Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Visone RV Re-Signs With Go Fas Racing for 2020

    Visone RV Re-Signs With Go Fas Racing for 2020

    Mooresville, N.C. — Visone RV, a one-stop-shop for RVs, travel trailers, campers, parts and accessories has expanded its relationship with Go Fas Racing to serve as a full-season associate sponsor on the No. 32 Ford with driver Corey LaJoie.

    The East Bernstadt, Kentucky-based company also specializes in rebuildable insurance salvage, repairable wrecks, heavy equipment and repairable motorhomes. They also supply motorhome repair facilities across the country.

    Visone RV has been a sponsor of GFR for years, including serving as the primary sponsor of the No. 32 at Pocono Raceway (I) and Talladega Superspeedway (II) during the 2019 season. The St. Hilaire family has been close with Terry Blankenship and the Visone RV group since the beginning of their relationship.

    “Terry at Visone RV has been with us here at GFR for the past several seasons and we’re excited to have him continue his partnership with us this 2020 season. Terry has the market cornered for all your used motorhome part needs and has quite the amazing off-road vehicle park in Wildcat Adventures Off Road Park. We can’t thank Terry enough for supporting our program year after year, 2020 is looking to be a great one for us.”

    Mr. Blankenship is also excited to renew the partnership with a growing organization in GFR.

    “We’ve had a long standing relationship with Go Fas Racing owners Archie and Mason St. Hilaire,” said Visone RV owner Terry Blankenship. “We’re proud to continue promoting the Visone RV brand in NASCAR with the Go Fas team for the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season.”

    Visone RV kicks off the 2020 Cup Series season with the season-opening Daytona 500 on Sunday, February 16 at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX.

    To learn more about Visone RV, visit VisoneRV.com.

    ————————————————————–
    About Our Team

    About Visone RV:
    Visone RV, based in East Bernstadt, Kentucky has the world’s largest selection of new and used motorhome parts in the nation. Visone also takes great pride and pleasure in selling new and used RVs. Visone’s great success and countless happy customers is a direct result of their relentless effort to acquire quality items and make them available to the public at wholesale or below. Visone supplies RV motorhome repair facilities across the country with a goal to always describe and disclose as much information to the best of their ability about all RV parts they sell.

    About Go Fas Racing:
    Go Fas Racing (GFR) currently fields Ford Mustangs in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series for driver Corey LaJoie. Located in Mooresville, North Carolina, GFR has competed in the NASCAR’s premier series since 2014; fielding cars for some of NASCAR’s top drivers, including past champions. To find out more information about our team please visit www.GoFasRacing.com.

    Stay up-to-date on Corey LaJoie:
    To get live updates during the race weekends follow @coreylajoie on Instagram and Twitter. Make sure to give Corey a “like” on Facebook – “@CoreyLaJoieRacing”. For a detailed bio and updated in-season statistics, please visit www.coreylajoieracing.com.

  • CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Jimmie Johnson Transcript

    CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Jimmie Johnson Transcript

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    DAYTONA 500
    TEAM CHEVY MEDIA DAY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    FEBRUARY 12, 2020

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE MEDIA DAY TRANSCRIPT:

    INAUDIBLE:
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: I’m just open. I have so many friends in that garage area, great friends that live in Austin, as well, to have the day off and go out there Monday afternoon, have dinner with some friends, went to the track, saw more friends. It was just kind of exploring and looking around. I don’t have anything planned. There’s really no plans formalized. Just kind of hanging out, looking around, seeing what it’s like, seeing what kind of develops as the year goes on. Of course, my focus and priority is here. There’s going to be a fine balance of making sure I can do everything I can on the Cup side while looking at some opportunities that should develop through the course of 2020.

    Q. Has anyone specifically reached out to you already and said they would be interested in you doing X, Y and Z for us?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: There haven’t been any specific plans thrown at me. I’ve had everybody from sanctioning bodies to team owners far and wide. I’ve been saying this for a lot of years: I’m open to all other forms of racing. Now that there is an ending near at the end of 2020, those calls and texts and stuff are coming in more often.

    Q. Is there a particular type of racing, IndyCar, track that you want to try?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: I’ve gone in circles enough, and granted a road course is still a circle, but I’m not interested in ovals really. I think the windscreen on the IndyCar certainly creates a huge upgrade in safety for those cars. I don’t want to say that an oval would be completely out of the question. The right oval would be important. I want to do some road course racing. After driving that F1 car a couple Novembers ago, just blew my mind what that experience was like. IndyCar is an option. Sports cars. I could see a situation where the WECS Series has an eight-race schedule, there’s a lot of off weeks an eight-week schedule. Travel the world, take my family with, school, experience the world. I could see a neat opportunity there. Clearly the IMSA Series racing here in North America would be a lot of fun. Those divisions would be probably my first focus in ’21 or ’22. In my heart, I still want to go back and do some off-road racing. I think opportunities like that will be around for a long time. I feel like there’s probably a shorter runway on some of these other series. With that being said, I’m just open. We’ll see what develops over the year.

    Q. Chase said earlier that he considers you the greatest driver of all time. Obviously people make the comparison, everybody has their favorites. Does that matter to you about where you would be considered in the overall pantheon of drivers?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: It’s cool to hear. I’m not going to lie. It’s great to hear. But that’s not a box I need checked. That’s not who I am, what I’m about, what I set out to achieve in my life in racing. I don’t have any attachment to it. Sure, it’s wonderful to hear it. I’m just stoked to be in the conversation. Whatever the argument is, whoever one day is decided is, just that I’m in that conversation is pretty rad.

    Q. When you were 17 years old, Joe Gibbs went from NFL head coach to coming into racing. What did you think at the time?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, I’m still pretty far away. NASCAR was not the national sport that it is today, especially from a media standpoint. I could see it. I read about it. I didn’t know what it really meant. I thought it was cool, certainly added a layer or level of, I don’t know, credibility. In some way there was something really big about Joe Gibbs coming into NASCAR. I didn’t know how long it would last, with my limited point of view. It certainly has lasted. He’s a Hall of Famer in our sport, has three drivers that are Hall of Famers. I mean, pretty dang amazing.

    Q. As far as this week, how have the emotions going into this what could be your last Daytona 500, been different than the emotions going into your first Daytona 500?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Difference between? Wow, yeah. I was going with one answer in my head of just emotions, period. It’s not the end of the year, so I’m very excited. All the emotions are just fun and excitement for myself, my family and team. But comparing to my first year I showed up here not knowing if I was a Cup driver or could fit in here or was going to have a career in this sport. Insecurity was maxed. Not self-esteem but self-confidence was low. I not only had to prove to the world, but I’m still trying to prove to myself that I could do it at this level. Much different head space.

    Q. Back to Chase, you’re leaving Hendrick with three drivers who are 26 or younger. You’ve been through this with Jeff and Dale leaving. What advice do you give those guys? Do you talk about this as far as filling your void? Do you think Chase is kind of the next face of Hendrick?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, I definitely think he’s kind of the leader in the group moving forward. Sure, they’re young. Chase and Alex to me, the amount of years they’ve been in racing, working on stuff, around it, clearly Chase with his dad and all the experience there, I just don’t see them. On paper the stats they’re young, but they’re old souls, been around racing so much and so often. I don’t feel them as being all that young. Surrounded by very smart people. I just think we’re in a great spot. Their youthful point of view, what they bring to the table, being able to watch them describe their cars. It’s one thing I felt as a veteran is I had a more heightened sense of the car, I could give better information or my experience could lead the team in a better way. They feel all the same stuff. We’re in there bouncing ideas off each other all the time. It’s really impressed me what they feel, how they can articulate it, how they can help the team use that information. I think Hendrick Motorsports is in a great spot.

    Q. How much input do you want to have on your successor?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: A lot of people want me to put in a good word. A lot of people think that I probably will have a big say in who goes in the car. I’m sure I will when the time is right. I think we’re all so focused on 2020, the burning question is not getting answered or is hard to even really lead on anything. Our heads are down on 2020 trying to make sure we have the best year here.

    Q. Does Chase remind you of anybody coming up through the ranks?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Through the ranks? No, I feel like he’s in a unique situation. I don’t know. I mean, I guess a little bit to Dale with his father’s success in the sport, being so popular. But still Chase has kind of been on his own path. I still see him as the seven-year-old kid in Vail when I went skiing with his parents. Every time I fell, he showed up with a snowball and hit me with it. I don’t know. I think I’m his biggest fan. I’m so proud of what he’s accomplished, who he is, how he goes about business. I know he’s going to be a champion in our sport. I felt that way for a long time. He’s been in the Hendrick system for a long time. He’s tested cars for the 48 team when I couldn’t make test days, when we were just kind of doing stuff that Chad didn’t think I needed to be there for. I’ve just been around him so much, probably one of his biggest fans.

    Q. What is your most memorable moment with Blaise Alexander? Would you ever consider running a throwback of him or memory of him with the ones you do right now?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, I would love to. I haven’t really put much thought into a throwback. I feel like I’ve honored him really well over the years in the fact that he’s been on every single Cup car I’ve ever driven. His initials have been on the left front bumper. Meaningful to me, I know it is to his family. I’d say the most memorable moment I have of him is the first time I met him, he was trying to pick my girlfriend up at the bar, then we became best of friends. He had a certain swagger to him. When I came back from the bathroom and saw him trying to pick up my girlfriend, I was like, Really, man? He just handled it in such a way. Hey, you know. Just Blaise, the way Blaise could only handle things. We were great friends ever since that day.

    Q. How prepared are you to see somebody honoring you and your career at Darlington someday?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Haven’t thought of it. That would be cool, sure. That would be super cool to see.

    Q. With other forms of racing you might do, might you ever get in a truck at Aurora?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: I wouldn’t rule it out. I’m open. I love dirt racing. I wish they’d put jump or two on the track. That would go back to my roots. I’d be open to it.

    Q. Any special guests on Sunday?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, I have a lot of friends coming. From a celebrity side, big-name side, there’s no one to this race that’s coming. Certainly some friends, some high school friends are coming out, some other friends from L.A. I guess doesn’t quite qualify, but Darius Rucker is a great friend. He’s obviously here and said he took the — told me he took the job so he could be here for my last Daytona 500. In a working sense, Darius is here, will be here.
    Q. Did you drive anything on the track the other day when you were in Austin?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Rent a car. Max Papis wouldn’t let me drive it. He was too busy being Max and showing me around. I didn’t drive anything there, but rode shotgun and felt like I was going to get sick.

    Q. Is Austin a track you wouldn’t mind racing?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, any road course race, especially an F1 track. Drove the one in Bahrain. Was able to go around the one in Abu Dhabi with Fernando in a McLaren production car, which was really rad. To see it even in a rent a car yesterday, there’s just a unique feel that TV doesn’t carry over. The tracks are awesome. I mean, they look big and nice and wonderful. From the driver seat, the way they shape turns really, really complicated angles and corners, a lot of elevation you can’t see from television which is very intriguing as a driver.

    Q. Is it a different mindset at all compared to any other race going into Sunday, what could be your last 500?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, it certainly could be depending on how the day goes, where I am in the closing laps. I can see my brain taking it in a million different ways. I certainly hope I’m in the lead, holding the guys off, the weight of the moment on my shoulders, all the nerves that would come with that.

    Q. How differently does Jim France go about things than past leadership?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: I’ve been around Jim so much, I’ve raced in his series before, clearly he’s at the helm now. He is so connected to the garage area, the owners, the team managers, the racing itself, the quality in the racing. Watching him through GRAND-AM and IMSA, he’s a two-wheel guy with all the AMA stuff he’s a part of and owns. He’s just a racer at heart. I really respect that about him and have enjoyed working with him over the years.
    Q. You know him pretty well?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yes.

    Q. Do you go fishing at times?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: I have been. I was pretty young when we went on the fishing trips. We caught some stuff. But I was a little quiet and afraid to kind of let it rip back then.

    Q. Every driver out here had a story about you, how you helped them at one point or another. Even Stenhouse, who wasn’t even a Chevy driver at the time. Where do you find the time to mentor all these guys?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: I feel like it’s because I’m really friends with these guys. What takes time is when someone is trying to get to you, you don’t know them, you have to work through the initial part of the relationship, schedule a call or schedule a meeting or grab a beer with someone. That stuff takes time. But in this garage area, as we all know we’re around each other so often, so much, if you want, you can form a relationship and a friendship pretty quick. I just always have. I’ve always had people be open and available for me. I know how it’s shaped my career. I’ve just wanted to do the same. So I’ve just been open to it and available. As things come along, I would see something, doesn’t matter if it’s in our garage area or I have friends that race Supercross, IndyCar, all that, I just sent them a text or gave them a call, kind of reached out. That’s just been me. I just blow people up all the time, especially in the era of texting, text messages going out. Just tried to share my experiences with these guys.
    Q. You don’t have to do that stuff.
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, I guess I don’t. It’s just me. It’s funny because I keep hearing about it, and I don’t have a really good answer worked up yet in my head because it’s been so fresh today. It’s just me. I value friendships, I value relationships. I’m proud of the ones that I have. It’s just been me. Coming up through the ranks, one blessing I think I had is that I didn’t have this crazy successful start to my career. I think I fell in love, stayed in love with this sport for the right reasons. That was the relationships that are built and the respect that I have for my peers and the people in the garage area. I got my first chance when I was 25 to really shine. You got guys now sitting waiting to turn 18 to come in and have their shot, they’re already shining. I just had a little different arc. That whole journey made me who I am today.

    Q. You mentioned earlier you would be open to maybe a part-time or some select Cup races if the opportunity was there. I have to believe there would never be a consideration to do it with anybody other than Rick, no?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, I couldn’t see it any other way in the NASCAR space. That’s family. It’s home. I take so much pride in knowing that I’ve only driven a car in Rick Hendrick’s equipment. That would be the case.

    Q. Is Rick going to get you involved after 2020 in some capacity? Is that something you want to be involved in?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: I know Rick is going to come calling. It’s just the way it goes. I feel like I don’t know what it will look like, but absolutely. It’s home. It’s family. I’ll be around.
    Q. Any other drivers expressed interest in driving NASCAR? I know Dixon wants to try it out.
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, there’s a lot of guys that are interested in it. Even yesterday at the IndyCar test, a lot of guys talked about it. I even heard guys talking about wanting to do an oval test. I was chatting with the Penske drivers. They’re the first ones to really say, What is it like to run an oval? Would that be a good first step? I’m like, You have to do it, it would be fantastic. You really get to see our cars in their environment to thrive. You take an IndyCar guy and put him in a Cup car on a road course, it’s going to be a little underwhelming. Totally different vehicles, totally different disciplines. You put them on an oval, let us get our aero magic working, put them at a track like Dover, Bristol, let them experience the banking in one of our cars, I think they’d really enjoy it.
    Q. Who do you feel is kind of the face of NASCAR right now if there is one?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Chase Elliott, yup. I do. I feel like he’s the one that’s connecting to the largest fan base and is the face. I feel that there are many other drivers that play very important roles with how the sport is developing. I think Denny Hamlin has done an amazing job to be available to NASCAR and to help lead in the right way, collect the drivers’ voices, help articulate that to the car owner group, to NASCAR, to the television partners, really help evolve this sport. Joey has made a big effort on that front, as well. There are a lot of guys playing a key role. The pretty face would be Chase.

    Q. You talked about always having relationships with different drivers. As you get toward the end of your career, is there one driver that something just never got resolved with and they left the sport that you wish there would have? What was the toughest situation in rebuilding a relationship?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON:
    I wouldn’t say there’s anything unresolved. I’ve always been one to try to resolve right away. It’s led to Harvick shoving me after a race to other things. I just want to get it wrapped up. I don’t feel like I’ve left anything there. The competitive spirit in the era or time when Jeff and I were fighting for championships, that was probably the trickiest point in time, the trickiest thing I’ve had to deal with. Thankfully Jeff and I both got heated a couple times, but we never let it get too far. There was always a lot of respect within the fierce competitive environment that we were in. That would probably be the trickiest thing I’ve had to deal with.

    Q. Was it Martinsville where it was the beating and banging?
    JIMMIE JOHNSON: Yeah, that one he was frustrated with me. On my end, I’d say my low point was at Texas. I don’t exactly recall how that all comes into play. Either Texas or Atlanta, but I think it was Texas. Things were heating up. He got to me and put a pass on me. I thought he moved me out of the way, and he didn’t. I just got loose and got out of the way. Come on the front stretch, I door-slammed him. That was probably my low in dealing with it.

    FastScripts by ASAP Sports
    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Toyota Racing Daytona 500 Media Day Quotes – Daniel Suarez

    Toyota Racing Daytona 500 Media Day Quotes – Daniel Suarez

    Toyota Racing – Daniel Suárez
    NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 13, 2020) – Gaunt Brothers Racing driver Daniel Suárez was made available to media at Daytona 500 Media Day.

    DANIEL SUÁREZ, No.96 Toyota Certified Used Vehicles Toyota Camry, Gaunt Brothers Racing

    Thoughts about having to race your way in.

    “I have flashbacks actually from 2016 when I had to go and race for the championship in Homestead. I feel like it’s kind of similar, right? You have to beat three guys. Similar mindset that you have to have. You have to go out there and execute, no mistakes, control what you can control.”

    What is the balance between being aggressive and going after something, not putting yourself in a spot where you get knocked out?

    “That’s a good question. Honestly, I don’t know. I will have to figure that out as I’m in the racetrack, obviously. The first half of the race, just be aggressive, not too crazy. After the pit stop it’s go time.”

    Have you had conversations with your team on how you’re going to approach it?

    “Yeah, we have a plan. We kind of know what we’re going to do, how we’re going to expect this. We have to execute. That’s the key.”

    You knew you were going to have to race your way into the Daytona 500. Do you feel there would be this kind of pressure?

    “I feel a little pressure, but not that much. I have to control what I can control and do my job. It’s very unfortunate the charter situation. That’s the way it works. But we’ve been in the market a couple months to buy one.”

    They’re not cheap.

    “No, not just that. There is no one for sale that I know. We went to Wal‑Mart seven times and didn’t find anything (laughter). No, there is nothing for sale. We actually tried, but there is nothing for sale. That’s a situation, you know. That’s how it works. Eventually hopefully we can find the right one.”

    Any idea of guys you might work with in your Duel?

    “Well, I hope with the other Toyota guys. Three Toyotas in there, so hopefully we can work with them and move to the front.”

    Is there an effort among them to help you out since they’re in a good spot getting in the race?

    “No, everyone is going to look out for their own. If the opportunity presents, I’m sure they’ll be glad to push a Toyota than a Chevy.”

    Is it nerve‑wracking in your position? Anything can happen. If things go well, you should be able to make it.

    “I think if we execute, if we don’t make mistakes, we should be fine. We just have to be calm, be patient. I have to do my thing. I feel like actually my car was pretty sporty in the draft. We have an engine that is as good as any other Toyota out there. The problem is that we don’t have the car, the body, and the chassis, not the newest and greatest car that he we can lower the car that much. When we’re in the draft, we’re as good as anyone. We need engine for the draft, we need the car for raw speed. Unfortunately we don’t have the car, but we have the engine. Feel good about it. We just have to execute, good pit stop, control what I can control.”

    If this would have been last year or a previous year, you probably would have said the same thing: you have to control what you can control. Is it that different? How different is it going into the Duels this year compared to last year?

    “Yeah, I think that now really there is a bigger stake in there. We have to be more calculated more with my moves, be aggressive at the end of the race if I have to. I don’t feel like anyone is going to be crazy aggressive out there because everyone wants to keep the primary. I have to use that to my advantage.”

    Do you expect help from your Toyota teams?

    “If the opportunity presents, yes. But they won’t slow down and look for me to push. Nobody would do that. I wouldn’t do that. If they can push me or push a Toyota, they’re going to push me, than another manufacturer. I feel like we just have to do our thing. There is pressure, yes. Obviously there is pressure. It’s not a big deal. I think we are in an okay position. We just have to be smart, execute, have fun.”

    The lack of speed when you unloaded and qualified, does that concern you?

    “We knew. We knew it was going to be tough. That’s the reason why we didn’t build a Clash car. We knew it was going to be difficult to just put the best and greatest ever. We did the best we could with the time that we had. I mean, we’re in the point where we’re still looking for engineers, we’re still looking for one mechanic. We’re still looking to build a team. We are going to eventually build it. We have what it takes to do it. It’s just not easy to find the people around the corner. We are looking for the right people. My goal is to take this team, it was a team that nobody knew, it was a part‑time team, to a winning team in the future. That’s my goal. Really I’m going to work very hard to build it the right way.”

    You’re still looking? You don’t have those people?

    “Yeah, today we don’t have an engineer. My crew chief is an engineer, like he’s wearing different hats right now. We’ll still looking for one of the mechanics. There is a few key people that we don’t have yet. We have a good pit crew, a very good crew chief. The general manager of the team, he’s an engineer, so he’s playing a few hats at this point. But we’re in the point where we’re still looking for some people, still building the team. We don’t have simulation yet. We’re still working on the simulation program. I mean, when we arrive here, we didn’t have SMT. There’s a lot of still things we’re still building the team.”

    Does that concern you, that you weren’t able to find those people?

    “I mean, you know, really the best people, they are working somewhere. That’s why they are the best. But I feel like we have a great manufacturer behind us in Toyota. They’re helping hard to try to find the right people. I’m sure hopefully soon we can find the right people and keep building this team as we go.”

    Speaking of Toyota, you’ve at least got hopefully a couple of stablemates in your Duel. Have you talked about being able to work together in hopes of getting you in the 500? Is that a discussion you had yet?

    “No, not really. I’m sure if the opportunity presents, they will help out a little bit.”

    What is your mindset going into tomorrow night?

    “My mindset is go out there, execute, no mistakes, and be aggressive when I have to be aggressive, be smart. I feel like if I can do my job, I don’t have to kill myself to make it happen. I feel like I just have to do not beat myself up. If I can do that, we should be fine.”

    What has this whole experience been like for you?

    “Yeah, it’s different for sure. The last couple years has been difficult in many different situations. I’m excited for this new project, this new challenge. I feel that we have a lot of good things coming for the future.”

    Is it important to keep that positive mindset?

    “Yeah, really. If I go down as a driver, the whole team goes down with me. If I keep them up, if I’m able to keep everyone up, we are able to get the right people, build the right direction, we’re going to have something pretty special.”

    You’ve never had to race your way in before. Providing all the pieces come together, will that potentially make this Daytona 500 start mean more than any of the others?

    “Probably a little bit. Probably a little bit. Daytona 500 is going to mean a lot if I can actually win it. Hopefully we can have a shot.”

    With the way things ended in the 2018 season, is it awkward at all to be back with Toyota?

    “No, no, no. Actually Toyota wanted me to stay. Toyota did everything in their power for me to stay. Toyota has been one of the best sponsors, supporters that I ever had. Some of you guys don’t know, but Toyota and I, we go way back since before I moved to the U.S. I was supported by Toyota Mexico. Then I came here to the diversity program supported by Toyota. The national series by Toyota, I mean, we have made history together. To be very honest with you, last year I missed Toyota the most. Toyota is a great manufacturer. They pay a lot of attention to detail. There’s a lot of great people, a lot of great people in this organization. Just very proud to be back with this group of people.”

    You say you missed Toyota the most.

    “It’s not that I missed them. There were a lot of things, a lot of good people, a lot of friends, a lot of people that it just doesn’t feel awkward at all to be back with them. It’s one of those situations that it’s kind of like when you’re in a relationship with someone for that long, you feel awkward being out of that circle, then you come back, you don’t feel awkward coming back, right? That’s how it feels. I’ve been with Toyota for more than 10 years. Every year I’ve been with Toyota in NASCAR but last year. It doesn’t feel awkward at all to be back with them.”

    More of a happy homecoming?

    “Yeah, I feel happy. I feel like if I’m smart, we’re able to build this team, we’re going to have a bright future ahead.”

    Is that a talk you’ve had with the team, this is what I want for you, to make you into a winning team?

    “Yeah, yeah. That’s why they brought me over.”

    Without having some of the mechanics, the engineers that you need, are you nervous at all going into a Daytona 500 without that?

    “I mean, it’s a process, you know. We have to build something. I mean, five weeks ago we didn’t have anything. Four weeks ago we didn’t have a crew chief, the most important in the group. It’s a building process. We have to build this. That’s why it’s difficult right now. But it’s going to get easier as we go.”

    How much do you get to help pick those people who make up the team?

    “A lot. I like to be involved with all those calls and decisions because ultimately it’s important for me to have a good chemistry and to know who I’m going to be working with.”

    Is that new more so this season or did you have that say last year, too?

    “I have had that in the past, too. Unfortunately in the past, they have moved people left and right, forward, back. It hasn’t been good. I feel like that’s one of the disadvantages of being with a big team, that sometimes they take people away.”

    Being the only representative from Mexico, how is qualifying at the Daytona 500? How does it feel to represent your entire nation as a whole? How much more force does the heritage give you coming into this moment?

    “Yeah, in my career I have gone through a lot of difficult times, a lot of good times also. That have made me the person I am today. I feel like I’m a tough person. We have to keep working hard trying to, like I said many times, control what I can control, go out there and fight hard.”

    Are there any mentors from Mexico or Latin American mentors at the moment that kind of talk to you or help you out past couple months?

    “Yeah, I have a lot of people helping me out, different friends, family, some other drivers. Just trying to go through this situation, it’s way easier that way. I know a lot of people with more experience than me. It’s just good to have support from my country. That’s for sure.”

    In joining Gaunt Brothers, it’s a much smaller team than the teams you’ve become accustomed to, how are you wrapping your head around dealing with smaller expectations? How do you set your goals knowing you’re probably limited on what your talent can actually do?

    “Yeah, I feel like it’s a process. I feel like it’s a process that we have to be smart in the way that we race. We have to be building this team. We’re in the point where we’re still working to try to get some people, some engineers and stuff like that. It’s going to be a process. But the goal is to be a winning team, it’s to build this into a winning team. If you think about it, there is not one single Toyota team that is bad. The goal is not to start the first one, it’s to make this another competitive team. It’s going to take time, a lot of work. We believe that we have what it takes.”

    In terms of your own personal development, where did you feel you had a weakness? How did you address it? How do you feel about it now?

    “I feel like one of my biggest weaknesses is just managing the people. I have a lot of people moving around. That hasn’t been good for my career.”

    The Mexican national team is playing in Charlotte on Thursday, March 26. You’re not on the track in Texas till late. Do you plan on attending?

    “Yes, yes.”

  • CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Chase Elliott Transcript

    CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Chase Elliott Transcript

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    DAYTONA 500
    TEAM CHEVY MEDIA DAY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    FEBRUARY 12, 2020

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 1LE, Daytona 500 Media Day Highlights:

    Q. Jimmie Johnson’s career, obviously he’s won seven championships. You don’t see him talked about.
    CHASE ELLIOTT: It’s a shame (laughs).

    Q. But for drivers like yourself who grew up watching him, do you think it’s viewed differently by you than some old-time racing fans?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Well, I don’t think he’s ever got the respect that he deserves over the course of his career. I think he’s the best to have come along. I think what he’s done, the amount of time he did it in, the way he did it, I just don’t see how that’s matched in my personal opinion. That’s just my opinion. I think like I said, I don’t think he’s ever got the respect he really deserves.

    Q. Do you think part of that is he doesn’t have the electric personality of a Dale Earnhardt Sr. or something like that?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I think it’s just the era that he came along in. I think sometimes, too, maybe when he’s gone people will respect him the way he deserves to be respected. I hope that’s the case. Certainly doesn’t seem to be that way right now.

    Q. He’s unquestionably the GOAT in your mind?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: In my opinion, yes. I don’t think it’s even close.

    Q. How do you replace someone like him as an organization? Has Jimmie talked to you about stepping up in a leadership role?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: No, I don’t necessarily think anybody has to necessarily take on that role. Nobody walks around the shop with a sticker that says you’re the face of Hendrick. I don’t really know why it needs to be talked about or whatever. I don’t think it matters.

    Q. Do you feel you’ll be more vocal after Jimmie leaves?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I don’t, no. I’m going to keep doing my thing. I’m just going to be me. I’m not the loud guy in the room. I’m not going to be the one that’s super talkative, this or that. I’m going to go about my business the way I like to go about it. Hopefully that’s good enough.

    Q. (Question about Jimmie.)
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I haven’t yet. I don’t know. It’s not really a conversation you have a whole lot with other drivers or friends much. It hasn’t happened to this point, so I don’t know.

    Q. How big of a year is this for you?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I look forward to the year. I look forward to getting started. I think we have a good opportunity as a team. I think our group is really talented. I think Alan is one of the best in the garage. I really feel like when you have a good group, you have a good pit crew, I feel like I can do a good job. When you have all those things in your mind, those things don’t always last forever. I don’t know how long is your pit crew going to be super-fast before somebody else wants to pay them more money to come pit their car. How long is Alan going to want to do it? He’s been here almost 20 years. You just don’t know. Nothing’s forever. I think we have a great opportunity right now. We need to make the most of it.

    Q. If it were up to you, what’s the one thing you would change about the schedule?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Go to some different places. I think we need to visit different towns, different cities. There’s some great racetracks around the country that are already there established that we don’t go to. I think we should look at that.

    Q. Your dad won this race 35 years ago, his first 500. Do you come in here with any different strategy this year or being in the right place at the right time?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, it’s tough. I really don’t know what the right thing to do is here. I wish I did, but I don’t. It’s been a hard thing because you see guys be really aggressive win. I’ve seen guys be really conservative win. There doesn’t seem to be a whole lot of consistency as to who that is and when it is. I don’t know. Kind of play it by ear on Sunday.

    Q. (No microphone.)
    CHASE ELLIOTT: No, I mean, look, somebody’s always going to be mad, right? Might be me on Sunday. It’s good, though. I’m glad people like to talk and run their mouths on stuff because it gets y’all talking about it, gets people fired up on social media. All that’s good. It’s good for all of us. I think we should all be thankful that people like to talk and get mad, get upset. I think it’s good. You guys should keep promoting that. It’s a good thing.

    Q. Your dad has the record for speedways. Do you ever talk about that?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: We haven’t had one conversation about how many he’s got, this or that. We both recognize kind of what comes along with that. The people are what allows that to be, right? It’s more than a trophy. It’s more than an award or how many times you got it. I get that now. I think he does, too.

    Q. (Question about helicopter.)
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I don’t have one, for the record. I do have my rating, but I don’t have one. Haven’t done a lot of flying. Try to stay current, that’s about it.

    Q. As someone who appreciates flying, how much do the fly-overs mean every week?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: It is a cool thing, especially down here. The fly-over is really neat. I think the Thunderbirds do it down here. I always enjoy seeing that. I’ve even enjoyed, too, not always the military that do it, oftentimes we overlook that, but there are some different flying communities and local folks that do the fly-over some weeks. I think that’s pretty cool, too.

    Q. Next year’s Daytona 500 is going to be the 14th. Super Bowl is February 7th. Typically, the Clash is the Sunday before. Would there be a concern of running the Clash and qualifying during the day of the Super Bowl?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: So, the Clash?

    Q. They haven’t announced the Clash yet. If the schedule were to stay the same, it would be the same day as the Super Bowl. Would that be a concern of running that event and qualifying during the day when the Super Bowl is that evening?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, for sure. I think you could expect not many people to be tuned in.

    Q. What is the story behind you and William in 2015 when he said he didn’t know how to shift, cost you a race back in the day.
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, we were racing down in South Alabama. He had just started racing late models at the time. I was running some late models here and there. It was a late model race there. It was a restart, I don’t know, probably halfway, three quarters the way through the race. I don’t think he had ever driven a straight shift before he got off iRacing to get in the real racecar. To his defense, he hadn’t done it much. It’s pretty wild really how fast he’s progressed, some of the things like that, for instance, that he didn’t have a lot of experience with. He missed a shift, I drove in the back of him and crashed basically.

    Q. Do you ever think about it?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: No. It happens. I get it. Like I said, in his defense, heck, he’d never done it much. I don’t know how old he was then. How old is he now?

    Q. 12. No, he’s 22.
    CHASE ELLIOTT: He was probably, what, 18 or so then. He hadn’t driven a car with a straight shift, with a clutch, even on the street much I don’t think. That was kind of the story I got. Somebody said after that they wanted to buy him like an old truck or something that was a five speed so he could practice on the road, just joking with him. No, it happens. It is cool, though. It’s amazing that you can learn that fast and do as well as he has.

    Q. What was the relationship like between you and him growing up?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: With William?

    Q. With your dad.
    CHASE ELLIOTT: With my dad? Obviously, I watched him race a lot as a young kid. As time went on, I feel like he’s watched me race a lot ever since. Our relationship has grown over the years. Really, I think it’s more of a father-son thing more than it is mentor-driver thing. He’s always kind of let me do my thing. I’ve always appreciated that.

    Q. Do you remember the first race you were racing and he was in the stands?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I mean, my first one. It was great. I mean, good, happy to have him around. That’s not something that anyone should ever take for granted, having your dad, mom, family with you supporting you in something you want to do. It’s special. Lucky to have him the whole way.

    Q. During the FOX telecast Mike said there were a select few select that reminded him of Junior Johnson. One was you. Have you heard that before?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: There’s only a select what?

    Q. Mike said in the broadcast that you reminded him of Junior Johnson. What does that mean to you?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I always appreciate the kind words. I didn’t know Junior at all. I may have seen him here or there. I didn’t speak more than five words to him in my entire lifetime. I can’t say I knew him at all. Obviously, dad did with his involvement with him over the years. Yeah, I appreciate the kind words. Enjoy having Mike. He’s a good asset to the booth. Yeah, like I say, appreciate everything he has good to say about me.

    Q. How do you spend your time down here?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Well, I mean, yesterday and Monday were kind of our two days we didn’t have much going on. I didn’t do much then. Yeah, we start getting busy today, stay busy the rest of the week till Sunday. You at least have one or two things to do every day. Good to have it spread out. The Duel being there spices up the week a little bit. I’ve enjoyed watching the short-track racing. I’ll probably go over there and watch some more before it’s over.

    Q. How do you feel the Chevrolets reacted in the draft? How was the ride compared to years past?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Similar, I would say. I think it’s really hard to judge our new car, our new body here. It’s just such a different animal. I think after we get back from the West Coast swing, we can take a step and say that we’re either better or we’re not. Hopefully it’s A and not B. But, yeah, we’ll go and we’ll run that West Coast swing, get out of here. This is its own week. These cars are different. They’re all speedway’d out, low drag, trying to go fast. When we get to Vegas, that’s intermediate. California is a big two-mile racetrack, which is different. We go to Phoenix, which is a smaller track. We have three opportunities to get three different report cards on how we did. I think that will be good for everybody.

    Q. Are you excited to see how the car performs at Las Vegas?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I’m super excited, yeah. We had an opportunity to make something better. Chevrolet put a lot of effort into it. As a group, collectively, from the team side, I know HMS did. I’m excited to see where it is. It’s an exciting thing to be able to have an opportunity to make something better. This sport is always evolving. There’s always people out front, you’re trying to catch them. This is an opportunity for us to catch up, do better, improve. That’s all we want to do, is just improve from where we were.

    Q. William and Alex talk about an influence Jeff Gordon plays behind the scenes at Hendrick. Have you experienced the same thing with Jeff?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Especially the way I came in, he was stepping out. He had a very large role in me getting started, the role that I was playing coming in. Yeah, absolutely. Jeff has been a good asset to Hendrick behind the scenes doing some new things, bringing some new life to some different areas, which I think has been good. Yeah, hopefully he’ll stick around and keep trying to help.

    Q. Do you expect Jimmie to step into that role next year?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I think Jimmie is a little bit different guy. Everybody kind of has their own thing. I think Jimmie wants to go do some other racing, go try some different things. Hey, man, he deserves that. You have the kind of career he’s had here, you should be able to go drive whatever you want to drive whenever you want to drive it, in my opinion. I think he’ll exercise that and he should.

    Q. (Question about adjusting cars after the Clash.)
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I mean, you might make it drive better. We’re not going to change the noses and the tails of the car, right? Especially other manufacturers. I think Chevrolet to Chevrolet seems to go pretty good. Yeah, I mean, we can’t change those other guys. They can’t change our stuff either. We just need to make sure we make that to our advantage and not theirs.

    Q. You have to play the numbers game?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Yeah, I mean, I’m sure that will be talked about at some point. It always is. It’s always tough, though. We’ve seen it these last few, probably the last four plate races, I feel like there’s been a lot of gamesmanship played from manufacturers, people trying to work together. It’s hard. I mean, it really is hard to get everybody on the same page and know when to draw that line and when to not. We’re learning as a group from the Chevy side. We’ll try to see what we can do to try to get somebody in Victory Lane on Sunday.

    Q. Do you think he’s still the greatest?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: Jimmie?

    Q. Yes.
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I would, for sure.

    Q. Did you have that opinion before you were teammates?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I did, yeah. He went five in a row. Like the seven thing is great, that’s amazing. But five in a row? Y’all sit back and think about that. That’s about as many times as I’ve won a race, which isn’t saying much. Like, I think about all the great drivers who won one. That’s crazy. Probably won’t ever happen ever again, ever.

    Q. What do you think is the biggest thing he’s done since you’ve come to Hendrick?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I think he just exemplifies how you should go about your life really on and off the racetrack. I think he’s a great person. He has his off-the-track life figured out. He treats people the way they deserve to be treated. He’s just a class guy. I think he leads by example. I’ve enjoyed having somebody like that to look up to.

    Q. Why don’t you think he gets the respect?
    CHASE ELLIOTT: I don’t know. I’ve often wondered that. I don’t understand why. I don’t know if it’s just an era thing. On the same token, he was around in the mid-2000s when some other guys were, too, that I feel like get a lot of that recognition and names that you know. I don’t know. I really don’t. I’ve often wondered that. I’ve never really understood. I do think it will be one of those things that once he’s gone people are going to be like, Whoa. Maybe it’s just because he’s such a nice guy, that he hasn’t changed at all. He’s had that same even keel that he had when he came in in 2000 or 2001. Never had the big personality I guess to go along with all the success, which I think is great. I think that’s how it should be or how you should be. But maybe that’s why. He’s just always kind of had that even keel about him. Yeah, I really think once he’s gone, I do think that will change a lot then. If it doesn’t by year end, I think it will when he leaves.

    Q. (No microphone.)
    CHASE ELLIOTT: For me the moment at Watkins Glen, him pushing me around the front stretch was really cool. That was about as cool as me winning the race. It was a big deal. Just the respect I have for him. I respect him a ton. I’ve looked up to him for a long time.

    FastScripts by ASAP Sports

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    About Chevrolet
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  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Media Day (McDowell, Keselowski, Almirola)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Media Day (McDowell, Keselowski, Almirola)

    MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 Love’s Travel Stops Ford Mustang – WHAT WOULD YOU CHANGE ABOUT THE 2021 NASCAR SCHEDULE? “I think that’s tough. There are so many logistics in it. I’m not trying to avoid the question, but I know how hard it is to get four kids to school and hobby on time, so planning a whole race schedule would be pretty difficult, but I love road courses, street courses, anywhere you can bring the action close to the fan and they can see the speed and just the thrill of our sport in a little closer matter I think is good.”

    YOU HAVE BEEN IN POSITION TO WIN THIS RACE BEFORE. YOUR THOUGHTS GOING INTO SUNDAY? “I think over the last four or five years we’ve put ourselves in that spot to be in the top 10, top five at the end of these races and I’ve sort of had this motto like if you put yourself in that spot enough, eventually you’re gonna get the push, you’re gonna get the right lane at the right time. Last year we were close and we just have to do the same thing. We have to put ourselves in position. You have to be in that first three or four cars coming the white flag to have a shot at it and that’s the first goal is to get yourself positioned at the end and then hopefully everything goes your way.”

    THOUGHTS ON JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK JOINING FRONT ROW AS YOUR NEW TEAMMATE? “It’s always hard to speculate on that. You want to give the answer, ‘Well, he’s got a lot of experience, he’s a good guy, works hard.’ Those are all true things, but I don’t know what that dynamic will look like. We did a few races last year together, but not having David Ragan there, a veteran also a close friend of mine, and it’s probably the first real teammate dynamic that I’ve had in my Cup career where you didn’t feel like you’re just trying to beat that guy. You always feel like you’ve got to beat your teammate to keep your job and with David I didn’t feel that. We just worked really hard on making our race program better and real transparent, so I hope to continue that with John Hunter. Obviously, he’s a rookie and doesn’t have a lot of experience, but he grew up in this sport and he grew up around great people and a great family, so I don’t like consider him your average rookie. You look at guys like Chase Elliott and Ryan Blaney and even though when they came in they didn’t have a lot of experience when you’re here every weekend and that’s your life, you know a whole lot about this sport and about how it works and the people and just from the small things of listening on the radio and just being around it your entire life you have a lot of experience. So he’s very mature. He works hard. He’s got a good work ethic and I think he’ll do fine on the race track.”

    HOW DOES IT FEEL TO HAVE SOME CONSISTENCY FOR YOURSELF WITH FRONT ROW? “I’m super-excited about that. That’s probably been the hardest thing for me in my career is I’ve always felt like I’m just barely hanging on, just barely keeping the job or just barely able to stay in the sport. So when you go from team to team you don’t ever get a chance to build that and cultivate that culture and that environment and I feel like this is probably the first time that I’ve had consecutive back-to-back, full-time, running all the races, doing all the things to be able to build that and we were able to do that over the offseason. I feel really good about the group we put together. Drew Blickensderfer did a great job when we went from three cars to two at Front Row there were a lot of great people to pick from and we sort of hand-picked our group and feel really strong that this will be the best we’ve ever been.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – HOW DO YOU FEEL AFTER SPEAKING WITH JOEY? “I think I’ve been pretty consistent and verbal about the blocking on the race track, so I don’t really have anything that I feel differently about with respect to that. As far as the comments specific to Joey, I’ll keep those between him and I.”

    PEOPLE WILL VIEW THE COMMENTS YOU MADE ABOUT JOEY AS A RIFT AT TEAM PENSKE. WHAT WOULD YOU SAY TO THEM? “I’m glad you all have something to talk about. You want to sell papers and drive clicks for NASCAR. Again, the comments between Joey and I specifically I’ve said what I wanted to say and anything further than that I’ll just keep between he and I.”

    WAS LAST WEEKEND ANY INDICATION OF THE PRESSURE YOU’RE UNDER BEING THE LAST YEAR OF YOUR CONTRACT AND A CREW CHIEF CHANGE? DID THAT CONTRIBUTE AT ALL? “I don’t know, I’m probably a little bit stuck in the forest to see it from the trees, but with respect to that I hate losing races that I feel like we were in position to win, so I hope that never changes regardless of team dynamics, contract dynamics and so forth. I think most people would tell you that’s a good thing that you want to win and you hate losing, so certainly we were in position to win that race and I’m proud of that and we weren’t able to capitalize on it through no fault of our own, which is frustrating whether it’s here or anywhere else.”

    DOES THE CREW CHIEF CHANGE INCREASE COMPETITION AMONG THE DRIVERS AT PENSKE? “I don’t know. Again, that’s kind of the forest from the trees and I’m really in the thick of it, so it’s hard to have good perspective on that.”

    WAS THAT AS BAD OF A WEEKEND YOU’VE HAD AT DAYTONA? “Oh, no. I think the last five or six I’ve wrecked out of everything here. Was that good? No. Was that the worst thing that ever happened to me at Daytona? By far no. The 500 is what matters.”

    0-FOR-10 IN THE 500. WHEN DOES IT START TO WEIGH ON YOU? “I don’t know if there’s a specific number that I mind. I look at the real chances I feel like we’ve had to win it where we didn’t get crashed out or we didn’t have things happen that we couldn’t control and that’s the real number to me, and I think there’s really only been three of those races of those 10. One of them I made a mistake and the other one we just weren’t fast enough and the third one, I think, we blew up in, so with respect to that it’s frustrating to not capitalize on the three opportunities I’ve probably had to win this race, but I am confident based on the way we ran the last four or five times here that we’ll have that opportunity again really soon, so I feel like this car that I have here for the 500 is one of the better cars I’ve ever had here. I’ve had great cars here the last three or four years and this is right up there with them, but at the end of the day I can’t control everyone else’s moves and in the last four or five years I’ve been caught up in that and you just kind of raise your hands and say, ‘we did what we could do.’ Whether that’s the 500 or anything else, so that probably makes it not sting so bad, knowing that we’ve been crashed out and things that were completely out of our control and other drivers’ bad moves. It doesn’t make you feel good about it though.”

    WHAT THREE ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT? “The three that stick out, really, in sequential order are ’14, ’15 and ’16. I think we had a car close enough to Dale to win in ’14 and I didn’t execute at the end. In ’15 I think we had a shot where we were running up front and blew up and in ’16 we were just slow all weekend, so those are really the only three that I haven’t been crashed out of.”

    ARE THE ODDS LESS THAN 50/50 YOU CAN FINISH THIS RACE? “Yeah, I’d say the current odds of just being able to finish the race, not that I’m a Las Vegas bet maker, but they’re less than what it is crashing out of it. I think you probably will get a 75 percent chance of crashing on Sunday and if you don’t crash, you just hope that you can make something of it.”

    THERE WERE SOME PICTURES ONLINE OF YOU WORKING ON THE CAR. WHY WERE YOU DOING THAT? “I was just trying to be a resource. I’m not the body man that the guys we have at Team Penske are, but I just wanted to be there for them. Clearly, I made a mistake and I just wanted to own it the best I could and make sure we’re all pulling the same direction.”

    YOU WOULD THINK THE FIRST PART OF THE RACE WOULD BE CALMER, BUT WHAT ARE THE ODDS WE SEE A CLEAN FINISH TO THE RACE? WOULD THEY BE ALMOST ZERO? “Yeah, I would say that’s pretty fair. I don’t know how you couldn’t know, but it doesn’t seem to change the behaviors, which is mindboggling to me. You can’t win races that you’re not running at the finish of and when you’re making double and triple blocks with the closing rates that the cars have right now someone is going to the care center, more likely than not it’s gonna be the car that started the block. So it seems strange to me to make a move that had almost 100 percent certainty of not working, that everyone can see. The same moves are being made over and over again and it’s the definition of insanity, but it is what it is and as it affects us, we just try to survive it and not be the one to cause our own demise.”

    WHAT IS YOUR GAMEPLAN FOR THURSDAY? “I feel really good about Thursday and Sunday. We didn’t qualify like I thought we would, but the car drives really, really well and with the way the draft is working right now you don’t really need to be fast. You need the car to handle well, so that’s a good sign.”

    WHO ARE SOME OF THE DRIVERS THAT CHALLENGE YOU IN THESE TYPE OF RACES? “I think Denny does a phenomenal job. There are a lot of drivers that are good at this type of racing. I think Denny is certainly right up there. I think Denny shows a lot of promise. I think Clint Bowyer is really good. My teammate, Ryan Blaney, has really excelled of late at this type of racing. He just won Talladega and he’s led a lot of laps here at Daytona, but it’s really hard to pick just one driver. I think there’s about a half-dozen drivers. Kurt Busch I would add to that. I hate to even list because I’m gonna leave somebody out unfairly.”

    HOW DO THEY CHALLENGE YOU? “They make good moves and they fill good gaps and seem to be able to know when to hold ‘em and know when to fold ‘em. That’s what good plate racers do.”

    DO YOU REMEMBER THE FIRST TIME YOU WORKED WITH JEREMY BULLINS? “I think the first time I met Jeremy was in 2012, December of 2011 or January 2012 when he had just taken the job at Team Penske on the XFINITY side.”

    WHY DO YOU FEEL THERE WAS INSTANT SUCCESS BACK THEN IN XFINITY? “That’s a good question. I’m not sure I completely know or understand it. I think he’s a smart guy, a good team leader. He’s constantly reinvesting and very focused. I didn’t know him as well then as I do now, but the result of that has been a strong, focused team that strives for excellence.”

    IS THERE ANOTHER LEVEL FOR YOU IN TERMS OF WAYS TO EXPRESS YOUR FRUSTRATION? “I don’t know. It’s so obvious what the issue is that it’s kind of like if you can’t see it, you’re never gonna see it.”

    WE SHOULDN’T BE TALKING ABOUT IT, IT’S SO OBVIOUS. “Yeah, so if there’s another way, I don’t know what it is.”

    LAST YEAR ON THE WEST COAST SWING TEAM PENSKE JUMPED OUT STRONG AT VEGAS AND FONTANA. WERE YOU SURPRISED TO HAVE SUCH AN UPPERHAND? “Definitely Team Penske fired off really strong in the west coast part of the season last year, but there were some good decisions made on the cars. We probably rested on our laurels a little bit too much over the summer and paid for that in the playoffs, but I think there’s a good fire under everyone’s butt to get started here in 2020.”

    DID EVERYBODY FIGURE OUT THE RACING LAST YEAR? “I wouldn’t say everybody figured it out. I’d say Gibbs did a really great job of adapting and keeping up with it as the rules continued to evolve. They just found a way to get ahead.”

    HOW HARD IS IT TO SET UP A PASS WITH THOSE RULES ON A 1.5-MILE TRACK? “I think some tracks are certainly easier than others. It’s very situational dependent. What line is fast? How many laps do you have on your tires? There are a lot of dynamics to it that sometimes make it easier than other times, so I’d say some weeks it’s pretty easy and a lot of weeks it’s really hard.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang – WHAT HAS JIMMIE JOHNSON MEANT TO THIS SPORT? “Jimmie has meant a tremendous amount to this sport. He’s been incredible for our sport. He’s been a great champion and a great role model for any young racers growing up. If you could do it like anybody, you’d want to do it like him. Not only has he won seven championships, but he’s done it with such class. He’s just such a classy guy, so humble and down to earth and just a genuinely nice guy, and that’s what I tell people when they ask me about Jimmie Johnson. The guy is just a winner on and off the race track and that’s hard to come by. A lot of people that have success it goes to their head and they become super-arrogant and that’s just not Jimmie. Jimmie is just such a classy guy and yet he’s a seven-time champion.”

    WHO DO YOU FEEL CAN FILL THE VOID AS THE NEXT FACE OF NASCAR? “I don’t know. I don’t feel like Jimmie has gotten the credit he deserves as a seven-time champion. I don’t even think you would classify him as the face of NASCAR, so from that standpoint I think it’s unfortunate. At the same time, I think NASCAR has done a really great job of spreading out that role. Ever since Dale Jr. left it’s been about trying to attract fans of every driver and making sure that everyone is plugged in and trying to create that stardom out of each and every one of us to try to carry the banner. From that standpoint I think every one of us has a role in representing our sport and doing it well and in a way that is authentic to us.”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THE CREW CHIEF CHANGES AT SHR? “I think that was more of an organizational thing just trying to be better as an organization. I think we obviously have the 4 car in the same four walls at our shop and they perform at a very high level and so after two years of me being there we performed good, but we weren’t great so just looking to try to be great. That’s really what it boils down to. The goal is to have four Stewart-Haas cars in the final four at the championship and if it’s not the case, then we need to reevaluate, so for us as an organization Zippy and Brett Frood and Tony and everybody in management thought that it was necessary to shake some things up and move some personnel around to try to get the most out of what we have as an organization.”

    HOW WAS IT WITH JOHNNY? “I really enjoyed working with Johnny. Johnny and myself were great friends. We got along really well away from the race track and did a lot of things together. Our families got along, but at the end of the day it’s a performance-based business and we ultimately need to perform better. This change is in an effort to do that. We’re making this change in an effort to perform at a higher level and hopefully we do that. I feel very good about working with Mike Bugarewicz. I think the guy is tremendously talented. He’s built race cars in the same shop as us. I’ve watched his work ethic and the guy is relentless and I love that about him. Just in the two months I’ve already worked with him just his passion and his emotion and the amount of work he puts in is incredible, and I really feed off of that energy. I’m excited. I’m looking forward to it. I know Buga and all the guys are fired up and I think it’s gonna be a great year for us.”

    KEVIN IS GOING TO RACE WELL INTO HIS FORTIES. WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT HIS LONGEVITY? “He’s doing a phenomenal job in staying not only competitive, but focused. You see a lot of guys when they get to that point they start getting into other adventures and other business ventures and it distracts them, and I think Kevin has done an amazing job of really eliminating a lot of distraction. From what I see being around the guy, he cares about his family and racing. He doesn’t have a lot of distractions, so he’s really focused and he’s competitive. I think as long as he’s competitive that keeps the juices flowing and keeps him excited about coming back to the race track every week.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR EXPECTATIONS FOR THE RACE THIS YEAR? “You just don’t know how the races are going to play out. You’ve got to go race and put yourself in position. People are gonna block. I’m gonna block. We’re all gonna do it. We’re all gonna make aggressive moves. We’re all gonna do everything we can to try to win the race. That’s what we get paid to do. Sometimes the block or the move is risky, sometimes it’s calculated, whatever you want to call it, but we’re going 200 miles an hour inches apart and mistakes happen, accidents happen. The unfortunate part is when accidents happen here and Talladega, they usually cause a big mess.”

    WHAT DID YOU LEARN LAST YEAR? “I learned last year that just hard work is not enough. Hard work and preparation and dedication is not enough. You have to have everything go right. It’s hard to explain, but you can work equally as hard as you did the year before, and we did at Stewart-Haas Racing, and not produce the same results as 2018. As a company we had a stellar year in 2018. We had something like 17 wins as an organization. It was crazy and then turn around and follow it up with three or four wins as an organization and it wasn’t the same. The effort was the same and, if anything, worked harder, so I think that was one thing that was eye-opening for me last year was it’s more than hard work and dedication and preparation and all those things. You’ve got to hone in on exactly what you need to be successful and then do everything you can to maximize that. When you don’t have that, you’re scrounging and you find ways to be resilient and scrappy and I think those times really build a race team and build character in a race team and help you learn about prevailing. I think this will be a big year for us on how well we learned from 2019 and if we can come out of that a better, stronger organization.”

    HOW IMPORTANT IS IT TO GET HELP AT SPEEDWAY RACES? “When it comes to speedway racing there is strength in numbers. The more cars you get together, the faster you go and so you try and help each other, you try and work together and help each other. In speedway racing there are opportunities to help each other and you try and do that, and I think Ford really started this whole working together as a manufacturer as One Ford. Of all places to do that, Daytona and Talladega are the two places you can accomplish a lot together. When you pull out to make a pass or to make a move, eight times out of 10 you need help, you need cars to go with you to pull off the pass or to make the bottom lane work or to make the middle lane work. If you make a decision, you want to know that you have the help and support of the guys behind you, so when you start teaming up as a manufacturer, it makes it a little bit more methodical as you make moves on the race track and things, knowing that you have the help and support of your teammates driving the same manufacturer car.”

    CAN THE SECOND-PLACE CAR GET AROUND THE LEADER WITHOUT HELP ON THE FINAL LAP WITHOUT HELP? “I don’t know. I think there’s the potential to find out Sunday night, I really do. I think two cars locking together, we saw it at Talladega last year at the end of the year with Clint and Keselowski, and we’ve seen it here in practice and I think it works. It’s risky and pushing in the corners is the riskiest part. You’ve got to be careful in how you do it, but if you can stay locked together you can go really, really fast and you can separate yourself from the field. So I think there’s the potential for that to happen. The other thing that’s questionable is the pack was only a few cars right there at the end of the Clash, so I don’t know if that’s a fair test, but I think the tandem will come into play. I think it can work and I do think the second-place car can get by the first-place car, but when you’re coming to the checkered for the Daytona 500 I can promise you that the first-place car is not gonna let that happen easily.”

    WHAT KIND OF SKILL IS NEEDED TO BE THE LEAD CAR IN THE TANDEM? “There’s some technique that comes into play when you’re the lead car and you’re getting pushed. You can’t just run your normal line and you can’t just drive and steer wherever you want. You’re trying to be conscious of the guy behind you and keeping him attached because what happens is as long as you’re together and locked together and the guy behind you is pushing, you’re going really fast. But the moment you become unattached you slow down tremendously and if the pack is behind you, they start sniffing your draft and they will just blow your doors off when they catch back up to you. So, yeah, there’s definitely an art to it.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Media Day (John Hunter Nemechek)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Media Day (John Hunter Nemechek)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Wednesday, February 12, 2020

    DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY

    JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK, No. 38 Ford Mustang

    DO YOU THINK GROWING UP IN THE SPORT WILL HELP YOU IN YOUR ROOKIE YEAR? “Yeah, I think so. I think growing up around it and be a part of it, you have seen the good, bad and ugly. You learn how to handle yourself and not handle yourself in certain situations. Being able to have a radio and listen to the crew guys from the standpoint of the crew chief talking to the engineers to my dad talking on the radio with the spotters and how they communicate, I think that has helped me as a driver. Growing up around it and experience the Daytona 500 as a kid following his dad and watching his hero is pretty special to be able to be down here driving in my first Daytona 500 as well.”

    WHEN YOU STRAP IN ON SUNDAY, WILL YOU TAKE A COUPLE OF MINUTES TO SOAK ALL THAT IN? “I wouldn’t say that I have had a huge chance to soak everything in. That is one thing that I have been told, to just take some time for myself and enjoy the moment. You only get one first start in this thing so being able to enjoy it. Some of the other drivers I have talked to regret not enjoying that and taking some time for themselves. Before I strap in I will take a couple of seconds to think about it and that this is it, we are here. This is really cool. Then we will go out there and maximize our opportunity and try to accomplish what we are here to accomplish.”

    WHAT WAS YOUR DAD’S REACTION WHEN YOU GOT THE CALL FROM FRONT ROW? “He was pretty excited. He pushed me to be better always. But that is a dad mentality, a boss mentality and advisor mentality. He has been every role for me trying to push me to be better. It is really neat to have him here. Being able to grow up and be at every Daytona 500 that he has been a part of and now for him to be a dad cheering on his son and the roles reversed is pretty neat.”

    DOES BEING IN THE SEAT WITH THIS TEAM FOR THOSE HANDFUL OF RACES LAST YEAR HELP YOU GOING INTO THIS FULL TIME THIS YEAR? “I definitely think that the baseline of knowing what to expect. The short track package is out the window from what I drove last year. Us as a team we want to strive to make our cars better and be able to communicate with my crew chief, Seth Barber and the engineers and figure out what changes we need to make in the off-season to make our team and cars better is something that we strive for. Being able to have that communications already kicked off, I definitely think it helps compared to coming into a brand new team. There are still some new faces on the team and one up in the spotter stand as well. Just trying to communicate as best we can and make the most out of it.”

    WHAT DID YOU NOTICE WAS THE DIFFERENCE IN TALENT LEVEL AND KNOWLEDGE IN THE CUP SERIES FROM WHAT YOU WERE USED TO IN THE XFINITY SERIES? “I think every series has talent. When you come to the Cup Series, there is a reason these guys are here on Sunday doing what they do and racing against and that is why they have had such long careers. They are the best in the business. To take everything they are doing and try to learn and experience and when you come to the Cup Series it is a whole different level. It is a big jump for sure. Being able to kind of take everything you can out of that and just make the most of it, that is the biggest thing for myself, being able to be here with the Cup guys and now I am a Cup guy. Just learning from them and make every opportunity count.”

    IT WAS JUST THREE RACES BUT WERE THERE ANY MOMENTS LAST YEAR THAT YOU SAW SOMETHING ON THE TRACK THAT OPENED YOUR EYES? “Probably the coolest thing is having data on the Cup cars compared to Xfinity and Trucks. You can compare when you think you are driving in the corner deep and maybe you aren’t or if you are overdriving it in the corners. I had to rely on that pretty big for not having any experience in the Cup car to jumping in and trying to learn at three different race tracks and where I could be better, what I should focus on. What are the trends of steering input and how guys are setting up their cars for the long run. There are so many variables to making a car go fast. Being able to get here and not make any mistakes is the big thing. From the time you show up when practice starts to the time the checkered flag falls you can’t make any mistakes. In the Xfinity and Truck Series’ you don’t want to but if you were able to make a mistake then you were able to rebound from it. These guys, they don’t make mistakes. Sometimes they do, I shouldn’t say they don’t. Sometimes they do and sometimes they have clean weekends. It shows when they don’t make any mistakes.”

    WHAT ADVICE DID YOUR DAD GIVE YOU GOING INTO THIS RACE? “Take it all in. Enjoy the moment. Have fun while doing it. That is the biggest thing. YOu don’t want to come here and try to set the world on fire and wreck trying to do so. So be there at the end of the race and have a shot. It is anyone’s race here at Daytona, that is for sure. Being able to maximize our performance and being able to have him down here as a dad and enjoying the moment with me will be very special.”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT YOUR ROOKIE OF THE YEAR POSSIBILITIES? “It is going to be a tough battle. It is going to come down to the very end. I think being able to race against Cole (Custer), Tyler (Reddick) and Christopher Bell is something we have done through the Truck Series, Xfinity Series and now the Cup Series. We all came in at different times in those other series’ but to be in the same class in the Cup Series is pretty special. We all want to beat each other. With the situations we were all dealt we are in different positions with different teams but you know the goal going in and try to maximize your races and opportunities.”

    “I feel like I have a good relationship with all of them. We have all had run-ins in the past. I feel like we have all had our times where we have been mad at each other but at the same time I think I would say we are all friends here at the track. Some of us hang out with each other once in awhile. Probably the coolest thing, and I kind of regret going now, but being able to be at Christopher Bell’s first asphalt late model test. I shook down the car for him and I wish I would have raced that car that weekend because that thing was fast.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE YOUTH MOVEMENT IN NASCAR? “I definitely think there is a next generation of drivers coming in. I think you see some of the older generation of drivers getting ready to hang up their helmets. One of the greats in our sport, Jimmie Johnson, this is his last year. To be a part of that new generation coming in and with Cup experience I think will help us in the future. We want to make a name for ourselves and we have done so in the Truck and Xfinity Series. To start that learning curve now in the Cup Series and get to race around these guys and pick their brains and have a good relationship with them will only make me better as a driver.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Media Day (Kevin Harvick & David Ragan)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Media Day (Kevin Harvick & David Ragan)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Wednesday, February 12, 2020

    DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Ford Mustang

    “I think everybody knows that I have been pretty vocal about my opinions on the schedule change and having a variety of markets and race tracks. I think that variety, based upon everything that we have heard and you guys have heard, I don’t think there is any limit on that. I think it is important to really consider areas of the country, Canada, but I don’t think it matters on the race track. I think it could be exciting anywhere.”

    STREET COURSES? ARE YOU IN FAVOR OF THAT? “As long as we don’t have to jump through gutters like we did in the LA street race. In the end, you really don’t need a street course. There are a number of great road courses in great markets that would be perfectly suitable for the things that we do on the race track.”

    A LOT OF PEOPLE WANT MORE SHORT TRACKS BUT IOWA SEEMS TO BE ABOUT THE ONLY ONE IN TERMS OF INFRASTRUCTURE THAT COULD HOST A CUP RACE RIGHT NOW: “I would disagree with that a little bit. I think, and I still believe that our All-Star race would be a great platform to help rebuild some of the grass roots system. Let’s just use Evergreen Speedway. You go to Evergreen Speedway and you have some upgrades to the race track with soft walls and grandstands and infrastructure and get it ready for an All-Star race. You wouldn’t have to create some crazy format in order to have a good race and you would help build the infrastructure and take that All-Star race around the country and help rebuild some of these race tracks and leave Truck and XFINITY there and when you are done with that three-year package you have a great race track where you can race ARCA cars or late model cars and you have created an environment that is upgraded and rebuilt because of the attention and money that you brought there from the All-Star race. You could do that at Irwindale, Evergreen, IRP. You could run at IRP on the Wednesday night before the Indy 500 and never be short of people. That one is ready to go with soft walls and they know how to put up plenty of temporary grandstands. Thinking about stuff like that and the infrastructure of our short track system is something you could use at the top levels to help rebuild.”

    DO YOU ANTICIPATE SPEEDWEEKS CHANGING NEXT YEAR DUE TO THE DATE CHANGE FOR THE 500? “I have no ideas. That is way too specific for me.”

    WOULD IT BE OKAY IF IT BECAUSE JUST ONE WEEK FOR YOU? “Yeah. That would be perfectly fine with me.”

    ARE YOU OPTIMISTIC THINGS WILL CHANGE A LOT FOR 2021? “I don’t have enough knowledge to give you an honest opinion. I think based on the conversations I have had with everyone from NASCAR that they will be aggressive in looking at things outside of the box and different from what we have done in the past. It is really kind of like ending at Daytona with the regular season. The story is already built. We need more of those types of situations. Even if you only go there for one year, who cares? It was a great story, right? The race is almost secondary because you are in a market that hasn’t had NASCAR or hasn’t had NASCAR in a long time. Something we haven’t done before. If the race is no good, what difference does it make? Everybody wants to have a great game. Everyone wants to have a great football game too and sometimes they are blowouts. Sometimes you get a Super Bowl like we had this year and sometimes you get a route. But the anticipation and hype leading up to it, we need a lot of those on the schedule.”

    WHEN DID YOU SIGN YOUR EXTENSION? “End of last year.”

    IT SEEMED LIKE YOU WERE MAYBE GOING IN THE DIRECTION OF GETTING OUT OF THE CAR EARLIER: “I don’t know if that is a fair assumption. For me, being in the car was always on the table. I think for me it was really testing the waters to kind of see what that was all about. I am in a unique spot to be fortunate enough to be able to experience that and still drive the car. I had to have a lot of conversations. I sat down with Mark Martin and Dale Jarrett and Rusty Wallace and Joe Girardi and I asked a lot of questions about when those guys knew it was time and what did they feel like they could have done differently. A lot of it pointed to why you would want to get out of a situation when you are competitive with a group of guys that you love to be around and are performing and racing for championships. It is a much more predictable schedule and lifestyle than what it was 15 years ago from a testing standpoint and a lifestyle standpoint and how you operate. There were a number of things and they all pointed to staying in the seat. I enjoy the TV booth. I enjoy the radio show. For me, not doing the radio show gave me Wednesday back. We have a very interesting year with the new car being developed and having to develop with it. The simulator time will be up and I need those days back. With the way the race schedule is now on Saturday’s and my family coming to the race track more now that Piper is older it is almost like you are on vacation. Most of these race tracks you go and run one qualifying lap and the rest of the day you have to go figure out something to do. Being in the booth – those were some of the compromises that had to come with staying in the car in order to keep the family life balanced and be able to spend enough time with them to keep that balanced.”

    SO CUTTING OUT A LOT OF THOSE PRODUCTION MEETINGS DUE TO RADIO AND TV DURING THE WEEK AND KEEPING MORE TIME FOR YOUR FAMILY PLAYED A ROLE? “Absolutely. Being in the car, that is all stuff that down the road I still want to do, there are just compromises in every situation and for me making the decision that I made had to come with compromises that lead to more time. With that came the way that we gtravel and how we travel and the things that we do and gaining hours back in airplanes and things like that were all in there as well. There are a number of things that went into the process.”

    DID YOU RECALIBRATE YOUR GOALS? “My goals are always the same. Be as competitive as you can week in and week out and ahve a chance to compete for championships. We have done a good job at that. A lot of times people forget that this isn’t baseball, football or basketball. Experience in this game matters a lot more than being able to run fast or jump high. Our bodies don’t matter as much as they do in other sports. When you look at a guy like Mark Martin, what was he 55? Most of those guys were in their 50’s when they quit. It is easier now than what it was then. That was one thing that Dale (Jarrett) and Rusty (Wallace) brought up. What difference does it make? As long as you are physically able to do the things at a high level, there is really no reason to just up and quit unless you have some things that are happening at home that you want to do different or something along those lines. As long as that circle of life is balanced, our sport is not like other sports as far as your body is concerned.”

    DO YOU THINK ABOUT LEGACY? “I don’t.”

    DOES 50 WINS MEAN ANYTHING? “It would be better than 49. The things that mean the most to me are keeping my team happy. I feel responsible for giving them the effort that I have because I know how much effort they put in. Instead of paying attention to those numbers and thinking about what it would be like to pull into Victory Lane, I enjoy it like at Indy. I was more excited about the picture than I was about winning the Brickyard 400. I was more excited to see the pictures of those guys and how happy Rodney and those guys were. I feel satisfied because we were able to achieve that together and they got to experience it. THose things to me help keep me motivated because I like to experience those things with those guys and my kids and wife and everybody who is around. It is just those types of things that are as fun as the competition on the race track. Now, look, I love to beat Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin and all these guys that race these cars and that is still a pretty big thrill for me in order to outduel those guys and out-think them. There are a lot of things. It is easy to stay motivated.”

    DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU NEED TO BE A PART OF SHEPHERDING THE SPORT INTO THIS NEW ERA THAT IS COMING? “I think the biggest thing of anything like that that came to my mind was the intrigue of the new car. I think it will be interesting to figure out how to make it work and how to get to a point of being competitive and having a chance to win races and what that looks like and what it drives like and what it steers like. Can we make our simulator better than everybody elses’ simulator. There are an endless amount of things that are intriguing. That is the one thing I miss from having owned the race team. How can I put this puzzle together to make it better than another organization. As much as that competition inside the car drives me, it is also that competition and how can I feed these guys enough information to outhink those guys over there.”

    STEWART-HAAS RACING FEELS LIKE IT IS COMING UP ON A TRANSITION A LITTLE BIT WITH FREE AGENCY AND THINGS. DO YOU HAVE A VOICE IN THAT OR THE DIRECTION? “I am fortunate that they keep me in the loop as far as opinions and where things are at. I am lucky because that is kind of what Tony (Stewart) and Gene (Haas) wanted as they hired me was to be a part of that stuff and be involved. I enjoy that part of it. I also enjoy the part that I don’t have to pay for it. I enjoy voicing my opinion and walking out the door (laughter). In the end it is still their team and they make the ultimate decision but it is something that I get to at least have a voice.”

    IS THERE ONE PIECE OF ADVICE YOU GOT FROM MARK MARTIN OR DJ OR THOSE GUYS THAT REALLY RESONATED WITH YOU? “Well, I think that the thing that stuck out to me from Mark was to just remember when you walk out the last time you will never get to see your number on that scoreboard again. From Girardi it was, ‘Make sure they take the jersey off for you, don’t take it off yourself.’”

    “The analytics go off of average drivers, right? I like to think of myself as above average. Most of the time. I think with Dale (Jarrett), for him leaving a situation where he was very successful and winding up in a situation that he was in ultimately kind of ended things for him. I think that the biggest or one of the biggest things I took away from that was that age doesn’t matter if you are competitive in this particular sport. Also, if you are with a good team and you have worked your whole career for it, don’t walk away from it and turn your back on it.”

    BOBBY ALLISON WON THIS RACE WHEN HE WAS 50: “You know, as we go to more and more common media types and they try to compare to other sports, I think that a lot of people forget that our sport is not other sports and if you look back it was not uncommon to race the car into your 50’s”

    HOW COOL WAS IT TO SEE TONY INDUCTED INTO THE HALL OF FAME? “That was a lot of fun listening to his speech. I wish he would have put a number on those past girlfriends. I don’t know if he can keep track of that. Tony, I think his speech shows his character and why everybody loves him for who he is and nothing has changed other than he is not here every week. Tony will always be Tony. It is very rare you see him excited for something that requires so many pictures and media and things like that. Seeing him excited, and he falls right into the same group as my team. When I can see him excited and happy about his life and the way that things are going, it makes me happy. It was a great night to celebrate a guy that is in the NASCAR Hall of Fame but he has been great for racing in general.”

    WHAT DID YOU GUYS LEARN FROM THE CLASH? “You mean the crash. I think it will be more of the same. You are going to have to survive. I think survival will be more talked about this year than any year in the past. We have all been programmed to block and do things with the old package for so many years and this is not the old package. The runs are happening faster. The cars are kind of lining up and spin out really easy to the right when you push them wrong. They are going. They are hauling the mail. They are fast compared to where we were before. Just I think as we go and learn you have to have had some luck in the past and we have not had any luck in the past few years in this race. I have had a lot of luck and been on the winning side of this race too. You have always had to have some luck to win this race. You have to have a fast car and it just has to be your day.”

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Wednesday, February 12, 2020

    DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY

    DAVID RAGAN, No. 36 Ford Mustang

    IS IT MORE IMPORTANT FOR YOU AS A DRIVER TO STUDY THE RACE THAT HAS JUST GONE BY TO LEARN WHAT MAYBE WENT WRONG OR THE TRACK COMING UP? “That is one thing that you have to navigate individually. I think that you can’t dwell on last weeks race too long. Sometimes early in my career I did that. You make a mistake and you dwell on it Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Before you know it you are hopping on the airplane to go to the next track. I have to turn the light switch off on Monday night. I get back and do my post race review and have our meeting and stuff and then you have to turn that switch off. You have to take good notes so the next time you go to that track you can reference those. I think it is important mentally to turn the switch off from one race and start planning on the next.”

    WHEN PEOPLE LOOK AT YOUR CAR THIS WEEKEND THEY WILL THINK IT IS A FRONT ROW CAR BUT TECHNICALLY YOU ARE WITH RICK WARE. ONE OF THOSE CARS, JJ YELEY, HAS TO RACE HIS WAY IN. ARE YOU HOPING TO HELP HIM OUT TO GET ALL THE RICK WARE CARS INTO THE 500? “We haven’t even had those discussions. Until you just brought it up I didn’t know what cars had to race in and what Duel. I am sure there will bea conversation at some point but at the end of the day we have to take care of the No. 36 Ford and that is my job. If it is convenient to help out a teammate or even help out a friend that needs to get in, I think first and foremost it is myself and all my Ford teammates.“

    WITH JOHN HUNTER NEMECHECK BEING A ROOKIE, DO YOU THINK YOU COMING FROM A RACING FAMILY WITH KEN RUNNING CUP AND HIM BEING AROUND THE CUP GARAGE ALL THESE YEARS WILL HELP HIM? “Absolutely. I think rookies today are a lot more prepared than rookies 10 or 15 years ago with the technology and data we have at our fingertips. The rookies can access a lot of information. John Hunter is a winner in other divisions, grew up around the race track, he has a father that is still in tune with the race cars and race tracks. John Hunter came over last year and did a real nice job and I think he will slide in. He had all off season to spend time with his team and crew chief and engineers to build that little bit of trust that you need to build. I think he is prepared and ready for the opportunity.”

    DID THE KOBE BRYANT TRAGEDY BRING TO MIND FOR YOU A CHANGE IN HOW YOU WILL GET AROUND? “You know, I think it made me think a little bit more before I hop on a private aircraft and go anywhere or even hop in your rental car and head down the road looking at your GPS not knowing exactly where you are going and multi-tasking. A lot of times we take for granted that we do a lot of traveling and there are accidents that happen every day. I don’t want to take anything away from the common person getting involved in an accident and losing their life, obviously. Kobe’s accident brings to light some of the dangers that we still have but I don’t think it will change the way that I travel. I am too tight. I didn’t spend the money to travel too much on a helicopter and any time I am flying on an airplane there are usually a lot of people on it. I am always grateful when I do land or I will say a prayer when I take off. I always tell my wife and kids I love them before I leave the house because you never know. We live in a world where we travel all the time, even if you aren’t a professional athlete you are still traveling a lot more than folks did 20 or 30 years ago. It definitely makes you think about it more and events like that you have to try to turn them into a positive thing that if we can appreciate our lives a little more and the way we get around, I think that is important.”

    WHAT IS YOUR PERSPECTIVE GOING INTO SUNDAY? YOU SAID ALL ALONG YOU WEREN’T DONE COMPLETELY, BUT DO YOU TREAT THIS AS YOUR LAST ONE? “I don’t really treat it as my last one. Man, I am 34 years old. I don’t want to stay on this earth and never race again. I know I am not going to be in Las Vegas but I am sure there will be a few more races throughout the year that I will pop up and run. It is a little more relaxing coming down here knowing you don’t have to worry about your downforce car sitting at the race shop or how your pit crew will be all season long or if you made the right acquisitions on the engineering staff or those things that go into making a team competitive all season long. All I have to worry about is the Daytona 500 and I take it as seriously as I would if we were running a full season but I am not distracted by any of the other noise that goes with starting a full season. It is fun to be down here. I still love motorsports and I love racing. I want to race for a long time. This is an important big race and a fun race to be at. Who know what my future will be like at the Daytona 500 but I hope I can run more down the road.”

    DO YOU HAVE ANY BUCKET LIST RACES YOU WOULD LIKE TO RUN? “Yeah, some I have run before that I want to go back and race like the Snowball Derby and my Legends car at the Thursday Thunder races at Atlanta Motor Speedway where I got my start. I would like to run the 24-hours one day. I would like to run a Martinsville truck race. I would love to go back to Toledo and Salem, Indiana. ORP and some of the great short tracks that I ran in my ARCA car back in 2004 and 2005. Absolutely. There are some fun races that I would love to run down the road without running full time on the Cup side. It will allow me that opportunity to hopefully explore some of those opportunities.”

    WHAT IS THE LINE ON BLOCKING? WHAT IS FAIR GAME AND WHAT IS NOT? “It is different for everybody and in every situation. Let me start by saying that with this package it is a lot harder to be effective at blocking because the runs that we get are so big. We have more horsepower and the spoiler is bigger and punches a bigger hole in the air and that guy that is getting a run that you are going to block, he is coming at a faster rate than what we have ever had before. Over the last five to seven years at the speedway races, if you were aggressively blocking up front and you had a good spotter, you could maintain the lead pretty well and it has been done well. Dale Jr., Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski and some of those guys. Jamie McMurray, they were really good at maintaining both lanes but you can’t do that as aggressively anymore. I think we have seen that. If you look at the data from the July race down here and both Talladega’s, you will see where a lot of those wrecks were because of guys trying to block and you get a good run and the bumpers don’t line up well anymore. The line for me is that I am not going to push it blocking unless it is very late in the race and the risk is worth the reward. If I were good enough, if anyone blocked me, I would just wreck ‘em. The problem is a lot of times when you do that you wreck yourself. The way to stop all that is for the guys to just wreck and you kind of get them out of the way but that is easier said than done. Nothing would make me happier than to have a great run coming and some guy pull up to block and I could spin him out and keep going. that would be awesome and that would teach them a lesson. Sometimes you get caught up in those wrecks though and I don’t want to do that either.”

  • CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Kurt Busch Transcript

    CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Kurt Busch Transcript

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    DAYTONA 500
    TEAM CHEVY MEDIA DAY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    FEBRUARY 12, 2020

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE Session Highlights:

    ON THE 2020 CAMARO ZL1 1LE:
    “it has shown well in the wind tunnel. That’s the real data we have to go off of. The balance last year at Daytona and Talladega isn’t all that different with the new Camaro. It’ll show up more so at the 1.5-miles and short tracks later on.”

    TALK ABOUT THE UNIQUENESS OF SPEEDWEEKS. CAN YOU SEE IT CONDENSED BEGINNING NEXT SEASON TO EITHER ONE WEEK?
    “It’s always great to have a week that leads into the Daytona 500. I think that’s the reasoning for the Clash and Qualifying to be on a separate weekend. I don’t mind it being spread out for a week. We have to kind of get the rust knocked off things. We’ve got to have a couple practice sessions and the Qualifier. It all makes sense the way it’s set up. But, could we do things with the Clash and do things different there? Sure. But, I really like the way Qualifying is a week out and leads us into the Great American race.”

    WOULD YOU WANT TO GO UP AGAINST THE SUPER BOWL THOUGH?
    “When they drop the green flag, I race. I don’t know when and where or how it will fall, but it makes sense to be after football.”

    DO YOU AND YOUR BROTHER, KYLE BUSCH, STILL HAVE THE SIBLING RIVALRY YOU USED TO HAVE?
    “Oh, absolutely. It’s as strong as it is in different reasons. But, I would say we’ve mellowed a little bit. But yet, to get left behind after I beat him at Kentucky, we were sharing a plane ride that weekend, and he was more frustrated that he lost. It wasn’t that he lost in general, it’s that he lost to me. And that’s what made it that much more better to win that and to have an outcome where two of us put it out on the line like that, racing against each other. There was that moment of brotherhood where he left me a small window on the outside of Turn 4 and that’s what helped me win with the Monster Energy Chevy.”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK WHEN HE SAYS HE THINKS CAN WIN 7 OR 8 CHAMPIONSHIPS AND BE THE GREATEST OF ALL TIME?
    “Ah, it sounds like Mohammad Ali speaking, and he should go for it (laughter). I wish him the best.”

    IF YOU COULD MAKE ONE CHANGE TO THE SCHEDULE, WHAT WOULD YOU MAKE?
    “Oh, these are a lot of cool questions right away. And I’m not even warmed up yet. I think we’re going to end up with a shorter schedule. There are some tracks that are part of the whole TV alliance and there are some tracks that we need to go to twice, and there are some tracks that we don’t. If a track isn’t selling out, could we go to Iowa Speedway and sell out? It would be a zoo. Why we’re not in Canada is beyond me. Xfinity was racing in Canada and Mexico years ago. Street races. Why haven’t we figured out how to do a street race yet? I think there are plenty of cool things that are on the horizon now that SMI, ISC, and NASCAR are all working out their track contracts.”

    WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM CHIP GANASSI NOW THAT YOU’VE WORKED WITH HIM FOR A WHILE?
    “Chip is pretty much a straight-forward guy like he is when you see him or what you know about him. He’s right up front. There’s no BS. When he wants an answer, you’ve got to give him an answer. He already knows the answer to the question that he’s asking. That’s a sign of a true leader in any which category. It’s fun to race with him and to do to dinner and to have team meetings and to represent his sponsors, the manufacturer with Chevrolet; it’s the perfect combination for where I am in my career. And to race for Chip, we’ve got to win more. We’ve got to win more races this year.”

    INAUDIBLE
    “It’s a tough line to draw. And it’s a tough line to talk about. With the tires and the rules package, it doesn’t lend to side-drafting and the stability that we need to be able to lean on each other that hard. There has to be an understanding that when you are going to perform a block at a certain level, and you wreck and you wipe out five other guys that had nothing to do with that block, that’s something that the driver needs to digest and understand and implement when it comes down to when they’re going to do that in the future. So, as long as people are learning from the mistakes and the carnage that happened in the Clash, that’s what I hope we can all take from it. But, at the same time, it’s the Clash. People are going to race different in the Qualifier. People are going to race different in the 500.”

    ARE THE CHEVROLETS JUST NOT MARRYING UP AS WELL IN THE DRAFT AS THE FORDS AND TOYOTAS AT THIS POINT?
    “I would say that we’re all pretty equal. It’s that when there’s a quantity, like we were the other day in the Clash, of seven or eight cars, and we’re all trying to tow our train through a smaller group of Toyotas and a smaller group of Fords, it looks larger and looks like they’re not as in sync. When there’s more, that’s what we’re trying to do is win by numbers. And that’s why you see us doing different patterns than what you might see the other smaller groups doing.”

    IN LOOKING AT WHAT THE 2021 SCHEDULE MIGHT BE LIKE, ARE THERE CERTAIN TRACKS OR MARKETS YOU’D REALLY LIKE TO SEE NASCAR GO TO?
    “For me, I don’t know why we’re not racing in Canada at that Montreal track. They have a street course where they’ve had IndyCar for years. Iowa Speedway is a track I thought NASCAR bought, but we’re not racing there in the Cup series yet. I love the Pacific northwest as far as the geography and why we’re not racing in Washington state yet is a question as well. So, there’s plenty of cool tracks that have good seating capacity that I think need to be explored. But, it’s all part of the politics and the structure that ISC and SMI and the TV partners have in place.”

    ARE YOU OKAY WITH A STREET COURSE?
    “Yeah, I think it would be great. I raced a street course in the Southwest Series in 1999 around the L.A. Coliseum. The atmosphere was incredible. The energy was buzzing, and it was fun. Mark Martin came back to race with us. Harvick was there. Ron Hornaday. It was a cool atmosphere to put on a street race.”

    INAUDIBLE – ON THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TALLADEGA AND DAYTONA
    “For Daytona, it’s tough to go three-wide. Talladega, we can go four-wide, no problem. So this track is narrower, more treacherous, and the penalty and the risk here are much higher at Daytona than at most tracks when you try to go three-wide. And the spot on this track that’s tougher than all other parts of the track is Turn 4. The sun always shines on Turn 4 and if you get the wind coming in off the beach, that’s where you have the least amount of downforce and that’s why you saw the most trouble in the Clash happen in Turn 4 the other day.”

    DO YOU HAVE ANY ANXIETY ABOUT A POSSIBLE PRESIDENTIAL VISIT KINKING-UP YOUR PRE-RACE SUNDAY PLANS?
    “This the Daytona 500. It’s already over the top, off the charts, fun, exciting, and you’re just rolling with whatever comes your way. They tell me it starts at a certain time, but you go when they tell you to put your helmet on. And I can’t wait for President Trump to show up and for all of the race fans to acknowledge him and just to have that fun atmosphere of a president at the Daytona 500.”

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Toyota Racing Daytona 500 Media Day Quotes – Martin Truex Jr.

    Toyota Racing Daytona 500 Media Day Quotes – Martin Truex Jr.

    Toyota Racing – Martin Truex Jr.

    NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 12, 2020) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Martin Truex Jr. was made available to media at Daytona 500 Media Day:

    MARTIN TRUEX JR, No.19 Bass Pro Shops Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Did you feel comfortable with James Small being named your new crew chief?

    “For sure. I felt real comfortable with it. It felt like Cole (Pearn) just stayed home for the weekend, which he did, I guess. Yeah, everything seems cool. He seems comfortable with his new role and all the decisions that are on his shoulders now, and so far he’s done a good job.”

    Could you talk about your relationship with Joe Gibbs and kind of what you came to expect about him in just talking to the other drivers.

    “Well, it’s been exciting to work for him, and certainly I’ve learned a lot about him and about the company in a little over the year that I’ve been there. But it’s amazing to see the way he leads the place and how everybody looks up to him and the amount of work he puts in is amazing. I think he eats, breathes and sleeps racing, and if he’s not meeting with a sponsor, he’s at the shop. It doesn’t matter what time of day it is. I feel like he’s always there. He does a great job of motivating people and a great job of making sure everybody has what they need to perform.”

    Do you remember what your first thoughts were when you first learned that this Super Bowl winning coach is going into racing?

    “Oh, I was pretty young then, so I don’t know ‑‑ I remember that I thought it was really cool, but other than that, I was young. I didn’t really understand just how big of a deal it really was and what racing was all about at this level back then. Obviously he came in at a good time when the teams were smaller and you could kind of get your foot in the door and start a team. It would be much more difficult to do that today, I believe.”

    How is the communication with you and James Small so far?

    “So far it’s been good. I think James has been right there on the front lines with us the past few seasons, and obviously he wasn’t out in the spotlight because he was an engineer and not a crew chief, but I feel like he’s really doing the same things as before, and our communication really hasn’t changed a whole lot. I just feel like it’s business as usual. From that standpoint, it feels comfortable, and he’s done a good job of just keeping things the way we’ve always done them. Not trying to change, not trying to be somebody ‑‑ change the team up to be the way he wants it. He knows what we have works, and his approach is so similar to Cole’s that it’s really been seamless so far. Hopefully that continues to be the case.”

    Did you like the fact that he even embraced the tee shirt?

    “Yeah, and I’m not surprised because he always has worn a tee shirt. Like I said, him and Cole are kind of like twins. One is from Canada, one is from Australia, but I’m pretty sure in some way they’re related. They’re very, very similar, and from that standpoint, I think that’s a good thing.”

    Kind of an oddball question, but is there a best and the worst thing to eat before a race?

    “There’s a lot of things that you probably shouldn’t. Anything spicy is probably a bad idea. I keep it simple: chicken, rice, maybe steak, rice, something like that, a little salad or something. But yeah, nothing too heavy or nothing that’s going to upset your stomach, obviously.”

    What’s considered fair when it comes to blocking here?

    “Well, I think lately anything is fair. It tends to cause a lot of crashes, too, but it seems like that’s par for the course in speedway racing these days is just block until you crash and go to the next one.”

    With James coming in from Australia, he has the Supercar background. Obviously with the new car coming out, how do you think he can bring that knowledge over?

    “Yeah, that’s an interesting question, and I don’t know much about those cars, and I don’t know how similar the cars that we’re going to have are to those, but certainly his experience, I’m sure there’s things that he’ll think of or say, hey, we used to do this maybe, and that could help us possibly, especially on road courses. Yeah, it’s going to be interesting to try to figure that thing out, it’s going to be so different than what we’re all used to in NASCAR, and it will be the first time we have independent rear suspension, and that doesn’t sound like a big change, but it’s huge. I mean, we go from a straight axle that we’ve had forever and ever with trailing arms to independent rear suspension, it’s going to be interesting to see how the engineers translate all that stuff, and how do we make the cars feel like we want them to. I don’t know. It’s possible that it feels way different. It’ll be interesting.”

    Do you have any thoughts on going to the West Coast after Daytona?

    “Yeah, I feel good. I think we really learned a lot last year about the 550 package. I think early on it was a challenge. A little bit of our slow start last year was mostly due I felt like to that car and those rules and the way you have to drive it, and I really had to change a lot of the things I was used to doing, and I feel like by the end of the year we really had our arms around it from the standpoint of how to approach certain tracks. The downforce versus drag thing is all very, very difficult to figure out. There’s a lot of ‑‑ there’s so many options that you can pick, and I feel like you don’t really know exactly what you had until the race was over. You made a lot of decisions going into race weekends and practice that’s really hard to determine whether you made the right decisions. You really need to get into the race and run the race and figure that out. So I felt like we learned a lot about all that stuff last year, and we’re really comfortable with it now. Like I said, I had to learn a lot and change a lot of the stuff that I did behind the wheel, and hopefully because all those things we learned, hopefully we can get a quicker start this year, and hopefully that translates into more than seven wins.”

    Do you feel good about eight wins in 2020?

    “Yeah, I do. I feel like we should have had more than seven last year, and we’re always trying to be better, so we’ll see. All we can do is try, but I’m excited about it.”

    How do you think that the changes to the short track package is going to affect the racing at Phoenix?

    “I think it’ll be better. I think there’s more opportunities to make passes, especially at the front with the leader. Certainly last year with the super high downforce and the short tracks, it was a challenge. It was a real challenge to run behind a car, to get close to that car, and so track position was super critical. And I think this year it’ll go back the other way. Hopefully enough that the races are really good. I think it’ll be better for sure, short tracks and road courses, it’s a positive change, and I’m looking forward to it. I think that package suits us well, and it’s something we’ve had success with in years past. We’ll just see. I’m looking forward to it.”

    What’s your favorite Jimmie Johnson story?

    “Oh, there’s a lot of them. God, he’s just such a good guy. That’s the biggest story I can tell you is if you ever need anything, you call Jimmie Johnson, know what I mean? It doesn’t matter what it is, and he’ll, yes, sir, he’ll do it right there for you, drop whatever he has to do. Just a super good guy, and you wouldn’t know he won seven championships and 80‑some races. That’s the best story I have, that I can tell.”

    Is it going to be weird not having him around next season?

    “I’d say yeah. I think it is, because he’s been here so long. I can remember coming up through the ranks and he was already in Cup winning races. A cool story that I have was back when he drove in the Busch Series in the 92 car for what was ‑‑ yeah, Herzog, they had like a driver tryout thing or something. Anyway, I went to Kentucky to test that car the year Jimmie was driving it because they were thinking of putting me in it the next year, so that was kind of a cool story. They raced there the day before, or I guess it was a Saturday night race and I went there on money to test, so that was pretty neat to get to drive in one of the cars that he raced.”

    Would eight wins make it a successful season for Joe Gibbs Racing?

    “Well, 19 would. I mean, that’s what we had last year. I mean, if you’re talking about the whole organization, I think –”

    Well, for you and for the organization.

    “I think for the organization, 19 is a goal. It’s going to be a tough one to reach. That’s a lot of wins, and last year was an incredible year. I think for us, it’s hard to just say a number. Like will we be happy with seven, will we be happy with eight. I think we’d like to win more than we ever have, which eight is our best season, so eight would be great. But also I think if we’re competitive each and every week and we’re in position to win races and we can make it far in the playoffs, all those things are important. I would probably rather win zero races and the championship than win seven and finish second again. So we’ll just see how that all plays out.”

    After seeing how the organization works for a year, what is being done at Joe Gibbs Racing that’s really helped them separate themselves?

    “You know, I will say that it’s not just one thing. It can’t be just one thing. I think it’s just across the board. It’s the approach, and it starts at the top with Coach and the way he leads the team and makes sure that everybody there has all the things they need. Every department has good people in it. It’s just an amazing place to see that many people work together so well. You have different personalities, and you think about 500 people. How do you make them all work together and continue to push hard to constantly be better, to do all these little things, building cars, parts and pieces, finding the sponsorship, all the things that it takes. They just do it all at a high level, and that’s what it takes. To be able to be atop this sport is really, really difficult. There’s a lot of great teams, a lot of great drivers, and it takes everybody pulling in the same direction, and that’s what Coach is able to get out there and get it done.”

    You’ve been with a few teams, obviously. Do you sense things are done more smoothly or better?

    “I’d say it just ‑‑ from top to bottom it’s just, yeah, it’s more complete. It’s more streamlined. Just a lot of smart people is all I can tell you. I’m really honored to be able to drive their cars and work with them because it’s pretty amazing what they do.”

    Was it fun to be a part of a team last season?

    “It’s really fun. It’s hard. I think there’s no secrets. We share everything in our meetings. It’s hard to one‑up those guys on a consistent basis. That’s what’s fun about it, though. It’s a huge challenge. I think we all push each other to be better as drivers, as teams, the way the crew chiefs work together, the engineers, you name it. They all work together well, but it’s really hard to find a way to beat those guys, but it’s fun, as well. It’s kind of the race within the race. You’re trying to beat your teammates, and you know if you do, you’re going to have a pretty good day. That’s always fun.”

    Furniture Row had an alliance with JGR, but the fact that you’re going head‑to‑head against Kyle and are in meetings all the time with him, at the shop with him, what did you learn about Kyle that maybe you didn’t know prior to being his teammate?

    “You know, I would say that I didn’t really learn anything that surprised me. I felt like I knew him pretty well when I was at Furniture Row. I think the biggest thing is just having ‑‑ when we were at Furniture Row, they were okay with us finishing second. They weren’t real happy when we beat them, you know. So now they’re happy when we win, and that’s a little bit different. As easy as it sounds, it is kind of a big deal. So you know that you’re getting all the best stuff. There’s not something that maybe they have for a few weeks that you didn’t know about, which in the past there was things like that. It’s just nice to know you have those guys behind you because they’re really good at what they do.”

    What’s your favorite track to race on?

    “It’s difficult to pick a favorite. I really enjoy most all the tracks. I really, really love Darlington, though. Like I would say if I had to pick one, it would probably be Darlington or Homestead.”

    A lot of guys have been saying Darlington. Why is that?

    “It’s just unique in that it’s really fast but it’s really narrow. The surface being old and the tires wearing out the way they do, it’s a huge challenge, and it’s a lot of fun.”

    What about least favorite track?

    “Least favorite track, probably Talladega. Talladega. Least favorite. Second least favorite is Daytona.”

    Do you have any thoughts on the schedule because next year Super Bowl is going to be February 7, Daytona is going to be the 14th, they’re talking about condensing the week and running the Clash the same weekend as the 500. Your thoughts?

    “I think it would be good. Obviously I don’t know that we want to go up against the Super Bowl. I don’t think anybody wants to go up against that on TV. I think it’s a good idea. Condensing is always good. One week in Daytona, that would be fine. It would be more fun to race consistently when we’re here instead of wasting time and being here for three days and doing nothing. I’d be all for that.”

    I know for fun you do fishing and hunting, I guess, but have you done competitive fishing and would you do that being a competitive person?

    “I have a few times. I’ve fished a few tournaments. I never really took them too seriously because I don’t want to take the fun out of the fishing part, but I do get somewhat serious about it even if I’m not in a tournament. I like to catch. I don’t like to fish, I like to catch. So I work really hard at trying to be better and catching. It’s been pretty good this off‑season.”

    You also have a sponsor like that, too ‑‑

    “It helps a lot. If I need something, I know where to get it.”

    From age 20 to 30 to almost 40 over the course of a career, what have you found that you have learned, gained in terms of your driving repertoire, as a passer, as a restarter? What are some of the things that you learned have really opened your eyes and made you this well‑rounded driver that you are right now?

    “Ooh, that’s a good one. I think it’s just something that you never stop learning. This sport changes so much. It’s week to week. It’s car changes, it’s tires, it’s tracks changing. I think what separates the really good guys, they’re able to change and adapt quickly. Certainly team‑wise, you have to have a great team, and I obviously have been in a great place the last five years or so. But I have learned a ton, and the more you run up front the more you learn how much those little things matter. So the key is just putting all that together, I think, learning ‑‑ winning, you learn a lot when you win. You learn how to ‑‑ I guess you learn how to win. Sounds easy enough, and I won coming up through the ranks, but not consistently in Cup for a long time. I learned a lot about myself. I learned a lot about how to drive, how to do things right, how to make good decisions under pressure, but it’s hard to learn those little things until you start winning. And winning consistently I think teaches you a lot.”

    If you were developing a young driver right now, what would you want them to focus on? Where do you even start? It seems like you can’t be a one‑note guy because that one thing you do well could be gone.

    “That’s a good question. I don’t know. I think a lot of guys that are really good have come up different ways. I don’t know that there’s really a way you can measure a driver until he gets in the Cup Series. We’ve seen guys be really successful in Xfinity, not translate that into the Cup Series. It just takes so much to do it well. You can’t really measure a guy until he’s in the Cup Series.”

    Thinking of all your team changes throughout your career, what’s the biggest thing day‑to‑day life that can change from team to team? You go somewhere and go, oh, that’s my responsibility at this team or you have meetings when?

    “I would say it’s not huge. I would say that most teams do things pretty similar. From a driver standpoint, your job is basically pretty much the same everywhere you go. I would say that where I’m at now, there is more emphasis placed on meetings and things, and that’s just preparation. I think it shows a lot of the reason for our success has been really good preparation and understanding things ahead of time and being prepared.”

    Is that something that you become more and more aware of, that this is a race that ‑‑ are you chasing it?

    “Not until we come back. When we’re here for the race, it’s like, okay, yeah, I haven’t won it yet. The second still hurts from a couple years ago in ’16. I remember that vividly. But I don’t know, it’s a huge race. It is the big one. Everybody wants to win it. I’m no different. But I mean, I don’t lose sleep at night because I haven’t won it. I don’t think about it, I guess, any differently than any other race, other than when I come here, I don’t really worry about points. I just try to figure out a way to win it. Obviously I haven’t done that yet. I think the biggest thing for me is just trying to get to the end. Every time we are around at the finish of one of these races, we’re in the mix. We have a shot. It’s just so hard ‑‑ I’ve had such a hard time trying to find a way to finish Superspeedway races. I’ve tried everything, riding around, racing hard, staying in the front. The other day I’m running third and I get wrecked on a restart. It’s like no matter what I do, I can’t find a way to finish. I’m never the guy that caused the wrecks, but I’m always the guy in the middle of them. It’s very, very frustrating, very frustrating, and I don’t really know what to do about it. That’s really my focus every time we come here is just trying to figure that out. How do I get to the end? I know if we get to the end, we’re going to have a chance. So hopefully this weekend we can figure it out.”

    Will you go up and see Cole Pearn or anything in the future?

    “I was a snowboarder for a long time. I kind of gave it up when I started racing in the Cup Series because I really do not want to break a leg in the off‑season that’s pretty short, so I haven’t done it since I think ’07, ’08, but definitely when I retire, I will join Cole at his place up there, and we’ll shred some powder. I look forward to it. But I have talked to him a couple times. I actually talked to him the other day after the Clash, he asked me how it went, he was up in the mountains and didn’t get to see it, so we talked about that. But we keep in touch for sure, and he’s doing well.”

    # # #

    About Toyota

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  • CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Ty Dillon Transcript

    CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA 500 MEDIA DAY: Ty Dillon Transcript

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    DAYTONA 500
    TEAM CHEVY MEDIA DAY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    FEBRUARY 12, 2020

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO CAMARO ZL1 1LE, Daytona 500 Media Day Highlights:

    WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED IN YOUR PAST DAYTONA 500 STARTS?
    “Just growing in confidence in my approach to this and trusting my instincts. And what I’ve learned over the years, and this will be my sixth Daytona 500, is just trust my instincts with my energy of the pack that I see in front of me and not worrying about the amount of laps in the race or how far into the race we are. But to be on the mindset of a little defensive driving, skill if our car is not the best car. If we have a really fast car that can lead lines, I change my approach sometimes. But if I have car that needs to be a pushing car or doesn’t have the steam to pull out of the pack, I just have to have a mindset of feeling the energy and back out when I need to back out and see what’s going on with the race. We just haven’t had that many races that finish with less than 10 cars. My goal is to be at the end of the race and have a restart in the top two or three rows, and we’ve done that the last couple races. So, I think doing that we give ourselves the best opportunity to win a race.”

    AS A NASCAR DRIVER, THAT MUST BE TOUGH TO KNOW WHEN TO BACK OFF.
    “We are taught to go, go, go and get everything out of the race car every single lap. But you come to the superspeedways and it’s just a different mindset. It’s a different attitude. You see guys who don’t change, and they just go, go, go. Sometimes they win a lot of races, but they crash a lot of times, too. I think being able to pull the reins on yourself here and Talladega I would say are the only places necessary to make sure you ensure a good finish. If you can cut that part off from your brain for a little bit and have a little different mindset toward it, and not be so selfish and try to perform, perform, perform, you end up putting yourself in a better position.”

    WHAT HAS THAT EXPERIENCE AT DAYTONA REALLY TAUGHT YOU?
    “I think it’s knowing the magnitude of race day. Even until last year and the year before, it just builds you up so much that you would be emotionally drained before you even got in the race car. So, just knowing what’s coming, preparing yourself for the day ahead, and rest is so key this week because so much is going on. Just make sure mentally, physically and spiritually you’re ready for what you endure on the Daytona 500 day is key. You want to soak it in because not many get to experience the day. But you also want to take care of your body throughout it.”

    WHAT DOES IT MEAN THAT ANOTHER MEMBER OF YOUR FAMILY HAS ACHIEVED SUCCESS HERE AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL?
    “Certainly, Austin has a trophy here and I want one as well. For both of us to have a trophy here at Daytona would be a big thing. I think we’re capable of it. But I have a lot of reasons to win this race, not just to outdo my brother.”

    WHAT’S YOUR RELATIONSHIP LIKE WITH HIM?
    “We’re brothers, we’ve competed our whole lives. We’re still pretty competitive, but I’d say as we’ve grown up and we have our own families, and he has his first child on the way, we both grow in different ways and even our careers have grown in different ways. I think we’re very respectful of each other’s careers and lives. We’re still brothers.”

    DID YOU BOTH WANT TO BE RACE CAR DRIVERS?
    “I wanted to be a football player, and I was kind of the first to make the call to go racing and he kind of jumped in with me. He was a good baseball player and I was a football player. I think initially we didn’t have our minds set on being race car drivers from the start.”

    IS THERE A DEFINITIVE PART OF THIS TRACK THAT YOU WOULD NOT RATHER BE?
    “For me, being in the middle of a pack with the big run or on the bottom line in a pack coming off Turn 2 if your car is not handling good, especially if you’re tight off Turn 2 because your car will take off as if it was on ice, is one of the trickiest parts of the track.”

    HOW DO YOU RACE IN THE CONSTANT TRAFFIC?
    “I always try to look one to two cars ahead throughout the race. You have to have a lot of trust in your spotter to catch something ahead of you, but I’m always checking. I’m probably looking in four directions within a second, checking all my surroundings. I’m very aware of what’s happening in front of me because I want to miss that crash. I guess the most mentally exhausting thing for me is I’m constantly checking. If I’m in row eight of a pack, I’m watching the guys up front to see if they’re getting squirrely. That’s how I get my read on the energy of the pack. Sometimes you can get focused on your bumper and try to push the guy in front of you when the most important thing to you is happening four rows in front of you.”

    WHAT MAKES YOU SO GOOD HERE?
    “I think it’s growing in confidence and trusting my instincts, and just feeling the energy of the pack. My first couple of attempts I would see things and feel things but not adjust to it. You’re bread as a NASCAR driver to just go, go, go and get, get, get. But trusting that, ‘Man, this just doesn’t feel right’ no matter how many laps are left, knowing that history shows there’s going to be a lot of crashes, has helped me. But just trusting my instincts and feeling the energy of the pack has helped me the last few races.”

    IS THERE A DIFFERENCE IN THE DRAFT?
    “You can’t learn the Cup race until you get in the Cup race. I think I was a pretty good drafter in the Xfinity Series and even my rookie season in Cup. And I was; I did a good job and had some good races. But the Cup level is a different level. It’s hard to explain. Everything almost starts new when you get to Cup. You are a talented driver, you have the experience in certain ways, but when you get to Cup you have to readjust, you have to put yourself back down to what feels like a local track level of learning and build yourself back up. There’s nothing that beats experience at this level.”

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.