Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • RCR Post Race Report – First Data 500

    RCR Post Race Report – First Data 500

    Austin Dillon and Richard Childress Racing’s No. 3 American Ethanol Chevrolet Team Show Grit and Determination at Martinsville Speedway

    Finish: 22nd
    Start: 23rd
    Points: 23rd

    “I’m really proud of everyone on this No. 3 American Ethanol Chevrolet team for working hard all weekend and giving us a really solid car at Martinsville Speedway. We put up a fight all race long, which really helped us to stay on the lead lap and battle competitively in the top 12 throughout Stages 1 and 2. Early in Stage 3, we were racing hard with another car when we cut a tire and made contact with the outside wall. Our Chevy was just too loose after that, making it really hard to earn back the lap we lost while making repairs. We had a good fight, but this is not the finish we wanted today.”-Austin Dillon

    Daniel Hemric Survives Wild 500 Laps at Martinsville Speedway to Finish 17th in Chevrolet Accessories Camaro ZL1

    Finish: 17th
    Start: 18th
    Points: 26th

    “It was a solid day for us at Martinsville Speedway in the Chevrolet Accessories Camaro ZL1. We were just too loose and didn’t have the rear lateral grip we needed early in the race. We kept adjusting and trying to put ourselves in position to get the free pass or take the wave around, and finally late in the race we had something go our way that got us back on the lead lap. The No. 20 and the No. 34 got together behind us once we were back on the lead lap and turned us around. I hate that because I thought we were going to drive up into the top 15 pretty easily. It just wasn’t meant to be. We got a little too much damage to move forward at the end. All in all, just proud of these guys, proud of the effort and proud of the fight. We’ll roll on to Texas.”-Daniel Hemric

  • TEAM CHEVY AT MARTINSVILLE 2: Race Notes & Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT MARTINSVILLE 2: Race Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY
    FIRST DATA 500
    TEAM CHEVY RACE NOTES & QUOTES
    OCTOBER 27, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL FINISHING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER (* = Playoff Contender)
    2nd *William Byron, No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1
    6th Kurt Busch, No. 1 Global Poker Camaro ZL1
    9th *Kyle Larson, No. 42 Clover Camaro ZL1
    12th Chris Buescher, No. 37 Clorox Camaro ZL1
    13th Bubba Wallace, No. 43 Victory Junction Camaro ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL FINISHING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER (* = Chevy Playoff Contender)
    1st Martin Truex Jr. (Toyota)
    2nd *William Byron (Chevrolet)
    3rd Brad Keselowski (Ford)
    4th Denny Hamlin (Toyota)
    5th Ryan Blaney (Ford)

    UNOFFICIAL CURRENT PLAYOFF RANK (Following Round 7 of 10)
    POS. DRIVER (* = Chevy Contender)
    1. Martin Truex, Jr. (Toyota)
    2. Denny Hamlin (Toyota)
    3. Kyle Busch (Toyota)
    4.____Joey Logano ________________
    5. Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    6. Ryan Blaney (Ford)
    7. *Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)
    8. *Chase Elliott (Chevrolet)

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season continues next weekend at Texas Motor Speedway with the AAA Texas 500 on Sunday, November 3 at 3:00 P.M. ET. Live coverage can be found on NBCSN, NBC Sports Gold, PRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES AND QUOTES:

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 2nd
    WHAT MORE DID YOU NEED TO GIVE MARTIN TRUEX JR. A BETTER RUN FOR HIS MONEY THERE AT THE END?
    “Oh, I don’t know. He was really strong. I could work my brake bias a little bit in the car and gain a little bit and then I’d get to him and I’d heat them up a lot and kind of fall back. So, I don’t really know. He was super strong. Our car bounced a little bit on the short run, which was tough to kind of get around, but overall it was a really good day. This isn’t a place that I’ve loved coming to, and it just clicked this weekend. The things we did with the car going into qualifying and then obviously our race. So, I’m super excited, but second is not super fun either. So, we’ll try to get one spot better next time.”

    EVEN THOUGH TRUEX JR. IS A PLAYOFF DRIVER, IF YOU COULD HAVE GOTTEN CLOSER TO HIM, WOULD YOU HAVE MOVED HIM FOR THAT FIRST WIN, KNOWING HOW CLOSE IT WAS?
    “Yeah, I mean, whatever it takes. I wouldn’t race him dirty, but I’m really hungry for my first win, so whatever it takes. But, he ran such a good race, I think he would have been able to drag the brake and do all he could to keep me behind him anyway. So, it was close.”

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 GLOBAL POKER CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 6th
    ON HIS DAY:
    “We finished which was the highest we ran all day. Wow, what perseverance and an ability to make adjustments during the race. Daytime was hot and I told everybody and a lot of yellows at the end, we’ve got to be ready. We were lucky with the right lane on the right lane on the restarts. Thanks to Global Poker, Chevrolet, Monster Energy. We got a sixth. Really good day at Martinsville for us. Our teammate Kyle Larson got a top-10 as well.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 CLOVER CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 9th
    “This is my second best finish at Martinsville, so I’m really happy with that.
    We were able to steal some stage points as well, so we probably over achieved for how we usually run at Martinsville. I haven’t seen the points spread yet, but I would say we maintained from where we came in, so I’m happy about that.”

    WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION TO THE CALL TO STAY OUT TO FINISH THE STAGE?
    “We talked about it before the race that if we got the opportunity to get some guaranteed points, we would do what we needed to do. So I am happy about that.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 MOUNTAIN DEW CAMARO ZL1 – Recovered from mechanical issue on Lap 183, Finished 36th
    YOU MADE UP SOME SPOTS BY GOING BACK OUT
    “Yeah, whatever that is worth. Frustrating.”

    WHY IS IT FRUSTRATING?
    “Just disappointing for a day like that. We know better and we can do better than that.”

    WHAT IS YOUR APPROACH GOING FORWARD?
    “I’m going to go win it,”

    IS THIS GOING FORWARD A MUST WIN?
    “That is certainly the case now. We do have to win.”

    DANIEL HEMRIC, NO. 8 CHEVROLET ACCESSORIES CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 17th
    “It was a solid day for us here at Martinsville Speedway. We were just too loose and didn’t have the rear lateral grip we needed early in the race. We kept adjusting and kept trying to put ourselves in position to get the free pass or take the wave around, and finally late in the race we had something go our way that got us back on the lead lap. The No. 20 and the No. 34 got together behind us once we were back on the lead lap and turned this Chevrolet Accessories Camaro ZL1 around. I hate that because I thought we were going to drive up into the top 15 pretty easily. It just wasn’t meant to be. We got a little too much damage to move forward at the end. All in all, just proud of these guys, proud of the effort and proud of the fight. We’ll roll on to Texas.”
    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.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Five Fords Fun Top 10 in Martinsville Cup Race

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Five Fords Fun Top 10 in Martinsville Cup Race

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Saturday, October 26, 2019
    EVENT: First Data 500, Martinsville Speedway (Media Availability)

    Ford Finishing Results:
    3rd – Brad Keselowski
    5th – Ryan Blaney
    7th – Kevin Harvick
    8th – Joey Logano
    10th – Ryan Newman
    11th – David Ragan
    15th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    18th – Corey LaJoie
    21st – Paul Menard
    23rd – Michael McDowell
    25th – Matt Crafton
    31st – Daniel Suarez
    35th – Clint Bowyer
    37th – Aric Almirola

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang – “We just got together. I got inside of him getting down in turn three and he chopped me, and I got in his left-rear and moved him up a little bit and got inside of him, and then we hooked and got tangled up off of turn four. It’s disappointing. I had a really good Smithfield Ford Mustang and felt like we were maybe one adjustment away from being maybe a second or third-place car, so I’m proud of my guys, proud of the effort and we’ve got three more weeks.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – WHAT HAPPENED WITH HAMLIN FROM YOUR PERSPECTIVE? “I got fenced down the straightaway and just went to talk about it. I was a little frustrated by the situation and I went down to talk to him and didn’t really get the answers I was looking for.”

    WHAT ABOUT THE RACE? “I felt good about it. We weren’t as good as the 19, nobody was, but I felt like if you set us second, we’d run second or you set us eighth we’ll probably run eighth. Overall, it was as good as we were gonna do.”

    DENNY THOUGHT YOU GUYS HAD IT SETTLED, SO HOW DO YOU LOOK AT IT? “I was frustrated about the situation, obviously. I really wanted to go over there and talk to him and get his side of the story on what happened and he just said, ‘I ran you up in the wall, basically.’ He wasn’t as apologetic as I was looking for and that probably escalated the situation too much. I shouldn’t have shoved him. For all the kids watching that wasn’t the best thing to do, but I was frustrated, tempers are high. It’s the Playoffs, so that’s what happens.”

    IS IT PAR FOR THIS TRACK, PAR FOR THE COURSE? “Most of the time, yeah.”

    WAS IT THAT TONIGHT? “Yeah, I don’t know. I don’t think it was necessary. There were plenty laps to go. Race for the win and you’re coming off the last corner, all right, I get it, but I don’t totally understand the situation and why he had to do that.”

    DID YOU GET IT SETTLED? “Sure.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT TEXAS AND YOUR POINTS SITUATION? “I don’t know. I think I’m fourth from what I hear, but we still need to grab more points obviously. We can have better days than that, but we weren’t that bad. We can run up in the top five most of that race We were close, we were in the hunt, just couldn’t get it all there at the end.”

    HAD YOU BEEN ABLE TO TALK WITH DENNY BEFORE? DID THIS SURPRISE YOU? “Denny is Denny. He’s a little bit arrogant sometimes and I should be stronger than let that get underneath me when he does that.”

    DID THE CREW GUYS KIND OF ESCALATE IT BEFORE YOU COULD HAVE A CIVIL CONVERSATION? “No, we had a fine conversation. I shoved him.”

    WHY DID YOU SHOVE HIM? “I was made. I got fenced.”

    WOULD YOU TAKE BACK THE SHOVING? “Yeah, I would take that part back. Like I said, that wasn’t as professional as I should be. I wanted to have the conversation, but, like I said, the answers he was giving I felt wasn’t good enough and made me more mad.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Richmond Ford Mustang – “We were in the top five all day and I thought we had a good shot at second. We weren’t good on short runs. We were terrible for probably 30-40 laps and then we’d come alive and be great, but just didn’t have the speed.”

    YOU GOT CAUGHT ON THE OUTSIDE LATE. WAS THAT JUST BAD LUCK? “No, we just couldn’t go on short runs. That’s really all it was. We couldn’t get going for 30 laps and then just really struggled, so we just have to figure out what to do better there. We’ve got some big changes we need to make on that side, but long runs we were fantastic. We couldn’t go on the short run and that hurt us.”

    YOU HAD SOME RUN-INS WITH TEAMMATES. WERE YOU SURPRISED WITH THAT OR IS IT JUST MARTINSVILLE? “The one with the 2, he kind of dove in there late. He gave me the spot back, actually, so that was nice of him. The 22 just hit me five times as soon as he got to me. He tried to pass me for five laps and then he just started running me over, so I didn’t appreciate that but all of that stuff comes around. It’s just part of Martinsville racing.”

    WHAT’S YOUR OUTLOOK FOR TEXAS? “Hopefully good. Confident. Our car was really good there in the first race this year. We were leading when we blew up, so looking forward to going there. We had a lot of stage points today, which is nice. We just need to keep ourselves in the hunt That’s what you’ve got to do.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Blue Bird School Bus Ford Mustang – “We just out-tired there at the end. Those other guys had tires and we didn’t and it didn’t work out the best for us. It was a challenge. They did a good job. Our pit stops were awesome today. That made a big difference and just came up short.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Hunt Brothers Pizza Ford Mustang – “We got our car a lot better in the second half. We made some major adjustments when we got to the end of the second stage and made our car a lot better. We just didn’t quite get back up there.”

    HOW ENCOURAGED ARE YOU GOING FORWARD? “It’s just another race. That’s the same thing I’ve been saying for 32 weeks.”

    HOW IMPORTANT IS IT TO FINISH LIKE YOU DID ON A DAY THAT WASN’T THE BEST. “They did a good job in the second half of the race and we got a decent finish to minimize the damage.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Alliance Truck Parts Ford Mustang – “I think that’s about all we had or maybe a little more than what we had. We just kind of kept our head on our shoulders all day and made the most of what we had. I was really proud of our team for that effort.”

    HOW BRUTAL WAS IT OUT THERE TODAY? “Long green flag runs, a lot of aggressiveness, a lot of contact. It was really tough to pass. When you get behind somebody you’re way faster than that big spoiler would just kill you, but, all in all, a good day for us.”

    YOU MOVED BLANEY AND THEN GAVE HIM THE SPOT BACK. WHAT HAPPENED THERE? “Nobody said anything to me. I had somebody right on my butt and Blaney came down to block and I couldn’t let him in, and I about spun him out. And then I got to the other end and I about spun out and I was like, ‘Just go, Blaney. I about spun you out last time.’ My car ran better behind other cars, so that was it.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Almirola Leads Ford in Martinsville Cup Qualifying

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Almirola Leads Ford in Martinsville Cup Qualifying

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Saturday, October 26, 2019
    EVENT: First Data 500, Martinsville Speedway (Qualifying)

    Ford Qualifying Results:
    4th – Aric Almirola
    5th – Michael McDowell
    6th – Ryan Blaney
    7th – Clint Bowyer
    9th – Daniel Suarez
    10th – Joey Logano
    15th – Brad Keselowski
    16th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    17th – David Ragan
    22nd – Kevin Harvick
    27th – Ryan Newman
    28th – Corey LaJoie
    30th – Paul Menard
    31st – Matt Crafton

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 BlueDEF Ford Mustang – YOU ANNOUNCED YOU’RE BACK NEXT YEAR, SO HOW MUCH IS STILL TO BE DESIRED? “I want to win races. I want to a championship. It’s always been that way. Once you win a race at this level the next goal is a championship. It’s as simple as that. You start off every year to win your first race and then as many as you can and compete for a championship. We’ve been a part of years where I’ve been part of that conversation and I’ve been years where I haven’t, and, for me, over the years it’s hard to pinpoint without pointing fingers or anything else other than just looking at yourself in the mirror. I mean, sometimes there were reasons and sometimes there wasn’t and I should have performed better. I’m with a manufacturer that’s dedicated to that goal (winning races and championships). I’m with an organization that’s dedicated to that goal and certainly a race team, so that’s the goal. I love this sport. It’s fun. I love you guys. Everybody works their butt off to bring in the show. Call us whatever, but that’s our job and to come in and set up shop, put on a show and tear it down and go to the next one and I like that life.”

    IS IT HARD TO LOOK YOURSELF IN THE MIRROR? “I’m not a very attractive person. Yes.”

    WHAT DO YOU EXPECT ON SUNDAY? “Hopefully not as much of that (accidents like the truck race). But you can expect, tensions have been high. I hate to say it, but his Playoffs for as chaotic as it has been, as many swings as there’s been, some upsets, some good stories there hasn’t been that big, crazy story yet and you look for a track like Martinsville to possibly produce something like that. Hopefully, it’s just behind you. At the end of the day it’s in the rearview mirror and we’re drinking beer laughing about what they did all day long, not what we did. You don’t want to be laughing at yourself.”

    CAN YOU BE MORE AGGRESSIVE WITH GUYS STILL IN THE PLAYOFFS SINCE THEY MAY HAVE MORE TO LOSE? “Whether I was in it or out of it or anything in between you’re full force. You’re coming here to win the race no different than anybody. It doesn’t matter if we were racing, that’s the unique thing about the predicament we have with our Playoff system. It’s not like the NFL where you go home and it’s just two teams putting on a show. There are 40 of us still out there putting on a show and that being said I’m at one of my best race tracks. Whether I’m in the Playoffs or out of the Playoffs or anything in between I feel like I have a shot at winning at this place and hopefully bringing another grandfather clock home.”

    CAN YOU MAKE A MOVE THAT OTHERS MIGHT NOT MAKE IF THEY’RE STILL IN THE TITLE HUNT? “If that opportunity presented itself on a short track, it’s short track racing and you see it all the time – you take that chance. That’s how we all grew up. Those are the risks you take as a race car driver and really short track racing nine times out of 10 is the only thing that produces that opportunity, that opportunity of ‘hey, it’s there for the taking, you gonna take it or not?’ That doesn’t always present itself on a mile-and-a-half track or another race track. These short tracks like this, these half-mile race tracks, are no different than any other Friday or Saturday night all across the country. I see it every week. I have race cars that race all over the country on short tracks. This kind of racing happens every night.”

    YOU WERE FASTEST IN PRACTICE ON THE LONG RUNS. “Yeah, crumbs. It’s all about crumbs on these short tracks like this. We were fast on our averages and things like that. I’ve got a lot of confidence for tomorrow. We’ve got to get there. You’ve got to put yourself in position. It’s gonna be extremely hard to pass. When I talk crumbs I mean you’re just barely better than them. You’re a couple hundredths here a couple thousandths there. But we have a full head of steam going into the race and we should be. We tested here a couple months ago? I’m not sure when that was, August? And we were good there. We’ve been good here. Ever since I’ve been in the 14 car we’ve been good here. It’ll be fun. I’m looking forward to it.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Richmond Ford Mustang – HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE CHANGE TO YOUR PIT CREW FOR THE REST OF THE PLAYOFFS? “It wasn’t a decision by me. It was a decision by the upper office – team managers and things like that. We have four great pit crews, counting the Wood Brothers team, and with the two cars still left in the Playoffs we decided to – you know, my guys have done such a great job and it hurt me for those guys not to be a part of it because they’ve gotten us this far, but the 2 team has been really great all year and they have some really fast hands right now and they’re really on top of the ball. My guys were too, but it was a call to try to really step our team up a little bit, that it could be stepped up. The opportunity presented itself. It wasn’t anything that I disliked or liked. It was just how it is, but hopefully it doesn’t cause any bad waves or things like that. It’s just something Team Penske thought we should do to improve our team where we could a little bit.”

    HOW CLOSE ARE YOU WITH YOUR PIT CREW? “They’re family. I know all of them very well. I know their spouces and kids very well, so that stings. You try not to make it personal because it’s not. It’s a business and that’s sometimes kind of hard to get in the back of your mind – that it’s business and you have to do what’s best for everybody – but those guys are family from pit crew, road crew and everybody like that. They’ve got to be.”

    HOW WAS YOUR CAR TODAY? “We were decent. Made two long runs and some qualifying runs. I thought we were OK. You never know going into tomorrow. The weather is gonna be a little bit different and practice is so hard here. It’s kind of hard to figure out what the track is gonna do when we get a bunch of rubber on it, but I thought we started pretty well.”

    WHAT DID YOU THINK OF ROGER PENSKE BEING AWARDED THE MEDAL OF FREEDOM? “The highest civilian award you can get and that’s pretty amazing. It just shows what he’s done for so long, how great of a person he is outside of motorsports, and what he’s done for his country and his community. It’s really incredible. That was really neat to see. I heard about it before it happened and I really couldn’t think of anybody more deserving than RP.”

    MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 A&W All American Foods Ford Mustang – “We’re making gains. I think everybody at Front Row and especially the 34 group with Drew Blickensderfer and our guys now that we’re coming back to tracks for a second time we’re getting some momentum and getting things rolling. It’s a really big effort for us today.”

    A GREAT QUALIFYING RUN. “That’s a great day for us. That’s a win for sure. I’m real excited that two weeks in a row we’ve shown a lot of speed. It’s different than Kansas, where you can be a little trimmed out for qualifying and get a better spot. At Martinsville, you’ll take all the downforce you can get. Our car has good speed and we’ve got A&W Restaurants on the car again this week and, more than anything, it’s a boost of confidence for everybody. We’ve been working hard. We’ve been fighting hard. We’ve been scrappy all year, but we haven’t been able to execute as well as we want to in the races. Martinsville, this is definitely a good start. Track position is really important here, but we’ve got to execute all day long – 500 laps – but this still feels good. It’s great for everybody at Front Row, for Bob Jenkins making the investment that he’s made over the years, and especially the last couple of years to strengthen our program with Ford Performance and our alliance with Roush Fenway. It’s great to see some results.”

    PAUL MENARD, No. 21 Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford Mustang – “It’s always tough going out first, especially here at Martinsville. The tires just take so long to come in. I got a little too loose on entry, a little too tight back to the gas and just kind of on top of the track, but made a lot of changes today and we’ll see if they work out tomorrow.”

    HOW IS IT REPRESENTING THE WOOD BROTHERS AT THEIR HOME TRACK? “It’s awesome. This is my fourth time doing it and a lot of 21 fans here, so that’s neat to see.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang – “Our car is good. We’ve had good speed since we got here and our Smithfield Mustang has been driving good. We’ll see what tomorrow brings, but I’ve been happy with it so far.”

    CRUCIAL TO START UP FRONT HERE WITH HOW HARD IT IS TO PASS? “Qualifying and a good starting position is really important at Martinsville. We put a lot of emphasis on qualifying well when we come to these short tracks. It means a lot and I think today was a great day for us. We got a good car in race trim, really good on the long run, and then it also was able to qualify well, so hopefully we can use that to our advantage tomorrow. Hopefully, we can keep our car up front, do a good job on pit road and have good restarts and do all the things right and then we’ll see what happens.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Hunt Brothers Pizza Ford Mustang – IS IT HARDER TO WIN A CHAMPIONSHIP NOW WITH THIS FORMAT? “I think it’s just hard to get there. It’s not really the same. It’s definitely different, whether it’s harder or easier you could probably debate that. If you look at the old style points it’s a pretty good points battle if you did it how it was 15 years ago, but it’s just hard to get to Homestead and put it all together through the nine weeks leading up to that. That’s the most difficult part.”

    TWO OF THE LAST THREE WINNERS AT MARTINSVILLE WON THE TITLE. IS IT COINCIDENCE? “Yeah, I think it is. It’s a coincidence.”

    DID YOU LEARN ANYTHING ABOUT RESTARTS AT KANSAS THAT WILL HELP AT TEXAS? “We’ve learned a lot about restarts all year. Restarts are the name of the game to get yourself in a position with the way you have to race. Every week every restart is important as you go to any race track.”

    WHAT ABOUT RESTARTS AT MARTINSVILLE? “Hopefully, they don’t go like the truck race did today. It’s the same as the answer I just gave just because of the fact that the restarts are key. Being on the outside here stinks, so you’ve got to kind of find a way to get yourself down and find a hole and so restarts are as important here as anywhere.”

    HOW HAS THE DYNAMIC OF RESTARTS CHANGED? “I’m classically trained over the last twenty-some years in NASCAR racing, so my days of short track classically trained are over. You try to be as aggressive as you can and the restarts are different than they used to be just because you have to be so aggressive on them.”

    OF THE THREE TRACKS IN THIS ROUND IS THIS THE ONE THAT CONCERNS YOU THE MOST? “This hasn’t been our best race track, but we’re not gonna qualify well today, but we’ve qualified in the back and started in the back and you really have to just get in that rhythm and see how the race plays out and not make any mistakes and put yourself in position at the end of the first stage to be where you need to be and it’s really no different than any other race. It wouldn’t be my choice to say if I had one more race left I wouldn’t pick Martinsville for sure, but we’ve run fine here over the last few races and expect to do the same tomorrow.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Alliance Truck Parts Ford Mustang – WHAT DID YOU THINK SEEING ROGER PENSKE GET THE MEDAL OF FREEDOM THIS WEEK? “That’s a big one — anytime you get invited to the White House no matter who is sitting there. It seems like there’s always a lot of drama over whether it’s a left or a right guy in there, but it’s still a big deal to me. I’m happy for him. He’s certainly done so much in his life. I don’t know how he’s done it, but he deserves the credit for it.”

    HOW SURPRISING HAS YOUR EXIT BEEN FROM THE PLAYOFFS FOR YOU AND THIS TEAM? “I don’t know if I have a really good word for that. It’s not fun, but it is what it is. Surprising is maybe not the word that comes to mind as much as disappointing, but reality nonetheless.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT QUALIFYING TODAY? “I thought we would be a little bit faster than we were. I was hoping to qualify up in the top three or four and get a great pit stall, but it wasn’t there, so we’ll see. I’ll be interested to see with the impound how the car runs in the race.”

    YOU ARE THE MOST RECENT WINNER HERE. HOW DO YOU LIKE YOUR CHANCES TOMORROW? “We’ve ran so well here the last few years, but the racing is always evolving and always changing. The cars keep changing. Even the car we had here last spring we weren’t allowed to bring back. You have to keep up with the times.”

    YOU WEREN’T ALLOWED TO BRING IT BACK? “Yeah, they changed some rules on it and the car was outlawed.”

    WAS IT THE REAR END STUFF? “I think it was something with the chassis.”

    YOU HAVE A MIXED PIT CREW NOW FROM THE 22 AND THE 12. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THAT? “I’m not allowed to have feelings. It’s not a sport, who was it, was it Poole that said if you want fair go to the place with corn dogs and hot dogs. I think they might have those here, so maybe that’s not a great analogy, but it wasn’t my decision and it’s not my authority to make it, so you just have to roll with it.”

    THERE HAS BEEN SPECULATION ON WHETHER YOU AND PAUL HAVE RUN YOUR COURSE. DO YOU HAVE ANY FEELING ON IF YOU NEED A NEW CREW CHIEF? “I haven’t put any thought into that.”

    YOU GUYS HAVE THREE WINS. “There are a lot of people that would be happy to have three wins.”

    ARE YOU ONE OF THEM? “I’d be a lot happier to have four or five wins and a shot at the championship, but that’s not the reality and I try really hard to be thankful for what I’ve got.”

    CAN SOMEBODY DO WHAT YOU DID IN THE SPRING AND JUST BEAT THE FIELD? “With the big spoiler it’s real easy to take control of this race and use the air and kind of hold everybody off. I feel like Chase Elliott was the fastest car in the spring and we had track position on him and we used it pretty well, so you have to take what you’re given and that’s the rules as they are and we’ll try to do the best we can with them.”

    DAVID RAGAN, No. 38 MDS Transport Ford Mustang – HAVE YOU STARTED REFLECTING YET ON THIS COMING TO AN END? “I don’t want to seem weird because this is a pretty big milestone and something interesting happening in my life and my career, but I haven’t thought about it much. I’ve taken these weeks as I normally would. You want the best finish you can get. I’m preparing the same. I was on the simulator this week and doing the same appearances and stuff like that, and I think if anything I’ve been pretty busy with some of my family and friends and some different people who are like, ‘Hey, we want to come to one of these last few races,’ so I’ve been calling in a few favors and getting a few extra hot passes here and there and that’s keeping my mind off of not racing full-time next year. I think Homestead will feel a little different, but here at Martinsville, last week at Kansas, Talladega it’s all felt pretty good. I think it would be bad news if it was feeling bad and I was feeling upset or stressed out, but I feel really good. I’m so excited about some of the things I’m working on for next year and it’ll be a fun off season.”

  • Toyota Racing MENCS Martinsville Post-Qualifying Recap

    Toyota Racing MENCS Martinsville Post-Qualifying Recap

    MENCS Post-Qualifying Report – Martinsville Speedway
    Hamlin wins his third NASCAR Cup Series pole at Martinsville Speedway

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (October 26, 2019) – Denny Hamlin won his third pole of the 2019 NASCAR Cup Series season and will lead the field to green for tomorrow’s race at Martinsville Speedway.

    Toyota Racing Post-Qualifying Report
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Martinsville Speedway – October 26, 2019

    TOYOTA STARTING POSITIONS
    1st, DENNY HAMLIN
    2nd, Chase Elliott*
    3rd, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    4th, Aric Almirola*
    5th, Michael McDowell*
    8th, ERIK JONES
    12th, MATT DIBENEDETTO
    13th, KYLE BUSCH
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Freight Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Starting Position: 1st

    Talk about your qualifying effort.

    “It was good. We definitely didn’t expect to run that fast for sure. We didn’t make any mock run and the fastest in practice was something like a 59 or something like that, so certainly caught us off guard, but really I just drove it to its capability and that’s kind of all I had. I was happy with it. I knew when I ran it, I was pretty happy with the lap, so to have the pole is obviously a huge, huge deal here.”

    Two of the last three Martinsville winners went on to win the championship. Is that just coincidence or is there something specific about winning this race and not having two weeks to worry about anything?

    “Two of the three, so that’s 66 percent. If they’re in the Final Four, they have a 25 percent. It is part of just numbers. It just happens to be one of those things. I think really, you don’t see many surprise winners at this race track. I think it’s really just the best guys, the best drivers really perform really well at this race track. It’s just challenging in so many different ways. It’s challenging just to tell your crew chief what’s right and wrong in the car. I think that it’s more coincidence than anything, but certainly if it was the entire field – a lot of it is just because the Round of 8 guys will always step up in the Round of 8. They spend more time on their cars, things like that, so it’s more coincidence, but a lot of it is just because those guys are great and I wouldn’t know.”

    Is it shaping up to be a Denny Hamlin weekend?

    “I hope so. All signs indicate yes if you were looking in a Magic 8-Ball right now. Our car was good in practice. It was good in qualifying obviously. That’s all we have to go by. I know that we’ve definitely spent a lot of time and emphasis on working on a setup for this race track. Chris (Gabehart, crew chief) has definitely wanted to spend more time on working on a setup on a race track that I’m particularly good at. You try to win at the places that you’re extremely good at and I think that the hard work and effort that they’ve done working on all that stuff is paying off right now.”

    If it rains and the race track dries tomorrow, will the green race track change anything pretty dramatically?

    “It will change the first 50 laps or so for sure. I think it will level off after that. The latest I saw is likely by race time, we could have sunshine. I don’t think it’ll change a whole lot, but certainly at the beginning, it will throw us all for a loop. It’s going to be the same for all of us. We definitely wouldn’t change our setup based off just that first stint. If anything, we have an advantage because we’ll have some track position, but I was confident with our car in the heat and the sun today, it was pretty good.”

    What is it that you can share with your teammates that makes you so good at Marrtinsville?

    “The worse thing to ever happen to me is me, Kyle (Busch) and Joey (Logano) came here and they gave us the same race car, they changed our inserts and they told us to go run 40 laps each. They analyzed all of our data and I killed them in a 40-lap run and then they studied and they got better and they beat me. That was the worse thing that ever happened to me was when (Joe) Gibbs (Racing) got that test going. It was probably Joey’s second season at Gibbs, but I remember kind of just watching them. I remember it like a book. Kyle smoked me for the first five laps and then was not good on the end. I just kind of had a good balance of all of it. They went to work and they got good at it. Kyle really stepped up at Richmond as well, not too long after, but it goes both ways. I’ve gotten so much better at tracks like Charlotte and Dover and all that because of Kyle. That’s what teammates are for is to feed off of your weaknesses and that’s what we’ve done.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 19 Auto Owners Insurance Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Starting Position: 3rd

    Talk about your qualifying effort.

    “Yeah, it was a good effort. We had a little bit of a weird day practicing. It’s always difficult to practice here. A green track this morning pretty much and then cold temperatures – it heats up throughout the day. We pretty much threw out the first practice, we only get one really and we were off a bit. We tried some new stuff here from what we’ve been doing the last few times and had to kind of go back to home base for a while in qualifying. Luckily, we hit it pretty close. The guys did a good job there and we got a good couple laps in. Happy about it and hopefully we can stay somewhere near the front there.”

    # # #

    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.

  • TEAM CHEVY AT MARTINSVILLE 2: Qualifying Notes & Quote

    TEAM CHEVY AT MARTINSVILLE 2: Qualifying Notes & Quote

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY
    FIRST DATA 500
    TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES & QUOTES
    OCTOBER 26, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    2nd Chase Elliott, No. 9 Mountain Dew Camaro ZL1
    11th William Byron, No. 24 Liberty University Camaro ZL1
    14th Kyle Larson, No. 42 Clover Camaro ZL1
    18th Daniel Hemric, No. 8 Chevrolet Accessories Camaro ZL1
    19th Alex Bowman, No. 88 Llumar Camaro ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Denny Hamlin (Toyota)
    2nd Chase Elliott (Chevrolet)
    3rd Martin Truex, Jr. (Toyota)
    4th Aric Almirola (Ford)
    5th Michael McDowell (Ford)

    NBCSN will telecast the First Data 500 at Martinsville Speedway live at 3:00 p.m. ET Sunday, October 27th. The NBC Sports Gold app will stream the race and live coverage can also be found on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 MOUNTAIN DEW CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 2nd (PRE-QUAL QUOTE):
    WILL START FROM THE REAR DUE TO ENGINE ISSUE. ON THE IMPORTANCE OF QUALIFYING:
    “We’d still like to have a good pit pick. A lot of times, that can be as important as your starting spot. So, obviously we don’t get to keep our starting spot, but a good pit pick would be nice. It would be great to have that first pit box or a really good one. We’ll do our best.”

    YOU SAID YOUR BEST CHANCE TO GET INTO THE ROUND OF 4 IS WITH A WIN. HOW BIG OF A CHALLENGE IS THAT NOW STARTING FROM THE BACK HERE?
    “I think if you’re car is driving good and you make good decisions and execute the day like it needs to be done, I don’t think starting last isn’t something that you can overcome. Certainly it’s not how you want to start your day and it puts you in a bit of a hole, but I think at the same time I think if your car is driving good and you do a good job fighting your way up to the front, you still have a shot. That’s why a good qualifying effort is still important if you do get yourself in a position towards the front at the end of this thing, tomorrow, a good pit stop could decide it for you. So, I think we have to continue to push in all areas and just hope it goes our way.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 11th
    ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN
    “I was really happy with it. I mean I definitely kind of blew Turn 1. I got a little greedy coming to the green and I felt really good about it and kind of over exceeded it into (Turn) 1. It was at least a decent lap. Race trim was really a struggle for us. We honestly threw more changes at the car than we could count. With how our qualifying felt, I feel really great about the race. I think we have adjustability in the car.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 CLOVER CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 14th
    ARE THERE ENOUGH GOOD PIT SPOTS THERE THAT YOU THINK YOU’LL HAVE A DECENT PIT STALL TO WORK WITH TOMORROW?
    “I don’t know. I have no idea. I typically qualify better here. But, we’ve just been playing with some things and trying to get better here at Martinsville. Been doing a lot of studying and have changed-up things I’ve been doing in the car, so we’ll see if it pays off tomorrow. I still feel a little a little out of control, but we’ve been working hard. Hopefully it pays off.”

    YOU SAID AS SOON AS YOU WON AT DOVER THAT YOUR FOCUS SHIFTED TO THIS RACE AND HAVE SPENT TIME ON THE SIMULATOR. WHAT ELSE HAVE YOU BEEN ABLE TO DO TO TRY TO COME WITH TERMS WITH THIS VERY TRICKY HALF-MILE?
    “I honestly haven’t been spending any time on the simulator. But I just looked at a lot of SMT data in just kind of areas that I got beat compared to the good guys, and tried to look at that and study that and see what I can do to simulate what they do; and then try and balance our car around that. I feel like our balance is quite a bit different than normal here, so hopefully that’ll be good for the long run, but we’ve just got to wait and see for tomorrow’s race. Once it gets past halfway, that’s usually when I stat to struggle. Hopefully tomorrow is a little different.”

    DANIEL HEMRIC, NO. 8 CHEVROLET ACCESSORIES CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 18th
    “Since we unloaded, our Chevy Accessories ZL1 was good. Looking forward to an opportunity to redeem ourselves from our run in the spring. It will be interesting. We had a solid lap. Looking forward to tomorrow.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 LLUMAR CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 19th
    ON HIS EFFORT
    “Felt like it was pretty decent. It will hopefully give us decent track position and go from there. We will see here tomorrow.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 24th
    ON HIS RUN
    “Not what we expected. Not what we expected. We really liked the balance of the car in race trim and how it drove. We just missed it in our qualifying adjustments from there. Live and learn and we will make different adjustments when we come back in the spring.”

    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 MENCS Martinsville Quotes – Denny Hamlin

    Toyota Racing MENCS Martinsville Quotes – Denny Hamlin

    Toyota Racing – Denny Hamlin
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (October 26, 2019) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin was made available to media at Martinsville Speedway:

    DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Freight Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    With this being the round that gets you to Homestead, how focused are you on keeping it one week at a time and not thinking ahead to Homestead and a title shot?

    “I think that next week’s mentality will change based off of really what happens this week. I feel like if I can give this week my 100 percent focus then likely I’ll be in a better spot going into next week. I think you can only have so much mental capacity to handle three races at a time. You have to really focus on the one and that’s what I try to do, that’s what I’ve been doing each week. I really haven’t looked ahead or forward or anything like that. I haven’t said anything for Texas, nothing for Phoenix, it’s all been about this race track.”

    How much of this race do you feel like is not in your control? For example what lane you restart on, people getting into you, cut tires, that kind of thing.

    “They’re probably 30 percent. I think that if you have the fastest car and the best driver and all that, there’s still – and you’re leading – there’s a 30 percent chance of losing because of unknowns. There definitely are no guarantees and anything like that. There’s definitely cautions that could really bite you. It could mix up the field, take away your track position, bad pit stops, there’s just a lot of different things that can keep you from winning. It’s not just about other sports where it’s one team against the other, one on one, it’s one versus many. Everyone’s got an agenda.”

    Did you learn anything last week in Kansas on restarts that might transfer over to Texas?

    “Yeah, if my car is that fast, it’ll be pretty easy. It always is easy when you have a fast car, but it just seems like – you know the lane choice and things like that, I was very apprehensive to put guys with four tires right on the outside of me of all places, especially on a mile-and-a-half, but I just felt like the bottom is where I was most successful. I’ve seen other guys be successful down there and I didn’t really pay attention to teammates or anything like that. I just did what I thought was best for me to try to win and it worked out.”

    With the new transition going out of Turn 2 on the backstretch at Texas, will that play into your decision as to what lane you want to restart on?

    “I don’t know. I mean I’ve got to look through all of the statistics really to figure out what’s been most successful. I’ll look at past races and figure out retention rates and things like that. I really haven’t dug into the numbers yet to figure out what lane would be best there.”

    Do you believe in the concept of momentum?

    “I think there is such a thing as momentum if you’re going to the same type of race track. So say you have three mile-and-a-halfs in a row and you run well in the first one, well immediately you’ve already got a good baseline to start your second one and then you have a good result, more than likely you’re going to finetune it and be even better for the third. I think momentum stops when you go to an entirely different race track. It doesn’t matter if you’ve won four in a row on those mile-and-a-halfs, to then go to Martinsville or Bristol, nothing applies. There really is nothing that applies. Momentum stops when the race tracks become different.”

    Do you feel like you’re coming into Martinsville in the best place you ever have as far as the Playoffs are concerned?

    “Yeah, certainly. Definitely in a points position, yeah, better than I’ve been in years past. Running as good as we’ve ever run essentially. Yeah, I feel pretty good about it. There’s not really any weakness I see in our particular team at this point. Even with the given race tracks that are left. There’s really no weaknesses there. Yeah, it’s just the unknowns that we’ve talked about that can take you out, but I can’t control the unknowns, I can only control what I can do, so I’ll try to do the best I can.”

    Why is this year better than 2010 when you had eight wins?

    “We really stockpiled – I think we swept a lot of races in 2010 if I remember right. We were dominate at a couple tracks and so I just think that everywhere, we’re just good everywhere this year. I think this is the most top fives I’ve had, somewhere in that range, average finish, things like that. All that stuff is a little better and especially when you look at like the drivers this year with this package, everyone’s average finish is up simply because there’s so many different variables with where you’re drafting on the mile-and-a-halfs and things like that. For me to have a better average finish, where really it looks like the field has risen up one or two spots, that tells me we’ve made the gains, not everyone else.”

    # # #

    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.

  • Toyota Racing MENCS Martinsville Quotes – Kyle Busch

    Toyota Racing MENCS Martinsville Quotes – Kyle Busch

    Toyota Racing – Kyle Busch
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (October 26, 2019) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle Busch was made available to media at Martinsville Speedway:

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Halloween Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Does this race have any sort of a wild card element as far as what you can control and what you can’t?

    “Yeah it does. With just respect to late in the race coming down to late restarts, whether it’s inside 20 (laps) to go, sometimes, maybe, definitely inside 10 to go, no question inside 5 to-go restarts. Nobody has any care for anybody else at that time and you just run over anybody you can run over.”

    You have a 14th-place average finish in the Playoffs so far, has it been nice to have those Playoff points to fall back to or has this team just been tested too much, in a way, for your liking?

    “Obviously it’s a good thing we ran the way we did through the regular season and got some bonus points, the bonus points that we had to help us through. As far as results of the Playoffs, I mean I don’t have a sheet in front of me, but I can run you down problems in every single race. There hasn’t been a clean race that we’ve had in the Playoffs that have given us the opportunity to run up front all day and be in control of our own destiny towards the end of the race. We’re always coming from behind. Every time you come from behind, you can only make up so much and last week we showed that again. We drove through the field three times and could only get to second. We were limited by second there at the end, even with four tires versus the guy out front with two.”

    What’s the significance of your helmet?

    “The significance of the helmet here is we’ve been doing a giveaway on the BundleofJoyFund.org – people can go there and donate $18 to then have their chance to be entered into an opportunity to win this cool helmet here. Thanks to M&M’s and Toyota and everybody for allowing me to – giving me the helmet space for a couple of weeks during Halloween. This is just kind of a cool thing that we get to do to raise some money for the Bundle of Joy Fund. Tickets are 18 bucks. We’re looking forward to picking out the grand prize winner that gets to take home this cool helmet. Then we’ve also got some little cool giveaways too for second and third.”

    Where is the concern level in this round and getting to Homestead if you’ve had trouble with running clean races?

    “Whatever comes up next, tackle it when it gets there. What are you going to do? I can’t tell you that I’m going to have a perfect race and everything is going to be clean and I could go out there and win Martinsville. If we could, let’s go home. You just have to tackle it as it comes against you and deal with it then.”

    Can you point to one thing that’s hindered you and your team from getting more wins after Pocono?

    “Circumstances I guess. We had an opportunity to win Loudon and we had damage on a restart with five (laps) to go in a stage and then had to come back down (pit road), which ruined our track position for the day on that one. Same exact thing happened last week. We pitted, had damage at the end to finish a stage, had to come down and come from behind and then we had a throttle problem. I can go on. Give me the list of the season and I can tell you what’s happened to us. It’s just been frustrating for sure. Unfortunate circumstances – I put myself in the fence in Vegas to start with, came back from that and then we had something else happen. Time and time again, over and over. Again, just haven’t had any clean races. It’d be nice to have a clean race. We were running up front all day at Talladega, we missed a couple wrecks and then all of a sudden, we were the cause of the last big one. Tell me what I’m supposed to do to fix what’s going on.”

    Looking ahead at Texas, did you learn anything from Kansas Speedway that will transfer over to Texas, especially when it comes to restarts.

    “Restarts in (Turns) 1 and 2 are certainly treacherous, just the way the banking is not quite there to hold you like it used to be. The track ends are very different in 3 and 4, different than 1 and 2. You kind of see, especially with the Xfinity cars with the lower downforce, they have a bit more issues. We’ve seen some late-race restarts and some problems for some guys in that race a couple of times and for us, it’s no different. We also have some of the same issues. We learned some things last week I think at Kansas that helped our car and hopefully we can transfer some of that knowledge to Texas and Homestead as well.”

    Do you have some confidence though knowing that you won Phoenix in the spring?

    “I’d like to think that this round is a good round for us anyways. We run well at Martinsville. We run well at Texas. Coulda, shoulda won the Texas race, got in the wall late and then had a flat tire. Phoenix, yeah, we won Phoenix this spring, but that was nine months ago. So much has changed since then, it’s entirely different now so maybe we can still be good when we go back there hopefully, but a lot’s going on in the development of everybody’s cars and things like that for this season.”

    Do you know where the improvements are in the cars across the board for people in regards to Phoenix?

    “I don’t know for everybody. We’re all picking and choosing and wining and dining everything on the cars, whether it’s front downforce, rear downforce, lower drag, setups, different combinations of shocks and springs and what kind of wheel rates and things like that, that we’re all working with and dealing with and how the cars evolved. There’s a lot. It’s not just one little thing.

    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.

  • TEAM CHEVY AT MARTINSVILLE 2: Chase Elliott Press Conference Transcript

    TEAM CHEVY AT MARTINSVILLE 2: Chase Elliott Press Conference Transcript

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY
    FIRST DATA 500
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    OCTOBER 26, 2019

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 MOUNTAIN DEW CAMARO ZL1, met with media and discussed the motor issue he had during the first practice, what his strategy will be on Sunday with having to start from the rear, his views on teamwork and stage points, and more. Full Transcript:

    CHASE, IF YOU JUST WANT TO OPEN THIS WITH WALKING US THROUGH WHAT HAPPENED IN PRACTICE AND WHAT IS YOUR OUTLOOK FOR THE REST OF THE WEEKEND?
    “We broke a motor there, five laps in, and it’s obviously and unfortunate way to start the day, for sure. But, it’s one of those things really that it kind of what it is at this point and everybody is working hard to try to get our car back put together to get some practice in this next one. At this point, that’s the most important thing.”

    WHERE, IN YOUR MIND, DO STAGE POINTS COME IN NOW WITH HAVING TO START IN THE REAR? YOU’VE GOT 500 LAPS HERE TO MAKE YOUR WAY BACK TO THE FRONT, BUT YOU’RE SIX POINTS OFF OF FOURTH SPOT ON THE CUTLINE. YOU NEED EVERY STAGE POINT YOU CAN GET. WHERE DOES THAT FACTOR INTO YOUR MINDSET A DAY OUT FROM GREEN FLAG?
    “I think just to keep things simple for us, we need to try to win. And, if you’re not in a position to win, just get as many points as possible. I think that keeps things simple for you. I’m going to be trying to be as far forward as I can be at each particular moment and try to make the smartest decisions that I can throughout the day to get us there. Obviously stage points are important, but I’m going to try to get as far forward as I can and get the most points possible at any given point in time. Yeah, starting in the back will be unfortunate for that first Stage, but there’s nothing I can do about it now.”

    YOU HAD AN ENGINE ISSUE AT DOVER. DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA IF THEY ARE RELATED AND ARE THERE ANY CONCERNS THAT THERE IS SOMETHING THAT COULD POTENTIALLY HAPPEN DURING THE REST OF THE WEEKEND?
    “It’s hard to day. I don’t think they are related, based on what happened. But, I don’t think they are related. I don’t know if that’s good or bad. But, anytime you have two engine problems in four weeks, that’s not good, for sure. I do know that we’ll do a diligent job of trying to figure out what the problem was and hope that we can find a problem. You know, sometimes with engine failures or with parts failures, in general, when you break something, the worst thing that can happen is you don’t know why or what broke. So, we just need to make sure we do a good job of trying to figure out what caused the failure if we can find it. And, I think if we can do that. I think we can correct it.”

    DOES THIS RACE HAVE ANY SORT OF WILDCARD ASPECT AS FAR AS WHAT YOU CAN CONTROL AND WHAT YOU CAN’T?
    “Every race has a little bit of a wild card aspect. Who knows how restarts are going to go or if you’re going to get some damage or crash or whatever, so I think there’s always a wild card factor everywhere. But, I do think that people who always run good here are always going to be good, and I think they’re going to be good here again this weekend. If we can outrun those guys, we’ll probably have a shot to win.”

    YOU DID A REMARKABLE JOB IN THE CLOSING LAPS AT TEXAS. HOW DO YOU EXPECT THE RESTARTS TO GO THERE NEXT WEEKEND? DID YOU LEARN ANYTHING ABOUT YOUR CAR THAT MIGHT TRANSFER THERE?
    “Restart-wise, no. I think some of that is kind of happenstance as to how the lanes roll and how good your pusher is behind you and how willing they are to push you. And a lot of that stuff is by chance. Some of it, you put yourself in those positions if you have the opportunity, but I think everybody kind of knows what they need to do, it’s just a matter of whether or not you can position yourself in a good spot. So, we were in a fortunate situation to move forward on that last restart there at Kansas, which was good. It wasn’t good enough to win. I obviously wish we could have won. But, we definitely had some things go our way to make it through.”

    YOU WERE OVER TRYING TO HELP YOUR CREW AFTER YOUR MECHANICAL ISSUE THIS MORNING…IS THAT IMPORTANT TO LET YOUR GUYS KNOW YOU WANT TO HELP?
    “Obviously I want to help. I think everybody wants to help, but sometimes if too many want to help, you just get in the way. You don’t want to be in the way for sure, but I certainly care enough and I know everyone on our team cares and we all want to help and we all want to do what’s best to get our car back together so we go out and we go out and hopefully have a good practice in this next one, and tat is where our mindset is for all of us, not just me.”

    DID YOU AND YOUR TEAM FEEL COMING INTO THIS RACE THAT THIS WAS A POTENTIAL ROUND THAT IS GOOD FOR YOU IN TERMS OF WINNING YOUR WAY INTO THE CHAMPIONSHIP?
    “I have the mindset of this place has been hit or miss for sure. We’ve had good runs here, we’ve had bad runs here. We haven’t really found a consistent factor as to why. One is one way, or the other is the other. That has been a bit of a bummer. Just the inconsistency here. So hope we can find some consistency at this one. Texas has been a struggle since they repaved it and Phoenix has also been hit or miss. I do think that our teammates ran well at Texas in the spring, we didn’t really. I think for us if we show up and be on our game, I feel like we will have a shot to win one of these three races. Hopefully more than one of them, that would be even better. I think we can contend for wins in more than one of these next three races,”

    HOW HAS THE REPAVE CHANGED THE DYNAMIC OF THE RACING AT TEXAS?
    “It’s just a different racetrack. Three and four are obviously similar with the banking and everything, but one and two has been the struggle for everyone. Obviously for us, but I think everyone struggles on that end more than three and four, so it just a matter of minimizing our programs on the one-two side of the track relative to everybody else. I feel like that has been our weak point at the race track since they redid it.”

    INAUDIBLE:
    “I think the more laps we get there, the better it gets. That has become the norm I guess. I just hate they did what they did to it personally. It was such a great…the way it was laid out I thought the racing was so much fun there my first couple years in Cup. I really enjoyed it. But we were also running better then. A lot of time when you run good, you can be skewed as to how much fun you are having at certain race tracks. I think that is the case for me at Texas. Hopefully we get it turned around there.”

    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.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Joey Logano Martinsville Media Availability

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Joey Logano Martinsville Media Availability

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Saturday, October 26, 2019
    EVENT: First Data 500, Martinsville Speedway (Media Availability)

    Joey Logano, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – IS YOUR WIN LAST YEAR THE BIGGEST OF YOUR CAREER? HAS YOUR ANSWER CHANGED FROM LAST YEAR? “Maybe and maybe it hasn’t. It’s hard to say. I still look at this race last year as kind of the championship race, in a must-win situation in a way, to be able to make that happen that was great. It’s hard to say that Miami is not the biggest race win, though. That one was really for the championship and we were able to do that, so they’re probably right up there together as biggest wins. It doesn’t discredit the Daytona 500 or those crown jewel events, but, to me, championships are bigger than crown jewel race wins, so if you look at that and that’s the path to get there, then this ends up being probably one of if not the biggest win of my career.”

    A COUPLE OF GUYS FROM THE 12 TEAM ARE ON YOUR PIT CREW NOW. HOW BIG OF A DEAL IS THAT AND IS THERE ANY CONCERN OF DISRUPTING THE FLOW YOUR CREW HAD? “No, it doesn’t concern me. We had a rookie jackman this year who has made a lot of good gains over this season, but I feel the opportunity to put basically the same team together that won the championship last year for the next few races I think was a smart play. We definitely needed some speed from the pit crew side of things and putting the band back together from where it was last year when we won the championship makes sense, so I was on board with that.”

    DOES THIS RACE HAVE A WILD CARD ASPECT IN THE SENSE OF THINGS YOU CAN AND CAN’T CONTROL? “Not really. I don’ t feel like there’s a wild card race anywhere you go. There might be some races that there might be more risk or something could happen, but I don’t think it’s a wild card race. I don’t think anything happens by accident in this world a lot of times, so I don’t think so.”

    DID YOU LEARN ANYTHING ON RESTARTS LAST WEEK AT KANSAS THAT YOU MIGHT BE ABLE TO APPLY NEXT WEEK AT TEXAS? “Yes and no. Kansas is such a different race track than Texas is. The way you race at Texas with that d-shaped front straightaway that makes the track really wide – you have more of that in the quad oval or whatever they call it, and that tightens it up a lot to where there’s not really a four-wide opportunity – there’s three-wide and three-wide is tight to get through there. You have a much narrower turns one and two than Kansas does, at least from the groove part of it, and then three and four you’re pretty much wide-open all the way through that one, so just a lot different race track. It’ll race much different than Kansas did, so I don’t know much from the restart stuff will transfer.”

    OF THE NEXT THREE RACES IN THIS ROUND WHERE IS YOUR BEST SHOT TO WIN? “I probably would say here, but I do think Texas will be a good track for us. Phoenix has been a challenge for us. We’ve won there before, but the last four or five races has been a bit of a challenge for us. We’ve made some small gains to get back to where we were. We ran better there in the spring than we have in the past couple years, but that’s probably when I look at one of the most challenging tracks of the next three races, I probably would look at Phoenix as that. I look at our best ones as probably here and Texas.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT MARTINSVILLE? “For racing I don’t think it gets much better. I don’t think there’s any race fan that says, ‘I hate watching races at Martinsville.’ I don’t think anyone says that. This is a great race track. It goes to show that you don’t have to be going 200 miles an hour to put on a great race. This is the slowest track we go to and there’s more contact and bumping and banging. It’s old school short track racing. Like you go to any of your grassroots type race track around where you live and watch late models race or whatever it may be that’s running at the time, it’s a lot like Martinsville there. I think our sport was built on race tracks like this and I’m sure this race track itself. All you have to do is look at the pictures in here. I think that’s what makes Martinsville so special is it’s stayed true to the roots of our sport and still to this day proves that short track racing is some of the best racing we’ll see all year.”