Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Ryan Newman – Daytona 500 Advance

    Ryan Newman – Daytona 500 Advance

    Team: No. 6 Koch Industries Ford Mustang
    Crew Chief: Scott Graves
    Twitter: @Roush6Team, @RoushFenway and @RyanJNewman

    Bluegreen Vacations Duel 1 – Thursday, Feb. 13 at 7 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM Channel 90
    Daytona 500 – Sunday, Feb. 16 at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

    ADVANCE NOTES

    Newman in the Duels

    · After qualifying 15th on speed in this past Sunday’s Daytona 500 qualifying, Ryan Newman will line up eighth in Duel 1 Thursday night. It will be Newman’s 19th Daytona 500 qualifying race all-time with a best finish of third (2008).

    · In last season’s opening duel, Newman lined up 13th and went on to finish ninth. He has 12 all-time top-10 results in the Duels and has finished ninth or better in three straight Daytona qualifying races.

    Newman at Daytona International Speedway

    · Newman will make his 37th start at DIS on Sunday and 19th in the Daytona 500.

    · He is a former winner of the Great American Race, driving his then-No. 12 to victory lane in 2008.

    · Overall at DIS, Newman has 11 top-10s and six top-fives with an average result of 18.4.

    · Newman drove to a 14th-place finish in last season’s kick-off race despite riding on the inner-liner of one of his tires. He has finished 14th or better in five-straight Daytona events with two fifth-place results.

    · Newman also finished fifth in the 2013 Daytona 500 and third in the 2006 Great American Race.

    Scott Graves at Daytona International Speedway

    · Scott Graves – in his sophomore season with Newman – will be atop the pit box for his fourth Daytona 500 Sunday. Overall at DIS Graves has one top-five – fifth with Newman – in last July’s summer event.

    · It will mark Graves’ eighth NCS race overall at Daytona, having served as crew chief for three events with Daniel Suarez (2017-18) and two with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (2013).

    · Graves also has six races under his belt in Xfinity Series action at Daytona, finishing second with Chris Buescher in 2015 and eighth with Suarez in 2016.

    QUOTE WORTHY
    Newman on the Daytona 500:
    “We showed some good speed in our Fords last weekend with practice and The Clash and overall I was pleased with the car. We had a decent qualifying effort, so Thursday night our goal is to keep it clean in advance of Sunday. I am fortunate to have won this race before and know how much it means to our sport, and our goal is to park the Koch Industries Ford in victory lane come Sunday.”

    On the Car
    Koch Industries (pronounced ‘Coke’) made its official debut with Roush Fenway Racing and Ryan Newman in last weekend’s Busch Clash event, nearly making an early trip to victory lane. Koch is back on the car as the primary for the famed Daytona 500 this weekend.

    About Koch Industries
    Based in Wichita, Kansas, Koch Industries, Inc. is one of the largest private companies in America, with estimated annual revenues as high as $110 billion, according to Forbes. It owns a diverse group of companies involved in refining, chemicals, and biofuels; forest and consumer products; fertilizers; polymers and fibers; process and pollution control systems; electronics, software and data analytics; minerals; glass; automotive components; ranching; commodity trading; and investments. Since 2003, Koch companies have invested nearly $105 billion in growth and improvements. With a presence in 60 countries, Koch companies employ nearly 130,000 people worldwide, with about 67,000 of those in the United States. From January 2009 to present, Koch companies have earned more than 1,300 awards for safety, environmental excellence, community stewardship, innovation, and customer service. For more news and information, visit www.KOCHind.com.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Advance

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Advance

    FORD PERFORMANCE NASCAR: DAYTONA 500 NOTES

    The 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season kicks off on Sunday with the 62nd Annual Daytona 500. Ford has won The Great American Race a total of 15 times with the most recent triumph coming in 2017 when Kurt Busch took the checkered flag in Stewart-Haas Racing’s Ford debut. It will also mark the second Daytona 500 start for Mustang after it debuted one year ago in NASCAR’s top series. The race is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Eastern time (Fox TV, MRN Radio and SiriusXM Radio)

    FORD CHANGES IN 2020

    There will be two newcomers and one returnee to the Ford Cup roster this season as Chris Buescher, Cole Custer and John Hunter Nemechek give three of Ford’s major teams a different look in 2020. Buescher, who won the NASCAR XFINITY Series title with Ford and Roush Fenway Racing in 2015, returns to that organization to drive the No. 17 Mustang for car owner Jack Roush. Custer and Nemechek will be part of a stout Sunoco Rookie of the Year class as both drivers move up from the NASCAR XFINITY Series. Custer will takeover the No. 41 Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing while Nemechek takes the wheel of the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford.

    FEBRUARY 16 REPEAT?

    This year’s Daytona 500 is scheduled to take place on February 16, which is the same date Davey Allison won on in 1992. Driving the famous No. 28 Texaco Havoline Ford Thunderbird for NASCAR Hall of Famer Robert Yates, Allison led 98 of the final 103 laps and beat Morgan Shepherd, driving for the Wood Brothers, to checkered flag as Ford swept the top four spots in the finishing order. Geoffrey Bodine was third for NASCAR Hall of Fame owner Bud Moore while driver/owner Alan Kulwicki was fourth.

    TINY LUND COMES UP BIG FOR WOOD BROTHERS

    Ford won the Daytona 500 for the first time on Feb. 24, 1963 when Tiny Lund took the Wood Brothers to Victory Lane and completed a script that would have made Hollywood envious. Lund didn’t have a ride for the 500, but was at the track watching Marvin Panch test a Maserati when the car went out of control, flipped upside-down and started on fire. Lund, along with four others, rushed to the scene and eventually pulled Panch to safety. Panch, who was the primary driver for the Wood Brothers, was unable to race in the 500 due to his injuries, so the team tabbed Lund as a substitute. Lund defied the odds by winning the race on one set of tires to give Ford and the Wood Brothers their first win in “The Great American Race.”

    KENSETH WINS EXPLOSIVE DAYTONA 500

    When Ford won the Daytona 500 on Feb. 27, 2012 with Matt Kenseth, it marked his second victory in three years. But while Kenseth will be remembered for becoming the ninth multiple winner of “The Great American Race,” the weekend will forever be remembered for a series of unforeseen events. For the first time in its 54-year history the race had to be postponed until Monday due to rain. As lingering showers persisted the next day, NASCAR officials decided to make it a primetime event for the first time. The race was building to a climax when caution came out on lap 157. During the ensuing caution, something broke on Juan Pablo Montoya’s car and sent it careening into a jet dryer that was working on the track. An explosion ensued and resulted in a red flag that lasted more than two hours as officials repaired the track. There were no major injuries, but the incident resulted in one of the more memorable photos ever taken as driver Brad Keselowski used his cell phone to post a shot from his vantage point on the backstretch. Kenseth eventually held off Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Roush Fenway teammate Greg Biffle on a green-white-checker finish to win.

    A CINDERELLA STORY

    Ford has won the Daytona 500 a total of 15 times after Kurt Busch took the checkered flag for Stewart-Haas Racing in its debut event with the manufacturer in 2017. That Cinderella story marked Ford’s fourth Daytona 500 win in a seven-year period, a streak that started with another Disney-type story when Trevor Bayne became the youngest Daytona 500 winner in 2011. The victory was even more memorable because it came one day after his 20th birthday and in only his second career NASCAR Cup Series start for the Wood Brothers.

    LOGANO GIVES FORD FIRST SWEEP OF DAYTONA SPEEDWEEKS

    Joey Logano survived an intense final 10 laps, including a green-white-checkered finish, to give Ford a sweep of Daytona Speedweeks by winning the 57th running of the Daytona 500. The win came on the heels of Tyler Reddick winning the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and Ryan Reed taking the checkered flag for the first time in the NASCAR XFINITY Series event. It also capped an undefeated month of racing at Daytona for Ford, which also won the season-opening Rolex 24 Hours. In the end, Logano used a push from Clint Bowyer to get in front of the pack, but when caution came out with three laps to go for an accident involving Justin Allgaier, the field bunch back up for the deciding restart. As the leader, Logano opted for the outside line and that proved to be the right decision as he got ahead of Denny Hamlin on the inside and stayed in front until the caution came out on the final lap to officially end the race.

    FORD’S DAYTONA 500 WINNERS
    1963 – Tiny Lund (Wood Brothers)
    1965 – Fred Lorenzen (Holman-Moody)
    1967 – Mario Andretti (Holman-Moody)
    1969 – LeeRoy Yarbrough (Junior Johnson)
    1978 – Bobby Allison (Bud Moore)
    1985 – Bill Elliott (Harry Melling)
    1987 – Bill Elliott (Harry Melling)
    1992 – Davey Allison (Robert Yates)
    1996 – Dale Jarrett (Robert Yates)
    2000 – Dale Jarrett (Robert Yates)
    2009 – Matt Kenseth (Jack Roush)
    2011 – Trevor Bayne (Wood Brothers)
    2012 – Matt Kenseth (Jack Roush)
    2015 – Joey Logano (Roger Penske)
    2017 – Kurt Busch (Stewart-Haas)

  • CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA: Post-Clash Notes and Quotes

    CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA: Post-Clash Notes and Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    BUSCH CLASH AT DAYTONA
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    FEBRUARY 9, 2020

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    2nd AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 BASS PRO SHOPS/TRACKER OFFROAD CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    4th KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 CREDIT ONE BANK CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    7th CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    11th JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    12th KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Erik Jones (Toyota)
    2nd Austin Dillon (Chevrolet)
    3rd Clint Bowyer (Ford)
    4th Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)
    5th Ryan Newman (Ford)

    The NASCAR Cup Series season officially kicks off next weekend at Daytona International Speedway with the Daytona 500 on Sunday, February 16 at 2:30 P.M. ET. Live coverage can be found on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES AND QUOTES:

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 BASS PRO SHOPS/TRACKER OFFROAD CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 2nd
    HAVE YOU EVER BEEN IN A RACE LIKE THIS WITH THIS FEW CARS LEFT?
    “Yeah, I actually have. One of my Xfinity wins here was very similar; there were about four cars left. It was me and Chase Elliott, and we beat him back to the line. It reminded me of that and I thought we were going to come home victorious. I started getting worried, we were starting to lose Chevy’s fast. There at the end, we probably should have made a better move to work with the 42 under the caution. There were two Fords, two Toyotas, and two Chevys I believe is how it was lining up to be. I got good help from the 14 on the start, I got where I wanted to be, and I blocked high. I kept working hard. I got back to second on the white flag and I was back to a decent position. But those guys just laid back enough and got such a big run on the backstretch. My spotter said ‘go high, go high’, and I was more focused out the front. I started to go high and Newman made a pretty good block on it. I just have to re-watch out and learn from it, and if you’re in that position again, what would I do different to defend off multiple cars. It’s hard because you can block and get turned really easy; I’ve been on both sides of that. We made it through. I’m proud of Chevrolet, Symbicort, Bass Pro, everyone that helps with this program. That was fun. I just wish Justin (Alexander) and I could have kept our record together. Every time we start a new race team together or get together, we’ve won. That’s the first time we haven’t. We won our first Xfinity, first Cup and this would have been back together for a second time doing it again. We were close.”

    HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THIS RACE FROM BEHIND THE WHEEL?
    “Well, we had a strategy, but the strategy didn’t really work out for us. The caution came out, which was nice because we got to race. Once we got to race, it was a wreck-fest. I made some really good moves in missing wrecks. That was probably the proudest I am of that. The guys finally gave me a good brake pedal and I was able to make good moves there. Usually, at superspeedways, I’m begging for more brake and stopping power. I’m glad we had it today because I stopped and didn’t hit Jimmie Johnson, and people were just going left and right.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 CREDIT ONE BACK CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Finished 4th
    “It was a little crazy there, a lot of crashes. But I still had a shot to win with a beat-up car. It was cool to race for a win like that, but it just didn’t work out there for me.”

    DO YOU ANTICIPATE WE’LL SEE SOMETHING LIKE THIS NEXT WEEK?
    “People are always more cautious Thursday because you don’t want to crash your 500 car. The 500 is so much longer of a race and there’s points on the line. So, it should be a little tamer.

    WHEN YOUR CREW CHIEF TELLS YOU TO JUST BRING BACK THE WHEEL, DOES THAT SET YOUR MENTALITY OUT THERE?
    “It’s always kind of that way for this race here. There’s nothing on the line, other than the trophy. So, everyone is out there doing that.”

    WHAT’S IT LIKE IN THE DRIVER’S SEAT WITH ALL THE CRAZINESS?
    “It’s just wild. You’re trying to find a hole to not get caught up in any crashes.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in crash on lap 79; Finished 11th
    “They were all sideways and I thought for a minute I was going to get through. I was still on the gas and somebody clipped me in the right rear, and it was all over from there. I really didn’t see what happened. It was really impressive how the Fords and the Toyotas could use the bumpers to push cars. So, I assume at some point, there would be too much and have a crash. But I think we need to do a better job with our cars to receive those pushes. When I was up front and the second group caught the first group, there was so much energy in the group and they were able to slam draft like we could years ago. Our cars just weren’t ready for that; our setups weren’t right for that. We learned a lot. Unfortunately, we didn’t make it to the finish. But I learned a lot while I was out there.”

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in crash on lap 74; Finished 12th
    “We were just trying to have our fuel mileage right and it was just a gamble on the Chevy side to make sure all of us could make it together. We needed a couple of yellows and not get caught up in the yellows. But we were just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Everything just gets crazy at the end.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT SOME OF THE MOVES THAT WERE GOING ON OUT THERE?
    “We’re all racing an analytics race now. It was all about fuel mileage, team work and manufacturers working together. That’s what we were directed to do and it’s just a matter of getting to the end. But we didn’t get to the end. The format needs to change. We need to have cash up for grabs or something every ten laps, and see who’s at the end to grab the most cash. All of us are just going to ride until we get to that point and that’s when everyone starts wrecking. We just need to figure out how we can make more winners in the same race instead of more wrecked cars.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA ‘COLOR OF THE YEAR’ CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in crash on lap 74; Finished 14th
    “I just kind of spun the tires. The guy in front of me was spinning the tires. It was just weird; you would never spin the tires that bad on a speedway car. Obviously, it went hard to kind of get accelerated. But I don’t know, I just have to look at it.”

    WAS THERE SOMETHING ON THE TRACK POSSIBLY?
    “They wrecked and then we ran through that area, but I don’t really know. It’s hard to say.”

    DID YOU SEE ANY MOVES OUT OF THE ORDINARY?
    “No, I mean you’re going to do what you can do. It’s hard to say what goes on. Just have to be aggressive.”

    THIS IS YOUR FIRST CLASH. WHAT DID YOU THINK OF IT?
    “Yeah, it was alright. It was just kind of waiting until you get to the end, but we didn’t get there.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 VALVOLINE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Sidelined in crash on lap 74; Finished 15th
    “Something happened and I checked-up and the guy behind me decided not to check-up. It just kind of killed the right front and at a certain point, it was just a clash. We worked on it just to get some reps, but didn’t want to kill ourselves to make it better. So, it’s unfortunate for our Valvoline Camaro. I think overall, we had a good day obviously with qualifying on the front row for the 500. But I’m bummed-out, man! I wanted to go back racing and I feel like we rode around and then we crashed.”

    WHAT’S IT LIKE TO BE ON THE FRONT ROW FOR THE DAYTONA 500?
    “Yeah, it’s really special. There is a little bit of anxiety that comes along with it, you know, for the Duel, and not wanting to tear your stuff up, but five years ago I came down here and missed the 500. Two years later, I was down here with Hendrick Motorsports on the pole, and every year since then we’ve been on the front row. It’s just a dream come true to be driving for Rick Hendrick and have Hendrick horsepower under the hoods. Man, our car was really fast again today it’s just being in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

  • DiBenedetto Earns Eighth Starting Spot in Thursday’s Second Duel Qualifying Race

    DiBenedetto Earns Eighth Starting Spot in Thursday’s Second Duel Qualifying Race

    Matt DiBenedetto and the No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane crew got off to a solid start in their first qualifying session as a team, posting the 16th fastest speed in pole qualifying for the 62nd annual Daytona 500.

    Only the top-two starting spots are locked in for the 500, with the rest of the line-up determined by the twin Duel qualifying races on Thursday night. DiBenedetto will line up in eighth place in the second 150-mile qualifier.

    “Today is important; it is still an important day,” DiBenedetto told reporters after posting a speed of 191. 685 miles per hour in Sunday’s time trials. “A better starting spot for the Duels is nice. It isn’t the end-all, be-all for sure, but it is always important.

    “It is the first qualifying of the year and for the Daytona 500, so it means a lot to the teams and the speed of the car is a testament to the teams.”

    DiBenedetto and the No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Mustang have shown good speed in the early runs at Daytona International Speedway.

    He was 10th fastest in Saturday’s opening practice session with a best lap at 201.902 mph, and was eighth among drivers with a best 10-consecutive-lap average of 197.936 mph.

    In the second session, with the focus on a single-car run, he was 18th fastest, running just three laps with a best lap at 192.732 mph.

    Thursday’s Duel qualifying races are set to start at 7 p.m. with TV coverage on Fox Sports 1.

    The Daytona 500 is scheduled to start just after 2:30 p.m. on Sunday with TV coverage on FOX.

    ###

    About Motorcraft

    Motorcraft® offers a complete line of replacement parts that are recommended and approved by Ford Motor Company. From routine maintenance to under-hood repairs, Motorcraft parts offer exceptional value with the highest quality and right fit at competitive prices. Motorcraft parts are available nationwide at Ford and Lincoln dealers, independent distributors and automotive parts retailers are backed by Ford Motor Company’s two-year, unlimited-miles Service Parts Limited Warranty. Ask for Motorcraft by name when you visit your local auto parts store or your favorite service facility. For more information, visit www.motorcraft.com.

    About Quick Lane Tire & Auto Centers

    Ford’s Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center offers routine vehicle maintenance such as oil and filter changes, light repair services including brake repair, and tire replacements on all vehicle makes and models. With more than 800 locations and growing, customers can visit www.quicklane.com to find a center that is closest to them, print savings coupons and review maintenance tips to keep their vehicles running at peak efficiency. This site includes information on how to spot tire wear, how to jump-start a battery and even a series of tips to improve a vehicle’s fuel economy.

    About Ford Motor Company
    Ford Motor Company is a global company based in Dearborn, Michigan. The company designs, manufactures, markets and services a full line of Ford cars, trucks, SUVs, electrified vehicles and Lincoln luxury vehicles, provides financial services through Ford Motor Credit Company and is pursuing leadership positions in electrification, autonomous vehicles and mobility solutions. Ford employs approximately 200,000 people worldwide. For more information regarding Ford, its products and Ford Motor Credit Company, please visit www.corporate.ford.com.

    Wood Brothers Racing

    Wood Brothers Racing was formed in 1950 in Stuart, Va., by Hall of Famer Glen Wood. Wood Brothers Racing is the oldest active team and one of the winningest teams in NASCAR history. Since its founding, the team won 99 races (including at least one race in every decade for the last seven decades) and 120 poles in NASCAR’s top-tier series. Fielding only Ford products for its entire history, the Wood Brothers own the longest association of any motorsports team with a single manufacturer. Glen’s brother, Leonard, is known for inventing the modern pit stop. The team currently runs the Ford Mustang driven by Matt DiBenedetto in the famous No. 21 racer.

  • Toyota Racing NCS Post-Race Report – The Clash at Daytona – 02.09.20

    Toyota Racing NCS Post-Race Report – The Clash at Daytona – 02.09.20

    Erik Jones Wins The Clash at Daytona International Speedway
    Tandem Camrys a winning combination in Cup Series exhibition race

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 9, 2020) – Erik Jones and Denny Hamlin proved two Camrys are better than one at Daytona International Speedway, as the duo worked together to send Jones to victory lane on Sunday afternoon.

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    NASCAR Cup Series
    Daytona International Speedway
    187.5 miles, 75 laps

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, ERIK JONES
    2nd, Austin Dillon*
    3rd, Clint Bowyer*
    4th, Kyle Larson*
    5th, Ryan Newman*
    6th, DENNY HAMLIN
    16th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    18th, KYLE BUSCH
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    ERIK JONES, No. 20 Sport Clips Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Finishing Position: 1st

    How would you describe this day?

    “Well, not what I would’ve thought we’d want. It was an awesome race. I’ve got to give a huge thanks to Denny (Hamlin) there in the 11. He stuck with us there that whole last lap. This thing wasn’t the fastest car, I don’t think, left in the race, but we brought it home. I owe him one for that one for sure. Really cool though. I mean Busch Clash first year back, to win that, that feels good and with SportClips again. These guys have been really loyal to me the last few years, so it’s cool to get them another win and hopefully next Sunday, we cap off another one right here.”

    Could you have a game plan with so few cars left on that last restart?

    “I was hoping I could get pushing the 6 (Ryan Newman) and get up front and then hopefully, then Denny was going to help us. That didn’t exactly work out. Everybody was slicing with that few of cars. He just locked on and we stuck together. I think honestly my car was so draggy, it wasn’t too much for him to stay connected and he was able to push us home. Feels good to start off with another win. It’s a really cool race. One that I grew up watching and then to have it back with it’s original namesake feels pretty good.”

    You could write a book on this win. Take us through those last two laps.

    “Well, I have to thank Denny (Hamlin) off the bat. He pushed us really good there in the end. He got us the lead and got us up front. It was wild. We got in a few wrecks and tore the car up pretty bad. I didn’t know how rough it was. I knew it was still holding water and oil, so we were in okay shape. The SportClips Camry took the win, so it feels good. What a way to start the year – in victory lane. I hope we can keep it going from there and keep adding them up.”

    You said a few wrecks – I counted at least three. Can you talk about the repairs that your team did?

    “Yeah, it’s pretty bad, but the Camry kept running strong. We came down and didn’t really know what we were trying to fix. I couldn’t see it, but could tell the hood was pretty torn up, and the right front was as well. I didn’t know it was that bad to be honest with you until now, but it sure feels good to come out of here with a win, especially in a race with perserverance like that. You don’t want to give up and when it pays off in the end, it makes it extra special.”

    How was the handling of your Camry?

    “It was dragging the front a lot. We were dragging some of the splitter bar pretty hard. There was a lot of contact. It felt a little dragging compared to how we started the race, but with Denny being able to stay locked on there for the last lap – I was trying to find him and see where he was and get a push, and finally we got locked up there getting into (turn) one, and he was able to stay on me. Definitely, it didn’t start as good as we started the day.”

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Finishing Position: 6th

    You seem pretty darn happy like you did something today.

    “It’s so awesome. I mean I knew he needed to strap in because that last lap I was going to push him. I didn’t care if I was going to push him into a wreck. I was just going to push him. It was fun. I mean my car was so, so fast. Proud of the effort there. Glad we got a team win, I mean that’s all I could really do at the end was push him to victory.

    How did the car feel to drive. That couldn’t have been very driveable?

    “I had eight wheels. I had four in front of me, I had four on me. When we linked up, it was fast. I mean it was unbelievable. The thing is, I had his damaged race car to cover up all the damage to mine, so it just worked. Just another fast Camry. That was two fast Camrys on that last lap there. So happy with the whole FedEx team for not quitting there and trying to get the race finished and got us a team win.”

    What did you learn?

    “We can go to the front. I mean our cars are super fast. I think that everyone’s going to realize that these plates blocks just don’t work. Not with this package. I think the way you used to drive superspeedway races where you had time to see the runs coming, it just doesn’t work and causes for carnage like you see. It’s great for TV, but if you don’t want to finish, then you continue to do the same thing over and over.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 19 SiriusXM Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Finishing Position: 16th

    What happened in that wreck?

    “I don’t know to be honest with you. Trying to get going, trying to get the 10 (Aric Almirola) going there on the bottom. I got a good jump there and just got hit in the right-rear (tire) and turned into the fence. Not sure what happened. It sucks. Superspeedways are not good to me.”

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Finishing Position: 18th

    What happened with Joey Logano out there?

    “I was going to look low, but I knew he was driving low, so then I was like okay, I’m going to go high and then he drove up the race track in front of me and then I was like okay, now I’ve got to cut back down and cut low. When I did, I touched him just a little bit, which then turned his car and then we were just sandwiched and the wreck was on. I don’t know. Either you can race or you can wreck. The reason why we ride in single file is because we don’t know how to race. Just a product of a few bad decisions there and we’re all crashed.”

    # # #

    About Toyota

    Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. and North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands. During that time, Toyota has created a tremendous value chain as our teams have contributed to world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 38 million cars and trucks in North America, where we have 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama (10 in the U.S.), and directly employ more than 47,000 people (over 36,000 in the U.S.). Our 1,800 North American dealerships (nearly 1,500 in the U.S.) sold 2.8 million cars and trucks (2.4 million in the U.S.) in 2018.

    Through the Start Your Impossible campaign, Toyota highlights the way it partners with community, civic, academic and governmental organizations to address our society’s most pressing mobility challenges. We believe that when people are free to move, anything is possible. For more information about Toyota, visit ToyotaNewsroom.com.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona (Bowyer’s 3rd Place Finish Leads Wreck-Filled Clash for Ford)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona (Bowyer’s 3rd Place Finish Leads Wreck-Filled Clash for Ford)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Sunday, February 9, 2020
    BUSCH CLASH POST-RACE DRIVER QUOTES

    FORD FINISHING RESULTS
    3rd – Clint Bowyer
    5th – Ryan Newman
    8th – Ryan Blaney
    9th – Joey Logano
    10th – Aric Almirola
    13th – Kevin Harvick
    17th – Brad Keselowski

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Koch Industries Ford Mustang – Finished 5th

    “I am proud of the effort that went into it. We had a good Koch Industries Ford. We had good speed and the car drove good. The strategy was good. We just didn’t have the alliance at the end to get that push. I blocked the 3 car but I didn’t see or know that Denny had the 20 lined up and a freight train coming on the outside. I knocked a left rear tire in blocking Austin. It was just unfortunate the way the timing worked out. I feel bad about the deal on the restart. There must have been oil or something on the track for all of us to do what we did there. Nevertheless we crashed and looked kind of stupid coming to the green. I guess that happens. It wasn’t the peak of stupidity today though, that is for sure.”

    WHAT WAS IT LIKE BEHIND THE WHEEL? “The car drove really good, we just didn’t have the drafting partners and teamwork that we needed there at the end. The rest of it was what we kind of expect here. We are used to that. Keselowski and I joked about it beforehand. He asked how many cars would be on the lead lap at the end and I said 10. He said he was going to take the under and he was right by more than I thought.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Pure Farmland Ford Mustang

    “Man, what a shame. We had a really fast Pure Farmland Ford Mustang. All the Fords were really fast. Doug Yates always brings the horsepower every week but he really loves Daytona. It is a shame a Ford won’t win this thing because we dominated the race. All in all it was a good day for us. It isn’t the finish we wanted but it was productive with a new team and new crew chief and working through a lot of those things.”

    WHAT ABOUT THAT WRECK THAT KNOCKED YOU OUT? “That is just part of it. That last wreck there in particular I don’t think was anybody’s fault. Denny (Hamlin) just had damage from the previous wreck and elected to not pit, which I get. I understand that. This race doesn’t pay any points or anything, so you can take that risk and if it doesn’t work out it doesn’t work out. Unfortunately it tore up a bunch of really good race cars. I guess the damage got down on one of his tires and caused him to have a flat and he spun out it front of all of us. I felt like we were in the right spot to have a chance to win the race. I feel like we had a very productive day for our race team and I am really happy with the way things went with my new crew chief and how we worked through a lot of stuff. The big event is a week from today. I can’t remember the last time someone won the Clash and came back and won the 500, so if you have to give up one, today is a good one to give up.”

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 Mobil 1 Ford Mustang

    “Well, I thought it was kind of boring to run around there single-file. Man, I wish we would have stayed that way. We are not capable of going two-wide. We tore the hell out of ‘em. You know it is going to happen though. Here is the thing. There were a lot of difference scenarios out there and shenanigans in a race like that where the Chevrolet’s were trying to make it and were on ultra old tires and that restart really showed it. It stacked everybody up and wrecked ‘em. That was unfortunate. I thought that was the end of our day and then it was just – I don’t know. The 9 and 42, those cars were the only ones with no damage. They should have won the race, but they took each other out. That was too bad. Fortunate for me though. Then I thought the 6 was going to win. I was going to get there and push him but I don’t know if he was blowing up or what. That is how the luck was going. I saw smoke flying out from him and I thought, ‘Oh damn, I need to go with someone else.’”

    WHAT WAS IT LIKE BEHIND THE WHEEL? “Did you see that? What was it like behind the microphone. It was chaotic. I was screaming. When that stuff happens you start talking quicker and louder and I was doing the same thing.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Busch Light #PIT4BUSCH Ford Mustang

    “That is just the way it goes here. We are just going to go burn a couple hundred thousand dollars of the owners money, load them up in the truck, head home and try again next week.”

    WAS THAT TYPICAL OF WHAT YOU EXPECT AT THIS RACE? “There are five of 18 cars left. If we can wreck five more we will be in good shape. Typical speedway racing.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford Mustang — CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE FIRST INCIDENT WITH KYLE (BUSCH) THAT COLLECTED YOUR TEAMMATE? “Yeah, Kyle had a run. I blocked it to the bottom. I blocked it back to the top. I thought I did a good job blocking and he just got to the inside of me and there really wasn’t a hole there and he just hooked me around. That was the first crash. Then they wrecked on a restart, that was the other crash. We didn’t really hit anybody on that one. The last one, Denny blew a tire. Dang it. I almost made it through. I needed about three feet. Oh well.”

    BRAD (KESELOWSKI) WAS CRITICAL OF THE BLOCKING AND HE WAS UPSET WITH YOU: “Apparently we all suck at this because there are only like three cars left right now, so I wouldn’t say anyone is really good.”

    WILL YOU TRY TO MEND FENCES WITH BRAD? HE WAS LIVID AND THEN SAID HE WAS GOING TO DISNEY AND DIDN’T HAVE TIME TO TALK TO YOU: “Well, I am going to Disney too, so I will see him there (laughter). I am sure he is fine. We get along fine. I don’t think he is mad at me.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 MoneyLion Ford Mustang — YOU SEEMED PRETTY ANGRY AND ANIMATED ON THE RADIO: “I just got wrecked for no reason. Dumb, dumb racing. Dumb moves being thrown out there. Guys that don’t know what they are doing so they throw crazy blocks. It is just ridiculous. We shouldn’t be wrecking all these cars. I am not Tony Stewart, I am not as smart as he is and he can say it a lot better than I could but this is just dumb. We had a good race car. The MoneyLion Ford was capable of winning the race, led a lot of the race and we got destroyed for no reason.”

    DID IT SURPRISE YOU THAT THIS WAS THE TYPE OF RACING OUT THERE ALREADY? “You would think these guys would be smarter than that. I get in wrecks all the time and I cause them, but the same one over and over again. It is the same thing. Somebody throws a stupid block that is never going to work, and wrecks half the field. Then goes, ehhhhh. I don’t know. Maybe we need to take the helmets and seatbelts out. Somebody will get hurt and then maybe they will stop driving like (expletive).”

    TO BE CLEAR, IT IS YOUR TEAMMATE JOEY LOGANO THAT YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT, RIGHT? “Yeah, it was just a dumb move. There is no reason to make that move. It was never going to work and it didn’t. Here we are. We are wrecked out of the race and now a Ford isn’t going to win most likely and a Toyota is. It was just dumb to take out the best car for a move that was never going to work.”

    HOW MUCH OF THIS IS GUYS TRYING TO FIGURE THIS OUT? “There is only one driver in this race that has never ran this before. There is some experimenting but at this point you know what you’ve got.”

    WILL YOU TRY TO TALK TO JOEY ABOUT IT? “I am going to Disney World with my family. I will worry about that later.”

  • CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA: Stenhouse Jr. (Pole Winner) and Bowman Press Conf. Transcript

    CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA: Stenhouse Jr. (Pole Winner) and Bowman Press Conf. Transcript

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    DAYTONA 500
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    FEBRUARY 9, 2020

    CHEVROLET CAPTURES EIGHTH CONSECUTIVE DAYTONA 500 POLE
    Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. and Alex Bowman on Front Row

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fl. (February 9, 2020) – For the eighth consecutive season, a Chevrolet will lead the field to the green flag for the 2020 season-opening NASCAR Cup Series (NCS) race, the Daytona 500. Behind the wheel of the No. 47 Kroger Camaro ZL1 1LE, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. claimed the top spot with a lap of 46.253 seconds/194.582 mph around the 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway to earn his third NCS career pole, and first for JTG Daugherty Racing since 2015.

    Alex Bowman was second quick in his No. 88 Valvoline Camaro ZL1 1LE with a lap of 46.305 seconds at 194.363 mph, and will start on the front row alongside Stenhouse, Jr. in The Great American Race.

    “Any time you can start the season off, your first race with an organization, and to see all the work that they’ve put in; guys at the shop that I didn’t even know were working Saturdays and late nights all for the benefit of me to come down here and jump in this car and run fast,” said Stenhouse, Jr., about his first season with JTG Daugherty Racing.

    “Touring the Hendrick engine shop, they were pumped-up for me to switch over into their horsepower. So, this goes to a lot of people that work hard behind the scenes for me to come out here and drive. It’s a cool way to start Speedweeks” he added.

    Hendrick power captured the top-four spots in today’s qualifying session, as Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Camaro ZL1 1LE and Jimmie Johnson, No. 88 Ally Camaro ZL1 1LE were third and fourth, respectively, in the order.

    Stenhouse, Jr.’s feat is also the first ever pole win for the all-new Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE, the 27th Daytona 500 pole for Team Chevy, and its eighth consecutive Daytona 500 pole, which is the longest pole-winning streak of any manufacturer at Daytona International Speedway. The Bowtie Brand now has 717 Cup Series pole victories in NASCAR’s premier racing series.

    Beyond positions one and two, the starting order for the rest of the 2020 Daytona 500 field will be determined by the outcome of the Bluegreen Vacations Duel, which will be held on Thursday, February 13.

    The Daytona 500 takes place on Sunday, February 16th at 2:30pm ET and will be aired live on FOX, MRN, and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    RICKY STENHOUSE JR, NO. 47 KROGER CAMARO ZL1 1LE, AND BRIAN PATTIE (CREW CHIEF), PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT:
    THE MODERATOR: We are going to get started with our Busch Pole Award winner for next Sunday’s 62nd annual Daytona 500. We have Ricky Stenhouse Jr., driver of the No. 47 Kroger Chevrolet. We will open it up for questions.

    Q. Ricky, how does it feel to run this new Chevrolet and put it on the pole, extending the streak of poles for the manufacturer?
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: Yeah, it feels way different than the Chevy Camaro that they ran last year. I’m just kidding. I don’t know.
    It’s the best driving Camaro I’ve ever driven.
    No, it’s cool to keep the streak, and it’s something that you don’t really think about when Mr. Hendrick shows up in Victory Lane knowing that we’re running his engine package, going to the engine shop and seeing all the guys a couple weeks ago and just saying hey to them, it’s something different that I haven’t driven. So, to keep the streak alive of the Chevys and Hendrick engines on the pole and on the front row is pretty cool because I know everybody at JTG Daugherty Racing has worked really hard this off‑season, and I think that’s what makes it special to me is knowing that those guys put in the effort. They put in the work. Not only just the work but they know exactly what to do to make our cars fast, and it’s a good way to start our new relationship with JTG.

    Q. Do you feel like you need to prove something this year and like today was some first step? Do you know where I’m headed with that?
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: No, yeah, I think there’s a handful of us that feel like we have something to prove. And two of those are in my corner with me at JTG Daugherty Racing with Mike and Brian. I know that I feel like I can still get the job done behind the wheel and win races like we did in the Xfinity Series, and I know Brian believes in what the JTG Daugherty ‑‑ their resources that they have at the race shop, the engines, the Chevys. I mean, he just believes in what they have and feel really confident that we’re going to be able to show what we both can do together, and I’m excited to continue that relationship.
    That was a huge move for me going over there, bringing people that I’m familiar with that have always been in my corner, and to go to a whole brand-new place, I think I’d have been lost not having them there.
    But to see the way they mesh with Jodi and Tad and Ernie, the way they’ve built that place up, they’ve smoothed transition right in, and just being at the shop with all the new people that the company has, it’s been a good off‑season, but we definitely have something to prove.
    I know that this is Daytona 500 qualifying. It’s one lap. It’s one weekend. But I know that they’re putting the same effort into our Las Vegas car that we’re taking to Las Vegas as what they’ve been putting into our 500 car.
    I think this is just signs of things to come, of our speed that we’re going to have with our 47 team.

    Q. Somebody like Mike who’s been with you throughout most of your career, and Brian more recently, what did that do for your confidence coming over to JTG because for two guys just to uproot what they were doing speaks volumes as far as what they felt about your potential.
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: It does, and Brian has done a lot in this sport on the Cup side and has worked with different drivers and different teams. Mike obviously was with Roush Fenway longer than I was, and for them to follow me over was a lot of confidence that it built up in me that they still felt like I could get the job done, but also they toured the shops, they went through and felt like the resources that JTG Daugherty Racing has are what we need to up our level of competition.
    You know, them being in the shop every day, talking to them on the days that I was out dirt racing, just talking about the things that they were getting done in the shop brought a lot of confidence to me, as well, even when I wasn’t at the shop.
    Having them in there working day in and day out has really helped the transition and helped my confidence.

    Q. And you also looked very solid in open‑wheel racing in the off‑season. How did that help you keep sharp, just ‑‑ Daytona is a completely different animal than anything you do, but how did having the opportunity just to stay in a race car keep you sharp and prepare you for coming in here?
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: Yeah, definitely ran more midget races this off‑season than I have in the past few years, and I’m glad I did that. Just staying in the seat, running more dirt races in a row, got more confidence built up. We were fast at quite a few of those races and felt really good and comfortable in the car. Just enjoyed my off‑season, and going to the shop, going dirt racing and just getting prepared for the season, it never hurts when you’re behind the wheel of something. I was ready to go when we got here.

    Q. Ricky, your fellow competitors have mixed feelings about you on plate races. You’ve obviously gotten the job done, you’ve won on these races, you’ve also been in situations that didn’t make you many friends ‑‑
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: Maybe only like two. They act like it’s every race.

    Q. I wasn’t saying it was every race now.
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: Yeah, it’s their opinion. Maybe two in the same race. (Laughter.)

    Q. Do you think you now have a chance to win this race and will you get the kind of help it’s going to take to win it?
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: Yeah, I think I’ve noticed over the years of speedway racing that when you have a fast car, obviously you get ‑‑ sometimes you get more people to work with you, sometimes you don’t. But I noticed we qualified on the pole at Talladega. The car was really fast, and I felt like it was easier for me to make moves knowing that I felt like I had enough speed to pull out of line and get the job done.
    You know, that to me is all that really matters is I know what our car is capable of speed‑wise, and that helps me make moves.
    THE MODERATOR: We’re also joined by crew chief Brian Pattie.

    Q. I have kind of a similar question. The fact that you have a fast car, how does that change decision making as far as how daring a move you make?
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: Yeah, I think for me in the little drafting that I did on Saturday’s practice, you know, the car definitely drives a little bit different. I feel like my moves are going to have to be a little bit more calculated, at least for the Duels. I know Brian, we’ve already talked about a few things that we need to adjust on our race car for Sunday. I feel like your car on Sunday needs to be a lot different than you qualify and run your Duel with, and so we’re going to continue to look at that. I feel like I want to learn a lot Thursday in the Duel to try and figure out what all we need come Sunday because in those practice sessions on Friday and Saturday, you end up getting a little bit of a draft, but you don’t get a race draft like you do on Thursday.
    We’re going to just take notes, and we’ve got a full week to come up with what we need for Sunday during the 500.
    But definitely going to have to be a little bit more calculated when your car is a little bit looser, but when Brian gets it dialed in for me, I’ll be able to be aggressive again.

    Q. What was the process of this team coming together with all the familiarity and the process of saying we want a lot of familiarity? Were you the first piece, Ricky, and then they asked you what do you need, or was it kind of more methodical and it was kind of by happenstance you guys were available and all ended up here?
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: All of the above.
    BRIAN PATTIE: No comment.
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: It all just worked out really well. I’m definitely happy the way everything worked out to, like I said, have Brian, have Mike in my corner on the same team and helping that transition. That was one of the pieces is just to be comfortable with somebody and make that transition as smooth as possible.

    Q. And kind of on a related note, Brian, just being able to continue the relationships, when you have that familiarity, it makes it a lot easier to hit the ground running this year, right?
    BRIAN PATTIE: Yeah, I don’t have to worry about figuring out driver lingo, what he needs or what he’s trying to say. Working together for three years, it’s a little bit easier. Yeah, I’m not worried about the communication. It’s been there since day one. Obviously, we had success in ’17 and we need to get it back there.

    Q. Brian, I have to ask you as a fellow central Floridian, this has got to be pretty cool for you to have done this in your home state and I can only imagine how proud you are.
    BRIAN PATTIE: Yeah, it’s cool. We sat on the pole here in the 400 with Biffle in ’16, won both Xfinity races here in the 400 and the fall, so this is the last one on the bucket list, and is obviously is a big step. So, this is a step in the right direction, and yeah, it means a lot.

    Q. Brian, for people that don’t know Ricky, what was it about him that you committed to making this move from your comfortable spot over at Roush and jumping kind of into the unknown at JTG and just following him and being able to be in a position where you could support him?
    BRIAN PATTIE: You know, it was multiple things. Obviously, Ricky was a huge part, but just talking to Tad, Tad and Ernie, met with them for three hours. That’s a pretty long interview. The crazy thing is we talked about racing maybe 20 percent of the time. So, I wanted to get a feel for how they are character‑wise away from the track, what kind of people they are. And it reminded me a lot of NEMCO. I told them that. Had a lot of success at NEMCO for 11 years, and I want to get back to that.
    RICKY STENHOUSE JR.: I bragged him a lot, and I bribed.

    Q. As far as Ricky, you know what he can accomplish?
    BRIAN PATTIE: Yeah, obviously we’ve had success, won races, and I think the mentality we have at JTG, it’s a racing mentality of just do what it takes, fits me, fits my mold. I’m not a meeting guy. I hate meetings. When you have more than one meeting in a week, it kind of frustrates me, especially when they get nothing accomplished. This program just seems easier, right. They trust what I have to say, and we just do it. We get graded every Sunday night, and obviously we were graded today and we have an A+, but we need to do this for 36 weeks.
    THE MODERATOR: Gentlemen, congratulations and good luck next Sunday.

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 VALVOLINE CAMARO ZL1 1LE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:
    THE MODERATOR: We are now joined by Alex Bowman, driver of the No. 88 Valvoline Chevrolet, who will be starting second in next Sunday’s Daytona 500 here at Daytona International Speedway. This is the third time Alex has started on the front row for the Daytona 500, and he has been on the front row for four of the last five races here at Daytona. We will open it up to questions.

    Q. The front row is becoming a very familiar place for you. Could you talk about this? This has got to be another terrific outing.
    ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, for sure. Obviously coming down here for 500 qualifying, everybody at HMS puts so much effort into these speedway cars. As a race car driver there’s not much you can do to make them go faster, but you can sure screw them up, so at least I didn’t do that.
    Just proud of all the guys back at the shop, chassis shop, fab shop. We brought four really good race cars, obviously Hendrick engines and the 47, as well.
    Proud of all those guys. I think we’re going to have a great race car in the race. Our Clash car has been driving really well, as well. Just excited to be back here with the new Camaro body. I think that’s going to be really great for us, and the Valvoline car looks really cool, so it’s been a good weekend so far.

    Q. Was there any point in your lap where you were like kind of knew it just wasn’t there or did you think you had it?
    ALEX BOWMAN: Well, getting off of Turn 2, there’s a flag at the end of the back straightaway that you can see and kind of see where the wind is at and what it’s doing, and the car kind of fell on its face off of Turn 2, and you could see the flag was pointed straight at me, so I knew we had a really big headwind. I wasn’t really aware of where the winds were for all the other guys, so I was a little worried about that, but obviously didn’t hurt us too bad. Would have liked to have been a little better, but still pretty good.

    Q. Alex, is it too soon to tell the difference between the two Chevrolets from last year to this year?
    ALEX BOWMAN: Yes and no. I feel like we maybe had a little glimpse of the differences in Clash practice. We drafted a little bit, not a ton, but definitely did a little bit. We’ll just have to wait and see. I think how the Clash goes will be a good indication, and then obviously Duels and 500 practice and all that. But I think it looks great. It’s been really great on track so far. We’ve had it on the racetrack once, and it qualified one, two, three, four, so obviously it’s working pretty good so far.

    Q. You probably haven’t had the benefit of this, but we were seeing the Dartfish on FOX. You launched a car length and a half, two car lengths better than him, and it appears what you were talking about sort of came up and got you; by the time you guys got to the line at the warmup lap, you were almost back to equal again. Any frustration that you did everything you could do, the team has done this all year long, and it came up to a puff of wind in your face to take it away?
    ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, I didn’t know that, so I’ll take it, though, for sure. I guess if I had a good launch, that’s great to hear. That’s really the one thing you can do at these speedways qualifying is just try to dial in your launch. It used to be a lot more difficult than it is now. With the actual restrictor plates, the engines literally wouldn’t want to take off, and they would kind of stumble and not want to go, and it was all about slipping the clutch, where now with more power they’re a little easier to get up to speed, and it’s more about minimizing wheel spin and just hitting your shifts right.
    Glad I did good there. Disappointed that we didn’t get the pole, but still, to qualify second, third year in a row on the front year here for the 500, it’s just all about all the hard work that the 88 guys put in back at the shop all winter. It’s really cool for them.

    Q. Any frustration that all that work, it looked like everything was perfect, it was lined up, you had the pole, and just simply Mother Nature, a puff of wind takes it away?
    ALEX BOWMAN: Oh, that’s all right. They call me “Bad Luck” Bowman, right, so the wind got me. But who knows. I mean, they may have just had a faster car, and it may have just looked like that.
    No, I’m sure everybody was fighting different winds. It’s Daytona. It’s a windy place, so you can always kind of see that. No, I’m not frustrated at all. We’re on the front row for the Daytona 500.

    Q. Just curious, during your drafting session yesterday, what did you glean from the new car? Does it feel any different drafting in a pack?
    ALEX BOWMAN: I definitely think there were some differences that Chase and I picked up on pretty quickly. I’m going to keep those to myself and hopefully be able to use them to our advantage. But it definitely had some differences. And you know, really just the evolution of the cars, I feel like every speedway race there’s some differences, and you pick up on definite things that work and don’t work and whatnot.
    I think the car was really good. But it was a really small pack, so it’s hard to say. Even the Clash is still a pretty small pack to figure out what your car is going to do. I think next Sunday is when we’ll really know, but it’s been looking really good so far.

    Q. And secondly, with so many driver changes over the course since last year, how do you prepare yourself to know who’s behind the wheel of what car? Do you rely a lot on your spotter? Do you study the paint schemes? Because who you dance with on Sunday, a lot of that determines how you’ll get to the front.
    ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, I can’t really rely on my spotter too well for that. He calls the car numbers wrong all the time. So, like at practice yesterday, he called like the 38 or the 36 the 12 like three times, so it was really funny.
    But I think by next Sunday, we’ll kind of have ‑‑ every driver will have that figured out, but it is different coming down here with so many different people driving different race cars. But yeah, tell Kevin Hamlin I said that he’s bad at reading numbers sometimes.

    Q. Everybody says Daytona is kind of a one‑off; it doesn’t really tell you what the rest of the year will be like. Have you seen anything to indicate that these Chevrolets will not be good going forward as they are right now today?
    ALEX BOWMAN: No. I think everything has been really positive. You know, everything that Chevrolet and all the Chevy teams and everybody at HMS have put into this new car, we’re all very performance driven, and we’re not going to do things if we don’t think they’re going to be better. Obviously, everything has been really positive so far. Today has been positive. Hopefully this afternoon goes well.
    But when we get to Vegas, we’ll really see what we have. I would say that Daytona is not the greatest indicator of how your year is going to go, but at the same time, everything has been really positive so far.

    Q. You mentioned you’re “Bad Luck” Bowman. You got the qualifying thing figured out. Do we just need a little dose of positive luck for “Bad Luck” to have a chance to win this race?
    ALEX BOWMAN: Yeah, I guess. That’s really ‑‑ all my friends call me “Bad Luck” Bowman, and they Photoshopped my face on the Bad Luck Brian meme. I don’t know if you’ve seen that one. But superspeedway racing, everybody wants to say it’s all about luck. It’s really not. It’s really about how you position yourself throughout the day, and sometimes luck comes involved in it and you get caught up in somebody else’s mess or something happens right in front of you or whatever, but it’s really about how you position yourself and what you do throughout the day, what situations you put yourself in.
    I would love to be a super lucky person. Obviously, I’m pretty lucky to get to drive a race car for a living. Sometimes I think situations could go better for me, but I think it’s more about the situations you put yourself in.

    Q. Are you “Bad Luck” Bowman just because of plate stuff or just in general?
    ALEX BOWMAN: No, it’s like life things. My best friends are mean. They are mean to me. I’m sure you’ve seen the Bad Luck Brian in like the plaid and ‑‑ so my face is on that, yeah. There’s one of that with my face on it, and my friends write on it all the time and send it in our group chat. So yeah, that’s what ‑‑ I surround myself with great people. That’s what I get to live with.
    But no, it’s just what they call me, and we laugh about it all the time.
    THE MODERATOR: Thanks for joining us, and good luck next Sunday.

    FastScripts by ASAP Sports

  • CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA: Post-Qualifying Notes and Quotes

    CHEVY NCS AT DAYTONA: Post-Qualifying Notes and Quotes

    NASCAR CUP SERIES
    DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
    DAYTONA 500
    TEAM CHEVY POST-QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
    FEBRUARY 9, 2020

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER

    1. RICKY STENHOUSE JR., NO. 47 KROGER CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    2. ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 VALVOLINE CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    3. CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    4. JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE
    5. WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA ‘COLOR OF THE YEAR’ CAMARO ZL1 1LE

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER

    1. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (Chevrolet)
    2. Alex Bowman (Chevrolet)
    3. Chase Elliott (Chevrolet)
    4. Jimmie Johnson (Chevrolet)
    5. Denny Hamlin (Toyota)

    FOX will telecast the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway live at 2:30 p.m. ET Sunday, February 16. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    RICKY STENHOUSE JR., NO. 47 KROGER CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Pole Winner
    CONGRATULATIONS ALL THE WAY AROUND. YOU CAN’T HIDE THAT SMILE. HOW GOOD DOES THIS FEEL IN YOUR DEBUT WITH JTG DAUGHERTY, TO PUT IT ON THE POLE FOR THE DAYTONA 500?
    “It’s cool. Tad (Geschickter, team owner) and (wife) Jodi are back at the shop with everybody. So. I’m just thankful for the opportunity to be here and to bring guys with me like Brian (Pattie, crew chief). They’ve been working really hard. They’re in my corner. They’ve been behind me throughout all my career. Ernie (Cope, competition director) runs a great organization and a great shop. The Hendrick horsepower was amazing. Obviously, we’ve got quite a few Hendrick cars right there behind us lined-up. Our Camaro ZL1 1LE was really strong. And the winds started picking up there, down the back straightaway; a little headwind for the other guys, so I’m really proud to put our Kroger Chevy on the pole on Kroger pole day for the Daytona 500. That was our goal coming down here. Pattie was working really hard all off-season for that goal. And everybody chipped in, the whole shop. We cut bodies off. We put them back on. So, this goes out to the whole shop and I’ve got to thank our other partners as well. I’m looking forward to hopefully continuing this momentum on Thursday.”

    WHAT DOES IT MEAN, PERSONALLY, IN MAKING THE TRANSITION YOU ARE AND THEN ACCOMPLISHING WHAT YOU JUST DID?
    “Yeah, it’s huge. Any time you can start the season off, your first race with an organization, and to see all the work that they’ve put in; guys at the shop that I didn’t even know were working Saturdays and late nights all for the benefit of me to come down here and jump in this car and run fast. Touring the Hendrick engine shop, they were pumped-up for me to switch over into their horsepower. So, this goes to a lot of people that work hard behind the scenes for me to come out here and drive. It’s a cool way to start Speedweeks.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 VALVOLINE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 2nd
    “Hats off to the JTG guys. Hendrick Engines one-two-three-four, so that’s pretty cool. We have a great Valvoline Camaro. I’m really happy with how the new Camaro has been so far. The front row is still really good. Obviously, we wanted the pole; but just barely missed it there. So, hat’s off to the Hendrick engine shop, the fab shop, and all the guys that work on these things all winter. This is really all about them. As a driver, you can really only screw it up. So, you can’t make it really go any faster. So, I’m proud of all the guys and we’ve got the best-looking car here with Valvoline on board. It looks awesome, and hopefully we’ll be up front in the 500.”

    THAT REMINDS ME OF BUDDY BAKER, WHO WON THIS RACE. WHAT WOULD IT MEAN TO WIN IT FROM THE FRONT?
    “Yeah, that would be amazing. We’ve been on the front row the last two years. We’ve had good runs. Just haven’t really finished them off. So, hopefully we can do that this year. This place is so cool. You walk in and man, it’s the Daytona 500. There’s nothing like it. There’s so many people and it’s such a big event. To lead laps here is really neat. But if we were to be able to go win, that would be amazing.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 3rd
    “It was a solid lap, just needed a little bit more obviously. It’s so early in the week and just trying to keep the car in one piece. It’s great for Team Chevy to be one, two, three, four. We’ll try to be good next Sunday, that’s really all that matters.”

    HOW DID YOUR CAR FEEL AND HOW WILL IT RACE? YOU JUST MISSED THE FRONT ROW
    “Yeah, I think our NAPA Camaro will be good next Sunday, I hope. It’s always good to kind of get back in the groove of things and I’m looking forward to this afternoon’s Clash. And then, just trying to keep our cars in one piece I think is the main goal this week. I haven’t done a very good job of that over the course of my career down here. So, we’ll try to do better and hopefully have a good showing today and most importantly, next Sunday.”

    SO MUCH HISTORY HERE FOR YOU. HOW MUCH DO YOU LOOK FORWARD TO THE DAYTONA 500?
    “Yeah, it was just good to get back to the track. We race so many times throughout the year and once you get a little bit of time off, for me, I feel like when it gets to be February or the middle of February, I’m ready to go back. And that’s been the case this year. So, I’m just excited to be here and get back in the groove. This is the first of a lot of racing ahead, so we’re just excited to get back in the groove, number one, and hopefully put on a good show for all the people that’ll be here next week.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 4th
    AS YOU’RE ON YOUR FINAL FULL-TIME SEASON, DO YOU SOAK IT IN OR DO YOU JUST GO ‘BUSINESS AS USUAL’?
    “It’s a balancing act. I want to soak it in, but I’m just wired to race. I want to win races and I want to be a championship threat. So, I’ll try to figure that out as the year goes on. Things are pretty casual this first week here in Daytona. As we get to the 500 and the races that follow, I’m sure I’ll gravitate more toward the work-side and the performance-side of life. But, I’m just thankful to be here. It’s been a heck of a run and I’m very excited to start my final full-time season. I’m very excited to have Ally on board and support from Chevrolet. And honestly, the support from everybody at Hendrick Motorsports. There’s a really cool energy in our shop and I’m thankful I’ve had all these years with Rick and to be a part of this great family.”

    A LOT OF FANS LINED THE STREETS FOR THE MARATHON TODAY
    “Yeah, I ran the Daytona Half Marathon this morning which is always a great event. And it’s certainly one to weigh on my mind as I’m eating all the Christmas candy and holiday things that we do, knowing that there’s a half-marathon out there for me and keeps me a little more honest and in shape. So, it was a fun day today. I did great in that race and qualified fourth, and I’m looking forward to the Clash later today.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 AXALTA ‘COLOR OF THE YEAR’ CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 8th
    WHAT ARE YOUR FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF THE NEW CAMARO?
    “It’s really hard to tell. I got out there with Jimmie (Johnson) a couple of laps, that’s really all we did. We tried to push each other. It didn’t seem like it was all that stable, but we just have to see. I think the Clash will be a better indications. It’s really hard to tell, so far, until we get out to race.”

    BEYOND THIS, DO YOU THINK YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO WORK WITH?
    “Yeah, definitely. I think that’s the goal of this car is to make it better on the intermediate tracks. I think it’s definitely going to be quite a bit better at those places. Here, it kind of is what it is. We would like to have a little more speed than we showed. But I think on the other tracks, I think we’ll be just fine.”

    ARE YOU SURPRISED WITH YOUR QUALIFYING RUN?
    “Yeah, especially for as much as we focus on it, that’s not very good. We worked hard on it, but I don’t really know. Everything felt fine, so I don’t really know. We’ll see what happens.”

    RYAN PREECE, NO. 37 COTTONELLE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 17th
    THOUGHTS ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN.
    “I feel good. That’s one of our best qualifying positions, for sure, at a superspeedway. I’m extremely happy for Kroger and everyone to get the pole here at the Daytona 500. That’s really cool.”

    “We didn’t draft much in practice, but I definitely feel like Chevy did an awesome job with the new body we have this year. Hopefully this can be a consistent thing.”

    TYLER REDDICK, NO. 8 CATERPILLAR CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 18th
    THOUGHTS ON HIS RUN.
    “Not too bad. We weren’t exactly where we wanted to be for qualifying pace trying to get the front row. We’ve got some work to do. We just missed it a little bit, but we knew we were going to be a little lucky to get the front row coming into this. We’ll work on it and see how the Duels go. I feel like the car didn’t drive too bad being where it was and, obviously, we’ve got to be locked into that for the Duels. Hopefully, we can race pretty good and try to get a few spots back that way in the Duels.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 CREDIT ONE BANK CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 20th
    THOUGHTS ON HIS RUN.
    “It was pretty average. Honestly, when I come here, I don’t really expect to get the pole. We never qualify well at superspeedways. I think we focus more on having good race cars. Hopefully, we’ll learn a lot today in the Clash, and be good for the Duels and the 500.”

    YOU WON THE LAST NON-POINTS RACE LIKE THIS. WHAT DO YOU THINK GOING INTO THE CLASH?
    “It’s just wild. There aren’t a lot of cars and it’s a short race. It’s a race where most of us have been sitting since Homestead. Everyone’s just excited to get out there, race and learn a lot. Try to get familiar with things with new people, either on pit boxes, pit crews, spotters, things like that.”

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 22nd
    “You can feel it, it’s Daytona 500 qualifying. Here we go.”
    “We’ll see how things stack up. With new Camaro ZL1 1LE, the Hendrick guys have shown the single car speed. We have to figure out the balance on what we’ll see in the race conditions. I’m excited about the Clash later on to get that run in with the guys, to get pit stops done and just get back into sequence. We’re a team that can win races, we can make a run at the championship and it starts on a day like today.”

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 30th
    “Our Camaro performed well. We didn’t really come out here prepared to qualify really well, we really kind of focused on making sure that the car races well so we can get a good opportunity to possibly win the Duels and run well in the 500. I’m loving getting used to and feeling the new ZL1 1LE. I feel like the body is not only going to benefit us here, but all throughout the year. I’m already feeling things that I like for other tracks in the future, so I’m excited for everything that’s to come.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 UNITED STATES AIR FORCE CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 32nd
    “Every time we come down to Daytona or Talladega, especially for the 500, we always have a really good car in race trim. We’re not very good by ourselves, slow and a little draggy. But we always seem to shoot right to the front. We’ll have to manage our race, make it to the third stage. Re-watching last year’s race, we got taken out before the first stage ended. So, we just have to position ourselves and put ourselves in the best spot possible.”

    WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO HAVE THE FAN SUPPORT THAT YOU DO?
    “It means a lot. I just try to continue to be myself 100 percent, on and off the race track. I think that latches on to the fans and carries me a little bit farther than others. I’ve over-stepped the line a couple of times, but we’re all human. It’s all part of it. It’s a fun journey. I appreciate them sticking around and being a part of it.”

    BRENDAN GAUGHAN, NO. 62 BEARD MOTORSPORTS/SOUTH POINT CAMARO ZL1 1LE – Qualified 33rd
    “Our Chevy, right now, is still locked in. We’ve got one more car that we’re worried about, but I think if we go off of yesterday, we should be OK. It will be awesome if we can lock it in for the Daytona 500 and not have to worry about the Duels. Then, I can relax and have a good time the next couple of days, and come back and get ready for the 500.”

  • Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Captures Daytona 500 Pole in JTG Daugherty Racing’s No. 47 Kroger Camaro ZL1 1LE

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Captures Daytona 500 Pole in JTG Daugherty Racing’s No. 47 Kroger Camaro ZL1 1LE

    Daytona Beach, Fla. (February 9, 2020) – – JTG Daugherty Racing driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. scored his first Daytona 500 Busch Pole Award after turning a lap time of 46.253 seconds (194.582) in the No. 47 Kroger Camaro ZL1 1LE. Stenhouse beat out Alex Bowman for the coveted spot that posted a lap of 46.305 (194.363).

    “It’s cool,” said Ricky Stenhouse Jr. “Tad and Jodi (Geschickter) are back at the shop and I just want to thank them, Gordon (Smith) and Brad (Daugherty). I’m thankful for the opportunity to be here and to be able to bring guys with me like Brian (Pattie) and Mike (Kelley). They are in my corner. They have been working really hard and been behind me throughout all my career. Ernie (Cope) runs a great organization and great shop. The Hendrick horsepower was amazing. Obviously, we’ve got a few Hendrick cars lined up behind us. Our Kroger Camaro ZL1 1LE was really strong. The wind started picking up down the back straightaway – a little headwind – for other guys.

    “We’re proud to put the Kroger car on the pole on Kroger Pole Day for their Daytona 500,” Stenhouse Jr. continued. “That was our goal coming down here. Brian and the guys at the shop have been working hard all season for that goal. The whole shop chipped in. We’ve cut car bodies off and put them back on and this goes out to the shop. They’ve worked Saturdays and worked late nights all for me to come down here to jump in the Kroger car and run fast. Looking forward to continuing the momentum on Thursday.”

    This is JTG Daugherty Racing’s 12th year competing in the Daytona 500. It’s a huge accomplishment for the racing organization and team owner Tad Geschickter is proud of what his team has in store this season.

    “Daytona is the place that highlights the strength of the team and how hard everyone works. To be the fastest car there this weekend makes me really happy for everyone that puts in the time. I’m really proud of everyone that works for JTG. For me personally what comes to mind is the partners like Kroger and everyone that stands behind us through thick and thin. We want to create value for all our partners involved and give them what they deserve. Today was a good day.”

    This locks in the first two starting positions for the Daytona 500. The rest of the starting lineup will be determined after the Bluegreen Vacations Duel at Daytona on Thursday live from at Daytona at 7 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Qualifying (Almirola Paces Ford in Daytona 500 Cup Qualifying)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Daytona 500 Qualifying (Almirola Paces Ford in Daytona 500 Cup Qualifying)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    NASCAR Cup Series (NCS)
    Sunday, February 9, 2020
    DAYTONA 500 QUALIFYING

    FORD QUALIFYING RESULTS
    7th – Aric Almirola
    11th – Joey Logano
    12th – Kevin Harvick
    13th – Clint Bowyer
    14th – Cole Custer
    15th – Ryan Newman
    16th – Matt DiBenedetto
    19th – Chris Buescher
    23rd – Brad Keselowski
    24th – Michael McDowell
    25th – John Hunter Nemechek
    26th – David Ragan
    27th – Ryan Blaney
    37th – Corey LaJoie

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang – Qualified 7th

    “That was pretty easy. When we show up down here for Daytona and Talladega, the drivers have a few things that are important with the launch off pit road and hitting your shifts and all those things and being smooth on the wheel but most of the speed just comes from the guys and everybody back at the shop and all the preparation and hard work that goes into the offseason and gearing up for the Daytona 500. I am proud of the effort. It shows we have a lot of raw speed in our car. Now we just have to get it ready for racing. That is what is most important now. If you don’t get those top two spots you go race for your starting spot in the Duels and you make sure your car is driving good for 500 miles here on Sunday.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford Mustang — Qualified 11th

    “If you qualify on the front row it does matter. If you don’t, then eh, not really. You want to qualify good, don’t get me wrong, but if you aren’t on the front row I am not sure it doesn’t matter much.”

    WITH BRAD’S ISSUE YESTERDAY, DO YOU THINK TEAM PENSKE HAS GOTTEN THE BAD LUCK OR GREMLINS OUT OF THE WAY EARLY HERE? “I don’t know. I don’t believe in gremlins and bad luck or any of that. Things sometimes just happen, but what are you going to do? I am not a luck guy. You just always have to expect the unexpected.”

    DO YOU LIKE THAT DAYTONA 500 QUALIFYING IS SO DIFFERENT THAN THE OTHER PLACES YOU GO? “I like speedweeks. I have always liked it, even when I was a fan of the sport before I raced. I like that you are down here for awhile and get to watch races this weekend and get to start racing again on Thursday and throughout the whole weekend. For a race fan, that is really cool. You make a trip out of it. You are in an awesome location. You are at the beach. You aren’t stuck somewhere that is 30-degrees right now. I like it. I like coming down here and staying down here for 10 days or whatever it is. It is a fun time.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Busch Light #PIT4BUSCH Ford Mustang — Qualified 12th

    “We were a little behind the eight ball. We got out there late and drug the track a little too hard. We didn’t quite run as fast as we thought we would. We will be okay. We will just go race now.”

    THE CLASH TODAY, WHAT DO YOU EXPECT? “Our Mustang has been fine. I think you just have to get in the positions you need to be in to try to avoid the wreck or the wrecks and try to position yourself for the end of the race. It is good to be in the Clash. Obviously it is great to have Busch back on board with the Clash but it is also good for me to kind of knock the rust off and be able to go out and race.”

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 Rush/Mobil 1 Ford Mustang — Qualified 13th

    “It is an interesting day. You wake up and your mindset is on this Clash later today and trying to be in Victory Lane at Daytona and your mindset is there and now all of a sudden I am talking about the Daytona 500 qualifying. It is unique in that sense. Today in qualifying, it is all about the efforts of Stewart-Haas Racing and Ford Performance and Doug Yates and all his guys at the engine shop. It is their day. I am looking forward to wherever we land, but more importantly I am looking forward to getting on the track tonight, getting back in the swing of things. That is the hardest thing about all of this. You sit there, I just got a chance to watch my favorite team win the Super Bowl and all the while I am sitting there thinking to myself that I have watched them prepare for this game all season long and be ready for it and realize that in two weeks time I am going to be doing this completely cold turkey with a team that I have relatively never worked with before. I am looking forward to getting the opportunity. I am looking forward to the Daytona 500. You always do, every single year. I haven’t gotten that done yet. We got so close last year going down the back straight away and we went for it and wrecked. That is all you can ask for is that opportunity. I know that Johnny and all the guys gave me that opportunity already ahead of time. It is up to us to get it to the end and then put it into a situation where you can win.”

    MATT DIBENEDETTO, No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford Mustang — Qualified 16th

    “Today is important. It is still an important day. A better starting spot for the Duels is nice. It isn’t the end-all, be-all for sure, but it is always important. It is the first qualifying of the year and for the Daytona 500, so it means a lot to the teams and the speed of the car is a testament to the teams.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – Qualified 23rd

    “I thought we were going to be a little faster than I was. We showed a little bit more pace in practice but we thought we might have gotten a little help. We were hoping that wasn’t the case and weren’t really sure what we were going to run, but I guess it was.”

    THE CLASH LATER TODAY. MORE ABOUT KNOCKING THE RUST OFF OR GETTING THE CHECKERS? “We are definitely here to win the race but we will probably do a little bit of both.”

    YOU HAD AN ISSUE YESTERDAY: “I just had a little error of misjudgement and clipped it and hit it kind of perfectly to tear up the right side of the car. The team fixed it last night and we should be good to go. Being that this is speedweeks and being down here so long, the guys bring a lot of stuff to fix the car. You always expect the unexpected and you expect damage that you might get in the 150’s. They were fairly well prepared.”

    HOW MUCH WILL YOU STUDY BETWEEN NOW AND SUNDAY TO MAKE SURE YOU KNOW WHO IS BEHIND WHAT WHEEL WITH ALL THE CHANGES COMING INTO THIS SEASON? “I think this rule package, the racing on plate tracks involves so much that what is true one year isn’t true the next. There have been some big changes in rules the last year or so that have really affected the plate racing. Of course you want to study and be as prepared as possible but I am not sure it is as important as it used to be.”

    MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 Love’s Travel Stops Ford Mustang — Qualified 24th

    “Our lap went great. The team did a good job. I feel that is about where we were going to be. I feel good about that and not overly concerned on where it stacks up. Hopefully somewhere in the top-20 would be good to get a good spot for the Duels and we will race hard in the Duels and see what we have and use it as a learning experience to see what we will need for 500 miles on Sunday. It is just a small preview. Everything is different. I think with years of experience now you know how to translate what your car does in the Duels to what you need it to do in the 500. Everyday here is about gaining knowledge and learning what you need to do to put yourself in position.”

    JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK, No. 38 Citgard Ford Mustang — Qualified 25th

    “It is kind of an interesting weekend for myself. I feel like waking up on Sunday morning and only running one lap of qualifying is something to get used to compared to everything else that the schedule has kind of been through the Truck and XFINITY Series. It is cool to be here for my first Daytona 500. We are right there with my teammates and sandwiched in the middle of them. Yesterday practice was good. I felt good about our car. I didn’t know about single car speed. I felt good in the draft but everything is so enhanced and happens so fast in these Cup cars. I am trying to get used to how everything drives and the runs these cars get compared to everything else I have driven in my past. Experience is everything. I am trying to learn as much as I can.”