think everybody gets into trying to look for a pattern and I don’t think you can. There might be and it may play out into a pattern, but you can’t start the Chase thinking about a pattern that happened over the last two or three years because every year is different. There are so many things that can change and so many things that can go right or go wrong that it’s hard to say just because something has happened the last two or three years in a row, that it can happen that way again.”

    IN YOUR SEARCH FOR SPONSORSHIP, HAVE YOU BEEN FORCED TO TRY NEW APPROACHES OR APPROACH DIFFERENT KINDS OF COMPANIES THAT YOU DIDN’T NECESSARILY THINK YOU WOULD TRY TO REACH OUT TO? “I think you always have to be that way. I think you always have to think outside the box. When you’re selling something, and you go in there with the same approach that everybody else has, what makes your organization stand out from theirs? I think that’s kind of the way we thought about it from day one because we were a new company anyway, so it was easy to start with new ideas and a new approach.”

    EVEN WITH THE ECONOMY IN A SLUMP, IS IT SURPRISING THAT GUYS LIKE YOU AND JEFF GORDON, STARS OF THE SPORT, ARE LOOKING FOR SPONSORS AT THIS POINT IN THE SEASON? “Not necessarily. We all understand the situation. We all understand why corporate America has had to pull the reigns back a little bit. So is it a surprise and a shock? No, not necessarily. If you look in this garage area, it’s still a thriving sport and it’s still represented by a lot of Fortune 500 companies. I wouldn’t stand here and say that we’re all in bad shape, because the sport is very healthy right now. All you’ve got to do is walk through the garage area and see that.”

    HOW IMPORTANT IS A GOOD STARTING PLACE HERE AT NHMS GIVEN IT IS THE START OF THE CHASE? “It’s no different than it would be here in the spring. You approach this race just like you do the spring race. You can’t race with the Chase in mind. You have got to race the race and you have to take it one week at a time. We had a good practice this morning. I feel like we have a good base to start from tomorrow. It is a three-day weekend and we will literally take it one day at time and focus each day on what the job is and the what that task is for that day and not over think the rest of it. I think that is where you get yourself in trouble, just thinking about the stuff that is really out of our control right now. So you just focus on the things that we did to get ourselves in the Chase.”

    IF IT SUNNY TOMORROW, WILL YOU BE ABLE TO ADJUST TO THAT? WILL IT BE SMALL ADJUSTMENTS OR DOES IT MEAN YOU HAVE TO START OVER? “I think where we are at right now, small adjustments will get us there. We had those changing conditions…it wasn’t this cool obviously in the spring, but we had times during the weekend and even during the race where we had overcast skies for a long period and sunny periods. So, we know what we have to do to equal the car back out depending on how the conditions change.”

    THE IMPROVEMENTS YOU GUYS HAVE MADE OF LATE, WAS IT A GRADUAL IMPROVEMENT OF FINDING SMALL THINGS OVER TIME OR WAS THERE A EUREKA MOMENT? “No, there never was that big, big gain. It has been a lot of little things throughout the season, especially the last two and a half to three months I feel like. I’m happy with that. I’m not sure I wanted to find one big chunk. It’s nice to see that in different departments we found little things and it shows the whole organization is pulling their weight and working really hard and staying pumped up. It’s not just one group found something and everybody else was like ‘whew, we don’t have work for it’. Everybody is doing their part, finding their part of the equation to make us better.”

    WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO BE SUCCESSFUL AT DOVER? “It is a track that is kind of a two-phase deal. It is easy to get your car too tight in the center trying to get it to drive up off the corner nice and it seems like if you get it to rotate through the corner then it is way loose off. That’s the two things that you really battle there. It is the sacrifice of which one do you want to be a little bit off to accomplish having a balanced car.”

    HOW IMPORTANT WILL IT BE TO GET OUT OF DOVER AS CLEAN AS YOU POSSIBLY CAN? “It’s as important as the other nine that aren’t Dover. It is one of 10. It is one-tenth of the equation. There’s not going to be emphasis on one track versus another. We have to be setup for 10 races at 10 tracks. So, that is what we are doing.”

    ARE YOU WORRIED ABOUT ONE TRACK OR FOCUS MORE ON ONE? “No.”

    HOW DO YOU COMPARE THE ACCOMPLISHMENT OF MAKING IT AS A RACE CAR DRIVER AS TO THE ACCOMPLISHMENT OF GETTING YOUR TEAM TOGETHER? “The same as it was last year at this time. We did the same thing last year so it is the feeling is the same, the effort is the same. It is having the right people in the right positions which is the same thing we have talked about for the last year and a half also. Not of that has changed. You hire good people, you hire them to do the right jobs and then when I come here on the weekends. I worry about driving. Bobby Hutchens (Director of Competition) assumes that ownership role on the weekend for us and handles all that side of it.”

    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.

  • CHEVY NSCS AT NEW HAMPSHIRE TWO: Jeff Burton Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    SYLVANIA 300

    NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    SEPTEMBER 17, 2010

    JEFF BURTON, NO. 31 CATERPILLAR CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and discussed mindset heading into the Chase, who is the favorite; racing at New Hampshire, RCR having three cars in Chase, his approach to challenging tracks, Chase competitors trying to win their first race of the year and other topics. Full transcript:

    TALK ABOUT BEING BACK AT NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY AND KICKING OFF THE CHASE: “We ran real well all day, there were several people who ran real well all day too that had trouble. This has been a real good racetrack for us. The first race of the Chase is always real intense. It’s fun. The first race of the Chase is a lot of fun; there is a lot of pressure; it’s exciting. I’m proud to be here with the situation that we’re in and we’ll see if we can go get off to a good start.”

    OTHER THAN TALLADEGA WHICH IS ALWAYS KIND OF GOOFY, IS THERE ANOTHER TRACK THAT CONCERNS YOU OF THE TEN? “No, not really. Not one that sticks out. We’re going to unload somewhere and be not where we need to be and need to catch up. We don’t know where that is. Every track is going to be a challenge. There is not one that sticks out where we say, ‘Ok, this is problematic for us.’ They’re going to be some surprises. This weekend, we came here running really well last time and we typically run really well there, but we could unload here and be real off. We don’t know where the challenge will be right now, but there certainly will be one.”

    WHAT IS YOUR APPROACH TO TALLADEGA? “My approach at Talladega hasn’t worked real well because I haven’t won a race at Talladega. I’ve tried everything. I’ve tried to ride around, I’ve tried to be aggressive and be in the front, I’ve tried to kind of wait around and see how things are going. At the end of the day, it is. You go in there with a strategy and whatever that strategy is you just stick to it. It’s one of two things, it’s either be aggressive and go try to lead as many laps as you can, or it’s go ride around in the back. It’s nothing in between. I think the guys that ride around in 15th trying to not be aggressive I think that’s a major mistake. I think if you’re going to ride around, go ride around. My take on Talladega is do one of the two and whatever happens, happens.”

    HOW DOES THIS TRACK PLAY TO YOUR STRENGTHS? “That’s a good question. Honestly the best we’ve run here since the track was reconfigured was this last race. My success was prior to the track change, and because the track has changed so much and the way you run these racecars has changed so much that advantage got away. When I was winning a lot of races here the strategy of winning this race and running around this track fast wasn’t really about the center of the corner; it was about get in the corner deep and get off the corner fast and you kind of gave up the center of the corner. Well you can’t do that anymore. Today, drivers have learned to carry speeds through the center of the corners. They have faster cars that carry speed. Teams have started working on that, so that strategy has changed and that way of winning a race here has changed. I had to adjust and it’s hard to adjust when you’re doing well. It took me awhile to catch on, but that was our synergy of success for a long time.”

    YOU WERE KIND OF A VICTIM OF SUCCESS THEN? “I felt like I was. I just didn’t feel like I adapted as fast as I needed to.”

    A LOT OF CHASE GUYS ARE COMING TO THE RACES WITH NEW CHASSIS, BUT THERE ARE A LOT OF PEOPLE THAT VIEW THAT AS A RISK. CAN YOU TALK ABOUT WHY THAT IS? IS THAT LESS OF A RISK THEN IT USED TO BE WITH THE WAY TEAMS PREPARE NOW? “Well, if our program is running right our chassis 240 should be better than 239. If not, then don’t build 240. So we are constantly evolving our race cars and we are constantly trying to make them better. We do have more ways of measuring what a better car is today; we have more data ways without having to bring it to a racetrack. In today’s environment, we can’t go test car A compared to car B on a racetrack; there is nowhere to go do that. So we’ve made big investments in trying to find ways to do that at the shop and we have a good amount of confidence in those things. When we bring a new racecar out we’re bringing it out because we think it’s better than the one we had prior. By the way, this will be one of many new racecars that we bring out. We’ve geared our program up to be ready for the Chase and to be the best that we can be in the Chase and we believe that if we aren’t building better cars right now than what we had in June, it isn’t going to be good enough. That’s our thought process to it. We’ll see if that plays out or not, but in my eyes it’s a constant evolution.”

    WHAT CAR ARE YOU RACING THIS WEEKEND? “You know what, I don’t know what car it is anyway. When I come to the race track—I know what the game plan is for building new cars, I know what the strategy is for building new cars. The most we’ve run a car all year is like three times. Every car I sit in looks brand new. Hell, I wouldn’t know if it was four races old or brand new; they all look brand new to me. I’m much more comfortable with a company that is trying to be progressive and is trying to build something better now than what they were building yesterday. If I had came here—we ran really well here in the first race, we had a great chance to win that race—if we had brought that same car, and that would be the conservative strategy to bring that same car. I’m pretty sure the 48, the 20 the 18—I’m pretty sure all those guys are building new cars to bring cars that can go beat that. We have to do the same thing.”

    YOUR TEAMMATE SAID THAT HE IS ADMITTEDLY AGAINST A DIFFERENT POINTS FORMAT FOR THE GUYS IN THE CHASE. DO YOU AGREE WITH THAT? “I agree with him. I believe our series is built on racing the entire field. I believe that if you finish 35th, you should get 35th points. If you finish 35th, you should not get 12th place points. You should get the points you earn that day based on the entire field. There are a lot of reasons for that. If you win the race and you are a point guy, lets say three people finish second-third-fourth

    that aren’t in the Chase, well the next guy that’s in the Chase, he didn’t finish second. He finished fifth. When you compare him to you, that’s where he finished; he didn’t finish second, he wasn’t second best to you, he was fifth best to you and so he should be awarded fifth-place points. It would make the Chase more exciting going into Homestead because the fewer times your penalized for having bad races the better the championship hunt would be at the end of the season, but it is not the most fair way to crown a champion.”

    JEFF IT DOESN’T HAPPEN EVERY YEAR, BUT IT DIDN’T HAPPEN LAST YEAR; THE GUYS THAT GO INTO THE CHASE WITHOUT HAVING WON A RACE IT SEEMS HAVE A HARDER TIME WINNING IN THAT LAST 10-RACE STRETCH THAN THE GUYS THAT DID WIN. IS IT HARDER TO WIN ONCE YOU GET INTO THE CHASE, OR IS IT JUST 10 MORE RACES? “Well, I think they’re 10 more races, but I do think that everybody steps their game up. There is a reason that you haven’t won. You know, our weaknesses were exposed. It wasn’t that we weren’t fast enough; it was that we didn’t have the right pit stop, we didn’t have the right move by me, we didn’t have the right strategy. The questions for the teams that haven’t won races are, ‘have you been able to fix your weakness?’ It is hard to fix weaknesses in a year. I think that’s why it’s hard to win if you haven’t won, because there is a reason that you haven’t won. It’s hard to adjust those things throughout a year. I believe that everybody is going to bring their best the next 10 weeks, everybody is trying to elevate their program and it does get harder. I hope that it would get harder.”

    WHAT WOULD BE YOUR IDEAL FORMAT AND DOES TWEAKING THE CHASE DE-LEGITIMIZE THE SYSTEM? “I don’t want to say I don’t car because obviously I do care, because if I didn’t care I wouldn’t have made the comment I made about how you award points. But part of me doesn’t care at all. Because whatever the points are……it’s the same for everybody. And it’s building the race team, its driving the car; it’s all the things you have to do when the rules are the same for everybody. So you can take advantage of those rules. I like the Chase format and I think the playoff type system is fun and it’s what sports are all about. Sports are about pressure-filled, high-energy moments when there is a lot on the line and the more of a tournament atmosphere you can bring to it the more opportunities there are for that.

    “At the same time, I like the traditional body of work meaning something. You know? I think your body of work should mean something. So, combining those two things in some form or fashion is the right thing to do. Which by the way, is what we have. So I don’t think we need major changes but the thing that we lack or potentially lack is a Super Bowl. Where there are two teams, maybe even three or four teams, where it’s zero to zero and you kick the ball off. We lack that a little bit, and it would be cool to have that, but you can only have that be legitimate if your body of work still has to mean something. You can’t just say, ‘okay its zero to zero, last two cars have at it in the last race’. It’s not what our sport has been about but there is part of me that says, ‘wow, that is really exciting’. How many super bowls do you guys go to where there are half the people who aren’t even watching the game? You know? But they are there for the party. And that is what is cool about the Super Bowl, it’s a national event. And the more we can do those kinds of things, the better it is for our sport. And on top of that, there is one person who always wins the pool who doesn’t even know who is playing (laughs). And that really pisses you off.”

    ON THE POSSIBILITY OF JIMMIE JOHNSON AND THE 48 TEAM BEING MORE VULNERABLE THIS YEAR THAN IN THE PAST. WHY IS THAT A PREVAILING THOUGHT?

    “Because he doesn’t hold the trophy for the fifth time. When I say that and you guys know my opinion on this, I think we re-write history. How many of the last four years, of those four years, did you go in there and say, ‘well, the 48 is hot right now’. ‘The 48 is by far the favorite.’ It hasn’t been there every time. They haven’t dominated every race and they haven’t dominated………so I think that everybody is looking for an opening but again, I go back and I watch what has gone on in prior years and they have always certainly been a top pick but its

    never been a lock. You know? They made it a lock because they went and got the job done. So I don’t think they are any more vulnerable this year than they were last year. I happened to think they were vulnerable last year. And they were vulnerable the year before. The same way every sports team is. There is no team that is not vulnerable. And if it was, then Duke wouldn’t have beaten UNLV and knocked them out of the tournament. If people weren’t vulnerable then the Giants wouldn’t have won the Super Bowl a few years ago. Every team is vulnerable.”

    ON MEMORIES THAT YOU HOPE YOU NEVER FORGET? “Man, you are asking me to get out of my comfort zone here. Professionally and personally are two different categories. Professionally there has been………..it’s really hard to say. You know professionally it’s been winning Dover racing Matt Kenseth to me was a big moment because I respect him so much. I don’t know………..I am much better about looking ahead than looking behind. The birth of my children, you know obviously….it’s really hard to answer that question because I am so into Chase mode and getting this thing going that my mind is on that. Get back with me on that. My brain is just not there.”

    ON HOW MUCH IS MENTAL TOUGHNESS A PART OF STAYING IN THE CHASE: “I think mental toughness is always important. It’s easy when things are going well. You know what I mean? When things are going well, it’s easy to be mentally tough. The question is when the chips are down, who is going to be mentally tough? The chips are going to be down for everybody at some point in this Chase and those will be the defining moments in this Chase and who can come through those……..that’s going to determine who the winner is. So I think mental toughness is real important and I think attitude is real important and not for only the drivers but for everybody on the team. There has got to be a desire to win it. You know, everybody wants to win it but the question is who is going to sacrifice to win it and what are you willing to sacrifice and be willing to give up? And I feel like my group of people will give up just about anything to win this thing and I feel like I will too. Short of our integrity…….we are not going to give up our integrity. But short of that we are willing to make a lot of sacrifices to do what needs to happen.”

    ON WHETHER THE MULTI-CAR TEAMS HAVE A BETTER CHANCE AT NOT HAVING A PART FAILURE IN THE CHASE “There is not a team in the Chase that doesn’t have a lot of people. Every team is at least a two-car team or three-car team. Stewart-Haas is a two-car team but they have a lot of help from Hendrick so…….or I assume they have a lot of help from Hendrick…so every team has enough people to answer the call. I think it’s very important for every team not to fail. I hear a lot about ‘well, we can’t do this or we can’t do that’ and I am really tired about talking about it. Let’s talk about what we can do. There is a lot of talk and when Chases start, and races start its ‘well we can’t do this, and we shouldn’t do that’ and you know……no kidding. ‘We can’t break a motor’ and I am like, ‘really?” (laughs). I am more about what are we going to do to make more horsepower and more torque and not break the motor. Sometimes when you get in that mode of we can’t do this and we can’t do that, you start forgetting about what it is you can do. So our approach to this thing is more about what we should be doing and what we can be doing and what we need to be doing versus what we are not going to do. You know, we are going to make some mistakes along the way. Every team is. No team is going to not have a bad pit stop, not have the perfect strategy or perfect set-up. You know? What have you got and what can you do with it? That is what this thing is all about.”

    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.

  • CHEVY NSCS AT NEW HAMPSHIRE TWO: Jimmie Johnson Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    SYLVANIA 300

    NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    SEPTEMBER 17, 2010

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/JOHNS MANVILLE CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and discussed racing at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, the Chase and other topics. Full transcript:

    ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO RACING AT NEW HAMPSHIRE THIS WEEKEND? “Excited. Ran well here in the spring, qualified decent and ran up front all day long. Excited for our chances. I think these first two races are going to be really good for the 48 team. I’m hopeful to come out and get a win and ideally get two wins. Really get everybody worried about the No. 48 team and doing our job. We’re excited. Kerry (Tharp, NASCAR PR), no worries, I announced that I am the 2009 Male Athlete of the Year and did my opening comments. Way too much information.”

    BEYOND TALLADEGA, IS THERE A RACE TRACK THAT CONCERNS YOU IN THE CHASE? “I felt like what I experienced last year with Texas, you really are vulnerable anywhere you go. I know a lot of people make Martinsville up to be a wild card race and it certainly is because of the close contact, but Martinsville you can hit the fence, you can hit someone else and in most cases, keep going. Texas, I felt like the mile-and-a-halves, you would have room and you could avoid situations and that was my belief last year and I was caught up in something that kind of has changed my mind. Maybe it hasn’t changed my mind, but it’s made the reality for me that anything can happen anywhere. I tried not to be sucked into that because last year we had so much momentum and so much going on. It just seemed like things were really going to happen for us and then Texas was the reality check that this thing isn’t really over until you run every mile at every race.”

    CAN YOU TAKE YOURSELF OUT OF A CHANCE TO WIN BY WORRYING ABOUT WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN AT A RACE TRACK? “I really think that a driver and team needs to continue doing what they’ve been doing and if you’re a team that doesn’t think and spends a lot of time thinking and now you’re spending all this time worrying about stuff that will probably hurt you. Ideally you just have to do what you know and what got you to this point. For me, that’s not thinking – I’m not good at thinking.”

    DOES NEW HAMPSHIRE AND THEN DOVER FAVOR ANY TEAMS IN THE CHASE? “First of all, we all think that a fast start is needed to win the Chase. In ’06, it wasn’t the case so we all say that but until we get to race six or seven, the race strategy of what it really takes isn’t going to be clear yet. Yes we are all hopeful to get off to a good start here and for our team and the fact that we’ve been very consistent and running in the top-five here the last few times. Then Dover has been such a good track for us, it gets us really excited as the Lowe’s team that we can hopefully run where we should and run up front and collect a lot of points. Lead a lap or lead some laps and get off to a fast start in the Chase. We’re hopeful for that, but if it doesn’t happen then we’ll spin it in a way that says in ’06 you didn’t need to and there’s still hope and there’s still nine races and it probably drives all of you crazy, the positions we take week after week. We’ve got to give ourselves hope somehow.”

    WHY DO YOU HAVE CONFIDENCE AT DOVER? “For me, it’s really just the history that I have at these race tracks. Dover was my first big track that I ran in ASA and sat on the pole, led a bunch of laps and had a puncture with the tire and took me out of it. Nationwide, loved it. Cup career have loved it and won a lot there. It is a place though that if something goes wrong and outside of the spin I had in qualifying, you’re going to hit something. You can spin like a top down the front stretch, but I’m just glad I didn’t hit anything. It will eat you up. I may be coming back to a question we had at the start, I’m going with what I know and going to continue to drive the car as I always have and Dover is a track that I just love driving. I’m looking forward to it and am going to go in there with that mindset and try to put the fear out of my mind and go for a win.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE INTERMEDIATE TRACKS IN THE CHASE AND PEOPLE SAYING THEY NEED TO ‘JIMMIE-PROOF’ THE CHASE? “I guess I take a little pride in it because it means we’ve been doing our jobs. It’s such a fragile environment, living it myself, I know we’ve had four awesome years, but anything could have happened at any time from the way I see it. It’s very difficult to operate at this high level in this sport that is so competitive with so many superstars that are out there. I take a little pride in that comment, but at the same time, I know this is a tough road to hoe.”

    IS YOUR INTERMEDIATE PROGRAM AS GOOD AS IT HAS BEEN IN THE PAST? “I think I made these comments a few months ago when we were getting into the summer that the mile-and-a-halves were a little tough for us. It seems like we’ve been able to qualify well, then as the race goes on we just couldn’t adjust the cars the way we needed to. We led a lot of laps at Chicago, there’s some other tracks where we would start well and then fade. Michigan, we started up front and then just really couldn’t get the car tuned in right as the race went on. We see some tracks where we ran well, but had a spin at Chicago, use that as an example. I felt like we would have finished well there. Then we look at Michigan and feel like we didn’t run like we should have and that does worry me. A few of those tracks, including Indy, we start up front and just a slow fade to the back. What makes me feel good about that going into the Chase is how we ran in Atlanta. We went back to the 48-style stuff and what we know and had a car that maybe wasn’t the fastest all night long, but a car that we could adjust on and improve and at the end of the race I had a shot to win. If we didn’t have Atlanta, I would be a little more concerned, but Atlanta gave us a lot of direction and I think we’ll be competitive on the mile-and-a-halves. I’m not sure that we’re as strong as we’ve been there in the past on those style of tracks, but we do have some time yet to kind of sort things out.”

    ARE YOU MORE COMFORTABLE USING THE CAR YOU WON WITH IN JUNE OR DO YOU WISH YOU HAD BROUGHT A NEW CAR? “Just depends on your team and what’s going on that year. Through the summer in some of these races that we’ve struggled at, we’ve been trying new stuff. From different style clips on cars to setups and sometimes you think you need to keep moving forward to keep up with guys and we go down that road and it doesn’t pan out for us. So we’ve actually back-tracked a little bit and have gone back to stuff more like the start of the year and early spring that really works for us. You never know. You have to stay looking forward and the stuff we were working on through the summer, we haven’t put it away, we just need to figure out another piece or two to put with it. Our minds are always thinking forward, but at times you can get ahead of yourself in some respects. The Childress guys have had a lot of momentum lately, they’ve been bringing great cars to the track all year and there are times and they might be the example that when you keep using new stuff and you have the right direction, you can bring better equipment to the track each time. Right now, we’re not really in that position. We have a lot that we want to bring, we just need to sort it out a little bit more.”

    HAVE YOU ARRIVED AS A GOLFER? “Oh no. Far from it. It was a cool spread and glad to be in it, but I’m still 25 handicap. Golf is a means to drinking beer for me so it’s still the same thing for me. I am 35, am I getting close to that Senior status?”

    IS THERE A STRATEGY TO WIN AT NEW HAMPSHIRE?: “In the spring we had a great car in the long haul and we came down to some short runs at the end and that really played into the 2 (Kurt Busch) car’s hands. We put on a good race and moved each other out of the way to fight for the win and sort things out. This track is so difficult because what you need for the long run and we have a lot of long runs through the middle of the race will not work for a five lap shootout. You just have to pick your poison. Are you going to worry about the end of the race and just hope you don’t go a lap down and hope you maintain decent track position or do you work on the car like you normally do and try to make it good for an entire fuel run. Of course we’re trying to balance it, but it’s a really tough thing to do here. I would assume we’re going to have short runs at the end, but we need to keep our eyes on that this weekend and make sure our car’s right.”

    DO YOU CARE ABOUT THE PERCEPTION OF THE FANS AND COMPETITORS OF YOUR ABILITY TO DO WELL IN THIS CHASE? “With what we’ve done and what I’ve heard through being in there week after week, that chance is there. I’m not sure that one race would make the garage area say, ‘Oh man, the 48’s there.’ In my eyes I try to think about it realistically, if we’re able to run well here, Dover and get two or three races linked together then we might be able to pick up something like that. I sure hope I do and I would love to put our team in that position that see if it really makes a difference or not. Early in the Chase, at least in my experience, it’s easy to not get too emotionally attached to things. At the end of the Chase when you have a shot and you can see Homestead out there and you’re one of the two or three guys that has a chance, your mind does a lot of weird things on you. If I can build some momentum until then and be a player and a factor at that point, I think we can get some heads. Until then, these guys are too strong, too smart and I don’t think they would allow that to go on.”

    HOW DIFFERENT ARE YOU THIS WEEK HEADING INTO NEW HAMPSHIRE? “I made those comments in New York doing the media stuff and I woke up this morning, put together a crib and put together the little mobile on it and got the bath tub out and got everything setup. Then I was like, ‘Oh yeah, we’ve got media coming up and practice.’ I know I have said that point comes where it hits you and it hasn’t yet so I know it’s the Chase, I know what’s going on and walking the garage area and take my job seriously and do everything that I need to, but each year I have had more fun in the Chase. I am hoping that this is a sign that I am more relaxed, enjoying the moment and I’m going to give 100 percent either way so the less I stress about things, I think the better I’m going to run. I’ve seen that trend as well. I’m excited, I’m relaxed and looking forward to the Chase and we’ll see what happens. Hopefully I can be more relaxed this year and enjoy the experience and make even better decisions yet because I’m in the right place in my life.”

    DID YOU LOOK AT THE TIME WHEN YOU GOT UP THIS MORNING? “I jumped in the shower at 10:20 and was panicked. I was like, I have to get to the media center so I was just kind of occupied doing other stuff.”

    WHAT IS YOUR LEVEL OF VELNERABILITY AND WHAT COMPETITOR CONCERNS YOU GOING INTO THE CHASE?: “We’ve had enough slow summers that I don’t feel vulnerable going into the Chase. I know the tracks that are on the schedule and we all know how good they are for me and they all give me a lot of hope and excitement moving forward. I don’t think that I’m any different this year than last year. Stats may show that this year I’m actually in better shape than I was last year. I can play into that stuff and let it change my mind a little bit emotionally. Either way I know that I’ve got great tracks coming up. I know that we respond well to pressure and I’m excited for it. I feel good about things. I’m also a realist and I look at that two ways – one, and I’m only 10 points out now so that gives everyone a lot of hope because the furthest out is 60. Then from there I have to go out and look at these final 10 as this is the start of the season and we’re at Daytona again or wherever again, it has started over. I’m not going to stress about the past, I’m not going to carry baggage in from the regular season and I hope my team doesn’t. I feel confident with the conversations we’ve had that we’re all on the same page and we’re on a clean sheet of paper and it’s time to go. I know we say this every year that we’re up here and that everyone has a chance, but honestly it’s a wide, there’s a wide group of guys that can win this thing. We’ve seen the Stewart-Haas stuff coming along, Roush cars are fast again, RCR (Richard Childress Racing) cars have been great, Gibbs cars have been good and Denny (Hamlin) has been a little streaky like I have, but the 18 (Kyle Busch) has been real consistent lately, Denny is coming off of a win – it’s going to be exciting. I’ve got my teammate Jeff (Gordon), he’s been real consistent all year long and I put a lot of weight in a past champion’s hands when it comes to a championship battle. You’ve been there and done that and you know how to deal with the pressures that come with it. I think it’s going to be a really good Chase.”

    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.

  • CHEVY NSCS AT NEW HAMPSHIRE TWO: Clint Bowyer Press Conference Transcript

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    SYLVANIA 300

    NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    SEPTEMBER 17, 2010

    CLINT BOWYER, NO. 33 CHEERIOS/HAMBURGER HELPER CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and discussed the start of the Chase, momentum and consistency, his home track of Kansas Speedway and other topics. Full transcript:

    TALK ABOUT YOUR OUTLOOK AS THE CHASE STARTS THIS WEEKEND: “I’m looking forward to it. I’m excited to be in the Chase. Our team is excited. It’s just a whole new rejuvenation for our race team. We’re starting over. When we went into this thing, if you think about it, we were 500 points out. And we’re 60 points out. That’s a big change in one race time. So, ten races to go. This is a fun atmosphere to be in. We’re excited about it. There are good race tracks for us. There are ten tracks that are really good for me. I think we’ll be good.”

    GOING BACK TO KANSAS IN A COUPLE OF WEEKS, CAN YOU EXPLAIN TO US THE FIRST TIME THAT YOU KNEW YOU WERE GOING TO RUN THERE? AND DO YOU STILL GET BUTTERFLIES GOING BACK THERE? “It all started driving down the road to Lakeside (Speedway in Kansas City, KS); I remember when it was a housing development. Never in a million years would you have looked at that area right there going down 435 and said this is going to be a huge racing complex with a shopping mall and everything that’s over there. It’s unbelievable how much that race track has brought to that area and Wyandotte Country. When it was being built, to drive by it when it was being built, and when it was, to go to the first race and be in the infield hanging out with your buddies and watching a race and dreaming of racing there. To go back there and compete, not only compete, but to compete at the top level of motorsports, it’s a pretty neat feeling.”

    YOU HAD TO FOCUS SO MUCH ON MAKING SURE THAT YOU GOT INTO THE CHASE, ARE THERE ANY CONCERNS THAT YOU DIDN’T HAVE ADEQUATE TIME TO PREPARE FOR EVERYTHING ONCE YOU GOT INTO IT? “No, we had a brand new car ready for it, the first race of the Chase. It wasn’t like we weren’t prepared. It’s not like you work so hard to get in the Chase and your fizzled. Everybody’s excited. Like I said, this is a whole rejuvenation for our race team. Just the sheer excitement of being in the Chase is worth something. And then if you go back and look at our record, my record even before these ten races, these are good race tracks for us. We’ve never finished outside the top five when we’ve been in the Chase. Go back and look at last season even when we weren’t in the Chase, those ten races were my best races of the year. And I think we can improve for sure off of where we’re at right now.”

    DO YOU FEEL YOU ARE AT AN ADVANTAGE BY NOT BEING CONSIDERED A TOP CONTENDER FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP? “Yes, absolutely and that is what I am looking most forward to is being the underdog and being that afterthought. Everybody puts the pressure…I mean, did you hear how many questions Jimmie Johnson just answered? And that was all pressure-related. How are you going to handle the pressure? What are you going to do this time to win your fifth championship? My teammate Kevin Harvick, I was in New York listening to him answer those same exact questions because of the way he has run all season long for 26 races. We haven’t answered one of them. The only thing you guys want to know from us is how do you think you can do. That is great. It reminds me a lot of 2007. The same scenario. We came and won the first race and kind of set the tempo for the Chase and for our race team as well. I hope that I can back that up. I think that we can run at that level. I think our cars are good enough too. Probably better than they were. We’ve got some room to improve and we need to improve if we are going to win a championship and compete with these guys for 10 races. The way our cars have run all year, Kevin has done a good job of showing our potential at RCR. If we can match that for 10 races like he has for 26, somebody at RCR should win.”

    YOUR TEAM HAS BEEN ONE OF THE MOST CONSISTENT IN RECENT WEEKS. NOW THAT YOU HAVE QUALIFIED FOR THE CHASE, WHAT KIND OF ATTITUDE DIFFERENCE IS THERE WITH THE TEAM, YOU USED THE TERM REJUVENATING AT RICHMOND, HOW PALPABLE IS THAT? “I think it is everything. Confidence and momentum is everything in any sport I think. They both feed off of each other. The last month has been a lot of momentum and has brought a lot of confidence to our race team. I think, hopefully, we can continue to ride that wave as long as we can. If we could carry that throughout the Chase, we can be a force to be reckoned with, just like we were in 2007. That is the thing about my Chase, in my opinion, that is different from any other years. You don’t have that dominate organization. You have got every organization in it that is very strong, very capable of winning racing and we have seen it all year long. Everybody has had their time in the sun. I think it is going to be the same thing. I think you are going to go into Homestead with anywhere from three to six cars with a shot at winning the championship. I think that is going to be big for our sport.”

    WE’VE SPENT WEEKS DEBATING WHO IS IN THE TEAM AND WHO HAS THE BEST CHANCE TO WIN, SOME SAYING THAT OUTSIDE DISTRACTIONS SUCH AS RUNNING THEIR OWN ORGANIZATION WILL BE AN ISSUE, DOES ANY OF THAT REALLY MATTER? “I really don’t think it does. The only one with a sheer advantage, in my opinion, is Jimmie Johnson. He’s won four in a row. Everybody is chasing after him and there has got to be a level of intimidation there. Everybody else, all it is, you have to be able to get on that roll, get on a rhythm and find that mojo. If you can carry that thru 10 races, you are going to find yourself a champion. That is how close the racing is. I think the one that is the most consistent always wins the championship. If you have a bad race, as close as this racing is, I don’t think there is time to make for.”

    AS CLOSE AS THE FIELD IS, WOULD IT SURPRISE YOU IF SOMEBODY BROKE OUT EARLY AND STARTED WINNING RACES AND GETTING A BIG LEAD? “I just don’t see the way Jimmie Johnson won four out of the 10 races or whatever he did to dominate a Chase. He surprised us all before, and he may. But I just don’t think that any one team is going to break out and be head and shoulders above everybody else.”

    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.

  • CHEVY NSCS AT NEW HAMPSHIRE TWO: Kevin Harvick Press Conference

    NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

    SYLVANIA 300

    NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

    SEPTEMBER 17, 2010

    KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 SHELL-PENNZOIL CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and discussed getting into the Chase, the mindset of the Chase, sponsorship in NASCAR, RCR having three cars in the Chase and other topics. Full transcript:

    TALK ABOUT YOUR OUTLOOK THIS WEEKEND AT NEW HAMPSHIRE AND STARTING THE CHASE: “For us, I think we just have to keep doing the things that we did up until this point. We won a few races, had a lot of top-fives and top-10 finishes. On the days where we really struggled, I felt like we, for the most part, made something out of those days. It was good enough to lead the points in the first 26 (races) so there is really no reason for us to change our strategy. I feel like the guys have done a great job of getting the cars prepared. They have built four or five new cars. We’ll see what happens. Whether we win or lose, I think everybody has done everything we can control. We’ll just go race now.”

    HOW DOES IT MAKE YOU FEEL WHEN PEOPLE SAY TO JIMMIE JOHNSON WHO CAN STOP YOU HERE AND HE SAYS YOU? “I think everybody is proud of everything that we have done to get turned around. If you had told me at the start of the year that the turn-around was going to be as good as it has been, I think we’d all have chuckled a little bit and said ‘We hope so’, but you never know how it is going to turn out until you start racing. It is kind of like these last 10 week, you never know what is going to happen until you get in here and race. Just proud of everybody. I think everybody is jacked up and just ready to go race and see where we stack up in the end.”

    DO YOU THINK THAT PUTS PRESSURE ON YOU BY BEING LABELED THE FAVORITE BY JOHNSON? “I think he is still the guy to beat. I mean, he has won the last four so how can he not be until somebody beats him?”

    WHAT DOES IT MENTALLY FEEL LIKE TO GO FROM A POINTS LEAD OF OVER 200 POINTS AND GO INTO THE CHASE 30 POINTS DOWN TO THE LEADER? “For me, I just quit looking at the points about half-way through the year because things were going so good, it didn’t really matter. We knew what we were racing toward and that was a reset of the points and we needed to figure out how to win more and we did. We started winning races. Then as we got closer to the Chase, we just raced and that is really all we did. Now, it is time to think about going back to leading laps and going back, if you aren’t in contention to lead laps, you have to figure out how to get those five points. You have to figure out how to qualify decent and do all the little things that we did up until that point. Myself and the whole team knew what direction we were racing toward at the end of race 26, so the points didn’t really matter. Once we got to a point of knowing we were headed toward the Chase, we started thinking about the Chase and we didn’t even look, it didn’t even matter.”

    ALL THE CHILDRESS CARS HAVE NEW CHASSIS HERE THIS WEEKEND, CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE THOUGHT PROCESS TO DO THAT? SOME MIGHT THINK THAT IS A RISK TO COME HERE WITH SOMETHING YOU HAVEN’T RUN HERE BEFORE? “We think that is a good thing. Those cars were built and massaged and rubbed-on and really feel like they have been very detailed out as far as cars on the race track. That is part of the process of what we feel like we did right coming into the Chase, was build new cars that take more lead, that make more downforce and that’s why we saved them until now. The good thing about all the things we do now is we have wind tunnels and we have the shaker rig and the pull-down machines and everything that we put these cars on. You know what your good cars are, so you go and put them all in that direction and you try to make them better. They are so good at building the cars now; I don’t really think it is a risk. I think it is a good thing. I think you’ll see that over the next several weeks. A lot of new cars coming out of our stable. I know there has been a lot of talk about the un-predictability of what you bring to the race track, but I feel like our quality control is better than everybody else’s. The things that we do; the processes that we put our cars through to make sure they are built right and make the right downforce. The downforce is in the right spot. That is something that we do really good. I think RCR has always been very good at their quality control issues with the engine department and that has bled over into the manufacturing department of the cars.”

    YOU HAVE A NEW SPONSOR FOR YOUR TRUCK THIS WEEKEND, JEGS, WHICH IS NORMALLY DRAG RACING. CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THAT PROGRAM? “I think Jegs has been a part of us, whether it’s been just small pieces here and there for the last couple, probably three years actually, this will be the third year. They decided they wanted to venture out. They do the contingency program on the Cup and Nationwide sides. It is a big step for those guys to step out of the drag racing world and come over into the Truck series and be the primary sponsor. They have become good friends of ours and we are looking forward to running well this weekend and hopefully having a good showing for them and showing them that the NASCAR side will work well for them.”

    WHERE DOES SPONSORSHIP STAND WITH KHI FOR NEXT YEAR? ARE YOU SURPRISED THAT BIG NAMES LIKE TONY STEWART AND JEFF GORDON ARE HAVING TROUBLE SECURING FULL SPONSORSHIP FOR NEXT YEAR?

    “We’ve been very fortunate on the sponsorship side. Hopefully in the next three or four weeks we should have a lot of things wrapped up. And that’s a good thing. Our intentions are to still compete in both as they currently stand in the Truck Series and the Nationwide Series with the vehicles that we have and hopefully maybe a few more races than what we currently run. Everybody has done a great job from a Cup car to the Nationwide cars. Our current sponsors are all going to still be involved from the Nationwide side and many of them on the Truck side. For us, we’ve been very fortunate to have a lot of success on the sponsorship side and things are going great.”

    CAN YOU CONTRAST WHERE THIS ORGANIZATION WAS A YEAR AGO COMING TO NEW HAMPSHIRE, AND HOW VASTLY DIFFERENT IT IS NOW FOR THE ENTIRE RCR ORGANIZATION TO HAVE THREE CARS IN THE CHASE? WHEN DID THE ACTUAL TURNAROUND BEGIN? “The actual turnaround began in Indianapolis last year. That was our first generation of new cars with some different set-up things that were implemented into the cars at that particular time. From that point on it’s been a building process to get things headed in that direction. Richard (Childress) made a few more personnel moves as we went through that time and over the off-season. But really last year at this time, we had had a crappy year but the direction was headed in the right direction when we came here last year so everybody had started to calm down to a certain degree, knowing that the year was shot but that the direction was going in the right direction. So, I still say for the No. 29 team the key race for us was still California and just knowing that we had cars that were capable of competing. I felt like I made a big mistake and that was a huge eye-opener for everybody to get back in that mindset of remembering what you do when you win races and not forcing things.”

    WHEN YOU WERE GOING THROUGH THAT, DID YOU EVER THINK YOU COULD GET ALL THREE CARS INTO THE CHASE? “It’s been more than normal to get the three cars than it has to not. For us, that was something we’d done pretty well at through the years. Last year was definitely more abnormal than the norm that we’d been used to. I think last year made us better. I think those struggles definitely made us better.”

    YOU TALKED ABOUT JIMMIE JOHNSON BEING THE FAVORITE, BUT OBVIOUSLY YOU’VE GOT TO BELIEVE IN YOUR OWN ABILITY TO WIN THIS CHASE. SO WHY CAN YOU WIN IT? WHY WILL YOU WIN? “I think we have the best chance to win just because of the mindset that we’ve been able to put ourselves in going into it first off; and that came from running well in the first 26 weeks and running through almost three Chases leading up until this point. Until you beat the guy that’s won four times is one thing, but I think our shot at being able to win and have a chance to win the championship is there. It’s just a matter of how it all unfolds in 10 weeks. All 12 teams are capable of getting on a hot streak at any time. We’ve all been here before. We’ve all won championships in some sort of racing division at some time. So it’s just a matter of who puts these 10 weeks together and who gets on that hot streak.”

    DO YOU NEED TO BE BETTER THAN YOU WERE DURING THE REGULAR SEASON?

    “I don’t think so. I think if we do what we did in the regular season I don’t think we need to be any better.”

    EVERYBODY BASICALLY DREADS TALLADEGA. BUT IS THERE A TRACK OTHER THAN TALLADEGA THAT YOU ARE MOSTLY CONCERNED ABOUT? “I look forward to Talladega. I think the way that our superspeedway stuff has gone this year, and I know that can turn at any moment, but I look forward to the challenge of Talladega and putting ourselves in the position to race there. For us, the biggest hiccup has been Charlotte and we ran okay there this year and hopefully we can build on that and a lot of race tracks that we’ve gone to that we thought we had struggled at in the past, past stats haven’t stacked up for us as far as what we’ve done at particular race tracks. I think Michigan is a great example. So we just go out and race and I don’t think of a weak point for us that we have; there’s going to be a week that we don’t run good but I don’t think going in there we’re going to think that we’re going to run bad. So, Charlotte would be the one that sticks out in these 10 weeks. You can go to any of these race tracks and say that you’ve had a bad day at some particular moment. I think we’re looking forward to all of them right now.”

    DO YOU AGREE WITH TONY STEWART THAT MAYBE THE CHASE GUYS COULD HAVE THEIR OWN POINT SYSTEM SEPARATE FROM THE OTHER 33 GUYS AND IF YOU HAVE A BAD FINISH, IT’S ONLY AMONG YOURSELVES AND NOT AMONG EVERYBODY?

    “All right, you’re going to get me started on points and Chases and that stuff (laughter). The part of this sport that I like the most is that it requires you to race all 43 guys. And the part that sticks out to me the most is if you want to create a points championship that has one or two point increments and you can have a bad week, having a bad week is part of this sport. And if you finish 43rd, you still have to race the other 43 guys. If you want to have your own point system, let’s just have 12 cars on the track and call it I-ROC, because it won’t work. So, you’ve got to race against all 43 guys. Durability has always been a part of this sport and being creative and how far you can push things and having wrecks. Creating its own point system for the Chase would be a total mistake because that’s not what our sport is about. Our sport is about guys trying to make the race and people having to put their stuff on the trailer and go home. It’s always been (about) who could not break engines and who could not break parts and who could not break pieces. So I think you’d open up a can of worms. It wouldn’t be fun because it’s still not about 12 guys.”

    ON DOVER, YOU FINISHED 7TH THERE EARLIER THIS YEAR AND THAT COULD BE A WILD CAR FOR SOME OF THE GUYS BECAUSE THINGS HAPPEN SO FAST

    “Dover is a cool race track. It’s fast. But there can be a wreck off of Turn 2 that will swallow up 10 or 15 cars. We’ve been on both sides of that fence. We did run well there at the beginning of the year. Hopefully we can do the same thing when we go back. It’s one of those race tracks that lets you know how fast you’re going, not only when you’re going around the race track, but if you happen to hit something. It’s a fun race track but it can eat you up pretty fast.”

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  • Hot 20 over the past 10 try to become the hot one over the last 10

    Hot 20 over the past 10 try to become the hot one over the last 10

    26 races down and now the Chase begins. With the points for those in the top dozen reset, it essentially comes down to who will get hot over these last ten events and claim the season crown.

    Denny Hamlin leads Jimmie Johnson by ten as they venture to New Hampshire on Sunday. Sure, neither have exactly been blazing a trail to the title just yet, though Hamlin thawed out to win last week and both have done very well at the Loudon track.

    Carl Edwards has been the hot hand in recent weeks, but he has never won at the New England venue. Tony Stewart and every other Chaser, with the exception of Matt Kenseth, have visited that Victory Lane at least once. Jeff Burton has been there four times. It would be a good time for the invisible man to take off the bandages and be seen.

    Clint Bowyer has sure been noticed in recent weeks, and for good reason. Kyle Busch seems to be waking from his slumber, while brother Kurt has six top tens in ten weeks. His misfortune is that when he isn’t up front, he is somewhere near the back of the pack.

    Then there are those previewing for 2011. Juan Pablo Montoya, Jamie McMurray, and David Reutimann have been among our best in recent weeks. Can they go from being considered pretenders to potential contenders by the time we go into winter hibernation?

    As they begin the Chase, here are our top 20 over the past ten events…

    1 (2) Carl Edwards – 1495 pts – 5 Top Fives, 8 Top Tens
    Some cousins are kissin’, some are flippin’

    2 (1) Tony Stewart – 1434 pts – 1 Win, 4 Top Fives, 7 Top Tens
    Does this make Tony the under dog?

    3 (3) Kevin Harvick – 1389 pts – 2 Wins, 5 Top Fives, 6 Top Tens
    It has been fun till now, but the real season is about to begin.

    4 (5) Jeff Burton – 1363 pts – 3 Top Fives, 5 Top Tens
    Might wind up being the Kenseth of 2010.

    4 (6) Clint Bowyer – 1363 pts – 3 Top Fives, 6 Top Tens
    This is another Clint who might dare you to make his day.

    6 (4) Jeff Gordon – 1351 pts – 3 Top Fives, 5 Top Tens
    Number 5 is alive, but can he keep it that way?
        
    7 (12) Juan Pablo Montoya – 1346 pts – 1 Win, 1 Top Five, 5 Top Tens
    Too late for this year, but this fall could be a preview of the spring

    8 (15) Kyle Busch – 1302 pts – 1 Win, 3 Top Fives, 4 Top Tens
    Me thinks this Shrub is heating up to burning Busch status

    9 (7) Jamie McMurray – 1260 pts – 1 Win, 3 Top Fives, 4 Top Tens
    Maybe this year was just a sneak preview of what is to come.

    10 (14) Matt Kenseth – 1254 pts – 1 Top Five, 2 Top Tens
    He is here thanks to being no worse than 18th over the past ten.

    11 (11) David Reutimann – 1234 pts – 1 Win, 2 Top Fives, 2 Top Tens
    See above for an idea as to why, and toss in a win for good measure.

    12 (8) Jimmie Johnson – 1233 pts – 1 Win, 3 Top Fives, 4 Top Tens
    His trophies are more sequentially appealing than Jeff’s up on the mantle.

    13 (13) Ryan Newman – 1229 pts – 3 Top Tens
    Not in their Top 12, but could wind up in our’s before the season ends.

    14 (16) Kurt Busch – 1219 pts – 2 Top Fives, 5 Top Tens
    Either great or awful, it is time to be more of the former than the latter.

    15 (9) Greg Biffle – 1166 pts – 1 Win, 3 Top Fives, 5 Top Tens
    Three 30-something finishes can keep a good man down.

    16 (22) Denny Hamlin – 1159 pts – 1 Win, 3 Top Fives, 4 Top Tens
    Could another trip to the bottled shower be coming up at Loudon?

    17 (10) Kasey Kahne – 1151 pts – 2 Top Fives, 3 Top Tens
    I miss the girls, I miss the good hands guy from 24

    18 (20) A.J. Allmendinger – 1109 pts – 1 Top Five, 3 Top Tens
    Anagrams of his name include “renal melding” and “gnarled me nil.”

    18 (21) Martin Truex Jr – 1109 pts – 2 Top Tens
    The only Martin, Truex, or Junior to be found on the list this week

    20 (18) Marcos Ambrose – 1096 pts – 2 Top Fives, 3 Top Tens
    Down under on the list this week with six of last ten outside the top twenty

  • Twelve Chase Competitors; Twelve Different Championship Motivations

    Twelve Chase Competitors; Twelve Different Championship Motivations

    While the twelve drivers set to compete in NASCAR’s Chase may share the dream of being the sport’s champion, reaping the benefits of being “top dog” for the year, each one of them comes to the Chase with their own individual hopes, dreams, and motivations.

    Denny Hamlin currently sits in the cat bird’s seat, with the most wins and the most bonus points giving him top seed. But there is no doubt that the motivation and the will for Hamlin’s championship run was born in March when he had to succumb to knee surgery to repair the damage he did in the off season playing basketball.

    Despite incredible pain, Hamlin got right back into his car and soldiered on, demonstrating to himself and his team that he had the fortitude to compete, for that race and now for the championship. He continues to exude that toughness and confidence, which is no doubt his motivation as he prepares do to battle to keep that top seed to the end.

    “We’re tough right now,” Hamlin said. “We’ve got the most wins and hopefully that will carry us for the rest of the season. At this point, I’d say we could win all of them.”

    The motivation for the number two driver coming into the first Chase race is simple. Jimmie Johnson just wants to make history….again. Johnson conquered that feat last year when he was the first NASCAR driver ever to win four consecutive championships. He would make history again with a fifth in a row.

    “It’s been awfully tough to win four in a row, but we’ll show up and give 100 percent,” Johnson said. “We just want to do our best.”

    The third seed was first throughout most of season and Kevin Harvick, living up to his nickname, is just ‘happy’ to be there. After a miserable year last year when he not only missed the Chase but was close to leaving Richard Childress Racing, Kevin Harvick is back with a vengeance and his motivation is no doubt to prove that he truly is now at the top of the game.

    “I think it’s the most competitive that we have ever been,” Harvick said. “We are competitive as far as speed and the things that you need to race for wins and win the championship.”

    Kyle Busch may not be known as necessarily ‘happy’ but he seems almost elated to be in the Chase, especially after being on the outside looking in last year. For Busch, his championship motivation is to show the world and all of the fans that love to hate him that he is the real deal and can actually seal the deal.

    “You fight every day of your year to make the Chase,” Busch said. “This is all part of the fighting to get to the point where you can fight some more through the last ten weeks against the best in racing.”

    Busch’s older brother Kurt is just nipping at the heels of his baby brother in this year’s Chase in the fifth starting position. So, perhaps Kurt Busch’s motivation is just that…to show his sibling just who is king of the hill in the world of NASCAR.

    But Busch has another Chase motivation and dream. He wants to be the one who survives the fray, finally bringing home the NASCAR Sprint Cup to his ‘captain’ Roger Penske for the first time in the sport.

    “I know from experience that you can get it going in the right direction,” Busch said. “You can keep the momentum growing and sort of build some insurance for something bad happening later on during the ten-race stretch.”

    Sixth seed Tony Stewart only has to look at his uniform for his Chase motivation, sporting ‘Stewart-Haas Racing’ on his chest. Stewart would be the first owner driver since Alan Kulwicki to claim the championship.

    “You do what it takes and you do what you have to do, but I feel like we’ve got a lot of momentum right now,” Stewart said. “It’s just been a lot of hard work with our organization and the results are starting to show.”

    For seventh seed Greg Biffle, ninth seed Carl Edwards, and eleventh seed Matt Kenseth, there is simply one motivation to claim the Cup, that of honoring team leader Jack Roush who has been through so much this year, surviving yet another plane crash and losing sight in one eye. These three drivers will have one similar mantra, “Win it for Jack.”

    Jeff Gordon, who has been so consistent this season yet gone winless, is motivated to show he still has what it takes, even in the waning years of his career. Like his teammate Johnson, the ‘original four time’ champ is also hoping to continue his ‘drive for five’ effort.

    “When it comes to championships, I always like to lean toward experience,” Gordon said. “I think we are really solid. I think we’ve got an awesome shot at the championship.”

    The ‘other’ Jeff, with the last name of Burton, currently heads into the Chase for the Championship in the tenth spot. His motivation is that he is desperate to be at the head table of the NASCAR banquet before he ends his racing career.

    “It’s going to be intense,” Burton said. “When you waited your whole life for something and it’s in front of you, it’s going to be intense, it’s going to be full of emotion, and as it should be.”

    The final Chase driver, Clint Bowyer, hung on to make it in and is bringing up the Chase rear. His whole motivation is to prove that he has every right to be in the championship hunt.

    “You kind of go in as the underdog under the radar,” Bowyer said. “The good thing is that we do have a lot of momentum right now. That’s what got us in this thing.”

    Regardless of their motivations, hopes or dreams, twelve drivers will now officially start the competition for the coveted Cup. Their Chase will begin with the first race this weekend at Loudon, New Hampshire, continuing on to the final showdown in Homestead, where one of these twelve will be crowned as the best in this year’s class.