Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • DON MILLER, DAN LUGINBUHL INDUCTED INTO TEAM PENSKE HALL OF FAME

    DON MILLER, DAN LUGINBUHL INDUCTED INTO TEAM PENSKE HALL OF FAME

    Former Penske Racing President and Long-Time Team Executive Honored in North Carolina

    MOORESVILLE, N.C. (September 9, 2019) – Team Penske inducted two long-time team leaders and executives into the Team Penske Hall of Fame this morning, as former Penske Racing South President Don Miller and Dan Luginbuhl, one of the pioneers of motorsports marketing and public relations, were honored in a special ceremony at the team’s Mooresville, North Carolina facility.

    Miller met team owner Roger Penske in the early 1970s during his time as a sales manager for National Engines and Parts, Co. in St. Louis. Miller joined Penske Racing in 1972, working on the team’s stock car and IndyCar programs. A former racer himself, Miller brought a wide range of experience to the team and he worked in many capacities on his way to becoming Vice President of Penske Products.

    Miller was instrumental in bringing Penske Racing back into full-time NASCAR competition in 1991 with driver and fellow Team Penske Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace. Miller then became President of Penske Racing South, overseeing the day-to-day operations of the team’s stock car program. Under Miller’s leadership, Penske stock car teams produced a total of 69 victories in NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and ARCA competition until his retirement in 2007. The Chicago native was also an innovator in the sport, helping to design and develop several car safety advancements in NASCAR while leading the Penske team.

    “When I first started at Team Penske there were 29 of us,” said Miller. “The population has grown significantly since then, but there is no place I’d rather be. I always tried to do the very best, not only for this team, but for Mr. Penske. When you are a member of this team, he will always have your back. I really appreciate this award. I am honored to be a part of this organization and the Team Penske Hall of Fame.”

    When Luginbuhl joined Penske Racing in 1969, he helped chart the course for the team’s innovative and successful partnership model. He also helped pioneer modern motorsports public relations and marketing. Early in his tenure with Penske Racing, Luginbuhl cultivated the relationship with key team sponsor Sunoco, before he helped foster partnerships with some of the other top brands in motorsports including Pennzoil, Marlboro, Miller, Goodyear, Mobil, Mercedes-Benz and many other Fortune 500 companies.

    Under his guiding hand, Team Penske became the industry leader in American motorsports media relations, sponsorship and hospitality – a standard that continues today. Over his 35-year career with Team Penske, Luginbuhl distinguished himself in numerous roles within the organization as he helped define and refine the Penske brand. He served as Vice President of Communications when he retired in 2002 and he continues to be a valued resource for Team Penske.

    “I am very honored to receive this special honor. And I am humbled to be in the company of some amazing people,” said Luginbuhl. “It’s been my privilege to work with many a great people over the years. We have come a long way since 1969 and our team of 10 working at the four-bay truck garage in Pennsylvania. But the mission today is still the same – work together, get the job done, keep building the Penske brand worldwide and of course, ‘effort equals results.’”

    Inductions into the Team Penske Hall of Fame occur annually. Each year, two inductees are chosen from current and former drivers, employees and partners that have made a significant impact on the team and its history. The Hall of Fame class members are honored both at an event and within the walls of the Team Penske facility in Mooresville, NC.

    Miller and Luginbuhl join past Team Penske Hall of Fame inductees including: Roger Penske (2016), Mark Donohue (2016), Rick Mears (2017), Karl Kainhofer (2017), Rusty Wallace (2018) and Walter Czarnecki (2018).

    ABOUT TEAM PENSKE
    Team Penske is one of the most successful teams in the history of professional sports. Cars owned and prepared by Team Penske have produced more than 540 major race wins, over 600 pole positions and 34 Championships across open-wheel, stock car and sports car racing competition. Over the course of its 53-year history, the team has also earned 18 Indianapolis 500 victories, two Daytona 500 Championships, a Formula 1 win and overall victories in the 24 Hours of Daytona and the 12 Hours of Sebring. Team Penske currently competes in the IndyCar Series, the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. The team also races in the Virgin Australia Supercars Championship, in a partnership with Dick Johnson Racing, as DJR Team Penske. For more information about Team Penske, please visit www.teampenske.com.

  • RCR Post Race Report – Big Machine Vodka 400

    RCR Post Race Report – Big Machine Vodka 400

    Austin Dillon and the SYMBICORT® (budesonide/formoterol fumarate dihydrate) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 Team Earn Hard-Fought 12th-Place Finish at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

    Finish: 12th
    Start: 18th
    Points: 23rd

    “Starting off, our SYMBICORT® (budesonide/formoterol fumarate dihydrate) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 was tight in Turn 2 but handled really well everywhere else on the track. Trouble came early though when the caution flag was displayed during Stage 1. We all came down pit road to pit and a big group of cars got jumbled on pit road and started making contact with each other. The cars in front of me started colliding and I made contact with the No. 9 car, then the No. 17 car drove through all of us because someone hit him from behind, too. The craziest part of this entire race is pit road. You’re dodging slower cars and if something happens you have no where to go. You can’t dodge left. You can’t go anywhere. We were able to make repairs to our Chevy, but the damage definitely created handling issues for the rest of the day. We raced our way as high as seventh but the handling was so tight that we lost a few positions at the end to finish 12th. I’m proud of this team. We had a plan and we stuck to it. It feels great to put together a solid race for our partner AstraZeneca and everyone associated with the No. 3 team.” -Austin Dillon

    Late-Race Wreck Collects Daniel Hemric and The No. 8
    Liberty National Chevrolet Team in First Brickyard 400 Start

    Finish: 34th
    Start: 11th
    Points:25th

    “This was an important day, making my first Brickyard 400 start in the No. 8 Liberty National Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, and we had a really solid race going until we were involved in an on-track incident with about 50 laps remaining. I felt like we had a good restart and I got to the bottom, which is where you need to be. The next thing I knew I saw the No. 48 car sideways. I saw the left side of his car, his nose through the grass. I thought I had it missed but someone got turned down and caught me in the right side and turned me into the outside wall. I’m not sure what started it or what happened – it was just chaos. That’s been the story for this No. 8 team all year. Everybody on this team works too hard to have this many unfortunate things happen to us. We’ll put this one behind us and move on to Las Vegas next week.” -Daniel Hemric

  • TEAM CHEVY AT INDIANAPOLIS: Playoff Contenders Notes & Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT INDIANAPOLIS: Playoff Contenders Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    BIG MACHINE VODKA 400 AT THE BRICKYARD
    TEAM CHEVY PLAYOFF CONTENDERS NOTES AND QUOTES
    SEPTEMBER 8, 2019

    FIVE TEAM CHEVY DRIVERS ADVANCE TO PLAYOFFS

    Following the Big Machine Vodka 400 at the Brickyard, Round 26 of 36 races in the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS), 16 drivers have now qualified to compete in the 10-race MENCS Playoffs that will ultimately determine the 2019 MENCS champion.

    Five of the 16 Playoff contenders are Team Chevy drivers.

    There are three rounds of Playoffs (3 races per round) in the 2019 format, plus one final championship-crowning season finale. Four drivers will be eliminated following each round of three.
    · Sept. 15 at Las Vegas, Sept. 21 at Richmond, and Sept. 29 at Charlotte – 16 drivers
    · Oct. 6 at Dover, Oct. 13 at Talladega, and Oct. 20 at Kansas – 12 drivers
    · Oct. 27 at Martinsville, Nov. 3 at Texas, and Nov. 10 at Phoenix – 8 drivers
    · Nov. 17 Championship race at Homestead – 4 drivers

    TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL PLAYOFF CONTENDERS:
    POS. DRIVER
    7th CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1
    8th KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1
    9th KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 MCDONALD’S CAMARO ZL1
    10th ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 NATIONWIDE CAMARO ZL1
    13th WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1

    16 UNOFFICIAL PLAYOFF CONTENDERS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Kyle Busch (Toyota)
    2nd Denny Hamlin (Toyota)
    3rd Martin Truex, Jr. (Toyota)
    4th Joey Logano (Ford)
    5th Brad Keselowski (Ford)
    6th Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    7th Chase Elliott (Chevrolet)
    8th Kurt Busch (Chevrolet)
    9th Kyle Larson (Chevrolet)
    10th Alex Bowman (Chevrolet)
    11th Erik Jones (Toyota)
    12th Ryan Blaney (Ford)
    13th William Byron (Chevrolet)
    14th Aric Almirola (Ford)
    15th Clint Bowyer (Ford)
    16th Ryan Newman (Ford)

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series continues next weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway with the South Point 400 on Sunday, September 15 at 7:00 P.M. ET; Round 27 of the 2019 season, Round 1 of the Playoffs. Live coverage can be found on NBCSN, NBC Sports Gold, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    TEAM CHEVY PLAYOFF CONTENDER QUICK QUOTES:

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 – 7th
    “Just hopefully having a nice, smooth, uneventful race at Las Vegas would be good. These past couple of weeks have been wild with just a lot of stuff happening. So, we just need to get out there and I have confidence that we can have good cars. We’ve just got to get going in find a little consistency and just get things started off, uneventfully, would be great.”

    ARE THERE ANY TRACKS YOU’RE REALLY LOOKING FORWARD TO?
    “Yeah, the next one, really. I think you have to have the ability to win all of them, or the majority of them, to have a shot at Homestead. We just need to have that mindset going in. This first round is going to be tough. Michigan and Charlotte haven’t been our best two race tracks, so it’s important for us to not overlook it and put some emphasis on the first round and not just think we’re going to breeze right through.”

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1 – 8th
    WHICH IS YOUR FAVORITE PLAYOFF TRACK?
    “Vegas. That’s my home town.”

    THERE IS NO SPORT THAT GOES 10 STRAIGHT WEEKS LIKE THIS. HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THE EMOTION AND THE PHYSICALITY OF IT AS WELL?
    “You’ve just got to be ready for it. All year long you build up toward it. There are sister tracks to some tracks that other tracks that are own their own. Each week is a nice, fresh, restart; and you’ve got to get through three races each time, you know, the three rounds to get to Homestead. So, I kind of look at it as three races at a time and just try to piece together what you chew on.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 MCDONALD’S CAMARO ZL1 – 9th
    DO YOU HAVE CONFIDENCE GOING INTO THE PLAYOFFS?
    “Yeah, no doubt. It’s been a good couple of months. My cars have been good. We’re qualifying pretty well. So, we’ve just got to keep plugging along and hope we get a win and get through these rounds.

    THIS WILL BE YOUR FOURTH TIME IN THE PLAYOFFS. YOU’VE ONLY GOTTEN THROUGH THE FIRST. WHAT IS IT GOING TO TAKE TO GET THROUGH MORE THAN ONE ROUND?
    “I think just having nice, clean days. Days like we have had the last couple of months. Aside from crashing today, we’ve gotten good stage points and good finishes. So, we just have to continue having days like that and eliminating our mistakes. We just have to do the best we can in the stages and the finishes.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 NATIONWIDE CAMARO ZL1 – 10th
    SO NOW YOU TURN A PAGE IN THE SEASON AND MOVE ON TO THE PLAYOFFS
    “Yeah, I love Las Vegas. There’s three or three and a half grooves to run, basically. So, I’m really excited to get there and try to make the most out of a really strong 1.5-mile program for us. I think that’s a place that we can go and be capable of winning and I’m looking forward to it.”

    THE PLAYOFFS ARE STRESSFUL WITH HAVING TO RUN 10 WEEKS STRAIGHT. WHAT’S THAT GOING TO BE LIKE FOR YOU?
    “We’ve just got to go out and perform and not have good days and then bad days, like we’ve had the last two weeks. There are a lot of really good race tracks for us. The second round is extremely good for us. So, I’m looking forward to it. I think our cars are going to be really strong and we can go out there and win some races.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 – 13th
    ON THE PLAYOFFS
    “I feel like any place that we’re going back to for a second time is going to be really good for us. Definitely going back to Vegas is going to be great. Going back to Richmond is going to be good. The Roval is a new one, but I feel those two out of three in the first round, going back for the second time, can help our team.

    DO YOU HAVE A GOOD HANDLE ON THIS PACKAGE?
    “I think so. I would say after these last two weeks we’ve had a better handle. We were really guessing on how much straightaway speed versus corner speed we wanted, and I think we’ve got a good package going into the Playoffs.”

    DO YOU HAVE CONFIDENCE GOING INTO LAS VEGAS? DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU ARE WHERE YOU NEED TO BE TO START THE PLAYOFFS?
    “Yeah, I think so. I mean there’s no better way to go into than a Top 5 finish. And that’s really good for our team. It kind of helps start our momentum and I hope we can carry that into next week”

    WHAT ABOUT TALLADEGA, MARTINSVILLE AND THE ROVAL?
    “I really don’t know yet. Martinsville is tough. Talladega is very unpredictable. I just don’t know. We’ve just got to take one race at a time, obviously, and do the best we can.”

    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.

  • TEAM CHEVY AT INDIANAPOLIS: Post-Race Notes and Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT INDIANAPOLIS: Post-Race Notes and Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    BIG MACHINE VODKA 400 AT THE BRICKYARD
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE NOTES AND QUOTES
    SEPTEMBER 8, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    3rd BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOY CAMARO ZL1
    4th WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1
    9th CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1
    12th AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 SYMBICORT CAMARO ZL1
    13th TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO CAMARO ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL RACE RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    2nd Joey Logano (Ford)
    3rd Bubba Wallace (Chevrolet)
    4th William Byron (Chevrolet)
    5th Clint Bowyer (Ford)

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season continues next weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway with the South Point 400 on Sunday, September 15 at 7:00 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:

    BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 3rd
    “Heck of a day. I don’t know to say. We had speed all weekend in our Victory Junction Chevrolet. We never gave up all day no matter what happened on pit road. I still don’t know what happened. We went from the lowest of lows, to the almost highest of highs! It was just a solid day for our team. Smaller organizations having big runs. It is very uncommon these days. Almost like David and Goliath. Everything kind of clicked today for us. These little teams aren’t supposed to run with the big teams. It was a good day.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 LIBERTY UNIVERSITY CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 4th
    “I don’t know what happened on pit road at the beginning of the race, but other than that, it was a good day. I think it is a result of so many lead lap cars coming down the road at the same time, and there is really only one lane to turn into your pit box. We are used to three lanes to come down pit road and turn into our pit box, but here we only have two. It makes it tough.
    “With Jimmie and I it was a racing thing. I really didn’t have anywhere to go. Once Kurt (Busch) slipped by and we were three wide, I was trying to give him enough room and not slide up in to Jimmie but unfortunately there just wasn’t enough room.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 9th
    “I haven’t seen a replay of the pit road incident, but one thing about Indy is pit road is so narrow w. You have to start braking before you turn into your box which is typically not the case. I think that was a contributor. I apologize if I didn’t stop quick enough. Once they all started stopping, they stopped so fast, I didn’t get stopped quick enough and about the time I got stopped, somebody piled into me. It was one of those chain reaction things. I hate that it happened, especially that early in the race, but luckily, we were able to piece our car back together and finish the race. My crew worked hard during to get us better. So, it finished alright.”

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO CAMARO ZL1 – Finished 13th
    “Today was another solid day for our GEICO team. We continued to make the car better and better throughout the race and were able to miss the accidents in front of us. I battled a tight car for most of the race but Justin (Alexander) and I worked through adjustments together. I’m proud of my team for working hard all weekend and to finish 13th is more momentum for us to carry into next week. We continue to build our program and runs like this show that we are making gains.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 MCDONALD’S CAMARO ZL1 – Sidelined due to crash; Finished 33rd
    “I am kind of happy with how the day went except for crashing myself out. I am proud of the car my team brought. I felt like I had the best car probably. I didn’t get to see the No. 1 car, but he seemed fast as well. I was really, really good. I was happy with that, but upset with myself that I crashed myself. I’m looking forward to the playoffs. We’ve had faster, and faster cars every race.”

    DANIEL HEMRIC, NO. 8 LIBERTY NATIONAL CAMARO ZL1 – Sidelined due to crash; Finished 34th
    “I felt like we had a good restart there and I got to the bottom, which is where you need to be, then next thing I knew I saw the 48 (Jimmie Johnson) sideways. I saw the left side of his car, his nose through the grass. I thought I had it missed and someone got turned down and caught me in the right side of the Liberty National Chevrolet Camaro Zl1 and turned me into the outside wall. I’m not sure what started it or what happened – just chaos. This was an important day, making my first Brickyard 400 start, all the way up until the point where we were crashed. That’s been the story for this No. 8 team all year. Everybody on this team works too hard to have this many unfortunate things happen to us. We’ll put this one behind us and move on to Las Vegas next week.”

    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 MENCS Indianapolis Post-Race Recap

    Toyota MENCS Indianapolis Post-Race Recap

    Four Toyota drivers officially clinch their Playoff positions in Indianapolis
    All four Joe Gibbs Racing Camrys set their sights on the Playoffs

    SPEEDWAY, IND. (September 8, 2019) – After a practice accident, Denny Hamlin drove through the field at the Brickyard 400, securing a sixth-place result.

    Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series
    Indianapolis Motor Speedway
    Race 26 of 36 – 400 miles, 160 laps

    TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
    1st, Kevin Harvick*
    2nd, Joey Logano*
    3rd, Bubba Wallace*
    4th, William Bryon*
    5th, Clint Bowyer*
    6th, DENNY HAMLIN
    18th, MATT DiBENEDETTO
    27th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    36th, PARKER KLIGERMAN
    37th, KYLE BUSCH
    39th, ERIK JONES
    *non-Toyota driver

    • Camry driver Denny Hamlin was the highest-finishing Toyota driver in sixth.

    • Despite running portions of the day inside the top-10, Erik Jones, Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr. and Matt DiBenedetto all suffered damage from various incidents on pit road and on track this afternoon.

    TOYOTA QUOTES

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

    Talk about the restarts. It looked like they were crucial.
    “Yeah, it was all about the restarts. That’s why you saw the wrecks that you did in turns one and two. Passing was just not that easy. It’s part of it. It’s part of this race track, the challenge that comes into it. So much of it is about qualifying.”

    Been a heck of a year for you. Now you turn the page and go to Vegas. Talk about your mindset.

    “We are ready to go. Our cars are fast. Everything’s fast. As long as we execute, we know we are going to be in contention to win every week.”

    Talk about your run today.

    “Just frustrated. We finished sixth, but you just can’t pass. We would run like a second slower running behind someone. Got a bad restart on that last restart and went back to 10th or so, so I was happy to rebound to sixth. Wish we would have had a shot to get up front at some point. Just couldn’t overcome the traffic.”

    Will you change your approach any this season?

    “I think you want to create as good of a buffer as you can for the first two races that way you can go to the Roval and not have to worry about so much. That’s going to be the plan for us. To have a smooth Vegas, have a smooth Richmond and see how things play out.”

    MARTIN TRUEX Jr., No. 19 Auto Owners Insurance Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Finishing Position: 27th

    How ready are you for Vegas?

    “Well I can tell you that I’m glad to be rolling out of Indy. It’s been a pretty crappy weekend for us in general. Felt like we had something for them today at the start of the race. We were passing cars. We had to start way in the back, and then on the first pit stop, of course, we get in a crash. Unfortunate deal. The guys have been doing a good job, and I feel like the Playoff tracks line up well for us. We have a decent amount of Playoff points in the bank to start out with. First round, if we can just go do what we know how to do, be consistent, not beat ourselves, we should be able to move on pretty quickly. Hopefully, we can start to take advantage of the fast race cars. The last five to six races, we have been really strong. We don’t have a whole lot to show for it, so it has been disappointing. It has been frustrating from that point. Knowing that we have the team and the speed to go really far in the Playoffs and be a Championship contender feels good. We will be ready to start that next weekend.”

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Finishing Position: 37th

    Did you have any indication that the engine was about to go?

    “No, we just left pit road and we were just coming up through the gears. Everything was fine. We got to fourth. We made it all the way to turn two on the apron there and then tried to blend up in traffic and it just let go. I don’t know. We weren’t as good as we wanted to be, where we thought we could run with those guys. We were definitely struggling in the long run similar to yesterday. We thought we qualified a little better than we should, and I guess that’s probably why we weren’t quite there for the long haul and keeping downforce in the car I guess. Just too tight overall. I thought we were going to have a solid third-to-fifth, something like that anyways, and try to come out of here with some points or some momentum going into the Playoffs, but we are stuck here. Once it blew up, it knocked the brakes out of it so I couldn’t stop coming to pit road so I couldn’t get out of everyone’s way and not cause a caution. So sorry about that.”

    What happened to the race car?

    “I didn’t think we had a chance to win. We were just way too tight, we were off a little bit today. Thought we were going to have a solid third-to-fifth place car anyways and come out of here with a solid effort and have some momentum rolling into the next week. Unfortunately, we blew up. Everything was fine, there was no warning of it. It just happened all of the sudden. I was leaving pit road and blending back into traffic on the backstretch. When it blew up, for some reason it knocked the brakes out of it so I couldn’t stop. All in all, just a bummer day for us – for this M&M’s Hazelnut Camry.”

    How do you feel as you prepare for another run at the title?
    “It would certainly be nice to be headed into the playoffs with a little momentum on our side. That’s not the case. We head to my hometown, Vegas, to kick it off. Hopefully, we can have a good, clean Playoff run. Our guys have done a great job. We’ve had fast cars this year; hopefully, we can continue that.”

    You have a ton of experience on your team. How do you think that experience will help you?

    “You look at it, and we won the title in our first year together. We have been able to back it up championship race Playoff positions each year since. Hopefully, we can keep that trend going. We have certainly worked hard throughout the regular season to get this Playoff point advantage that we have right now. It would be nice to not have to rely on those points, but to be able to win some races here and close out the season strong and get to Homestead and race for a Championship.”

    ERIK JONES, No. 20 STANLEY Wish For Our Heroes Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing
    Finishing Position: 39th

    What happened in the accident with Brad Keselowski?

    “I just got loose and made a mistake. I didn’t think Brad (Keselowski) would be so tight on me and I just lost it. It’s my fault. I feel bad for the 2 (Keselowski) and I feel bad for our team as well. It’s a shame, we had a good Stanley Camry and I just hate seeing it come down like that. I just wasn’t anticipating enough and I drove in too hard for it. It’s all good. We’ll move on. Wish we would have had a good day. Our car was really strong and we had a shot to probably win today. Just didn’t work out.”

    What has the racing been like so far in this race?

    “Really challenging. That’s part of why I was making that move and being aggressive with it. I was just trying to get track position. I made a mistake on pit road and stalled it. I was just trying to get back up there. We had a good restart and I was just hoping I could get some good track position back. Tried to get in there and get another spot and it just didn’t quite work out.”

    Are you peaking at the right time?

    “I think so. We had good speed today, just an unfortunate incident took us out. I think we would have run top-five. I think next week in Vegas we will have the same thing. We have been right up there with our other teammates up in the front contending. Hopefully, we can just carry it into the Playoffs and have that same speed and momentum that’s going to take us deep into it.”

    As a driver, do you feel like you have the package figured out?

    “Yeah, definitely a lot more now. I wasn’t sure for a few races at the start of the year, and now, I’ve got it as close as you can. It’s tough, and it’s still hard to pass. Track position is still really important. I feel like we have a good baseline down at least for how much we trim out and how much downforce we put in, kind of how we setup in practice that transfers to the race well. We figured out a lot of stuff, and definitely things that are going to help us going forward.”

    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 INDIANAPOLIS: Unofficial Qualifying Results

    TEAM CHEVY AT INDIANAPOLIS: Unofficial Qualifying Results

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    BIG MACHINE VODKA 400 AT THE BRICKYARD
    TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS
    SEPTEMBER 8, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    5th JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1
    8th KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 MONSTER ENERGY CAMARO ZL1
    11th DANIEL HEMRIC, NO. 8 LIBERTY NATIONAL CAMARO ZL1
    13th ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 NATIONWIDE CAMARO ZL1
    15th BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY CAMARO ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    2nd Paul Menard (Ford)
    3rd Clint Bowyer (Ford)
    4th Joey Logano (Ford)
    5th Jimmie Johnson (Chevrolet)

    NBC will telecast the Big Machine Vodka 400 at the Brickyard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway live at 2:00 p.m. ET Sunday, September 8. The NBC Sports Gold app will stream the race and live coverage can also be found on PRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    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 Indianapolis Final Practice Quotes — Denny Hamlin

    Toyota Racing MENCS Indianapolis Final Practice Quotes — Denny Hamlin

    Toyota Racing – Denny Hamlin
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    SPEEDWAY, IND. (September 7, 2019) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin was involved in an accident at the conclusion of final practice at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Hamlin will go to a backup No. 11 FedEx Camry for Sunday’s race.

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

    How vicious was the hit you took in turn four?

    “It was big for sure. It was the last corner and I think the red flag had been out for a minute or so. We had just got into turn one when the red went out and we were going to finish our lap. It just blew a right-front. We hadn’t seen any wear issues so we might have run something over or whatever. Definitely got my attention.”

    Is there nothing you can do when that happens at Indianapolis with the wall so close?

    “Especially with it being in the short chute there. Definitely unexpected as I turned into turn four right there. The good news is that I think our backup is an okay car. We’ll go to work and come from the back, again and see if we can’t win another one.”

    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 Indianapolis Quotes – Erik Jones

    Toyota Racing MENCS Indianapolis Quotes – Erik Jones

    Toyota Racing – Erik Jones
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

    SPEEDWAY, IND. (September 7, 2019) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Erik Jones was made available to media at Indianapolis Motor Speedway:

    ERIK JONES, No. 20 STANLEY Wish For Our Heroes Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    How do you feel about the new deal?

    “Number one, I am just happy to get the release out and get it set in stone that we are going to be back in the same spot. It feels good. I’ve had a good relationship with JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing) since 2015. I’ve enjoyed racing for them and I hope I’m there for a long time. I hope we can continue to prove that we deserve this ride. I think Chris (Gayle, crew chief) and I having been doing our job here lately in trying to execute. We have good momentum going now, just need to keep that rolling.”

    Were you expecting more than one-year?

    “We will keep running with it and see where it goes. I think if we keep doing what we’ve been doing here the last couple months; I don’t think we will have any issues.”

    You are on a roll, and it looks like it will continue.

    “Well, I hope so. Right before the Playoffs is a good time to get your momentum rolling. I feel like this time of year has always been pretty good for us in the past couple years between my rookie season and up till now. We are on a roll and want to keep rolling here in Indy and on to Las Vegas. Last year, we had a rough first round of the Playoffs. We want to go deep; we want to go deep in the Playoffs. We want to be able to make a run at it and make it to the Round of 8, is definitely my goal. That gives you a shot to go to Homestead. If we make it there, I’d say it’s been a real successful year.”

    Do you think the new deal settles you down so you can focus ooon going out and winning?
    “Yeah, I didn’t ever feel pressure to begin with. I’ve always been pretty comfortable in my own skin and I felt like if we did what we needed to do everything will come along with it. We did that here the last few months. We had good negotiations, good talks. We have a good deal. I’m a young guy and I’m trying to prove myself and continue to prove myself. If we keep doing it, the other pieces will fall with it.”

    How do you feel about the Playoff tracks?

    “Pretty good. You look at them and there are some that I feel like are good for me and there are some I feel like are bad for me. The first round, we have a couple good tracks. The Roval is tough; it’s kind of a wildcard for everyone. I feel good. I look at the Round of 8. You have Texas, Phoenix and Martinsville. Texas and Phoenix have been real good places for me, Martinsville is a little tough. Texas and Phoenix are places you can win at. If we get to the round of 8, we’ve got a great shot. It’s just a matter of getting there. It sounds easy. It looks easy on paper, but it’s not as easy in real time. It’s a tough run. You have to be perfect for 10 weeks, and that is not easy by any means. I feel like we are really close to being a top-five team. We’re right there; we just have to keep plugging away to get there.”

    How do you feel the race is going to go on Sunday with four guys fighting for the last couple Playoff spots?

    “Those four guys are going to fight. It’s their season on the line. This package is probably going to produce some interesting racing as far as the way we are going to get runs. It will be pretty fanned out, pretty wild. You’re going to be seeing a lot of aggressive racing for the first five laps with people just trying to get track position with people getting hung up and stuck in traffic. I’m interested to see. It’s not a relaxed week; we want to win, but we don’t have any pressure as far as the Playoffs go. That feels good. I think there is going to be a lot of aggressive racing from a lot of guys.”

    Do you like this track? It is so different from anywhere else you go.

    “Yeah, I like it. As a far as the race track itself, it’s fun for me. It’s a real technical track. It’s real precise and it takes a lot of that. For me, the prestige and history, more than anything. I just enjoy that part of it so much. I grew up in Michigan, so this place was not far from home. I knew how special it was. I raced here in a quarter midget down in Gasoline Alley. We set up a track in the infield. So a lot of memories here. I spent a lot of time here as a kid growing up. It was cool to come here for the first time in Xfinity, and then even cooler to come here for the first time in Cup.”

    What was the Playoff experience last year like?

    “A lot different. A lot more intense number one. The Xfinity Playoffs were tough and to be honest, we almost didn’t make Homestead. We had so many Playoff points, and we had such fast cars that year. It was like we should make Homestead. These Playoffs, I don’t think any of the 16 guys are like, we are definitely going to make Homestead. I don’t care if you are Kyle Busch or Martin Truex or Denny Hamlin. It’s just tough. Especially you get down in the rounds, and things happen. It’s still racing; you can’t control everything. It’s tough to make it through each round. You have so many different tracks. It’s so diverse; it makes it so challenging. That was the biggest thing for me; how challenging it was and how perfect you have to be for 10 weeks. We had one mistake in the first round in Vegas. We got caught up in a wreck. It killed us. We were out; we were done. We never made it back up. It’s like you can’t have those incidents. You have to be really on your game.”

    What did you learn last year in the Playoffs that can help you this season?

    “It’s tough right, you have to take it step-by-step I guess. More than anything, you can’t look too far ahead. I felt really confident about our first round last year that we would easily get through it and I don’t think I look at it quite that way this year. I think I’m more race-by-race, step-by-step, one at a time trying to process it more evenly and get through it – not more precise necessarily, but just step-by-step. Making sure you’re not looking too far ahead and making sure you’re focused on the task at hand more. I think if you just focus on the race you’re at and really just take that one into account. I knew the 4 (Kevin Harvick) was having trouble. My spotter, Rick Carelli, had said, ‘Hey, he’s got a tire rub, he’s got an issue and is slowing down.’ I was running the top and he was running the bottom and I just kept running the top. It was just really an unnecessary risk and one that looking back I wouldn’t have done. Definitely this year, you have to be more cautious at times. When there’s situations in the race that can put you in a bad spot, you really have to monitor those and take advantage and adjust to not put yourself in those.”

    What do you mean by an unnecessary risk?

    “I knew he (Kevin Harvick) had right-front tire issues, he was slowing down and he had radioed he had a right-front issue. If you blow a right-front, you’re going to go up and I kept running up there and the second he blew the right-front, I was about to pass him on the outside and he just came right up into us. I easily could have just gone to the bottom and got myself out of harms way.”

    Where is your biggest concern in the Playoffs this season?

    “The Roval in the first round for sure. It’s just such a tough place and kind of a wild card. We saw that last year with obviously a couple restarts and the wrecks. Talladega in the next round is always tough. Those two right off the bat are concerns for me. Then in the Round of 8, Martinsville. Those three tracks right there – one in each round unfortunately, but those three tracks are ones – Martinsville is one I probably struggle with the most and I’m not looking forward to if we make it to the Round of 8. We also have Texas and Phoenix in there too, which are some of our best tracks. It’s a balance right, you have to take the good with the bad, but I think if we get in that run, we can definitely make the most of it.”

    How do you approach Martinsville mentally to do better at that race?

    “Try to. I’ve been trying to work on Martinsville since my rookie year. It’s just been a tough place for me as far as driving. It’s the one place left on the schedule where I feel like I’m definitely holding our team back. I just haven’t figured that place out. Everywhere else, the places I’ve struggled early on, I feel like I’ve gotten good enough to where we can be competitive and run top-10, top-five, but Martinsville is not that place. A top-10 in Martinsville would be a real solid day for us and we need to be better than that in the Playoffs. You can’t rely on top-10s, you have to get top-fives, wins and stage wins, especially at that point in the Playoffs.”

    How much will you focus to get into the top-10 this weekend and earn more Playoff points?

    “We talked about it this week, Chris (Gayle, crew chief) and I, about trying to get those 12 or 16 points. We want them, those Playoff points are huge and they can carry you through the rounds and get you to a better spot. It’s possible. It’s going to take a mistake probably from the (Alex) Bowman. It’s probably going to take a mistake from someone to really make up that many points in one race, but it’s possible. Or we can just win and pop up ahead of him.”

    Do you play the stage points game or do you just try to position yourself to win?

    “I think we do the same thing. If we feel like we have a car that can win, we’re going to position ourselves for that win. If we feel like it’s a rough day and we’re struggling, we’re going to take the stage points for sure. It’s just a matter of how the day goes. If we’re running up front all day long and I’m in the top-three and tell Chris (Gayle, crew chief) – you know when you have a shot to win. Chris will make the calls accordingly for that.”

    How interesting is it that only Jimmie Johnson has won multiple championships in recent years?

    “There’s definitely a gap right now for somebody to be the dominant guy. We have a couple right now between my teammates are all very good and very dominant and you look around, Kevin Harvick the last couple years so there’s been guys in the last few years that have really tried and have been dominant for one season at a time. There’s definitely an opportunity there to be that guy that wins multiple championships and is at Homestead every year and is winning back-to-back championships. I’d love to be that guy. I feel like we have a lot of growing to do to get to that point to be champions and be multiple-time champions, but it’s definitely an opportunity there to capitalize and become that guy.”

    When you were in victory lane, did you know you had your deal done?

    “I knew we had it done. It had been maybe a week-and-a-half that we had finally gotten it done. I felt good about it. I had a good idea the last few months that we would get it done, but it was about a week-and-a-half ago that we got it done.”

    So your win didn’t push the deal over the edge?

    “No, it didn’t make a difference, but it definitely made us all a little more excited.”

    # # #

    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 INDIANAPOLIS: Jimmie Johnson Press Conf. Transcript

    TEAM CHEVY AT INDIANAPOLIS: Jimmie Johnson Press Conf. Transcript

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    BIG MACHINE VODKA 400 AT THE BRICKYARD
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    SEPTEMBER 7, 2019

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1, met with media and discussed the recent progress of the No. 48 team, his approach to racing at the Brickyard in order to transfer to the Playoffs, the shortened weekend schedule, and more. Full Transcript:

    IF YOU HAD TO GO TO A VENUE AND BE RACING FOR YOUR PLAYOFF HOPES, IS THIS ONE THAT YOU FEEL RATHER GOOD ABOUT CONSIDERING YOUR PAST HISTORY HERE? HOW AWARE DO YOU WANT TO BE DURING THE RACE ON SUNDAY OF THE OTHER THREE COMPETITORS’ POSITIONS?
    “I don’t mind coming here at all. I love the history of this track and love being here. Making a lap here is really special. It’s a place that drivers all aspire to come and compete. But, if I could pick a track, it would probably be Dover. So, it would be different if I had a chance to pick myself. I love it here. It’s a great place. The car is real fast and we’re excited about the weekend.

    “Of course I’m going to be aware and of course I’m going to be fed information. So, we’ll just see how it unfolds. But, it’s pretty simple with just a couple of guys to worry about. And, I know that I need a lot of points in one afternoon. So, we’ve only discussed about how fast we’re going to be and how aggressive we’re gong to be. Hopefully we have a victory and just eliminate any need for points. We know that the best plans don’t always play out, so we’ll see. But, there will be some information coming in at times. But, hopefully we have a fast enough car that we won’t have to worry about it.”

    WHEN CHASE ELLIOTT WAS IN THE MEDIA CENTER EARLIER, HE WAS SAYING HOW IMPORTANT IT WAS FOR THE ORGANIZATION TO GET YOU INTO THE PLAYOFFS, AND HOW IT WAS IMPORTANT FOR YOU TO HAVE SPEED OFF THE TRUCK, WHICH IS LOOKED LIKE YOU DO. WAS THERE ANYTHING DIFFERENT ABOUT THE PREPARATION THIS WEEK AT HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS THAT WAS ABOVE AND BEYOND IN TERMS OF HELPING YOUR EFFORT? AND, DID YOU DO A MOCK RUN IN THE FIRST PRACTICE SESSION?
    “Yeah, we did a mock run at the end. Our last lap I think was a mock run. I think we were ninth on the sheet with that lap time. There has been more preparation, but it really hasn’t been because of the week. It’s been since Cliff (Daniels) took over as crew chief. There are more hours and more time…. We had a Saturday night race recently and they were asked not to come to the shop and it’s not just Cliff alone, but the energy and the brotherhood inside of the No. 48 team and how bad the guys want to perform. They are there when they don’t need to be. They’re there when they’re asked not to be (laughs).

    “So, it’s pretty amazing to see the time and effort. And all of that has added up over the last couple of weeks, where our guys have been able to spend more time on the car that we brought here. So, it’s hard to just look at any given week and say hey, we’re going to do more because you don’t have the time. The truck’s got to load and leave and all that stuff. But, weeks back, things started clicking, which have allowed really every car that’s gone to the track in the last three or four weeks to have more detail and more time spent on it.”

    IN A LOT OF WAYS, DOESN’T IT JUST SIMPLIFY WHAT YOU NEED TO DO….IT’S JUST WIN OR ELSE. YOU DON’T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT IN A LOT OF WAYS NOT CALCULATING THE POINTS, BUT YOU CAN REALLY SIMPLIFY IT BY JUST WINNING THE RACE?
    “Yeah, it would be a heck of a story to tie Jeff (Gordon) with five (wins) here and to come through a drought and all the things that we all know. You guys (media) had to write about it and talk about it. To have all that come to a conclusion and lock myself into the Playoffs would be one hell of a story. Hopefully, that is the story.”

    EVERYTHING YOU JUST SAID ABOUT CLIFF DANIELS AND THE TEAM, IT SEEMS LIKE YOU’RE IN THE RIGHT SITUATION NOW. BUT SEEING THE SUCCESS THAT WILLIAM BYRON AND CHAD KNAUS ARE HAVING THIS YEAR, DO YOU WONDER WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN HAD YOU STAYED TOGETHER?
    “I know what we had. We had lightening in a bottle. We had 14 out of 17 years that were just out of this world. We had a great run. There is no doubt about it. But, unfortunately, just where our relationship went in the final couple of year, we weren’t bringing the best out of one another. And that’s why we had to change paths. I still think Chad Knaus is the best crew chief to ever walk through the garage area. I do. I am his biggest fan and proponent and I think William is a great student for him to teach and evolve as a driver. So, I’m happy for them. Of course I want to beat them. Of course I want to outrun them. But, that’s Chad Knaus and he knows what he is doing. And, he is developing William at a rapid rate and they’re doing a great job.”

    DO YOU LIKE THAT IDEA THAT THERE’S A REGULAR SEASON CHAMPION AND WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT KYLE BUSCH GETTING THAT AND THE BENEFITS OF THAT?
    “Without a doubt there needs to be a regular season champion. I was part of a group that was pushing for that years ago. I was joking then, even if you just get a coffee mug that says ‘Champ’ on it would be well worth it. We love those things to fight for and work for. And it felt kind of empty when all of a sudden the Playoffs started and we didn’t crown a champion for the regular season. So, I think NASCAR has done a great job with that. They should triple the purse. That would be nice (laughter)”

    HAVE YOU FIGURED OUT IF YOU GO FOR STAGE POINTS OR IF YOU GO FOR STAGE POINTS, YOU KNOW THAT ALL THE OTHER GUYS YOU ARE RACING WILL DO IT AND YOU JUST HAVE TO PRETTY MUCH PLAY TO WIN?
    “I don’t think you’re going to win from 20th. So, you need to have a fast car. You need to be in the mix. You need to run up front. And if you run up front, I think you’re going to get plenty of stage points and then have a shot to win. So, I think we need to be a dominant car and we need to be up front all day long to have a shot to win the race.”

    WITH BEING A DOMINANT CAR IS BEING A TEAM THAT EXECUTES FLAWLESSLY. LAST WEEK, THERE’S NOT MUCH YOU CAN DO WHEN SOMEBODY WRECKS IN FRONT OF YOU. BUT, WAS LAST WEEK THE FIRST TIME MAYBE IN A COUPLE OF MONTHS THAT THE ENTIRE TEAM WAS PUTTING TOGETHER A RACE?
    “We’ve had plenty of bad luck, that’s for sure. I think Bristol, the race itself, was going well and we had good stops, but it’s tough to go back through each one of them. I’d say one easy one that stands out would be Chicago. We finished second or third there and that was a good one. Last weekend we did perform well through practice and qualified well and ran well. We’re getting there. What I have learned through this two or three-year drought and difficult time, is just how important the team is. I’ve known it. I’ve lived it. And, I’ve been the beneficiary of some amazing teams. And, I just didn’t realize how fragile it was until I got involved and had to start building that and help select the right people in place to build that team. It’s been an interesting journey. And through it all, I’ve learned a ton. I really have. And, I think we’re in a spot now that everybody can see where the hard work has gone and that we’re starting to show up and perform.”

    WITH THIS WEEKEND’S SHORTENED SCHEDULE, DO YOU HAVE TIME TO GET EVERYTHING TOGETHER? DO YOU LIKE THE CONDENSED SCHEDULE?
    “We feel like we’re on the edge of enough time at a lot of tracks to get the work-side done. So, I’d rather be in the pit stall right now working with my guys; I was in the middle of something before I had to come over (laughs). But, this is a unique schedule, and qualifying tomorrow is a different challenge. If somebody does have a problem and gets in the fence and has to go to a backup, it’s going to be a Chinese fire drill. But, we’ll just kind of see how it turns out. I am in favor of trying different schedules and trying to figure out how to maximize what’s best for both competitors and fans alike. So, we’re trying something new here. I can’t recall qualifying on race day except for Pocono maybe a year ago or something like that? It’s different. If it’s received well, than we’ll adjust, for sure.”

    BEYOND THE CHAMPIONSHIPS AND ALL THE RACE WINS, I REMEMBER WHAT YOU PULLED OFF AT HOMESTEAD A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO WHEN YOUR CAR WAS PULLED OFF THE GRID JUST BEFORE AND YOU WENT OUT AND WON THE CHAMPIONSHIP. DO THINGS LIKE THAT HELP YOU IN TERMS OF YOUR SENSE OF CONFIDENCE BECAUSE YOU’VE BEEN THROUGH A LOT OF OBSTACLES YOU’VE HAD TO OVERCOME?
    “Yeah, for sure. Experience helps. I have been able to work through some really tough situations and come out on top over the years. There are no guarantees on what happens here this weekend, but I do feel like if that opportunity presents itself, the experience I have will help me stay calm and help me do the right things in that moment. So, it helps me sleep better, absolutely, knowing what I’ve pulled off in the past. It helps with my confidence rolling into this weekend.”
    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: Indianapolis (Clint Bowyer and Daniel Suarez Media Availability)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Indianapolis (Clint Bowyer and Daniel Suarez Media Availability)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Saturday, September 7, 2019

    CLINT BOWYER MEDIA AVAILABILITY

    Clint Bowyer, No. 14 Rush Ford Mustang — YOU TALKED A FEW WEEKS BACK ABOUT NOT BEING ABLE TO PUT TOGETHER A COMPLETE RACE. WAS DARLINGTON A STEP FORWARD? “I think Darlington was a snapshot of our capabilities. I have said it time and time again, when we race to our capabilities we are a single digit car. A lot of things go into play on that. I feel like we have raced inside the single digits several times this year and more often than not struggled to get the finish and manage track position. It is a new game. We are all learning it. Obviously there is a certain group of teams that have a little bit more speed than some do so far but that certainly helps manage all those situations, right? The facts are, we are up against a situation where we can make the playoffs and compete within. If we can compete to our capabilities I feel like we can go rounds in the playoffs. We unloaded a fast hot rod here but it is a new beast. This is a whole new deal. Going around here and not lifting in the corners and things like that, you are asking different things from the race car than you did in years prior. What those cars go through and how we have learned over time with lifting and letting the locker unlock and letting the car roll, easy in and hard off, make that straight away as long as possible, it is all out the window. It is literally crate racing where you have to keep momentum. These Xfinity cars on the race track right now, that has been a snapshot of what we are racing here for the last few years. I think it is definitely a challenge for everybody that has been in the sport a long time, whether it is a driver or a crew chief or engineer. The aero team too. When you are trying to work on yaw moments and change the yaw and it changing in the mddle of the corner and how that car goes through that yaw moment is a drastic difference for what we are asking out of the car now that what we used to.”

    HOW IMPORTANT ARE THESE PRACTICES AND QUALIFYING WHICH YOU DIDN’T GET LAST YEAR BECAUSE OF THE WEATHER? “I think sometimes with me, myself and I don’t know if it is because of me and I have experienced some of it but less track time is usually a good thing for an organization like Stewart-Haas with such great people and great tools and a lot of experience in all facets of that. That is a good thing. Pocono is always a good testing ground, proving ground for what you will see at Indy. We were pretty decent there on speed and things like that. You are talking the same tire and the same situation. Speed and everything else, qualifying, I feel like I am fairly confident we will be fine there. It is the things you can’t control like an untimely caution or something like that. That is the difference where being in the situation we are in it could bite you. You still go out there and control the things you can control and make the car as fast as possible, qualify up front, get track position and stay in front of those guys. That is all you can control really. Anything else besides that, an untimely caution or something like that, so be it.”

    LOOKING AHEAD TO VEGAS, WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED WITH THE NEW RULE PACKAGE FROM WHEN WE WERE THERE IN MARCH THAT WILL MAKE THAT RACE DIFFERENT THIS TIME? “Everytime there is a rule change everything is all over the place. The teams are either hitting on it or missing on it, especially early in the year like Vegas was in the spring. That was pretty much the teams first shot at a 1.5 mile track and first stab as a team and organization. We have talked about it before. That point in the year you have made the bed. You are lying in the bed you made and this time around it seems like always when there is a rule change that by halfway through the season, usually by Charlotte, the gap is closed and everyone is honed in on where they want to be. That will be the case next week, no different than here.”

    WITH THE PRESSURE THIS WEEK, WHAT DID YOU DO DURING THE WEEK TO KEEP YOUR MIND AWAY FROM RACING? “Man, I went to the shop. It was a short week for everybody. I think everybody was pretty much junk on Labor Day. My Labor Day was less than eventful. I went down to the pool and kind of had some plans. I cracked open a beer and I sat there and looked at it for about an hour and was like, ‘Huh, that’s different.’ I will be damned if at about 5 o’clock I was staring at the back of my eyelids laying on the couch and she took the kids out for a walk and came back in and was like, ‘You up?’. I was like, ‘Yeah, I am good. What do you want to do for dinner?’ So my Labor Day was probably no different than anybody else. Tuesday I went to the shop like always. Wednesday we got some things done around the house, built a couple food plots for the deer and got that going, that was my off day. Wednesdays are kind of our Saturdays. Wednesday night I took Cash to the motorcross track and had a lot of fun there watching that little turd go around, it was pretty funny. It is funny how he learned the lingo. He says to me, ‘Man, I was ripping it brah!’ and I was like, ‘What did you guys say?’ But he learned the lingo. Then we came here and got ready to have a great weekend. It is a lot of fun to be able to come here. It is stressful. There are a lot of implications. It is important to me and my race team to be a part of the playoffs. It is important to our organization at Stewart-Haas Racing and certainly our manufacturer with Ford. It is fun though. It is fun to feel this way. You don’t have this opportunity to feel this way under this pressure and have that bearing on yourself every weekend. You just don’t. But it is kind of fun to test yourself and rise to the occasion and try to have some fun as well.”

    DID YOU FIND A HOME FOR THE KITTENS? “Yes, thank God. There was somebody that showed up and took the kittens. My old man saved the kittens and then left, as luck would have it. The kittens have a safe and good home. Cash was very worried about that when he woke up and found the kittens were no longer there. All is well in the kitten world, thank God.”

    WHAT WOULD IT MEAN FOR YOU AND YOUR TEAM TO GET THE WIN HERE TOMORROW? HOW MUCH CONFIDENCE WOULD IT GIVE YOU GOING INTO THE PLAYOFFS? “I don’t think a Brickyard win is about confidence or anything else, it is about the Brickyard and winning at Indianapolis. Hell, I don’t even feel welcome here half the time. If you find one of them yellow shirts or whatever. I don’t give a damn, we are here, and I would love to win here. I think it would mean the world to myself, my career, my family and our race team, your legacy or whatever the hell you want to call it. It is a big deal to win at Indy. It is something that everybody that races wishes they had an opportunity to even compete at Indy and be on these hallowed grounds. To be able to roll into victory lane would be ultra special for anybody in this sport and I am certainly no exception.”

    DANIEL SUAREZ MEDIA AVAILABILITY

    DANIEL SUAREZ, No. 41 Haas Automation Ford Mustang — LAST WEEK YOU HAD CONTACT WITH RYAN NEWMAN. WAS THAT JUST A RACING DEAL? “It was just racing. By the way, there was not contact. But yeah it was just a racing deal. It happened to be him but it could have happened with anyone. Newman, I have a lot of respect for him. He is a very aggressive driver. One of the most aggressive. People know that. Sometimes we race hard and sometimes you know what the limits are and sometimes we push a little bit hard. It was just a racing deal. I didn’t mean to spin him out. I didn’t mean to wreck him. But I wanted to pass him. Unfortunately he spun out but there was not contact and it was just racing like we do every week. That is part of it.”

    HOW FAR ARE YOU WILLING TO GO TO MAKE SURE YOU ARE ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE BUBBLE AFTER SUNDAY? “With the points situation and the bubble and all that kind of stuff, at the end of the day we have to control what we can control. I can not control where Newman finishes. I can’t control where Bowyer or Johnson finish. The only thing I can control is myself and I have to try to put myself in the best position for stage points and to finish the race in the best position so we can make it. I can not control their results. I can not go out there to wreck all three of them to make sure I am going to be fine. That is not how it works. I am going to go out there and do my thing, and the team will do theirs and the pit crew. This weekend is big because it is the last one and there is more pressure and I think is more fun and there is more attention from the media and things. It is part of it. I try to have fun with it. I try to go out there to do my thing.”

    WHAT WOULD IT MEAN FOR A DRIVER FROM YOUR COUNTRY TO MAKE THE PLAYOFFS AND THE HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE THAT COMES WITH THAT? “It would mean a lot but to be honest I am shooting higher than that. To make the playoffs feels like a must. In the past I didn’t feel like I either had not done a good job or the team or the combination of both. I the past I haven’t had what I need to be able to compete in the playoffs. I feel like now, the team, even when the team hasn’t been the best we are still right there. Hopefully we can make it happen and once we are in it try to go all in and try to put some good races together to transfer to some more rounds. We are a young team and are still getting better and better. They are still getting to know me and I am still getting to know the new rules package and stuff like that. I feel like we have a lot of good things coming. We just have to be patient and keep working hard.”

    “It would be something very cool. Making the playoffs would be extremely good but I am shooting higher than that. Like when I won a championship in ‘16, that was amazing and I liked it a lot but as soon as we started ‘17 I wasn’t thinking about it anymore. I was thinking about racing Cup. I try to achieve my goals and once I get those I like to go after the new ones. To be in the playoff is one of them but we have high expectations for things and hopefully we can make things work.”

    DOES THE CONDENSED SCHEDULE THIS WEEKEND CAUSE YOU ANY CONCERN? “I like it. It reminds me of the old K&N East when we used to do everything in one day. Now it is in two days. I like it. I have fun with it. It is a little different but overall I enjoy coming to Indianapolis. It is one of my favorite race tracks and I enjoy coming here a lot. We are looking forward to having a good, fun, solid weekend. So far in the first practice I felt like we have a lot of work to do. The car hasn’t been exactly where we want to be but we made a lot of ground and I feel like we are walking in the right direction. Hopefully the second practice will be a good step forward. I guess I am shooting high. It would be amazing to kiss the bricks here. That is one of my dreams. This place has a lot of history and I feel like this team is capable of doing that, we just have to put all the pieces together.”

    HAVE YOU HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO RELAX BETWEEN LAST WEEKEND AND THIS WEEKEND? “Yeah, a lot. Too much. Last week was a long week. Normally we travel on Thursday but this week we traveled on Friday, so we had an extra day. It was cool to stay home the entire week. We don’t have that most of the time. We had fun and I worked on studying what I have to do in Indianapolis and went to the shop a couple days and had lunch with the guys and did meetings. It was a good relaxed week. I feel like my body is at 100% to go out racing.”

    CAN YOU DISCUSS THE NERVES AND FEELINGS YOU HAD THE FIRST TIME YOU WERE HERE? DO YOU STILL GET THOSE FEELINGS, ESPECIALLY THIS YEAR? “More than nerves I feel excitement. I feel excitement coming to this place and knowing the history this place has and all the amazing drivers and all the legends. This place has a lot of history and to come here and to just be able to race here is something really cool. It doesn’t end there. As a race car driver you always want more and I want to be successful in this amazing place and I feel like I have a team capable of doing that. Hopefully this weekend is a good one for us.”

    HOW DOES WHAT YOU FACE THIS WEEKEND COMPARE TO THE HOMESTEAD WEEKEND OF 2016? “It is very interesting that you mention that because I have been thinking about that a lot. I even watched some of the videos of that weekend because it feels similar. It doesn’t feel the same, but it feels similar. Not just for making the playoffs but what that would mean to my team, sponsors and a lot of people. It is not the same but it is probably the closest I have been, position wise. Yes, it feels similar. I have had a lot of flashbacks from that weekend. I feel like I was able to handle that weekend extremely well. Like I said before, I feel like I work pretty well under pressure and I have been that way since I was racing go karts and was trying to find sponsors and win races to be able to continue and go to the next one. It feels good. It feels good to be here and good to be in this position and hopefully just like we did in 2016 we can end up the weekend on the good side of things.”

    WHAT WERE YOU WATCHING OR WHY WERE YOU WATCHING? WHAT WERE YOU LOOKING FOR? “I had some videos on my cell phone of little clips. I remember in practice back in Homestead a car spun out in front of me and I barely missed it. After I missed that, I told my guys that we were going to win the championship. I was very confident and I knew what I wanted. That is just myself and I feel like this weekend has a similar perspective. We have three guys that we have to beat. It is just pretty similar. At the end of the day, we have to control what we can control and go out there and have fun. I have to do my part and the pit crew has to do theirs and we can go out there to do our best.”

    YOU MENTIONED TEAM MEETINGS, WAS THERE ANY DISCUSSION IN THE MEETINGS ABOUT IF THE CIRCUMSTANCES WERE RIGHT THAT YOU AND CLINT COULD HELP EACH OTHER GRAB THE LAST TWO SPOTS? “No. I wish we talked about that but we didn’t. Clint and I, we are good friends and we know that if we can help each other we will but at the same time we will race hard. That is what we do. I know what I have to do and he knows what he has to do. We are going to go out there to do what we do best and try to beat each other but at the same time without trying to kill each other. Hopefully things work out in a good way for both of us.”

    HOW MUCH WILL DRAFTING BE A FACTOR TOMORROW? “Drafting is going to be huge. We already had a little bit of a taste of that in practice and it is going to be huge. I don’t think that the racing is going to be like we have seen in the past in the Xfinity Series the last couple of years because we are going way faster in the straightaway and the corners. I think it will be interesting to see how things play out and the way that we can try to play with air a little bit. We will see how things play out. We are still learning about it.”