Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Toyota Racing MENCS Pocono Post-Qualifying Report

    Toyota Racing MENCS Pocono Post-Qualifying Report

    Toyota Racing Post-Qualifying Report
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Pocono Raceway – June 1, 2019

    TOYOTA STARTING POSITIONS
    1st, William Byron*
    2nd, KYLE BUSCH
    3rd, Clint Bowyer*
    4th, ERIK JONES
    5th, Brad Keselowski*
    6th, DENNY HAMLIN
    20th, MARTIN TRUEX JR
    22nd, MATT DIBENEDETTO
    *non-Toyota driver

    TOYOTA QUOTES

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

    Qualifying Position: 2nd

    Did you have something going on in practice yesterday that was broken or something?

    “No. I think we missed our gaps from first practice to second practice a little bit so we were on the splitter. We got that situation resolved and it felt pretty good.”

    Do you think you’ll get over the frustration of not being able to figure out this package so quickly?

    “I think that we as a team, the 18 team, we’re fast every week. You look at last week and we were fast in practice. We know how to make speed. We know how to make fast race cars. We were fast again this week in five-lap averages, 10-lap averages. Same as last week and same as a majority of the weeks. The problem is when you’re not out front leading laps and you’re back in traffic, it’s hard to pass. It’s a struggle. It’s harder now than it’s been in a long, long time to be able to pass guys and get yourself up to the front and pass the leader for the lead in these green flag situations. Although there’s an argument to be made that Martin (Truex Jr.) can do it, so why can’t the rest of us do it. I guess I’m just not as good as Martin Truex Jr.”

    ERIK JONES, No. 20 DeWalt Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Qualifying Position: 4th

    Do you think strategy calls like two tires, no tires, etc. will help with track position at all?

    “I think so. You look at the last couple of years and some of the times we’ve got really good finishes here have been some strategy calls – pitting before the stage ends, taking two tires at the stage breaks or staying out even at the stage breaks. I think there’s going to be a lot of that. The last couple of years it was a mixed bag of who was doing that and who wasn’t doing it, but I think this year you’re going to get a majority of cars who are probably going to play that game and everybody is going to be on that plan. Fortunately for us, we’re starting really well in the top five there in fourth. I think we did a good job there and we just need to keep it. You can’t give that track position up all day now. It’s just going to be tough to get it back.”

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

    Qualifying Position: 6th

    How are you looking at the race tomorrow now that you’ve qualified?

    “It’s kind of what we expected. We didn’t make a run yesterday, but we’ll be hopefully somewhere in the top 12, 13 there and race from there. Just really want a smooth race from our standpoint. We’ve had blown tires and all kinds of crazy stuff happen. We’ve had blown tires three or four weeks in a row so we’ve got to just – if we have a smooth race, we know we’re going to have a good race so we just hope to have a smooth one here and get back on the train we were on.”

  • TEAM CHEVY AT POCONO 1: Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT POCONO 1: Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    POCONO RACEWAY
    POCONO 400
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF TRANSCRIPT
    JUNE 1, 2019

    WILLIAM BYRON PUTS CAMARO ZL1 ON THE POLE AT POCONO

    LONG POND, PA (June 1, 2019) – William Byron captured the pole for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) Pocono 400 race with a lap of 51.875 seconds, 173.494 mph in his No. 24 Hendrick Autoguard Camaro ZL1. It marked the third pole and eighth top-10 start in the 2019 season for Byron, and his first at Pocono Raceway, known as the ‘Tricky Triangle’.

    It was also the eighth pole for the Camaro ZL1 thus far this year, and the 707th pole for Chevrolet in NASCAR’s premier series.

    Other Team Chevy drivers who qualified in the Top 10 were Kyle Larson, No. 42 Credit One Bank Camaro ZL1 – 7th, Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1 – 8th, and Austin Dillon, No. 3 Dow Camaro ZL1 – 10th.

    Rounding out the top five were Kyle Busch (Toyota) – 2nd, Clint Bowyer (Ford) – 3rd, Erik Jones (Toyota) 4th, and Brad Keselowski (Ford) – 5th.

    FS1 will telecast the Pocono 400 at Pocono Raceway live at 2 p.m. ET Sunday, June 2. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 HENDRICK AUTOGUARD CAMARO ZL1 PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT:

    THIS IS A TRACK THAT HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS TYPICALLY RUNS WELL AT IN THE PAST. WITH THE MOMENTUM THAT SEEMS TO BE ON THE TEAM’S SIDE NOW, DOES THAT GIVE YOU ANY EXTRA BOOST GOING INTO THE RACE?
    “For me, it does. I think just from past experience for myself last year, we had a pretty good run finishing sixth. We had to start from the back, but it will be easier this year starting up front. I feel like our car is hopefully going to maintain the speed that we had in qualifying, which is good. It’s an impound race, so there aren’t a lot of change that we can make and that’s a good thing for us. I feel like we’re in a good spot going into tomorrow.”

    THIS IS YOUR THIRD POLE THIS SEASON AND OF YOUR CAREER. DID YOU DO ANYTHING THIS YEAR TO IMPROVE YOUR QUALIFYING?
    “I don’t really think we did anything different. Our goal at the beginning of the year was to qualify better; that was one of Chad’s (Knaus) goals and one my goals as well because it improves your ability during the race to control your race. Last week was a 600 mile race, so it really didn’t matter where you started. This week, it does matter for pit strategy and things like that. That’s a good thing for us. I feel like we just focused on it and I also feel like single-car qualifying is helping me because that is what I grew up doing with late model and legend car racing. I always had one lap to get it right and I kind of like that. I would say those are the only two differences.”

    WHAT ARE YOU AND YOUR TEAM GOING TO DO TO WORK ON MAKING THE RIGHT ADJUSTMENTS FOR THE RACE?
    “It’s been a little difficult for us throughout the race to get the balance right; that comes from my communication and knowing at the start of the weekend what you’re going to need at the end of the race. I’m really just starting to learn that now because last year was just kind of a dog fight to run well. I think that this year, you can kind of focus on what you’re going to need at the end of the race and that’s what is going to pay off. That is something that we are trying to do; focus on what we are going to need at the end of the race.”

    BEYOND JUST THE DIFFERENCE OF IT BEING AN IMPOUND RACE THIS WEEK, IS THERE ANYTHING ABOUT THIS WEEK THAT MAKES YOU FEEL DIFFERENT ABOUT HOW YOUR CAR WILL RACE FROM THE POLE COMPARED TO LAST WEEK?
    “Last week, I knew qualifying was its own beast I guess because we had a completely different race car for qualifying with it being two days off from practice and it being a non-impound race. This week, I feel like it’s going to translate more. I’m more excited this week because I know what we had in qualifying trim is going to be similar to what we have in race trim. Last week, I knew our car was going to be completely different. That gives me some optimism for tomorrow.”

    YOU HAVE A LOT OF SINGLE LAP SPEED, BUT HOW WAS YOUR CAR HANDLING IN PRACTICE AND WERE YOU ABLE TO DO ANY SIGNIFICANT LONG RUNS?
    “We did a couple long runs, which are usually 10 to 15 laps here. I felt like we were OK; we hoovered around the top ten area. I think we made some good improvements overnight and that showed in qualifying. I think that’s going to translate to the race.”

    KYLE BUSCH WAS SAYING THAT THIS WAS PROBABLY GOING TO BE THE TOUGHEST PLACE TO PASS ALL SEASON LONG. DOES THAT PUT ANY EXTRA EMPHASIS ON HAVING CLEAN AIR TO START THE RACE ON?
    “I think it does, but ultimately how these races are, you are eventually going to be in that 10th to 12th range based on that strategy. You are going to have to have the speed to pass, whether that’s on restarts or not, that’s probably going to be the case. You are going to have to be back in dirty air at some point, but it does help having the number one pit stall and having the ability to use that to your advantage.”

    SOME OF THE GUYS SAID THEY LOST SOME TIME IN TURN ONE. CAN YOU TALK ABOUT YOUR LAP?
    “We were really loose yesterday; we were struggling to make laps at the beginning of practice. We really just worked on the car from there to get it snugged up, but still turning on exit. It’s kind of the typical issues you have, but I think we really nailed the qualifying balance. We progressively got our car better throughout practice, so that kind of gave me some confidence going into qualifying. Once I got through turn three coming to green, I kind of knew what I had and turn one was all about not over-rolling the center. As much speed that we are carrying into the corner now, it’s easy to overshoot the center and carry too much throttle. Once I got off turn one and knew that if I didn’t screw up in turn two, I’d be in pretty good shape. Turn two is relatively smooth and turn three was all about just getting back through the throttle and unwinding the wheel to make the straightaway longer. This place is kind of like a road course in the fact that you’re trying to make the straightaway as long as possible.”

    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 POCONO 1: Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT POCONO 1: Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    POCONO RACEWAY
    POCONO 400
    TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
    JUNE 1, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Autoguard Camaro ZL1
    7th Kyle Larson, No. 42 Credit One Bank Camaro ZL1
    8th Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
    10th Austin Dillon, No. 3 Dow Camaro ZL1
    12th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Camaro ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st William Byron (Chevrolet)
    2nd Kyle Busch (Toyota)
    3rd Clint Bowyer (Ford)
    4th Erik Jones (Toyota)
    5th Brad Keselowski (Ford)

    FS1 will telecast the Pocono 400 at Pocono Raceway live at 2 p.m. ET Sunday, June 2. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 HENDRICK AUTOGUARD CAMARO ZL1 – Pole Winner
    YOU HAVE A CHECK MARK NOW NEXT TO POLE DAY. WHAT DOES THIS TEAM NEED TO FOCUS ON TO PUT THE ENTIRE RACE TOGETHER?
    “It’s all about execution. It’s on me to know what I need throughout the race and I feel like I’m starting to learn a little bit of what it takes during the last 100 laps instead of the first 80, which we’ve been pretty good at. This is great. It’s an impound race, so it’s great to see our speed is there. I’m just really excited. The guys have worked really hard on this 24 car; everybody at Hendrick Motorsports, the engine shop, the chassis shop. It means a lot. I’m excited for it. Like you said, Pole Day has been pretty good for us, so we’ll keep racking those up and hopefully we’ll rack up a better result on race day too.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 CREDIT ONE BANK CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 7th
    DOES IT BOTHER YOU TO HAVE ONE LAP OF QUALIFYING TODAY AND THEN YOU’RE DONE?
    “Well, we could go play golf. There are some really nice courses around here (laughs). Saturday is always a tough practice because the first practice is always so early in the morning that you don’t really learn a whole lot until the last few minutes of it anyway. Not that it’s a waste of time because you always learn something. But, this is a way for the teams to save a lot of money. If we can sacrifice a practice session, I think it’s good for the health of the teams.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 12th
    DO YOU LIKE THIS NEW FORMAT? ARE YOU IN FAVOR OF IT GOING FORWARD?
    ‘Yeah, I love it. I think it’s one of the best things they’ve done. In my opinion, there is no need of rebuilding these cars for qualifying. Just tape them up and go run your lap and be done. I’m sure the same crowd will be up front either way. Why make it hard on everybody to put these cars in full-blown qualifying trim and also cuts time on garage time for these guys, which I think is good.”

    HOW DIFFICULT IS IT TO RACE POCONO ON A SCALE OF 1 TO 10?
    “It’s pretty tough. It was a 10 for me just now. So, hopefully it’s less tomorrow.”

    WHAT MAKES IT SO HARD?
    “Just getting your car driving good everywhere is tough. Each corner is a little different. So, you just try to take your losses in one and be good in the other.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 15th
    “We were slower than we would like since we unloaded. And even when it’s driving well, it’s just a little slow. Hopefully it will race good but we’ll wait and see.”

    DANIEL HEMRIC, NO. 8 KALAHARI RESORTS AND CONVENTIONS CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 23rd
    “I think we’re making strides as a group in what we want to have in the race cars to give us that ability. We’ve still got some work to do and that’s why we’re here. We’ll keep working.”

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 25th
    HOW WAS YOUR RUN TODAY?
    “It was good. We picked up eight-tenths, I think, from our qualifying run in practice; so we’re really happy with that. We had some things kind of get away from us yesterday in practice. Our goal, well at least my goal, was to get in the 52-second range, and we did that. So, we’re improving each week. And, I’m really proud of that. And we continue to grow as a team and I think we’re really close to being where we want to be at short tracks and superspeedways. We have a little bit of room to grow at 1.5-miles, but this is a good start.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 VICTORY JUNCTION CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 26th
    ON HIS QUALIFYING:
    “We were sideways yesterday, so we made good adjustments, but maybe a little too much. But, I think being that it is an impound race, you can kind of get a read off of everybody else’s balances and go from there. But, I think our car was really, really good in race trim yesterday. So, I’m excited about that. But, we always know it’s never the same once you drop the green flag.”

    RYAN PREECE, NO. 47 KROGER CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 29th
    ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN
    “Oh, I mean we were really just too loose. We couldn’t get into the throttle the way we needed to. That’s the big thing.”

    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: Pocono (Bowyer, Keselowski Lead Ford Qualifying at Pocono)

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Pocono (Bowyer, Keselowski Lead Ford Qualifying at Pocono)

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Saturday, June 1, 2019
    EVENT: Pocono 400 MENCS Qualifying

    FORD QUALIFYING RESULTS
    3rd – Clint Bowyer
    5th – Brad Keselowski
    9th – Daniel Suarez
    11th – Kevin Harvick
    13th – Aric Almirola
    14th – Paul Menard
    16th – Joey Logano
    17th – Ryan Blaney
    18th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    19th – Ryan Newman
    27th – David Ragan
    28th – Michael McDowell
    30th – Matt Tifft
    33rd – Corey LaJoie
    34th – Bayley Currey

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 Haas Automation Ford Mustang: Qualified 3rd

    “We were fast. Holy cow that feels fast. It has been a lot of years coming here and I have never rolled through the corners like that. It is hard to convince yourself how much you can get away with and not get too much. You know you have to roll in faster than you did in practice. You know the speeds were up five or six-tenths out there. You can’t get it everywhere but they are holding it down in the tunnel turn which is different than practice. In one they were getting in harder and rolling faster, three they were rolling faster. Eventually you just quit thinking about it and go out there and put your lap together. Our Mustang was fast. I am proud of the guys. A good starting spot is going to be beneficial tomorrow for sure. All hell is going to break loose with this package. Restarts are going to be crazy. Cautions one way or another can throw your day for a loop big time. You just have to be ready for whatever they throw at you.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Wabash National Ford Mustang: Qualified 5th

    “The lap felt fine. It was pretty simple. Almost wide open. Just trying to make the most of what you’ve got.”

    HOW ARE YOU FEELING ABOUT THIS RACE AND THE EFFECT NOT SHIFTING WILL HAVE? “Everybody messes up shifting. It is really hard to do in a stock car. I think the cars are definitely easier to drive here than they were before and that should definitely make it easier on the rookies. Not having to shift makes it easier. The cars went from being very difficult to drive to very easy to drive.”

    IS THERE ANYTHING YOU CAN DO THIS WEEKEND TO PREPARE FOR NEXT YEAR’S DOUBLE-HEADER? “I haven’t really thought about that because we don’t know enough about it to say what it is going to be. Is it going to be two races in the same day in the same car? I saw something yesterday where they talked about running the road course one of the days. I think you can get over your handlebars thinking about next year really easy and forget about what you need to do to be successful this year.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Busch Light Father’s Day Ford Mustang: Qualified 11th

    “We just kind of missed turn one and that set the tone for the lap. I tried to carry too much speed and got the car up the race track a little bit. The rest of the lap was good though.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL YOUR CAR WILL RACE? “Pretty good. It was good in practice yesterday.”

    EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT THE TRACK POSITION GAME TOMORROW: “Yeah, I don’t know. It won’t be easy to pass for sure.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Valley Technical Academy Ford Mustang: Qualified 13th

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE DOUBLE-HEADER RACE WEEKEND HERE NEXT SEASON? “I think it will be cool. I think so many times we leave the race and kind of monday morning quarterback and always wonder what we would do if we had another shot at it. I think that is cool to have that opportunity now to race Saturday and then think about it Saturday night and then do it all over again on Sunday.”

    “The fans will be able to show up here and see a lot more racing and, like you said, it will be much more of an event. You will have the big race on Saturday and then I am sure followed by an infield party and all that stuff they typically do here and then have another event on Sunday. It will make it a big weekend.”

    DOES NOT SHIFTING FOR YOU VETERANS EQUALIZE THE FIELD FOR THE YOUNGER GUYS THAT WOULD MAYBE MAKE MISTAKES? “Yeah, potentially. Shifting was definitely an element that as a rookie when you showed up here was really challenging trying to figure out the down shifts and all those things. When to do it and the timing and all those things. I do feel like just leaving it in fourth gear is a lot more straightforward and self explanatory. I think it is just one more thing in the grand scheme of things that make the cars – I have to be careful how to say this – but it does make the cars slightly less challenging to drive.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford Mustang: Qualified 16th

    “We never made a qualifying run in practice, we were focused on racing good. So we paid the penalty in qualifying and hopefully we get the reward tomorrow.”

    HOW DIFFICULT WILL THAT BE WITH THIS BEING SUCH A HUGE TRACK POSITION RACE? “Yeah, I think it will be a huge track position race for sure. But there are going to be restarts and you have to handle in those situations. I think our Mustang will be able to do that. We have to make the right decisions on the restarts and the right strategy and we will get ourselves up there. If we get there we will be fine, we just have to get up there. It will be a battle. It will be hard fought, but I think we can get there.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Libman Ford Mustang: Qualified 17th

    “We didn’t qualify like we wanted to. We were too free. Hopefully it races better. I thought we were okay yesterday in race trim and just need to be a little better. We will find out tomorrow and see what we’ve got.”

    YOU SEEM LIKE YOU ARE TRYING TO FIGURE IT OUT STILL: “I am just thinking. I got out of the car about one minute ago so I am thinking about my lap and what I could have done better and what I need to do better. There are things – you change a lot of stuff from this weekend format last night that you are keeping in for tomorrow with the impound qualifying. So you wonder if it was the right adjustments, if you went too far or not enough.”

    IS IT HARDER ON THE TEAMS NOT HAVING THAT PRACTICE AFTER QUALIFYING TO MAKE ADJUSTMENTS? “You don’t really change a ton from qualifying to the race. It is just some minor with air pressure and trackbar stuff. I don’t think it makes it tougher on the teams. THe toughest part is just the cars trying to pass tech afterwards.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Wyndham Rewards Ford Mustang: Qualified 19th

    “I didn’t get turn one. I just didn’t hook up in one. I felt like my two and three was decent. It is something to work with our Wyndham Rewards FOrd and a lot of laps to try to gain some track position.”

    IS IT DIFFICULT TRYING TO RELEARN HOW TO RUN THIS PLACE WITH A NEW PACKAGE? “I have been here with several new packages over my career but this is definitely a big learning curve for all of us. Probably the biggest one of the last 18 years that I have been involved. We will just do our best.”

    MATT TIFFT, No. 36 Surface Sunscreen Ford Mustang: Qualified 30th

    “We weren’t very good. We were extremely loose. We had one or two runs in practice we thought were more solid and went back to more of that direction as far as qualifying for today but I think adding the grille tape gained so much front grip that our rear just couldn’t keep up with it and we got too loose.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Pocono Media Availability Transcripts

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Pocono Media Availability Transcripts

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, May 31, 2019
    EVENT: Pocono 400 Media Availability

    DAVID RAGAN, No. 38 ExploriaResorts.com Ford Mustang – YOU HAVE A NEW SPONSOR THIS WEEK. “Yeah, I was there earlier today. I didn’t want to come to the race track. I wanted to hang out by the swimming pool. Exploria Resorts has a lot of properties around destination towns around America and happen to have a few here in the Poconos, so it’s great to have them on our Ford Mustang this weekend. Exploria Resorts also has some in Daytona Beach, Orlando, some places near Bristol around Dollywood and some of the areas in Tennessee, so it’s neat to have a company that has a lot of race fans staying at their places here in the Poconos this weekend for some action, and I was able to visit them this morning and head out for some practice later on today, so it worked out good and I’m happy to be out here at the race track and making some laps.”

    HOW MUCH ARE YOU LIFTING OR BRAKING IN ONE AND THREE AND IS IT DIFFERENT FROM WHAT YOU THOUGHT COMING IN? “It’s pretty similar to what I thought. The teams have so much data and simulation is very, very accurate when you put in engine models and aero maps into a simulator you can pretty much be 95 to 99 percent accurate when you show up – close. I would say that we’re using 50 percent less brakes about everywhere – 250-300 pounds getting into turn one, which is the most, and then 50-100 pounds lightly dragging the brakes into the tunnel turn and turn three. A lot of it will depend on what kind of run you get in traffic, but by yourself that’s pretty consistent. I would say 50-60 percent less than what we had here a year ago.”

    WERE YOU ABLE TO DRIVE IN TRAFFIC IN PRACTICE? “Yeah, a little bit. I got out there around a couple of cars, within five or 10 car lengths. I passed one and somebody passed me and the cars were pretty stable and predictable and I felt like that handling is still very, very important and it’s a good mixture of who can trim their car out to go very fast down the straightaway, but you also have to handle through the corners. If you don’t stay in the throttle, if you don’t drive off of turn three straight and throttled up, you’re gonna pay the price down the whole front straightaway, so it’ll be interesting to see. I know all the crew chiefs and engineers right now are probably burning their computers up trying to figure out that sweet spot to find for final practice and for the race on Sunday.”

    DO YOU MISS SHIFTING AT ALL HERE? “I do a little bit, yeah. It makes it a little bit more interesting, exciting from the driver’s standpoint. I don’t know that from the fans perspective or from a TV perspective you would be able to tell the difference, but from a driver’s perspective I felt like it did give you some more options. If you messed up a corner, you could downshift. If you got through there in clean air, you didn’t have to. It just gave options and drivers do like options. I’m not really sure what NASCAR’s incentive was to prevent us from shifting, but I don’t think you’ll see any of that this weekend.”

    HOW MUCH DOES WEATHER AFFECT YOUR PREPARTION FOR EACH RACE? “I have the Accuweather app and I use it pretty regular and it’s something that we all want to be meteorologists in the garage. I think we definitely pay attention to the temperature, to the amount of sunlight you have on the race track because that dictates the asphalt temperature, which dictates the amount of rubber that’s laid down, so that’s something we pay attention to very closely, and, like I said, every driver, crew chief and engineer is a wannabee meteorologist and with all of the great weather apps you have at your disposal it’s easy to get a lot of information, so I do look at it fairly regular. My wife majored in meteorology and so that is something that we kind of act like that old couple, we’ll sit around and just have the Weather Channel on in the background sometimes and just watch it. We pay attention to it very closely.”

    DID THAT FINISH LAST WEEK GIVE YOUR TEAM A LITTLE MORE PEP? “Anytime you can run well in a race you feel good going into the next weekend. I think we had a better car than a 15th-place car, but the way the scenario worked out at the end that’s where we ended up, but it was encouraging that we did find some speed in our cars. We do have some newer cars at Front Row Motorsports that we’re bringing out over the next three or four weeks into the summer months, based off of things we learned the first third of the season, so it was encouraging that we feel like we’ve got better race cars coming through the pipeline now and anytime you can run well in a big marquee event like the Coca-Cola 600 in our hometown, a track of Charlotte Motor Speedway for our race team, it was a fun race, it was good from my perspective and I don’t know that anything from that week will correlate setup-wise to Pocono, but anytime you can race in the top 10 and get a top 10 or 15 finish that’s good for any team and certainly for Front Row Motorsports.”

    ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 10 Valley Technical Academy Ford Mustang – HOW WAS CHARLOTTE FOR YOU? “It was kind of an up-and-down weekend. We qualified really well and ran up front for the first little bit and then we had a penalty for an uncontrolled tire and got back in traffic and quite honestly we weren’t good enough to recover from getting put back in traffic. We kind of struggled and fought the rest of the day to salvage a respectable finish, but as long as we were up front and in somewhat cleaner air I thought we had a relatively competitively race car.”

    WHAT WOULD YOU SAY ABOUT WHERE SHR IS ON THE 1.5-MILE TRACKS? “I still feel like we have work to do. I think all of us feel that way – all the guys at the shop and all the drivers and crew guys. It’s a work in progress. We’re finding speed and we’re qualifying really well and we’re making our race cars go fast, but then there’s the whole other element, which is really important and it’s race-ability in the car, so we’re just trying to work through that and make our cars race better in traffic and all the situations that we get put in the race. There’s more work to do.”

    IS IT A COMBINATION OF IDENTIFYING WHAT THE CAR NEEDS MORE QUICKLY OR JUST A STRUGGLE WITH LITTLE THINGS THAT MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE? “It is a lot of different things. I feel like as this sport has evolved and as the tech process has continued to improve and get everybody in a smaller box you’re not finding huge advantages anymore. It’s really about stacking pennies and so we’ve done a really good job of that in year’s past. Last year was an incredible year for Stewart-Haas Racing and I felt like we had a pretty good handle on what we needed each and every weekend we showed up to the track, and now we’re showing up to the race tracks and still just kind of open-minded and not 100 percent certain when we get to the race track and we unload on what exactly our balance is gonna be.”

    WHAT IMPACT DO THE CHANGES IN PRACTICE AND QUALIFYING HERE HAVE ON YOU GUYS? “I think it certainly is different. When we used to we would show up and just get ready for qualifying on Friday. You’d qualify Friday evening and then Saturday really focus hard on race trim and then come up with a game plan Saturday night to get ready for the race. Now, that’s obviously different. We’ve got two practices on Friday and they’re short. For as big as the race track is and for as long as it takes us to get around here to get back into the pits to work on our car you don’t actually get a lot of laps on the race track in these short 50-minute practices. And then on top of that you’re trying to get in a qualifying run and just trying to make one qualifying run takes about 10 minutes out of your practice, so now a 50-minute practice is only 40, so it is challenging to get the amount of laps on the race track and come up with a plan to get ready for the race in just a short amount of time for that impound qualifying on Saturday.”

    HOW WILL THE NEW PACKAGE IMPACT RACING AND RESTARTS HERE? “I think if you’ve watched any of the previous races you’ve seen that the restarts are pretty wild and crazy, and Pocono has always been a place – even with the old package – that has really led itself to having crazy restarts. The front straightaway is long and very wide and then trying to get off turn one and down the short chute there down Long Pond it’s the same thing. It’s just wild and crazy, so I think you’ll see more of the same. I think we’ll be four, five-wide, drafting, running into each other and trying to get positions on restarts because that’s when all the action happens.”

    DOES SOMETHING NEED TO BE DONE ABOUT LAPPED CARS GETTING IN THE WAY? “Every race car on the race track deserves to be out there and they’re as much a part of the show as anybody else, but what you don’t want is you don’t want those cars that are multiple laps down and not really in the race in a lead lap position to have an affect on that race. You want those cars to really battle it out amongst themselves and you don’t want those cars to really interfere or impede in that race, and when that happens I feel like that’s when the guys on the lead lap really get upset and frustrated because sometimes those guys are racing on a lap all by themselves. They could be six or seven laps down not really racing anybody because there’s nobody even on the same lap as them, but yet they could hold a lead lap car up for a lap or two and the next thing you know the guy that they’re racing for position has caught them and got around them or something of that nature and that’s really frustrating.”

    IT SEEMS THERE HAVE BEEN SOME EXTRA LAPS UNDER CAUTION. HAVE YOU NOTICED THAT AND DOES IT AFFECT YOU? “It doesn’t have any affect on me other than we’re just slowing the progress of the racing down, but I have noticed that. I’ve noticed that the lineup has been a challenge, especially if just a few cars had pitted and the caution comes out. That has been a challenge for NASCAR and the guys in the tower to figure out how to get the lineup correct.”

    WHAT IS YOUR THOUGHT ABOUT MICHIGAN NEXT WEEK WITH THIS PACKAGE? “My initial thought is it’s gonna be like driving slot cars around there. We’re gonna be wide-open, really, really fast and doing a tremendous amount of drafting. I just hope that the race track gets wide enough for us to put on a great show for the fans and everybody. That track has notoriously been kind of a one lane race track, so hopefully we can get it widened out to two-and-a-half, three lanes to where we can put on a great show. I know the straightaways and the restarts are gonna be crazy. Those straightaways are extremely wide, so there’s gonna be a lot of bold, aggressive moves, but then you’ve got to funnel back down to hopefully more than one lane.”

    CAN YOU FLAT-FOOT IT AROUND THERE? “I don’t know because we haven’t been there yet, but I’m gonna assume yes.”

    NEXT YEAR THERE WILL BE A DOUBLEHEADER HERE. CAN YOU IMAGINE THAT? “Yeah, I’m excited. I think that’ll be fun to show up here and do some practicing and qualify and then race on Saturday, and then sleep it off and think about, ‘Man, what did we good? What did we do bad? What do we need to improve on?’ And then go do it again and try to make improvements to your race car for the race on Sunday. So often we Monday morning quarterback and think, ‘Man, if we could just run that race over again and we did x, y, or z, we would have been better.’ Well, now we’ve got that opportunity.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Menards/Libman Ford Mustang – HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT POCONO? “We always talk about the same thing every year, it’s hard to get your car working good in every corner. That’s the main thing and just trying to get it well-balanced, and it’s hard to do. Today, I’m one way in turn one and I’m another way in turn three, so it’s kind of hard to work on. You have to compromise a lot, so that part is tough. Figuring out a new package takes a little bit to kind of get rolling, but once you get rolling it’s fine.”

    HOW ABOUT SOME PERSPECTIVE ON LAST WEEK FROM CHARLOTTE? “I thought our cars were really good. We didn’t qualify great on Thursday, but we practiced great Saturday and our race car was really good. We had to come from 19th to get up there and got the lead at one point and I thought our car was easily a top-three car all night. We were racing hard with the 19 and 22 there at the end and I felt like if we could have got the lead at that point I thought I was the best car at that point, but I just couldn’t get around them. That’s the way things go, and then we had a reoccurring issue, something we’re working on, but I thought our cars were pretty strong Obviously, there are things we need to work on, but I feel like our company right now is top-two. I think us and Gibbs are really strong. All of the teams are always getting better. Hendrick is great. Haas cars are getting to where they need to be, but I like the direction our company is going, we just have to keep working.”

    WHAT IS YOUR THOUGHT ON LAPPED CARS THAT ARE A LAP OR MORE DOWN. THEY HAVE CAUSED SOME HEADACHES FOR LEADERS. ARE WE AT A POINT WHERE SOMEBODY NEEDS TO ADDRESS THAT A LITTLE BIT? “I don’t want to say anything bad. There are some that are worse than others. I’d say there are probably three pretty bad ones, and I know their cars aren’t the best. Their cars are off the pace, but leaders usually expect somebody to pick a lane and stay there. When you’re coming a second faster a lap and you catch them at that wrong point to where they’re just getting in the corner, 20 car lengths in front of you, and they’re going on the bottom and they slide up to the fourth lane that’s what really frustrates you. I got mad at somebody last week for doing that. Just pick a lane and I’ll find a way around you. When you cross four lanes of track in one corner that’s a problem, and I just don’t know where you’re going. It’s hard to get mad at them. They’re not having fun either doing that, so you’ve got to think if you’re in their shoes, but at least try to be as respectable the best you can and just stay on the bottom, stay on the top or stay in the middle – just pick a radius around the corner and stay there. It’ll make it a lot easier.”

    DO YOU FEEL ANY EXTRA PRESSURE TO GET A WIN? “Not really. Any given week I feel like any team can with the race – us, Gibbs, Hendrick, Haas – there are a couple others in there that have moments. The Ganassi cars come from Gibbs, but I don’t feel pressure. You just go out and do your best. That’s kind of the last thing I worry about. I just worry about not having problems at the race. We’ve had so many weeks where we’ve had problems throughout the race and promising runs just go down the drain. We’ve got to fix some issues and try to clean up some things. That’s the main focus and then the other stuff will come. The wins will come if you clean up that side of it. The speed is there and the team potential is there, it’s just a matter of kind of sorting some things out that we need to and just having some smooth races. Once you get that fixed up, then everything seems to come together. Nothing is coming together right now. We’ve got most of it, but the last little quarter is just not working.”

    HOW ARE YOU WHEN THAT HAPPENS? DO YOU POUND ON THE TABLE OR ANYTING LIKE THAT? “I get upset. I get upset on the radio and things like that. Honestly, I wish I didn’t get as upset as I do on the radio. That’s something I work on but it’s frustrating at times. Honestly, you try to forget about it the best you can – like right away you have to reload and reset and when something wrong does happen you just have to say, ‘OK, there’s nothing I can do about it now, at least not in the current moment, so let’s just try to figure out how to get better.’ But it frustrated you when it keeps happening over and over again and you just learn that everyone makes mistakes and things happen and that’s just our sport. I make mistakes. I hit the fence sometimes, so things just happen. You can’t really let it bug you too much. It’s something I’ve tried to get better at, not letting things kind of irritate me when things do go wrong of getting as upset and kind of in your mind thinks of what went wrong instead of it went wrong how do you overcome it. It’s something you get better at hopefully as you kind of get older and grow up a little bit.”

    ARE YOU GAINING GROUND ON YOUR ISSUES? “No, there’s no change that we’ve made. You just realize it. We’ve had a bunch of talks this week, myself and Jeremy and some other people just about personal stuff and trying to figure out how to be better behind the wheel and be a better leader. All of that stuff will hopefully come together. You’re constantly working on it, but it’s kind of a priority of mine because the last month or so it hasn’t been to my liking just personally. It’s not anyone on the team, but just personally and that’s something I’ve tried to get better at and hopefully we’ve got to make strides.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT A DOUBLEHEADER HERE NEXT YEAR? “I don’t know. I don’t know what the schedule will be like. Are we bringing two cars? They haven’t told us any of that. We’ve been trying to figure it out, hopefully soon we’ll figure it out so we can figure out what to do. I think it will be neat. I think it will be interesting. I’m curious to see what the race lengths are. I’ve got to think that they won’t be as long. This race is a 400-miler now, so maybe it’s a 300 or two 250s, so that will be interesting to see. I think it’s a good idea, a doubleheader weekend is cool. I think the XFINITY and Trucks are with us as well, so that’s a lot of racing going on. You get to see two races in one day, so that’s really cool. Hopefully, the fans will enjoy that. It’s a unique thing that I thought was intriguing about the new schedule.”

    HOW ARE YOU LOOKING AT MICHIGAN? “I don’t know. It’ll be a truck race. I don’t really know. That will be a lot different. Teams have been balancing out drag versus downforce and you hear guys talk about, ‘I think these guys have less drag, but they don’t handle as well,’ and ‘these guys have more downforce, but more drag.’ That place is gonna almost be a superspeedway. That place is so big, so smooth, so fast you’re just gonna want to knock all the drag out of it you can. I feel like that’s the direction everyone is gonna go, so that will be a little different race than what we’re used to. I see us running wide-open around there for a long time. I think that will look more like a truck race than anything else just because of the race track. Everywhere else this year I haven’ t really associated with truck racing. I raced trucks for a long time, so I think Michigan would kind of be like a truck race. I think they put on a good show there, so I just hope for a good show. That’s all you want to do is put on a good race for the fans and hopefully the cars are raceable and you’re able to make cool moves around people. That’s all I really hope for when I go to a place like that.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Wyndham Rewards Ford Mustang – WHAT WAS CHARLOTTE LIKE FOR YOU FROM A DRAFTING STANDPOINT? “We had a much more competitive Ford last week than we’ve had in the past to be able to do that. We still have a lot of gains to make, but, overall, the racing at Charlotte I thought was fairly good. You get a restart like that at the end when you’re four-wide coming off of turn two with five to go, you really can’t complain about the racing.”

    WHAT ABOUT MICHIGAN NEXT WEEK? “I don’t know. I think we’re all learning as we go. I think this weekend is an opportunity to learn and apply towards Michigan just because of the speeds and the banking and the type of racing that we have here. We get into the start of this summer stretch where you have a couple of Michigans and a couple Poconos and an Indianapolis, so you spend a lot of time on two and two-and-a-half mile race tracks and this is kind of our first real experience with that with this package, so outside of Fontana when everything was so new that I don’t think anybody besides the 18 knew.”

    DO YOU FEEL ANY ADDED PRESSURE TO DO WELL AT MICHIGAN WITH ROUSH HAVING SO MUCH SUCCESS THERE? “I quit feeling pressure a long time ago. Pressure is in bombs. It blows things up and it doesn’t make anything any better. Confidence is more important to me than pressure and confidence is knowing that you have an organization behind you that has a lot of experience and knowledge and has been there. That’s much better than having an organization that has never been or maybe never was and probably won’t be, so that confidence is way more powerful to me.”

    HAVE YOU AND RICKY TALKED A LOT THIS YEAR OR MORE RECENTLY ABOUT THE CARS? “We talk a lot at debriefs and compare notes. He’s got a little different language than I do. Part of that might be from Mississippi. We’re a lot the same in our upbringing being dirt track, open-wheel racers or just open-wheel racers in general, but I think I have a much more technical understanding and background of the car being an engineer, having an engineer mindset, and he doesn’t have that. So for me it’s about understanding his vocabulary, understanding his perspective and watching him work with Brian Pattie to understand what Scott and I can do to be better, or what Scott and I can do to help them be better because that in turn will make us better. I think it’s been a good relationship. Ricky and I have always gotten along on and off the race track. As I said before, we have a lot of passion about open-wheel racing. We’re kind of both partners with the same guy for dirt, sprint car racing – him with the winged car and me with the non-winged car, so there are lots of levels of our friendship.”

    WHAT DO YOU HAVE PLANNED FOR THE OFF-WEEKEND? “I think we’re gonna do a trip up to Michigan actually for a little family vacation, spend some time with some friends. That’s the plan as of right now.”

    WHAT WAS YOUR FONDEST MEMORY WITH YOUR DAD? “Just winning for him with him. Probably equally the midget race I won at Salem as much as the Cup race that I won at Michigan on Father’s Day weekend. At Salem we got in a fight over something stupid, which is what fathers and sons do because they’re passionate. I think I ended up lapping all the way up to seventh in the feature and came in and kind of lofted him the trophy and said, ‘Happy Father’s Day.’ That was my way of proving my point. Whether I did or not you have to know me and my dad to understand that. Those moments, I think, whether they’re good or bad or indifferent are ones that are special and Father’s Day or not, something you always remember the rest of your life.”

    COREY LAJOIE, No. 32 VisoneRV Ford Mustang – ANY PLANS TOMORROW AFTER QUALIFYING? “I’ll probably take a nap and watch the XFINITY race and see how that thing plays out. My wife is coming up tomorrow morning. Her sister lives up here, so we’ll probably go do something. We like going to the Kalahari. I’m just a big kid, so I’ll go down the water slide and knock little kids out of the way to get in line first (laughing).”

    ARE YOU GOING TO ASK YOUR ENGINEER TO GET EJECTED MORE OFTEN? “Yeah, we’re gonna leave him at home more often (laughing). I guess in his defense if you’re gonna get kicked out, you might as well get kicked out at home so you can watch the race from your couch. He thought about going to the Ferris Wheel and sitting on the Ferris Wheel and taking a picture and sending it to us, but Roy is a great asset to our team. Obviously, I hated losing him there on Thursday because we couldn’t get through tech for a little bit of left-rear toe, but that’s part of the rules. He was helping do fuel mileage from the couch on his computer and they can stay linked in. He just didn’t happen to have his butt on the pit box.”

    SO, HE WAS IN COMMUNICATION? “That’s the thing when they used to throw crew chiefs out back in the day or crew chiefs were suspended they would be hanging out in the driver’s bus or hanging out in the front of the lounge and they never see them. They’re still there. They’re still engaged. They can say they kicked him out and he’s not there, they just have somebody fill in for him but he’s still calling the ultimate shot. It’s not this big secret that he was still sending text messages and sending the Google documents or whatever the software they use to stay in contact with everybody. It’s just part of the deal. He just happened to be watching on the couch and he can drink his own free beer while he’s watching the race.”

    YOU’RE HAPPIER WHEN YOU FINISH 12TH. “Yeah, because when the pay window opened up it doesn’t matter how you get there, when the pay window opened up we were 12th and that feels pretty good. I feel more content and I guess you could put more weight into that 12th than you can at Talladega because people know going to Talladega it’s kind of a crapshoot, but over 600 miles you can’t really back into a 12th-place finish.”

    TY DILLON HAD SOME IDEAS ON HOW TO ENHANCE THE FAN EXPERIENCE. DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEAS? “I read what he said and he has some good ideas. I think maybe the top 25 guys should have cameras. I think a majority of the F1 cars have those halo cameras on every week because it kind of gets old seeing the same narrative, the same guys winning every week. Their cars are just that much superior than the others because there have been only two teams that have won a race that’s not a superspeedway this year, which is Gibbs and Penske. I think it’s a glowing fact that nobody wants to talk about if you don’t drive for one of those two teams, you’re not winning any points races, but that wasn’t the question. How do you make the broadcast better? It would be cool to livestream an in-car camera on your social media platform. That would be another way to monetize things for the drivers as well as the sport as well as improve our social media platforms – give us all the content because that’s all you hear about is content this and content that. There’s lots of things that happen in the back of the pack that TV cameras never see because there aren’t any back there. If they put in-car cameras in all of them, they wouldn’t miss anything. I think we need more visor cameras because those are cool shots – maybe four or five of those. Beyond that, I think we also need to tell a story on how the drivers get fatigued more. People assume we drive around in circles and your heart rate doesn’t get about 100 beats per minute, if they had heart rate monitors and graphs and percentage of body weight lost so they can see with different technology nowadays, that would be pretty cool to put in a broadcast. And there are also stories they can tell on pit road with pit crews that don’t get told a lot, so I think there are different areas where the whole broadcast could probably get a little bit better, but I think for the most part they do a pretty good job.”

    WHAT DO THESE TOP 15 RUNS OF LATE MEAN TO YOU PERSONALLY? “It feels good because nobody expects us to go up there and run in the top 20 on average let alone get up in there and race in the top 15, so to have those couple good days we just put those down in the bank and try to do it again. Those runs aren’t gonna come every week. We know that because we’re a 26th to 28th-place car on speed usually and there’s not really any momentum you can carry from there to here. I was talking to Nate Ryan and I told him we were gonna be 28th to 30th and where were we? We were 30th in practice. I do it every week, so I kind of know where we’re at. You just have to be realistic and check the boxes that we can check and not make any mistakes and if the race plays out in our favor, then we can run 12th and if it doesn’t, then we run 29th.”

    IS IT HARD GOING TO A TRACK KNOWING THAT’S THE CASE? “I’m probably overly realistic sometimes and I get picked at because I’m not optimistic most of the time. I figure we’re a half-second off the pace at Charlotte and if you figure it up we’re gonna be six laps down by the end of the race. That’s what my outlook is. Anything better than that is a gain, but Pocono is a place where downforce is important and obviously horsepower is important. I know we lack a little bit in those areas because we don’t have the A programs and we don’t have any wind tunnel time, so you just go in here and expect to beat the cars you’re supposed to beat and hope you can race against the teams that have a little bit more to work with than us guys do.”

  • TEAM CHEVY AT POCONO 1: Chase Elliott Breakout Session Highlights

    TEAM CHEVY AT POCONO 1: Chase Elliott Breakout Session Highlights

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    POCONO 400
    POCONO RACEWAY
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MAY 31, 2019

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS CAMARO ZL1 – Media Breakout Session Highlights:

    HOW WAS PRACTICE?
    “Practice has been all right. This is a tricky place and all the other rules and everything are different, but I still feel like it still has some Pocono of old tendency, which is nice. I’ve enjoyed racing here and it’s a challenge, for me at least, just putting together one lap and putting it together right, especially for what the stopwatch shows. It’s just hard, for me today, it was just hard to get through each corner properly and show the pace that I felt like we have.”

    DO YOU THINK THE RACE RESULTS LATELY SHOW A TURNAROUND FOR THE HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS TEAM?
    “I hope so. Like I tell people all the time. We get a report card every week. So, if it’s better than last week and better than what we’ve been doing, I guess we’re better.

    “I think we’ve all been running better as a whole. All of us ran in the top 10 last weekend, so yeah, like I said, the results are what they are and either they’re better or they’re worse and they’ve been better lately so I’d like to think we’re in a better direction.”

    AS YOU’VE GOTTEN MORE EXPERIENCE, DO YOU ARE HIGHER IN THE PECKING ORDER AT HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS AND CAN BECOME MORE OF A LEADER?
    “To me, as long as Jimmie (Johnson) is there, Jimmie is always going to be that guy, you know? I’ve won fewer races than he has championships. So, I think as long as he is in the organization, he’s always going to be our leader. And I respect that as everybody else should, too.”

    THE ATTENDANCE NUMBERS HAVE DWINDLED OVER THE LAST COUPLE OF YEARS. DO YOU THINK IT’S JUST ABOUT ADAPTING AND CHANGING TO GET AN INCREASE? THERE WERE SOME GOOD TAKES AND PERSPECTIVES FROM OTHER DRIVERS. WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON HOW IT’S CHANGING AND HOW NASCAR IS ADAPTING TO THE NEW FANS?
    “I don’t have a suggestion. There are people that get paid to make those kinds of decisions. My job is to try to go as fast as possible and be good at what I do, and that’s what I enjoy. I’m going to let somebody else make those decisions and answer those questions because I just don’t feel like it’s my place.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL THE RESTARTS WILL GO? WILL THEY BE CHAOTIC?
    “Yeah, I will definitely say so. It’s just so inviting to get three, four, or five wide down the front straightaway here, so think you’re going to see a lot of that. Giving the advantage, even more, to the people who are on the front row and guys who can get away. Like we’ve seen these past few weeks, I think the people up front and the guy who can get a good restart on the front row, whoever can get free and get clear of the lane, whichever that is and however he does it, is going to be in a great spot. Everybody else is going to be kind of getting jumped on one another and it’s going to be crazy from that standpoint. Just hope you’re in the right lane and your lane rolls. It’s hard to predict what lane is right and what lane is wrong. There are times when the top when really good last week and there were times when the bottom went really good and it’s just circumstances and how someone pushes and doesn’t or whatever. So, you just hope it works out.”

    SO, IT’S NOT JUST ABOUT YOUR MOVES. IT’S ABOUT THE MOVE ANOTHER PERSON MAKES IN ADAPTING TO IT AND IT ALL HAPPENS REALLY FAST, RIGHT?
    “Yeah, it happens quick. A lot of times you make your decision before you even see how things are going to unfold. So really, it’s a guess, I feel like sometimes; especially when you’re further back in that group. So yeah, you just make your decision and live with it and hope it works out.’

    WHAT DO THE TWO SHORTER PRACTICES, IN ONE DAY, DO FOR YOUR PREPARATION?
    “Yeah, I think it’s great. We’re supposed to be the best at what we do and I don’t know why we practice for hours on-end, anyway. So, whatever they want to let us do is great.”

    A LOT OF GUYS SAY THIS IS A DIFFICULT TRACK TO GET USED TO, ESPECIALLY WITH THE NEW PACKAGE. DO YOU LOOK AT IT IN THAT ASPECT AND FIND THE SHORTER PRACTICES TO BE A BIT MORE CHALLENGING?
    “I think it’s good. It just separates the guys who belong and the guys who are good and the guys who aren’t, you know? Again, you have a certain amount of time. Everybody has the same about of time. And, you just make the most of whatever you have and try to get it as good as possible for Sunday.”

    WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH THE NEW 2020 SCHEDULE FEATURING TWO RACES IN ONE WEEKEND AT POCONO?
    “I think it’s good. I support it just to change and to do something different. And, I think this is a good area to try it. It seems like this race brings a good crowd, or one of the two does, so putting them together is probably a good move. And to see something different, why not switch it up?”

    DO YOU THINK WE’LL SEE A POCONO THAT’S ANY DIFFERENT THAN ANY OTHER POCONO? SOME SAY IT WILL BE UNIQUE TO ANY POCONO WE HAVE EVER SEEN. IS THAT OVERKILL?
    “Yeah, that’s a little overkill (laughter). I think it’s still Pocono and I think the guy who gets out front is still going to have a great advantage as he always has. I don’t think tires are going to be a huge advantage so you’ll probably see guys pit this race backwards like we’ve seen here in the past; kind of road-course-style, probably. But aside from that, I think it’ll be Pocono like normal.”

    ARE YOU USING LESS BRAKE OR MORE BRAKE? EVERYBODY SAID JUST VERY LITTLE IN TURNS 2 AND 3 THIS TIME AROUND
    “Yeah, very little. For me, I was lucky. I just by chance happened to drive that Xfinity race last year, which was real similar to what this is. So, it’s very similar to what those cars drove like here, I guess it was this weekend, last year.”

    DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU NEED BRAKE DUCTS HERE?
    ‘No, I don’t think we’re using enough brake to it to matter.”

    DO YOU THINK THAT ADJUSTMENT, GOING FROM THE BRAKE DUCTS TO THE AERO DUCTS INSTEAD, WILL MAKE ANY IMPROVEMENTS TO THE RACE? OR, DO YOU THINK IT WILL BE PRETTY MINIMAL AS FAR AS THAT CHANGE GOES?
    “I think it will be really similar. Again, whether we have a whole lot of downforce or not a lot, the guy in front of you still has more than what you have. So, it’s going to be hard, regardless. So, I just think if it helps, great. But, if it helps, it’s going to help everybody and we’ll kind of all be in the same boat.”

    DO YOU MISS SHIFTING IN ANY WAY AT POCONO?
    “I do. I really liked it a lot. It was a lot of fun. I enjoyed doing it. So, maybe that’ll come back around sometime. We’ve seen it come and go. I wouldn’t be surprised to see it again down the road, but I don’t think it’s going to change the way the race looks or change the race. I feel like we’d all kind of gotten used to it, but it was just an addition I think that was fun for the drivers. I don’t really think it looks any different from the stands or TV, but it was fun for us.”

    DO YOU FEEL LIKE IT MADE IT EASIER TO PASS?
    “No, I don’t think so. It’s just more opportunity to mess up. But, no. Everybody was doing it. So, It’s not like one guy had an advantage over another. Everyone was doing it together. Like I said, I don’t think it’s going to change the way it looks. Like if you didn’t know we weren’t shifting, would you even know we weren’t shifting? Probably not. So, there ya go.”
    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 POCONO 1: Ty Dillon Press Conf. Transcript

    TEAM CHEVY AT POCONO 1: Ty Dillon Press Conf. Transcript

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    POCONO 400
    POCONO RACEWAY
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MAY 31, 2019

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO CAMARO ZL1 met with media and discussed his expectations at Pocono this weekend, his personal future idea changes to grow sport attendance, what the teams might be able to do to plan for the double-header at Pocono in 2020, and more. Full Transcript:

    DO YOU EXPECT TO BE LIFTING THROUGH THE TUNNEL TURN, OR IS THAT A CORNER WHERE THE TEAMS MIGHT GO FLAT-OUT?
    “We were so close to not lifting here with the old package through the Tunnel Turn, which was ridiculously fast. I think it’s going to be pretty wide-open. You can do it in a truck so I’d imagine you cab do it with these cars. I’ll let you know after lap 1. I’m curious to see if we’ll lift all the way out in Turn 3 and then what Turn 1 will be like if we lift all the way out there, too. There’s a possibility of not coming all the way out of the throttle all the way around here, which makes one minor slip or twist of the car have a huge impact over these long straight-aways. If you’re wide-open through any corner, you’re just taking whatever straightaways connect that corner and making them even longer, essentially. So, a mess-up in Turn 1, if you can hold the Tunnel Turn wide-open, gets quadruple-magnified down the straightaway. You’re just going to keep losing spots and keep losing spots. So, the more you’re wide-open, the more you take corners out of a race track.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT QUALIFYING? IT’S GOING TO BE REALLY ORCHESTRATED. AND IT’S LIKE 15 SECONDS APART FROM THE NEXT GROUP. DO YOU HAVE TO KIND OF GET YOUR MIND ABOUT HOW IT’S EXPECTED TO BE BECAUSE IT’S A LITTLE BIT DIFFERENT HERE?
    “I have no clue about that (laughs). You guys (media) are ahead of me. I guess when I go in and see Matt (Borland, crew chief) we’ll talk about it. But, I don’t know. They keep throwing new qualifying ways of approaching it at us. I really liked the beginning of the year. I know a lot of people complained about it, but we all had to do the same system. As a team, we were kind of ahead of it. I felt like as a driver and spotter and crew chief, we had figured out a formula to qualify well. And, our qualifying positions were the best they’d ever been with that old style. Now we went back to single file and we haven’t been performing as well. But, we’ve also been changing some stuff on our car to try to make sure our performance at 1.5-miles have been better. I think our performance at short tracks and super speedways were right up there. We’re a team to be talked about week-in and week-out at those tracks, but obviously we know as a team we have some improvement to make at 1.5-miles. And, the more of these bigger tracks that we go to, the more that we’re kind of honing into it. I think this year we’ve been more productive and more consistent. And that’s just because of a commitment to a driver, a crew chief, and a sponsor. And commitment means consistency. We’ve been able to grow through that. I guess your qualifying question turned into a big question. But, I don’t really know for qualifying. We’ll figure it out.”

    THIS IS MORE OF A GENERAL QUESTION ON THE SPORT ITSELF. THE NUMBER OF FANS THAT YOU SEE AT THESE RACES HAVE KIND OF GONE DOWN IN RESENT YEARS. THERE HAS BEEN TALK ABOUT THAT. BUT, FROM A RACING STANDPOINT, YOU OBVIOUSLY WANT FULL STANDS EVERY WEEK. WHAT’S YOUR TAKE ON BEING A DRIVER IN THAT ATMOSPHERE AND MAYBE WHY THAT MIGHT BE?
    “Yeah, I have a lot of thoughts on it. Obviously it seems as if attendance has gone down; but I go to a lot of different sporting events and I’ve been to a lot of different sporting events in the past three or four years and it’s kind of going down everywhere across the board, not just our sport. I think if you look at Charlotte last week for the 600, we had a great attendance and an amazing race. And viewership has up most of the year this year for our sport. As technology grows, we’ve got to do things different. Sitting still in the stands is just not the way that the world is going to keep going. I think the fact that we’re taking out stands isn’t as bad of a thing as if we can find new ways to bring fans to the track in just a different way. I think we can take out stands and add entertainment decks and change the outlook. I think tracks are doing a good job of adding more motorhome parking for fans. That’s the high-end kind of side, but we need for the college kids to sit by the track, listen to a concert, and watch the race. We need multiple dimensions of entertainment at our sport. We’ve got to get them here, because once they get here, they love our sport. Our sport is incredible. It’s one of the best live sports there is.

    “So, taking out stands doesn’t need to be seen as a negative. We’ve just got to find an approach to keep whether it’s standing room or a party deck or like at Indy where they have, I think it’s the ‘pit’ or something. We need to do that everywhere and not just confine our fans to sitting in the stands. As a young person myself, you go to concerts and parties and people want to move around. They want to see different angles and it’s the way that the mind is kind of growing with the younger ages. You’ve got to be able to entertain them at multiple levels so, if they can move around to different parts of the track and it’s more of an open atmosphere. If I were to rebuild a track, I’d build a short track or a mile-size track with no grandstands, but find a way where the track is viewable from all standing sections, and then find ways to make money in that way. And, I am no track promoter. And this is just a dream of a race car driver, but I think we’ve got to continue to find new ways to entertain. All the tracks are really doing that. Everybody is doing whatever they can within the confinements of contracts and agreements with sponsors and TV. But, I think our sport is being very progressive and we’re going to continue to adapt to that.”

    YOU MENTIONED FINDING NEW WAYS. POCONO IS A PLACE THAT’S TAKING THAT APPROACH WITH NASCAR NEXT YEAR BY ADDING THAT SECOND RACE ON THE SAME WEEKEND. WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THAT? DO YOU THINK THAT’S A POSITIVE FOR THE SPORT? WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT CHOOSING THIS VENUE TO DO THAT?
    “I think it’s awesome. And, I applaud Pocono. I think this track has always been the first to say hey, we’ll take on something new. And, we’ll try something new for the sport. And it’s worked out. And, I think more tracks should be aggressive in approach as far as trying something new. It worked out for Charlotte last year with the Roval. It that was a great race. And, I was running this morning and I know we have a road course here. And that’s an interesting thought if we, way on down the road, did a triangle and then we did a road course the next day and how that would play out. I think the mind split that we have right now of how we’re going to race two days is good entertainment. It’s a good storyline. I think we’ve just got to keep finding new ways to entertain. Our sport doesn’t need to go to the same tracks the same weekends, I think, every weekend every year. I think we’ve got to give new opportunities. I know it’s a promotion thing, but I think we’ve just got to keep finding new ways and not be afraid to make some mistakes or take risks in developing our sport and growing it.”

    WHAT YOU SAID ABOUT THE COLLEGE KIDS AND THE DECKS AND ALL THAT WAS VERY INTERESTING. AS A YOUNG DRIVER, DO YOU FEEL LIKE THAT’S SOMETHING YOU CAN CONTRIBUTE EVEN THOUGH IT’S NOT YOUR AREA OF MAKING DECISIONS. IT SEEMS LIKE YOU HAVE SOME GOOD THOUGHT PROCESSES GOING ON THERE
    “Yeah, it’s been pretty cool. Last year I was on the driver council as a first three years in the series driver. And that was an honor for me to be voted in by my peers. I just try to add that perspective as much as possible. And, I don’t know all the contracts. I don’t know the exact behind-the-scenes things. But, I’m going to share my opinion. And, I think another thing that would be cool for the future of our sport is if we could live stream from inside of every single car. If we had an in-car camera in every single car and each driver could live-stream that view from their social account, I think that would be big. It creates that interaction driver fan instantly. Now we get back to our phones and we go through and see and we can answer questions that they might have seen and we could replay it and go back through it with them. I know that’s kind of a controversy with the TV companies, but that’s something we’ve got to look forward to and there is no reason why we shouldn’t have in-car cameras in every single car these days, and provide more specific information for the specific fan. You can stream every minute of every sport on your phone right now. And the more access we give to a younger crowd, the more we’re going to attract that younger crowd.

    “I heard something the other about baseball. I was watching a Braves game. And their target audience is 50-60, who watch the actual channel on TV. But on their live-streaming app, their target age base has dropped 20 years. It’s 40. So, streaming on your phone has got to be big. You’ve got to use your platforms the way we can. I’m almost 30. I’m getting close to 30. I’m 27. But the younger the kids everyone gets, the more it’s on their phones. It’s AR/VR (technology) and we’ve got to adapt quicker than everybody else and get in these places. We have a sport that we can put people inside the car, and we’ve got to use it. We’ve got to use it to our advantage. We’ve got to use some kind of communication to put a driver communicating to a fan from inside the race car during the race. Whether everybody complains about it or not, it’s going to take us to another level as far as the future goes.”

    IS THERE ANYTHING YOU CAN DO THIS WEEKEND AND IN JULY TO PREPARE YOU FOR THE DOUBLE-HEADER NEXT YEAR? WE DON’T KNOW THE PARTICULARS, BUT CAN YOU TEST CERTAIN PARTS OR PIECES OR MAKE CHANGES QUICKER, JUST TO SEE OR PREPARE FOR WHAT IT COULD BE LIKE NEXT YEAR?
    “I think there might be an amplified focus on well, I guess not Saturday or Sunday, but today until Sunday; day to day, what the car did from say another practice today until the start of the race on Sunday. Just day to day, weather to weather if probably going to be the biggest thing we can pick-up on. Less rubber, more rubber. Those are things that we’ll probably over-analyze this time around to try to prepare for next year.”
    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 POCONO 1: Alex Bowman Press Conf. Transcript

    TEAM CHEVY AT POCONO 1: Alex Bowman Press Conf. Transcript

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    POCONO RACEWAY
    POCONO 400
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MAY 31, 2019

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 met with media to discuss the impact of the changes to the weekend schedule, his confidence level from his consistently strong finishes, the potential effects of the rules package, his perspective on changes to bring more of the younger generation into the sport, and more. Full Transcript:

    THIS WEEKEND IS A DIFFERENT SCHEDULE THAT NASCAR COULD POTENITALLY GO WITH IN THE FUTURE. WHAT DO YOU THINK THAT IMPACT COULD HAVE AND HOW DO YOU THINK TEAMS WILL RESPOND TO IT?
    “It definitely is a lot different for us. It’s kind of like what we do at Talladega. There will be a lot less time to make changes between those two practices and if you’re off, it’s going to be harder and more stressful to get a large amount of changes made between those two practices. I think trying to execute through those practices is probably going to be more critical because of the lack of time to get everything done and get through tech before qualifying. I don’t know what I’m going to do tomorrow. It’s going to be weird basically having the whole day off with just qualifying, so it’s definitely very different.”

    THIS LAST MONTH SEEMS LIKE IT’S BEEN A GREAT MONTH FOR YOU, SPECIFICALLY, AND LAST TIME YOU CAME OUT OF HERE WITH A TOP THREE. DOES THAT GIVE YOU ANY EXTRA CONFIDENCE COMING BACK HERE THIS WEEKEND?
    “Absolutely. I think our cars have been really strong here lately. It’s been a lot of fun going to the race track the last month. I’ve definitely been enjoying that and I’m really proud of everyone at Hendrick Motorsports. All four of our cars have been really strong lately, so that’s been good. Obviously, we had a really strong day at the second race here last year. The package is so different that I don’t think there is much we can really transfer over. I don’t think you’ll be wide open, but it’s going to be very little lifting and not a lot of brakes. Everything is going to be very different. I’m excited to see how it’s going to drive. I like new and different things, so I’m looking forward to that. I’m definitely confident coming in; I’m not sure what we can carry over from last year though.”

    LOOKING AT THE NEXT TWO WEEKS, THERE ARE A LOT OF QUESTION MARKS FOR MICHIGAN AS FAR AS WHAT TO EXPECT. WHAT DO YOU EXPECT FOR THE HIGH SPEEDS AND HIGHER DOWNFORCE?
    “I think it’s going to look somewhat like Kansas. I think Kansas and Michigan are the two tracks that compliment this package the most. I don’t know what the weather is going to be like, but if it’s cool, you’re going to be able to run wide open pretty much the whole race. It’s probably not going to be as double-file as Kansas, just because Kansas has widened out so much more than Michigan has. If you look at the Xfinity race last year with that package, it was a pretty good race I thought. I think it was very interesting how you had to work the air. I’m looking forward to that; I think it’s going to be a really good race for the fans. If there was a place where this package was going to give a desired effect and the closest racing, it’s going to be those two race tracks.”

    DO YOU HAVE ANY PLANS FOR THE OFF WEEKEND?
    “I moved houses the last off weekend and I’m moving my shop this off weekend, so more moving and not a lot of fun. I’ll just be getting the shop moved and prepping for Chili Bowl.”

    QUALIFYING WILL BE MOVING RATHER QUICKLY. IS THAT HARD OR ARE YOU GUYS JUST USE TO WHATEVER THEY GIVE YOU TO DO?
    “You roll up in staging and you’re just in the car ready to go. You go when they tell you. It’s different being single-car qualifying. I think there is a little more pressure and anxiousness just sitting there waiting for the last couple of cars to go before you roll out. You kind of just want to get it over with once you’re in the car. I don’t know if it’s going to be much different. I’m curious to see how it’s going to drive and how close to wide open we can be, but I’m looking forward to it.”

    WHEN YOU ARE SITTING THERE WATCHING AND WAITING, ARE YOU AWARE OF WHAT OTHERS ARE DOING OR ARE YOU TRYING TO FOCUS ONLY ON YOUR OWN DEAL?
    “You can try to look at what others are doing if you have a ‘Fan Vision’ or if your crew chief is talking to you, but once you get in the car, there’s not a whole lot you can see or watch for. Really, you’re not in the car until five to seven cars before you go, so when you’re outside of the car, you’re definitely watching really closely what everyone else is doing.”

    WE JUST HAD TY (DILLON) IN HERE TALKING ABOUT HIS PERSPECTIVE ON WHAT THE SPORT CAN DO TO BRING IN SOME OF THE YOUNGER GENERATION AS FANS. AS A YOUNG PERSON YOURSELF, IS THIS SOMETHING YOU THINK ABOUT AND WAYS TO GROW THE SPORT?
    “To be honest, I’ve kind of just been focused on myself and trying to get running better. I think there are a lot of things that we can say are easy to do, but we also really need to appreciate the fans that we already have and take care of them a lot as well. There’s kind of a fine balance, but what I think is cool about NASCAR is that they are so willing to make changes and always trying to improve the product. Other sports do that somewhat, but not to the extent that NASCAR does. While I might not have any huge ideas, I heard some of Ty (Dillon)’s stuff and it sounded pretty good. I think we have to balance taking care of the fans that we have and make it inviting for new fans, as well. I think NASCAR does a good job of that.”

    TY (DILLON) ALSO MENTIONED THAT POCONO IS A PLACE ON THE CIRCUIT THAT REALLY WANTS TO ADAPT TO CHANGE AND BE IN THE FRONT OF CHANGE. IS THAT SOMETHING YOU’VE NOTICED AND APPRECITE AS WELL?
    “Yeah, for sure. I think this is always a cool race track to come to. The race track alone is unique and different than anywhere else we go, but with the doubleheader we are going to have here next year, that’s going to be pretty neat. I’m excited to learn about how that’s going to work and how that’s going to play out. This is a great place and it’s good to have tracks that are willing to change, as well.”

    GIVEN THE CHANGES TO THE CARS THIS YEAR, WHAT DO YOU EXPECT RESTARTS TO BE LIKE HERE?
    “Restarts here are always interesting anyway, just with how long you have until you get to turn one and how crucial the draft was even without drag on the cars. The draft is just going to be more crucial. You’re going to be four or five wide just like we always have been getting into turn one and then it’s going to all funnel down and narrow out fairly quickly. They are going to be very crucial. This place is hard to pass. Once you get buried in traffic, it’s tough. Restarts are going to be very key; track position is going to be very key. It will be exciting.”
    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.

  • World Wide Technology forms a strategic partnership with Victory Junction and Richard Petty Motorsports

    World Wide Technology forms a strategic partnership with Victory Junction and Richard Petty Motorsports

    Collaboration will commence at the Pocono Raceway with the primary partnership of the No. 43 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 granted to Victory Junction, a camp for children with chronic medical conditions or serious illnesses

    Welcome, N.C. (May 31, 2019)-World Wide Technology (WWT), a market-leading technology solutions provider, in collaboration with Victory Junction, a camp committed to enriching the lives of children with chronic medical conditions and serious illnesses, today announced a special collaboration. Through a leadership donation to Victory Junction made by WWT founder and chairman David Steward and his family, Victory Junction will partner with Darrell “Bubba” Wallace Jr. , driver of the Richard Petty Motorsports (RPM) No. 43 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1.

    Wallace will drive the No. 43 Victory Junction Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 in a select number of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) events in 2019. Victory Junction will retain partner benefits to be used for the benefit of their campers. More importantly, WWT’s support of Victory Junction provides the camp with a profound cause-driven opportunity to raise awareness, and funds for their mission to provide life-changing camp experiences. The relationship also brings exciting opportunities for a key partnership with Wallace and Richard Petty Motorsports.

    From the moment Wallace first spent time at Victory Junction in 2015, the smiles and laughter heard throughout the lush 84 acres in the rolling hills of Randleman, N.C. left an indelible mark and impact on the Mobile, Ala. native.

    “Victory Junction not only gives opportunities to children that have boundaries in their lives – it gives them a chance to be a kid,” said Wallace. “It’s just an incredible place.”

    The Petty family established Victory Junction in honor of Adam Petty. Since opening in 2004, Victory Junction has delivered over 50,000 camp experiences to children and their families, and in celebration of their 15th anniversary season, WWT will leverage its strategic partnership with Wallace and Richard Petty Motorsports to donate to Victory Junction the creation and development of an advertising, fundraising and call-to-action campaign, “Feel Your Heart Race.”

    “I remember when I was a kid, having a lot of fun going out and doing things with my friends, and Victory Junction provides that and gives each child the opportunity to simply be a kid,” said Wallace. “The camp makes these kids feel as special as they truly are. This is a great opportunity for NASCAR fans to support Victory Junction and make every kid feel special – to feel empowered. Fifteen years is a great accomplishment and I want to do my part to help Victory Junction reach another 15 years.”

    “Investments in diversity are critical for the long-term viability and future competitiveness of WWT. The same applies to the sport of racing. As the only African American NASCAR driver in over 40 years, we have been honored to support Bubba Wallace. With the Victory Junction alliance, we will celebrate and enable kids with diverse challenges and perspectives to reach their fullest abilities. ‘What you have done for the least of of them, you have done for me.’ Given our family’s long history with Variety the Children’s Charity, BJC Health System and St. Jude’s, it was an easy decision to get involved with Victory Junction,” Steward said. “Diversity matters. That is why we support Bubba. That is why we support Victory Junction.”

    “NASCAR fans connect with drivers like Bubba and the causes they care about, so we’re excited for this opportunity to partner with Bubba Wallace, WWT and RPM,” Chad Coltrane, Victory Junction president and CEO, said. “Thanks to the generosity of the Steward family and WWT, we’ll be able to share the message of how Victory Junction helps children living with serious illnesses and medical conditions, and how fans can support that mission. We anticipate that other like-minded corporations and foundations will join WWT in the Victory Junction alliance in support of Bubba.”

    “The Steward family is blessed to support Victory Junction and their amazing work empowering kids with serious illnesses,” said David Steward II, Polarity, Ltd CEO. “Given our family’s shared values with Bubba, the Petty family and Victory Junction leadership, this partnership is a natural fit. We are grateful for the opportunity to make a meaningful impact in the lives of the Victory Junction kids and their families. Together, we will show a global audience that diversity in all its forms is important.”

    The partnership with Richard Petty Motorsports will commence at the Pocono (Pa.) Raceway on June 2. The No. 43 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 will feature a colorful Victory Junction paint scheme. Wallace made his Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series debut, and his first appearance as a driver at Richard Petty Motorsports at the 2.5-mile “Tricky Triangle” on June 11, 2017.

    The Pocono Raceway, Mattioli family, and Petty family hold a strong connection. In 2001, Pocono Raceway paid tribute to Adam Petty by re-naming the garage area in his honor. The great-grandson of Lee Petty, grandson of Richard Petty, and son of Kyle Petty, Adam was the only fourth generation athlete to compete in the highest level of his sport.

    The Pocono 400 will be broadcast live on FS1 and FOX Sports GO on Sunday, June 2 at 2:00 p.m. (EST). It will also broadcast live at 1:00 p.m. (EST) on the Motor Racing Network (MRN) and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    About World Wide Technology
    Founded by David L. Steward in 1990, WWT is a technology solution provider with more than $11 billion in annual revenue that provides digital strategy, innovative technology and supply chain solutions to large public and private organizations around the globe. While most companies talk about delivering business and technology outcomes, WWT does it. Based in St. Louis, Missouri, WWT is the largest African American owned business in the US, employs more than 5,000 people and is among the world’s greatest companies to work for as ranked by Glassdoor and Fortune. For more information about World Wide Technology, visit www.wwt.com.

    About Victory Junction
    Victory Junction is a year-round camp for children ages six to 16, with chronic medical conditions or serious illnesses. Co-founded by Kyle Petty and his family in honor of their son Adam, the camp is located in Randleman, North Carolina. Victory Junction exists to provide life-changing camping experiences that are exciting, fun and empowering, in a medically-safe environment, always at no charge to children and their families. Since Victory Junction opened in 2004, through on-site summer and family weekend camps and off-site through the camp’s outreach program, REACH, more than 50,000 camp experiences have been delivered to children and their families. Victory Junction is a member of the SeriousFun Children’s Network and is accredited by the rigorous guidelines of the American Camping Association. To learn more, please visit www.victoryjunction.org.

    About Richard Petty Motorsports
    A performance and marketing driven company, Richard Petty Motorsports (RPM), co-owned by NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty and successful business entrepreneur Andrew Murstein, is one of the most recognized brands in all of motorsports. RPM is the winningest team in NASCAR Cup history with 273 wins and has business partnerships with national and global leaders. Today the race operation fields the famed No. 43 in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series with driver Bubba Wallace. The team is headquartered in Welcome, N.C. and is supported by primary partners United States Air Force and World Wide Technology.

    For additional information, news and the latest updates, please visit www.richardpettymotorsports.com or connect with RPM on Facebook (Richard Petty Motorsports), Twitter (@RPMotorsports) or Instagram (@richardpettymotorsports).

  • Roush Fenway Heads to ‘The Tricky Triangle’ For First Time of 2019

    Roush Fenway Heads to ‘The Tricky Triangle’ For First Time of 2019

    Roush Fenway Racing heads north to the mountains of Pocono, Pennsylvania, as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS) converges on Pocono Raceway for the first of two times in as many months this weekend. RFR has four Cup wins at the track all-time along with 13 runner-up finishes.

    Pocono Raceway

    Sunday, June 2 | 2 p.m. ET

    FS1, MRN, SiriusXM Channel 90

    ·         Ryan Newman, No. 6 Wyndham Rewards Ford Mustang

    ·         Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 17 Fastenal Ford Mustang

    It’s Tricky, it’s Tricky (Tricky) Tricky (Tricky)
    Roush Fenway Racing has run 206 Cup races at ‘The Tricky Triangle’ dating back to 1988. A Roush Fenway Ford has visited victory lane on four occasions in the Cup series, with the first coming in 2005 with Carl Edwards. Kurt Busch followed with a win in the July race of that same year, one of his three victories for Jack Roush in 2005. Three years later, Edwards found winners circle again in 2008, and Greg Biffle carded the organization’s most recent win at the 2.5-mile track back in 2010.

    Runner-Up

    Roush Fenway has finished in the second position 13 times at Pocono with six different drivers. All in all, Roush Fenway has finished first or second 17 times at the triangular track.

    Tale of the Tape

    Overall RFR has 72 top-10 and 45 top-five results at Pocono along with three poles and the four wins. Mark Martin earned back-to-back poles in 1990 and 1991, before capturing his third in 1996.

    Where They Rank

    Coming off the Coca-Cola 600 and a top-five for Ricky Stenhouse Jr., he is 19th in the points standings, just behind teammate Ryan Newman in 18th. Just 13 points separate positions 15-19 in points as the battle for the playoff spots continue into the summer months.

    Roush Fenway Pocono Wins

    2005-1   Edwards               Cup

    2005-2   Busch                    Cup

    2008-2   Edwards               Cup

    2010-2   Biffle                     Cup

    By the Numbers at Pocono Raceway

    Race      Win       T5           T10         Pole       Laps       Led        AvSt      AvFn     Miles

    206         4              45           72           3              37096    1031       17.9        16.5        92740

    6              0              0              0              0              448         0              21.3        20.8        1120

    0              0              0              0              0              0              0              0              0              0

    212         4              45           72           3              37544    1031       18.0        16.6        93860