Category: NASCAR Cup PR

NASCAR Cup Series Press Release

  • Toyota MENCS Charlotte Quotes – Kyle Busch

    Toyota MENCS Charlotte Quotes – Kyle Busch

    Toyota Racing – Kyle Busch
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Charlotte Motor Speedway – May 17, 2019

    Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle Busch was made available to the media in Charlotte:

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

    How did practice go today and what do you think about this new paint scheme for M&M’s?

    “We’re definitely excited to have the opportunity to showcase a new product in the M&M’s family with Hazelnut Spread. Looking forward to having a good weekend here this weekend in the All-Star race and being able to go back to victory lane and win ourselves a million bucks. We started out real rough. Didn’t quite unload off the truck as good as we wanted to, but we’ve made a lot of ground and it made our car a lot better. Not really sure exactly how it stacks up yet with our competition, but we’ll certainly find out tomorrow night.”

    Is there much difference between this All-Star package and the 2019 package?

    “Not much different. You really can’t tell anything with the hood ducts that I’ve noticed. I haven’t noticed anything about them except engine temperatures being hotter. We all are trying to figure out how much grille tape to run and what to do with the frontend settings to mitigate the hot air that comes through the radiator that then comes out of the hood that then goes right into the air intake on top of the hood there and then you’ve got hot cars in front of you as well too when you’re back in traffic. It just keeps heat soaking and getting hotter, so we’re all kind of looking at that right now. As far as the drivability, I’d say the only other thing that I’ve noticed is when you get in the corner and you land and compress and you feel the splitter touch, you don’t feel it stall the splitter as bad and drive you up the race track. You can actually get in the corner, land and compress and the car will still stay turning. I feel like that’s a positive. We’ve got that ridged splitter like we all used to run and then somebody, somewhere thought it was a great idea to have flat splitters and that made racing worse. We’re back to the ridged for a week anyways and so far so good. I’ll have to wait and see what it does in traffic.”

    What are your thoughts on NASCAR using this race for a second-straight year as a research and development tool? Do you like it as a driver?

    “I think it’s fine. I think there’s opportunities during the season that we’ve got a couple of race tracks that are certainly a bit more challenging or difficult to put on good racing or passing, things like that. Charlotte has kind of been that way for the last few years. I don’t know why. Years ago with the CoY cars, I remember guys being able to run the wall, run the top, run the bottom, wherever and it put on a pretty good show. Lately, since we’ve gone to the CoT and then the Gen-6, now it’s kind of mitigated itself just to the bottom being the best way around here. The PJ1, the traction compound, obviously that’s kind of – it’s definitely better to be in it and so it’s making the middle groove faster than the bottom groove. I don’t know if guys will really be able to go to the bottom and out-handle, out-pass a guy that’s running the middle and if you’re in the middle, I think you can protect enough to the outside that you won’t be able to let anybody get to your outside. We’ll see what happens in the race, but certainly it’s quite interesting right now with just practice and not really in the race yet.”

    What about this place has suited you throughout the years and has that changed at all with what NASCAR has done with the PJ1 the last couple of years?

    “I don’t know exactly what suited me. It took me forever to win a Cup race here. I only have one Cup win here. Let’s all remember that. One. Past that, Truck, Xfinity, it’s been really, really good for me. We’ve been fast here. It would certainly be nice to continue to keep up those winning ways in the Cup cars and win another All-Star race here. Win another 600 here. Technically we only come here once a year even though there’s three weekends here. We only come here once a year for points paying wins so that’s kind of a challenge or different. I don’t know what’s allowed me to run well here and win races here. The traction compound the last couple of years has certainly moved and changed and been different. Last year, I remember in practice we first got into it and I think myself and Brad Keselowski both, we both crashed instantly as soon as we got in it and today was a little bit better than that. We’ll see what all transpires here later.”

    With the 2019 package, do you anticipate the Coca-Cola 600 will be more of a physical toll than before?

    “Yes, I think so. I think it will because the stresses that we’ve been putting on ourselves through the corners all this year have been harder. Cars have been faster through the mid-corners, so you’re just creating more centripetal forces and that goes through your body. That’s certainly been higher. The car is relatively – you can hustle it more so you’re up on top of the wheel I feel like a little bit more – just trying to get more out of it. When you’re out front leading and the car’s gripped up and good you can kind of a take a breath. You can kind of take it easy, but whenever you’re trying to run people down or pass people, it gets a bit hairier and crazier. It’s going to be for a long race and a long night with 600 miles over typically running 500.”

    When there’s a big block and potentially more of them in the future, does that start to impact how the field reacts and what everybody else might see?

    “Yes, it does. Guys have had runs. I threw a couple of blocks last weekend. Guys had runs on me, I would turn up on the straightaway to make sure they couldn’t get to my outside. If they wanted to get to my inside, I let them get to my inside because I figured I could run through the corner and get my momentum down the straightaway and be able to clear them on the next straightaway. It’s all relative. You kind of have to play it out and be careful with it. I was almost clear of (Clint) Bowyer, wasn’t sure if I was clear of Bowyer and I pulled up in front of him in practice here and he kind of was like right on my bumper, so it was really close. I cut it close, but it was practice and he let me live. If it was a race – the last lap in the race – I probably would have been turned. You just have to be ready for it. If you’re going to throw a block like I did with Tony Stewart back at Daytona a couple years ago, it could turn ugly. You’ve got to be ready for it. All depends I guess on who’s behind you and how pissed off they are in the moment.”

    Was there a reason you blocked Clint Bowyer in practice earlier?

    “I was trying to pass Clint (Bowyer) and I had a huge run on him down the frontstretch off of (Turn) 4 on the frontstretch and I passed him and I tried to make sure that I cleared him so he didn’t get back to my outside when I got back to 1 and 2 to be able to get back by me. I wanted to see if that move that I made was going to clear him for the lead and then see if I could maintain the lead off of Turn 2.”

    What track configuration do you like better at Charlotte – the oval or the Roval?

    “The oval. The Roval is stupid.”

    What do you see your role as a NASCAR driver to help a community heal after a tragedy?

    “There’s a lot of tragedy in our world each and every day. We’re so thankful and honestly we take it for granted sometimes that the freedoms that we have. We thank, for next weekend especially, the military with Memorial Day weekend, for all the things that they sacrifice and they do for us. But we also have the firefighters, the medics, the ambulance, the policemen, everybody that is out there to help make our world a safer place. Like the Las Vegas thing that happened, the UNCC (University of North Carolina at Charlotte) thing that happened, obviously there’s a lot of risk out there and it’s very unfortunate. We obviously pray for those that have been affected and that have had the losses and we try as a community to help build them up and show them a good time, bring them a good time, allow them a night of not forgetting, but just relaxing and maybe taking their mind off the situation for a few hours.”

    Do you take pride in the way NASCAR handles honoring the military and the national anthem before races?

    “Absolutely. We all are patriotic in our own ways. NASCAR seems to do it probably the best with the NASCAR Salutes program that we’ve had over the course of the last few years with having the ability to have the fallen soldiers on our race cars for Memorial Day weekend. Last year I was fortunate enough to take my soldier’s family to victory lane – the Toth Family with Sergeant Toth. This year I get the opportunity to carry around Sergeant Griffin so I’m really looking forward to that. I met the mom and dad last week being able to do a little reveal of my M&M’s Red, White and Blue paint scheme and also having the Griffin name on top of the windshield. I’m honored to be able to have them as part of our night and it makes it most special when you’re able to take them to victory lane so hopefully we can do that. With what we all do on Memorial Day weekend, I feel like we do it the best.”

    What’s your fondest All-Star race memory from growing up?

    “There’s been a lot of them. I think T-Rex is probably the coolest one for me. I was a huge Jurassic Park fan. I still am to today. Brexton is as well too. We’ve watched all the Jurassic Park movies and Jurassic World movies, so we love that. To see how dominant that car was and how fast that car was and it being with Jeff Gordon, who was my favorite driver growing up as a kid, was pretty cool to watch. I loved that one. Probably one of the biggest heartbreak ones that I remember watching was Gordon and the Chromalusion car ran out of gas going into Turn 1 on the last lap. Mark Martin ended up winning. Another heartbreak moment would have been the year that (Dale) Earnhardt was in the silver car and him and DW (Darrell Waltrip) and Jeff Gordon crashed out of 4 or something like that. Obviously the Davey (Allison) and Kyle Petty sparks flying, that was the first under the lights. There was a lot of cool memories that I remember from the All-Star race. Being pretty cool watching all of those, always dreamed of being able to win an All-Star race. Finally was able to get it done myself and then even so with watching Jeff Gordon be able to win his first race here in the Coca-Cola 600, I’ve always dreamt of being able to win a Coke 600 win and was finally able to accomplish that last year. This is a cool place. It comes on Memorial Day weekend. This was kind of about the brink in the season where you really started to see more night racing. We always kind of had Richmond as a night race and then you’d always look forward to Charlotte being a night race, especially at a mile-and-a-half. Later 90s you got Daytona. That was also a night race. I just like Saturday night racing. I think it’s cool. I think it’s fun. You’re able to have a Sunday off with family and friends. Of course now that I have a son, it’s his birthday so it makes it nice.”

    Does the sport still need a 600-mile race like we have next week?

    “Yes, I think so. Is it a tough race for the drivers? It is a tough race for the drivers. Is it as tough as it once was? Maybe not. Is it (tough) on the cars? No. The cars are way too sophisticated now. I bet you we could probably go 800 maybe even 1000 miles on a race car before you’d start to see problems. It’s just a matter of length and attention span I guess. Some other drivers would probably argue the fact with me that we don’t need a 600-mile race, but it’s tradition. I think it’s history. I think you keep some of those that have been the longer ones that have meant more to our sport over the years like the Daytona 500, the Brickyard 400, the Coca-Cola 600, the Southern 500. Those probably could stay the length that they are and many of the others could probably change. That’s just again, my opinion and you know what I think of opinions.”

    A year from now do you hope to be in the middle of double-duty for Indy or do you feel like the window is closing on that?

    “The window is probably closing. Honestly, I guess if I continue to workout and try to get in shape or stay in shape or get in better shape then I can continue to keep that door open for longer. I’ve been doing all those things. Whether or not the opportunity is ever presented, we’ll see what happens. As of right now, I don’t have any plans.”

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Clint Bowyer Claims All-Star Pole

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Clint Bowyer Claims All-Star Pole

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, May 17, 2019
    EVENT: Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Open Qualifying

    Ford Open Qualifying Results:
    2nd – Michael McDowell
    4th – Daniel Suarez
    5th – Paul Menard
    9th – David Ragan
    13th – Matt Tifft
    15th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    16th – Corey LaJoie

    MICHAEL MCDOWELL, No. 34 Dockside Logistics Ford Mustang – “We have a really fast Ford Mustang. Everybody at Front Row Motorsports did a great job. We brought a new chassis here, a new build, a new spec for us and it’s been fast all day. I’m really excited about tomorrow night. We came up a little bit short there. We wanted the pole, but I’m happy that we’ve made such gains. We knew in practice we had a shot at it, so you’re always hopeful, so I’m really proud of the guys and everybody at the Roush Yates Engine shop and Roush Fenway. We’ve all been working hard and it’s nice when you unroll something new and it works, so that gives us confidence and momentum, not just this weekend but moving forward into the 600 as well. It’s a good step for us. We want to get in the All-Star Race and race for a million bucks. We’ve got a few guys to beat tomorrow night to get there though.”

    DANIEL SUAREZ, No. 41 ARRIS Ford Mustang – “I’m pretty happy. If I wasn’t in the front row, I wanted to be fourth, so I’m happy with it. I feel like the car has been driving OK. It’s not the most comfortable car I’ve ever had, but everyone is in the same boat. Hopefully, we’ll be good tomorrow and have a nice day.” IS THE FIRST STAGE KEY WITH WHERE YOU’RE STARTING? “I’ve been in that position a couple times the last few years and we’ve done a good job of being calm and being smart. We just have to go out there and have fun and kick some butt.”

    PAUL MENARD, No. 21 Menards/Knauf Ford Mustang – HOW WERE THE CARS WITH THIS PACKAGE? “Last week at Kansas I thought the cars raced really well. You still get aero-tight and all that stuff, but you could poke a fender and still make moves and things. Today, I don’t know if it was my car or the heat, it’s a lot hotter obviously than it has been all year, it was really hard to pass and really aero dependent, so we’ll see once the sun goes down how it all shakes out.”

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, May 17, 2019
    EVENT: Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Open Qualifying

    Ford All-Star Qualifying Results:
    1st – Clint Bowyer
    3rd – Kevin Harvick
    6th – Ryan Newman
    9th – Ryan Blaney
    10th – Joey Logano
    13th – Aric Almirola
    14th – Brad Keselowski

    CLINT BOWYER, No. 14 Toco Warranty Ford Mustang – POLE-WINNING PRESS CONFERENCE – “It’s just so challenging. You think about it, we live and die by pit road speeding penalties coming onto the pit road week in and week out. You’re getting the most out of that line, that yellow line. Do not cross that yellow line speeding. Now, tonight, you cross that yellow line going as fast as you possibly can speeding as fast as you possibly can, so drastically different. You go up on top of that building and you watch your peers, you watch yourself, you make mistakes, you watch them make mistakes, you learn and put that in the bank and try to make the best of minimizing those mistakes. In a deal like that it’s so easy to psych yourself out. I walked out there with Austin Dillon and he’s like, ‘Man, I hate this. This is all I’ve thought about all day long.’ I was like, ‘Dude, I’ve been there.’ The more you think about something like that, the more you psych yourself out. I mean, I went over to Bass Pro Shops in between and did some shopping. I got a new fishing rod and got caught up on my outdoor stuff. I’m going on vacation in a couple weeks, got some flip-flops and just kind of chilled out and drove back over here, rolled through Camping World and looked at some motorhomes and daydreamed over there a little bit and then came back over and put your firesuit on and go out there and just kind of put a lap in. Our Fords are extremely fast, frustrated that we haven’t been able to break into victory lane. We’re poised to do that. I’m telling you, the Stewart-Haas cars have been extremely fast. Kevin showed his muscle last week in Kansas, had a mishap and didn’t get his win. We’ve been knocking on the door at Richmond and Bristol and Martinsville. With our 14 car I’m very proud of the job that Buga and everybody has been doing. That was the difference tonight. Tonight was all about going fast and getting the most out of three laps and I do love the aspect that you add that pit crew. It gives them a time to shine. My pit crew has been doing a jam-up job all season long and they were a big part of that. I call that a win. That is a victory. That’s something that’s not just a qualifying lap. It’s a total team effort and that’s why I feel like that’s a victory and everybody has to do their job. You have to have a fast car. We checked that box off. You have to do a great job coming on pit road and getting into the box, getting the most out of that, we checked that box, and those guys laid down a good pit stop, checked that box, and we rolled over here and checked another one off with a trophy, so there’s only one more and that’s to take Marcus’ million bucks and go to the house and have a good time with it.”

    WHAT DO YOU ATTRIBUTE THE POLE TO THE MOST? “That’s what I like about it, it’s a total team effort. It’s not any one of those things, it’s all of them. It’s a fast hot-rod on the race track. We were definitely fast, everybody saw that. The technology that we have today I don’t like it. I love it as a fan. You can sit there, but as a competitor I can just sit there and pick a guy apart and they can you. You’re watching the ghost car. I mean, it’s like, ‘Well, I can’t make that mistake,’ or ‘That’s where he beat me.’ Or this is where I beat him. I don’t like that. I like getting out on the race track and figuring that out the old-fashioned way. Call me old-school or whatever, but you watch those things and everybody saw that our cars are extremely fast and the ghost car and our lap and then I didn’t give up much at all coming onto pit road and getting into the pit box, and then all of a sudden you see the guys it’s their turn to shine, just like I said, and laid down a good pit stop, I got out of the box good and we sat on the pole. That’s a cool team effort and that’s why I was saying, ‘Hey boys, don’t go run off. I know you’re going to get a beer somewhere, but come over here. This is an effort and if they’re gonna want me in victory lane, let’s go over here and take a picture together.’”

    IT’S A 15-LAP SHOOTOUT IN THE FINAL STAGE. WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT STRATEGY? “Today was such a drastic different day that we’ve had. I mean, this is the hottest day by far that we’ve had with this package and it presented its own set of challenges. When you have a package or call it a package or program or whatever we’ve got here, when you have this new form of racing that we have right now, we have always lifted out of the gas. You run around here, you’re unable to run around here wide-open, and when you do that you don’t unlock the locker, you don’t allow the car to free up the way that it has typically standardly always done over the years at a track like this. When that happens you’re asking a lot out of the front tires as you get past the apex of the corner. Them things hold on, hold on, hold on and then you can kind of just feel them start to, ‘I can’t hold on anymore,’ and they start to give up a little more grip, you slip that thing, slide it up the least little bit and then it’s like, ‘Uh oh, boom, boom, boom, boom,’ and it keeps falling off more and more and more. Clean air is a big part of that, having clean air on the front of your race car and that’s why I was so excited about the job we did tonight. We put ourselves in position to take their million bucks tomorrow night and that’s all you can ask for for tonight.”

    DO PEOPLE UNDERESTIMATE HOW CHALLENGING THIS QUALIFYING FORMAT IS? “Yeah. There’s an excitement level. I guess it’s just an appeal to danger. There just is and that’s a dangerous qualifying format. I don’t mean that as a knock, or as a knock that I’m scared of it the least little bit because I’m not. But it also gets the hair on your back raised up and it gets your attention and you’re nervous. It’s fun to be nervous. It is. I think nervous is a healthy thing in competition. If you don’t roll up to the starting grid or the starting line like I grew up racing in motorcycles if you don’t roll up there nervous, something is missing. Tonight, with this qualifying session, you roll up there and you’re nervous. You’re nervous that you could slip up and maybe wreck. You’re nervous that you could slip up and cost yourself a chance at a million bucks. When the stakes are high like this the nerves and tension go up too, and I think that’s where the appeal comes from.”

    DO WE STILL NEED A 600-MILE RACE? “Yeah, absolutely. I wholeheartedly believe that it does. That’s a grueling race, but we’ve been all across the board with it. We’ve had races where it was like, ‘Man, where did it go? It seemed like faster than a normal race,’ and then all of a sudden we’ve had other races where it was maybe strung out or green flag stops or whatever. That’s racing, man. I’ve watched my dirt late models. That’s the thing about us racers is we don’t just race Cup cars. We’re involved in so many different forms of racing. We grew up in different forms of racing, different platforms, different stepping stones in getting to where we are today. We don’t use the benchmark of Sunday afternoon racing on a mile-and-a-half speedway at Charlotte Motor Speedway as the only information that I only ever have towards a direction of what I feel like a good race is. I’m acclimated to racing my whole life. I’m acclimated to racing. As soon as I get out of here I’m going to watch my dirt late model guys race. I’m watching the sprint car guys race. We’re racers. That’s what we do and last night was a hell of a race with the late models. You might roll over into a different track in Iowa and it might be dry, it might be a different circumstance, it might be not the best race you’ve ever seen, but I guess the anticipation and the unknown is what’s always been appealing to me is you don’t know what that 600 miles is gonna give you. You could go out there and sit on the pole of that thing next week and the next thing you know make a mishap get caught speeding on pit road next week and that could be the very difference between winning and losing and putting yourself a lap down and never being able to get that lap back. That’s the crazy thing is when all the different challenges come because of the length of that race, a lot of different things – attrition with your equipment, attrition with your team, communication, any kind of weak link in the chain and you’re out, and that’s why I feel it’s important to have at least one of those long races. I’ve always said it. I’m all for a 24-hour race in our sport. I think it would be totally cool.”

    CAN YOU DO ALL 24? “I would. I really honestly think I could, but I know I could do it with maybe just one other one. I know a lot of those sports car racers would probably think I’m a complete idiot right now, but I honestly think, I would love to try. I might fall asleep halfway through the middle of the night and pile it up in the wall, but I’d try. Maybe a 24-hour race with a break, with a potty break.”

    IT’S BEEN 417 RACES SINCE YOUR LAST POLE. HOW MUCH DOES THAT BUG YOU? “It did, man. I don’t know. Any paycheck I’ve ever had I never got paid on Friday. They never say anything about Friday, but it’s so important to go in and having a successful weekend on Sunday. I’ve tried. It’s not like you don’t try. I talked about it, getting yourself psyched up. I don’t know what it is about me, but I can tell you in a format like this since I was a little kid I would be better at that than I would be at the standardized same thing every week. I feel like I’m a better short track racer than I am on a mile-and-a-half, but I don’t know why. I just am. My dad would tell me, ‘Get your head right. It’s your mind.’ No, I come into a mile-and-a-half thinking I’m gonna win just like on the short track it just doesn’t seem to happen very often, just like a pole. My father reminds me of that as well, so I can’t wait to call him and tell him that it happened. I’m sure he’s watching. He’s probably on his third beer, but excited about tomorrow night. The other thing that pisses me off is when somebody asks you what does a million dollars mean to you? Are you out of your damn mind? It’s a million dollars. That means a million dollars. I don’t care if you’re Warren Buffett or the guy that’s gonna pick up the grandstands after tonight. A million dollars is a million dollars and if you think that it doesn’t mean anything different to me than it does to you, you’re crazy.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang – “I haven’t seen the pit stop part yet, but the driver missed it by a little bit. You’re trying to get so much and it’s just different than what it is when you practice, so you try to go more and it wasn’t there. I just barely missed it. I thought for a minute I was really gonna miss it and then I got really close to making it, but wasn’t quite there. That’s OK. I don’t know where we’ll end up. We didn’t lose a whole bunch of time, but probably a couple seconds worth trying to do it, but didn’t quite make it.”

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Busch Beer Millenial Ford Mustang – PIT ROAD LOOKED SMOOTH. “Yeah, it was just a little bit here and there. I think I could have got a little better in the braking onto pit road was OK, a little better time in the braking and I spun the tires a little bit too much leaving the stall, but in the end you don’t want to make any big mistakes and I think we accomplished that.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – THAT WAS QUITE A PIT STOP. “It’s a lot of fun doing this, a lot of pressure too, but it’s supposed to be hard. That’s part of it.” DID YOU THINK IT WAS PRETTY GOOD? “I couldn’t ask for more. I thought I got in really good and hated that it wasn’t good enough.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 BodyArmor Ford Mustang – “We didn’t even get a practice run at it in practice, so you can’t do that cold turkey. Obviously, I wish I could do it again. I wish I could have practiced it and I would have had a better idea of what I needed to do, but it was so hard to kind of just judge everything. You need a run at it. It just stinks. I wish we could do it again, but hopefully we’ll be able to drive up through there.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Acorns Ford Mustang – “That’s better than what I was last year, and I feel like we’ve got something that will race. It still seems like we’re lacking some raw speed, but I don’t know what the race is gonna bring tomorrow night. We’ll take what we’ve got, tune on it with what we can and what we have to and go from there.”

  • Toyota Racing MENCS All-Star Post-Qualifying Report – 5.17.19

    Toyota Racing MENCS All-Star Post-Qualifying Report – 5.17.19

    Toyota Racing Post-Qualifying Report
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Charlotte Motor Speedway – May 17, 2019

    TOYOTA ALL-STAR RACE STARTING POSITIONS
    1st, Clint Bowyer*
    2nd, KYLE BUSCH
    3rd, Kevin Harvick*
    4th, Austin Dillon*
    5th, MARTIN TRUEX JR.
    7th, ERIK JONES
    12th, DENNY HAMLIN
    *non-Toyota driver

    NOTE: Camry drivers Matt DiBenedetto and Timmy Hill will start 12th and 22nd, respectively, in tomorrow night’s MENCS Open event.

    TOYOTA QUOTES

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

    Qualifying Position: 2nd

    How do you feel about the pit stop that your team pulled off?

    “I thought everything about the lap actually was pretty good. I’m not sure how fast the lap itself was – how fast our car was on the lap. I felt like my progressiveness onto pit road and pit road speed was relatively good and then the braking point and being able to just chatter the tires all the way into the box was really close. Really on the money there. I thought we got all we could get out of it. We’ll see what happens and where it stacks up.”

    MARTIN TRUEX JR, No. 19 Bass Pro Shops/TRACKER ATVs/USO Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Qualifying Position: 5th

    What do you think of your run and how do you think your No. 19 Camry will do tomorrow?

    “It was pretty good. I was happy with everything. We didn’t have any mistakes. We weren’t blistering fast at any aspect. Our lap was a tick slow. Our stop was a tick slower than the 18 (Kyle Busch). You kind of add all that stuff up. Our exit was good, so that’s good. This is just really fun to do. To be able to come down pit road with no speed limit and all that stuff, it’s cool to do once a year. It’s just a lot of fun. It’s a special race and a special event. It’s neat to do something different. I’m happy with how everything has gone today and hopefully we’ve got the Camry dialed in for tomorrow night. I think we’ll be close enough to the front at the start that we can make something happen. We’ll just have to wait and see if we have the car to do it.”

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

    Qualifying Position: 7th

    How was your first experience qualifying for the All-Star race with the live pit stop?

    “It was different. I got a few runs in earlier trying to figure it out. I didn’t know how much you really had to adjust for how much grip it was going to gain and I changed some stuff – brakes settings-wise – so all that kind of together got me in the box pretty slow. Not too bad. We’ll start from there. Obviously we’ll be in the top 10, so that’s a good thing. The Craftsman Camry has got a lot of speed.”

  • TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE 1: ‘All-Star’ Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE 1: ‘All-Star’ Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE
    TEAM CHEVY ‘ALL-STAR’ QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
    MAY 17, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL ‘ALL-STAR’ QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    4th Austin Dillon, No. 3 Dow Camaro ZL1
    8th Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Ally Camaro ZL1
    11th Chase Elliott, No. 9 NAPA Brakes Camaro ZL1
    15th Kurt Busch, No. 1 GEARWRENCH/Monster Camaro ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL ‘ALL-STAR’ QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Clint Bowyer (Ford)
    2nd Kyle Busch (Toyota)
    3rd Kevin Harvick (Ford)
    4th Austin Dillon (Chevrolet)
    5th Martin Truex Jr. (Toyota)

    FS1 will telecast the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway live at 8 p.m. ET Saturday, May 18. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 DOW CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 4th
    YOU GUYS WERE FAST TODAY IN PRACTICE, HOW DO YOU FEEL AFTER THOSE LAPS?
    “It feels really good to back it up. We had a really fast lap by ourselves right there. I am proud of my pit crew for having a solid pit stop, and man, the adrenaline is just flowing right now after hitting pit road with all that speed. It’s an intense situation and you just want to give those guys that pit for you all year, a time to shine, and not slide it so it doesn’t focus on you. But yeah, that was a good overall run for us and if we can hold on to third, that would be awesome.”

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 8th
    TELL US ABOUT YOUR RUN OUT THERE.
    “I got on to pit road really good, got into my pit box really well, and our stop was good. We lacked some speed on track, so that was a bummer. We are struggling a lot with keeping balance in the car and we made some provisions that we knew would slow it down a little in qualifying. So hopefully that will come back to serve us well in the race.”

    CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 NAPA BRAKES CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 11th
    DO YOU FEEL ANYTHING DIFFERENT WITH THIS CAR AND NEW PACKAGE THAN THE CAR YOU HAVE BEEN RACING?
    “No, not really. I think a lot of it is track dependent. Last week, everybody said it was a great race, and that is great. It’s awesome. But I think with this track, the grip level is less and in the corners it’s tighter. Our corners speeds are too high I think to produce what was going on last week. But you know, I think it has the potential to be a good race. And we will see.”
    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 CHARLOTTE 1: ‘Open’ Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE 1: ‘Open’ Qualifying Notes & Quotes

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE
    TEAM CHEVY ‘OPEN’ QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
    MAY 17, 2019

    TOP TEAM CHEVY UNOFFICIAL ‘OPEN’ QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Daniel Hemric, No. 8 Caterpillar/Bass Pro Shops Camaro ZL1
    3rd William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Autoguard Camaro ZL1
    6th Alex Bowman, No. 88 Axalta Camaro ZL1
    7th Kyle Larson, No. 42 Advent Health Camaro ZL1
    8th Chris Buescher, No. 37 Kroger Your Personal Pit Stop Camaro ZL1

    TOP FIVE UNOFFICIAL ‘OPEN’ QUALIFYING RESULTS:
    POS. DRIVER
    1st Daniel Hemric (Chevrolet)
    2nd Michael McDowell (Ford)
    3rd William Byron (Chevrolet)
    4th Daniel Suarez (Ford)
    5th Paul Menard (Ford)

    FS1 will telecast the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway live at 8 p.m. ET Saturday, May 18. Live coverage can also be found on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

    TEAM CHEVY NOTES AND QUOTES:

    DANIEL HEMRIC, NO. 8 CATERPILLAR/BASS PRO SHOPS CAMARO ZL1 – OPEN Qualifying Pole Winner:
    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT YOUR CHANCES TOMORROW NIGHT?
    “I feel good about it. Obviously, having speed with as short as the stages are, hopefully we can lock this Bass Pro Shops Camaro with Caterpillar’s help, the ZL1, in as far as the All-Star goes, but we’ve got to have a solid first stage. I’m proud of these guys. I said on the radio this is the first box checked for the weekend. You’ve got to bring the fastest race car you can, and we’ve done that. Hopefully we can do our jobs tomorrow and do what we need to do to get in the All-Star race and really have some fun.”

    WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 HENDRICK AUTOGUARD CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 3rd in OPEN Qualifying
    DID YOU FEEL GOOD OUT THERE?
    “It was okay. I think as far as the track, the conditions are a lot slicker than what we were expecting, just with the temperature in the track. It’s a handful out there, so I think the Open race will be a handful for sure drive-ability-wise. We were just trying to position ourselves to get a good spot and hopefully get out front and try to drive away and get an easy way into the All-Star race.”

    ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 88 AXALTA CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 6th in OPEN Qualifying
    HOW DIFFERENT DO YOU THINK THE OPEN WILL BE?
    “I think it will be normal with this package. I think it will be interesting and it will be about like it has been everywhere else, with the exception of Kansas.”

    WHAT HAS IT BEEN LIKE WITH THREE- SECOND PLACE FINISHES? HOW DO YOU BALANCE THE FACT THAT YOU GUYS WERE A MILLION MILES FROM SECOND PLACE AWHILE AGO AND NOW YOU’RE FRUSTRATED WHEN YOU DON’T WIN?
    “The first one was cool, the second one was cool, and the third one was frustrating. We’ll try our best to keep improving. If we can continue to capitalize and put ourselves into positions to be up front, then I think we’ll have a shot at winning one. It’s good to be in that position.”

    KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 ADVENT HEALTH CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 7th in OPEN Qualifying
    THOUGHTS ON THE RUN:
    “We improved our time; it looks like we improved by a couple of spots. That’s good.”

    HOW AGGRESSIVE WILL EVERYONE BE RUNNING THE OPEN?
    “It’s always really aggressive. I think the Open is typically a more exciting race than the All-Star Race because guys are going for it just trying to get in. I wish I wasn’t in it, but we will try to be aggressive and get us in.”

    CHRIS BUESCHER, NO. 37 KROGER YOUR PERSONAL PIT STOP CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 8th in OPEN Qualifying
    HOW DID YOU FEEL ABOUT TODAY’S QUALIFYING RUN?
    “It was pretty good to get our Kroger Your Personal Pit Stop Camaro into that second round. I tried to run a little bit higher, but I probably didn’t need to. It’s still a respectable start for the Open and I think we have a good shot in getting into the All-Star Race.”

    DID YOU SEE MUCH OF A DIFFERENCE WITH THE NEW PACKAGE?
    “We haven’t been here with this style of package since this race last year when we tried out the current package, so I can’t say that I have a lot to compare to currently. I don’t remember yesterday very well, so this race last year was a long time ago. We are getting the hang of it. There are definitely some differences.”

    BUBBA WALLACE, NO. 43 WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 10th in OPEN Qualifying
    “Our second practice was not very good at all. Turn 3 and 4 is treacherous under the sun. So, I left a little out there because I expected this thing to take off on us up the hill, but it didn’t. So my guys did a great job from practice to qualifying trim. It’s not much different with these, whatever you want to call them. It hasn’t really changed much for us.”

    TY DILLON, NO. 13 GEICO MILITARY CAMARO ZL1 – Qualified 14th in OPEN Qualifying
    “It’s going to be pretty easy wide-open. It’s going to be a matter of whether you brought a trimmed-out race car, low drag or not. We kind of went on the less downforce, less drag side of it at Kansas and I don’t want to run that again. I don’t know where we’ll end up. Hopefully somewhere in the top six would be good. But, I think we’re going to race really well. I’m really happy with the way the car handled in practice. We ran wide-open for quite some time in practice, so I think that’s going to come in to an advantage tomorrow.”
    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: Harvick, Keselowski, Blaney and Newman Transcripts

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Harvick, Keselowski, Blaney and Newman Transcripts

    Ford Performance Notes and Quotes
    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)
    Friday, May 17, 2019
    EVENT: Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race Media Availability

    KEVIN HARVICK, No. 4 Busch Beer Millenial Ford Mustang – CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE BUSCH ACTIVATION BEHIND THIS PAINT SCHEME? “Obviously, I think as you look at Busch and Mobil 1, but with the Busch brand team they’ve obviously done a great job of activating not only this program, but the Car to Can at Daytona was one of the biggest things they’ve ever done, and who’d have thought that something so ugly would be so popular? But it’s great interaction and it’s been a lot of fun to go through the whole thing and to really see it all rolled out just makes me proud to be a part of a great team of people that have done a great job. I’ve learned a few new words and still don’t really know exactly what they mean, but we’ve had a lot of fun with it and as you go through things like this to poke fun at yourself and not really know what’s going on is part of the fun, so it’s been a great promotion and I never thought looking at it on a piece of paper that it would be something that everybody talked about so much.”

    DOES THE SPORT STILL NEED A 600-MILE RACE? “There are definitely traditions that need to stay and I think that’s one of them. I think as you look at the Coke 600 and you look at the Daytona 500 and the Southern 500, anything past that I would probably say you need to shorten your race.” WHY? “Honestly, it’s a crown jewel race. It’s close to home. Everybody puts a lot of effort into it. Mobil 1 puts a lot of effort into it because it is a 600-mile race and they want to prove that their parts and pieces look better than everybody else’s who doesn’t have Mobil 1 in them. There’s a lot of things to prove and everybody wants to win at Charlotte and the 600 is one of those races that every driver and team in that garage are going to say that they want to win. There’s only three or four races that everybody in the garage is gonna say those are three or four races we can agree on as being our crown jewel races.”

    DO YOU LIKE THE ALL-STAR RACE BEING USED AS ALMOST AND R&D TYPE EVENT THE LAST COUPLE OF YEARS? “It’s a race that you can try some things like that. I wish we had a little bit more on-track time with the parts and pieces that we had on the car to have a little bit of information on the things that are going on. We had a lot of questions that got answered today in practice. If you would have not told me that we had a different splitter and hood ducts on the car, I probably would not have known the difference. It didn’t really affect the handling problems that you have with the car. They still don’t handle as well as they need to behind each other, but it’s not any different than what it was with or without them.”

    HAVE YOU HAD TO EXPLAIN TO KEELAN WHAT THE STUFF MEANS ON YOUR CAR THIS WEEK? “He hasn’t been past the fact that it’s pink. He has just asked me why I’m driving a pink car and why did I agree to that, so I haven’t really pushed it any further than that. He’s got a baseball game and a couple of things to do tomorrow, so he’s not gonna be hanging around all day. As long as we don’t get to a few of the initials on the hood we’ll be in good shape.”

    WHAT IS THE POINT OF EXHAUSTION FOR A DRIVER IN THE 600 AND HAVE THE STAGES AFFECTED THAT? “I think as you look at it, my opinion of whether we should have stages or not is neither hear nor there. We have four stages of the race and there are 70 points on the line, so it’s important. I think as you look at the amount of points that you can gain from winning those stages, stages are important. You need to win stages and we did well last week in winning a stage and getting a bonus point and finishing second in the second stage. From there, whatever happens is kind of icing on the cake from a points standpoint just because of the fact that you’ve had a good part to the night. You add a third part to that with a third stage and it’s that much more important, so there are a lot of points on the line. Last year, we blew a tire and never even made it to the end of the first stage and Kyle won everything and gained 70 points on us in one night. That’s more than any other race by 10, so if you have a perfect night.”

    WHAT ABOUT THE PHYSICAL EXHAUSTION? “It just depends on how hot it is. If it’s gonna be as hot as they forecast it to be, it’ll be a long day. But you’re mentally programmed to go 500 miles, so your body kind of knows when you’ve done this for a long time it kind of knows that it’s like, ‘Hey, what are we doing here?’ And you mentally have to tell yourself that really when you look at the scoreboard and they tell you you’re halfway done, it’s really not that great of a sign because you know that you have a long ways to go and you already feel like you’ve gone a long ways. So for us it’s a little bit different mental preparation in order to keep yourself from being wore out 400 or 500 miles in and make sure that you’re ready for the last 100 miles that are extra.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE WAY NASCAR IS SO PATRIOTIC? “As a sport we do it better than any other sport. I think that’s one thing and for us we do, and Charlotte Motor Speedway does a great job on Memorial Day to showcase the military and how much appreciation we have for it, but this isn’t something that just happens one weekend a year for us. This happens every single week. The amount of support that is here for our military and the appreciation for our military and the things that they do shows up every single week at a NASCAR race. There isn’t a sport that does it as good.”

    DID YOU FEEL LAST WEEK WAS THE BEST CAR YOU’VE HAD THIS SEASON? “It was the best weekend that we’ve had on a mile-and-a-half race track. I think as you look at the performance of the car, we lost a little bit of the handling at the end of Stage 2. I felt like we were better than we were at the end of the final stage to just take off and lead. I look at things as if you’re going to have a chance to win, you have to lead laps and you have to have speed. To me, that’s the first step and we’ll figure out how to make it handle better than it did there in the latter part of the race. Once we had the debris on the splitter, that was a great lesson for everybody. You hear us talk about the sensitivity to the front of the cars, but we went from 12 laps wide open to not being able to make the corner because of a piece of windshield tear off on the splitter and wrapped around the splitter. For us, at that point, we kind of were chasing out tail. We had to put a set of tires on, didn’t have any tires at the end, restarted on the bottom and just kind of treaded water there at the end once we got our lap back. But speed-wise and the way that the weekend went, we’ll figure the rest of it out. You have to be able to lead laps to consistently win these races.”

    WHAT IS THE MOST DIFFICULT PART OF THIS TRACK TO NEGOTIATE AND WHERE DO YOU GET THROUGH IT THE BEST? “The only thing the same from the 1960s here is probably the grandstands and the snack bar up top, but I think as you look at this particular race track, this is a really tough race track to navigate from a handling standpoint because it’s very moody. The sun is as effective on this race track as it is any other race track that we go to. There’s a lot of little bumps that are in the wrong spots to keep your speed up through the corner that you have to navigate well, especially next week – it’s a tough race to handle because you start in the sun light, you go out of the sun light. There are just so many things that change throughout the night and then you add in the traction compound that they’ve put on the race track that wears out as you go through the night, so this is a tough race track to get the handling right on the car and keep it right.”

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang – WHY IS NIGHTTIME THE NEW DAYTIME WHEN IT COMES TO RACING? “I think with all the rules changes this year it has changed the way the cars race, where previously I think the daytime races were a little more hands-on for the drivers. You could probably do a little more with the cars because of the fact the track would get slick and you would have to work all the lanes. Then when we switched to the rules that we have today it’s kind of the opposite of that, where the cars when it’s daytime you can’t really do a lot with them. You’re kind of stuck in the groove that you’re in and at night it widens out and you can run all kinds of different lanes and take advantage of it. I think that’s lending itself for the nighttime races to be some of our best races in the sport.”

    DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE FOR TOMORROW NIGHT IN THE ALL-STAR RACE? “No, not really. I’d like to think that we’ll be really good, but we don’t know.”

    IS THE 600 AT THE TOP OF YOUR LIST NOW IN TERMS OF WINNING A CROWN JEWEL EVENT? “I’d say probably the Daytona 500 is, but the 600 is right behind it. Being able to win in my hometown in Michigan means a lot to me and all of these races I think the 600 the best I’ve finished is third or fourth, but all of them I’ve had an opportunity to win and it just hasn’t come together. And all I know how to do is keep showing up and put the effort in and it will happen for us when it’s time.”

    SHOULD THE ALL-STAR RACE MOVE FROM PLACE TO PLACE? “I don’t think it really matters what I think. I think it matters what the fans think. I think it matters what TV thinks because they’re paying a majority of the bill, so we’ll let those two figure it out.”

    THREE WINS AT KENTUCKY. WHAT MAKES IT SO IMPRESSIVE TO YOU? “Kentucky has been a good place to me. My mom’s side of the family is from just north of there in Ohio and it seems like we always have a lot of family and relatives and cousins and step-cousins and outlaws and in-laws, but it’s good to race in front of them as well. I really enjoy that area and enjoy that track. It’s the first track I got to drive a Cup car at in testing and I’ve just always had an appreciation for it.”

    DO YOU FEEL THE MILE-AND-A-HALF TRACKS ARE PART OF YOUR DNA? “I think to be an elite race car driver and win championships you have to be good at all the tracks. You look at the Playoffs and it consists of all the different track types and you can’t afford to have any weaknesses and the mile-and-a-halves make up the majority of the Playoffs, so you better have that right.”

    HOW HAVE YOU KEPT YOUR TEAM CHALLENGED DURING THE YEAR? “The true answer to that will be on the race track. Everything else is just a guess. My intuition is that last week was a good race for us in a lot of ways. It was good because we kind of out-executed our speed that we had for the majority of the race, and I don’t want to say we stole a win, but we got one where we weren’t the fastest car through execution. With that in mind, I’m really proud of it, but it was really refreshing to hear my car owner, Roger Penske, say that we have to work really hard to not get complacent and to keep pushing because it really starts at the top and him being able to say that and the whole team rallying around the constant need for improvement is a good culture to have.”

    IS THERE ANY DESIRE TO RACE THE INDY 500? “I had a lot of desire to do that a few years back and there was no real opportunity to do it, especially with the Ford, Chevrolet, Honda rivalry of sorts. Now I’ve gotten into a place where it doesn’t look like there’s any solution to that in the near future. I’ve accepted the fact or fate that I’ll just have to watch them on TV, but it would be nice to do and I have a lot of respect for those who have done it and tried to do it as well.”

    WHAT INTRIGUES YOU ABOUT AN INDY CAR? “One hundred and sixty thousand fans and $2 million prize. At the end of the day, those people are there and the fans make the race big. It doesn’t have to be an Indy Car. It could be a Monster Truck. If there were 200,000 fans there, and a $2 million check to win in it, I want to go win it. So with that in mind the fans and the people in that community make it special along with the track and the purse that they put up.”

    CAN YOU DEFINE THE AGGRESSIVENESS OF THE ALL-STAR RACE? “It’s been one of those races that we’ve seen a lot of aggression. The cars play a big role in that and I think we’ve seen that when the cars are a little less developed and the different rules create different incentives for being aggressive and not aggressive, so it’s hard to answer. I think this year if the conditions are right, it could be really a tremendous race where you’ll see a lot of that aggression, but you just never know.”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK THE REASON FOR THAT IS THIS YEAR? “Racing is always changing and that’s maybe the good thing and maybe the bad thing. I could see this year being a fairly aggressive race, maybe more so than year’s past.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT HOW NASCAR HANDLES PATRIOTISM? “I think if you look back to the history of the sport it was founded in the late forties, 1948, and World War II ended in 1945, so you do some quick math and you figure out the guys who formed the sport probably had a role in a lot of those things – natural thrill seekers, natural competitors in some way and connected to the military. To me, it’s only fitting that we have kept that connection for decades since that time period of NASCAR being founded. It’s part of our roots, part of our DNA, along with the moonshine. Patriotism and moonshine that’s a heck of a combination, but it’s one that I think we hold deeply with a lot of pride.”

    HOW WERE YOU PERSONALLY INFLUENCED TO BE SUCH A CHAMPION FOR PATRIOTISM? “First off, I haven’t traveled the whole world, but I’ve seen enough places to know that we’ve got it pretty good here and not everyone else has the same things we have. It’s a great privilege to get to drive a race car for a living, to get to be a part of this sport, whether you’re driving in it or watching it. There are a lot of places in the world that they don’t get to do those things. They don’t have those opportunities and so for that I’m thankful for what our country is, what it stands for that allows us to enjoy these type of events and recognize that it isn’t everywhere and the people that make the sacrifices that are willing to protect our freedoms have helped to make it possible.”

    WHEN YOU HAVE A SOLDIERS NAME ON THE WINDSHIELD HOW DO YOU INTERRACT WITH THOSE FAMILIES? “It’s really humbling. It’s really sad to talk to a wife or a mother or a husband or a father whose lost their spouse or son or daughter – sometimes even a child who has lost their father or mother. That’s very difficult to sometimes understand, so I have a lot of empathy for them and the sacrifice their family has been though and I just want to show them a good time and show them the respect that you would want if you were in their shoes.”

    HOW DOES IT FEEL TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE FOR SOMEONE WITH THE RECOGNITION YOU PROVIDE? “I think that all the time, to be honest. It blows my mind when someone just wants an autograph because I don’t really understand autographs, but it must mean something to that person, but let alone that it means so much to those families for them to come all the way out and drop what they’re doing to see their family member be honored and that they appreciate so much that we do it. That is really cool.”

    DO YOU HAVE A SAY IN WHAT MILITARY NAME GOES ON YOUR WINDSHIELD? “I was able to pick the family, so I think that was really special. I can’t really share the rationale behind it. Honestly, it’s classified, but with that in mind I’m thankful for the family that is there.”

    YOU SAID KANSAS IS THE BELL WEATHER RACE. HOW DO YOU FEEL THINGS ARE RIGHT NOW? “Seeing the speed that I saw in the Hendrick cars I think that was an important development because I don’t think at least we saw that before Kansas. Maybe you could make an argument about a little bit so at Dover, but for them to be as strong as they were at Kansas, I think, was a bit of a moment for them and for our sport. It shows that they’re not gonna have a quiet season.”

    PENSKE AND GIBBS HAVE BEEN ABLE TO EXECUTE. ARE YOU STILL A BIT AHEAD OF THE PACK? “In some ways yes. I would say our teams have the most experience in drivers, crew chiefs, pit crew members and that helps a lot when you have new rules and new things, but right now if I was being honest with you I’d say the Hendrick cars are the fastest cars.”

    RYAN NEWMAN, No. 6 Acorns Ford Mustang – HOW DO YOU APPROACH THE 600? “It’s a totally different race, a totally different mentality. It’ll be a different package, so to speak, but not totally. We’ve been not as competitive as we need to be at mile-and-a-half race tracks, so we’ve got one shot to do some extra testing for the 600, so we need to put a lot of effort into that because it does parlay into a lot of points throughout the rest of the season on those mile-and-a-half style tracks.”

    HOW MUCH IS RFR PREPARING FOR THE 600? “I don’t think we’re preparing for the 600, we’re preparing for what we need to do and do well here at Charlotte. I don’t think we’re thinking about the 600, but come Saturday night when the checkered flag drops we will be.”

    PHYSICALLY IS THE 600 A TOUGH RACE FOR THE DRIVER? “It depends on how good of a job my crew guys do. If it handles well and drives good, then it’s not that big of a deal. One hundred extra miles isn’t the end of the world, but if it’s hot, miserable and you have an ill-handling race car, it is 10 times worse.”

    DO YOU ASK FOR ANYTHING SPECIAL FOR THE 600 IN YOUR CAR? “More grip (laughing). No, you want to make sure you’ve got hydration and you’ve got good cooling, as much cooling as you possibly can. If it’s at all like this weekend it’s gonna be hot and that can distract you quite a bit.”

    HOW MUCH EMPHASIS DOES RFR PUT ON THE 600? “It’s just another race, but it is the Coca-Cola 600. We’ve got a special soldier on the windshield, which means a lot to me personally and overall it’s a big race. It’s the Coke 600. It’s in our backyard. It’s just like for Ford when we go up to Michigan it’s their backyard and it means a little something more.”

    AS A FORMER WINNER OF THE ALL-STAR RACE YOU CAN RUN IT FOR LIFE. DOES THAT TAKE SOME OF THE PRESSURE OFF? “No. It’s nice to be locked in, but it doesn’t make it so that you’re gonna be in victory lane because I’ve only done it once and it’s been a long time. My very first Cup win was the All-Star Race before I ever won a points race. That’s just the rules. They could change that next year.”

    HAVE YOU HAD 600s WHERE YOU’VE STRUGGLED TO GET THROUGH IT? “If you look at 200 laps at any race track that’s an XFINITY race, so it’s two XFINITY races put together and our cars demand a little bit more out of us. They’re a little faster with a little less downforce it seems, so just in general a little bit more of a challenge, so you better have your A-game on.

    WHAT DO THESE TWO WEEKENDS MEAN IN TERMS OF SHOWING PATRIOTISM? “I’ve always said that NASCAR does it better than any other sport. I’m partial, but I do believe that we pay tribute and give thanks and show appreciation and all the things that go into just being responsible as citizens to those soldiers who have done so much for us, giving us this freedom. You’ve heard it left and right, up and down, left and center, it’s all about us as a group just saying thanks on Memorial Day Weekend. To do what we love and have those people on our windshields, potentially their families in the grandstands and all the other members out there that have done so much for us after hundreds of years, it’s an honor to represent not just one but all of them.”

    IS THERE ONE TIME THAT STOOD OUT TO YOU AS BEING MEANINGFUL? “I met a fellow who was a green beret. I was at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. His name is Greg Steube. He came up to me out of the blue in the hallway and he introduced himself and said, ‘Hey, listen, I just want you to know you’re who we fight for.’ I looked at him like, ‘What are you talking about? You’re crazy. You’re just a nut race fan,’ and he is, but he’s also a hero, he’s also a wounded veteran and he’s a hell of a guy. He made me understand that when you make that sacrifice to go across the pond, to go into battle, to take this team of people that you’re led by somebody and you sacrifice your life, you sacrifice all the things that mean something to you in your life that he thinks about somebody like me that he looks up to as a hero when he’s the real hero. He looks up to me and knows that when he’s going into battle he’s fighting for me as an American family member, a guy with a wife and two kids and that model. That’s who he is fighting for and that just hit home with me more than anything else, any other story, any other general or four-star this or 17-star that. He hit it home for me.”

    RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 BodyArmor Ford Mustang – DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU EVER HAVE A HANDLE ON THIS ALL-STAR RACE? “Yes and no. Kind of the only handle you feel like you have on it is kind of looking back on previous All-Star Races when we practiced here in the daytime when it’s hot and what it does at night. It kind of bounces one way you look at what you did and whether it worked or not for night time. That’s the tough part with these day practices and night races with the big temperature drops. It’s not gonna drop a ton, but just the sun getting off the race track is big. You just kind of guess and look back at your notes and hope you make the right decisions.”

    DOES WHAT YOU HAD IN 2018 STILL WORK IN 2019? “Yeah, you can always look at what race track trends do even though the packages are way different. I think the biggest thing is the tires stay fairly similar and the track always does things fairly similar, no matter what the car is – whether in the daytime if you’re hot and slick and you’re loose, what does the track do when it cools down and gets tighter or maybe even gets freer. You just try to look back at your notes. Sometimes you miss it. Sometimes you guess wrong and it kind of throws you for a loop, but you can always kind of go back and just see track history with temperatures and track temp and sun versus night time and things like that.”

    DO YOU FEEL THE TIRES ARE THE MOST CONSTANT FROM YEAR TO YEAR AT THIS POINT? “Tires are changing a lot, but I do feel like they do a good job of telling us if it’s a new compound or we’ve run it somewhere else or run it here before. I didn’t hear about it being any different this weekend, so you figure it’s the same and hope it’s the same we’ve run here in the past and just kind of go off of that. The tire stuff is just like the cars, they’re constantly changing and trying to improve them.”

    DO YOU FEEL THE VHT WILL BE A BIG DIFFERENCE? “I thought it was pretty good in practice. We saw a lot of guys running the middle of one and two and you can feel the grip up there. Three and four it seemed like it didn’t work as good, but it was an option, so, yeah, that VHT stuff sometimes is unpredictable, but I feel like it’s good for us to kind of get up there and run it in practice and try to feel it out. I think it’ll be good. I think even the truckers were running it in practice. They were running the middle and I’m sure they’re gonna run it in the race a lot, whether it’s the middle or the very top even though it’s night time. You’re gonna be able to go up there and use it as a tool, which is what it’s there for.”

    WHAT IS THE ETIQUETTE FOR A MILLION BUCKS? “There is no etiquette. That’s what this race is. It’s a no points race. You’re racing for a lot of money and you do what you have to do. That’s a kind of in the moment thing. You can ask about what would you do and drivers say they have their minds made up, but really until you’re in that situation it’s literally a split-second decision of what you’re gonna do if you’re in that spot. We spend most of our time thinking about things that don’t happen and just kind of imaging the future, but it’s very rare that things you think about days in advance are actually going to go to plan in anything let alone this sport, but you just race really hard. You want to win. Are you going to go out and completely dump a guy and try to hurt him? No, you don’t want to hurt anybody, but you’re gonna race people hard and move them out of the way if you have to, but, like I said, that’s just in the moment stuff.”

    IS IT FAIR TO SAY YOU HAVE NOTHING TO LOSE? “You have a million dollars to use, and, yeah, you have repercussions whenever you lay the bumper to somebody and rough somebody up. You know they’re not gonna be happy with that, but at the same time you have to look back and say would they have done the same thing to me if the positions were swapped and most likely they probably would, no matter who it is, especially in this race. You just kind of deal with that after, but there is stuff to lose. People work really hard on these All-Star Races. It’s a big opportunity for a lot of teams to do well and it’s a great title to have to say you’ve won the All-Star Race.”

    HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOUR FRUSTRATION THIS SEASON? “None right now. Yeah, you’re frustrated in moments that don’t go your way. To be honest with you, the last four races haven’t been very good for us from it’s just not running good, getting caught up in some stuff. Kansas last week was a really big letdown. That’s one of our best tracks and we were just really bad all throughout the race, so that’s frustrating, going to a place where you feel it’s one of your best places and run that bad. You’re like, ‘What the heck is going on? What do we have to do?’ But, you can’t really let that stuff get you down. You can be frustrated about it for that night or the next day, but at the end of the day that doesn’t mean anything to be frustrated days afterward or let it take focus off this weekend. The thing about the past you just kind of figure out what do you need to do different there the next time. You put that in your book and you pull it back out a week in advance of the next time you go there. Yeah, it’s frustrating at times, but you just can’t live being frustrated. That’s no fun way to be, so you have to look for the positives in any result whether they’re good or bad. We’ve had opportunities this year to win some races and it hasn’t worked, but you just try to figure out what you need to do differently.”

    HOW HAVE YOU BEEN ABLE TO LET THIS STUFF GO? “Looking at the bigger picture, I guess. Yeah, it’s great what we do and I love my job and things like that, but at the end of the day you just can’t be mad all the time. That affects your life outside your job and that’s no fun, and then you’re no fun to be around anybody else if you’re a jerk all the time. I think growing up too, as you get older you kind of realize like what is important and things like that. You get fired up. Trust me, I’m probably one of the more firey guys when I put a helmet on and that’s how you should be, but you just can’t let it kind of bleed over into other things. I think just getting older. I used to hold grudges a lot when I was younger and you get a little bit wiser with age and learn to kind of let things go, just figure out solutions instead of dwelling on problems.”

    DO YOU FEEL YOU’RE CAPABLE OF WINNING LIKE BRAD AND JOEY? “Yeah, I think so. You have bad weeks. Kansas was just a bad weekend for us. We were just off, so that part stinks, but I feel like obviously our whole organization is good enough to win races. Brad put on a great show last weekend and was able to win that race, so the speed is still there it’s just about kind of cleaning things up, like I’ve said all year. Our group is great. Our group is fine and they do such a great job, whether it’s the road crew or the over-the-wall guys, they have it all together and it’s just a matter of everything coming together for you, whether it’s throughout 400 miles, 500 miles or 600 miles. That part I’m not worried about, it’s just a matter of me doing my job and just piecing things together.”

    WHAT’S IT BEEN LIKE WITH THIS BOTTLE OF YOUR LIKENESS ON IT? “That’s been cool. That’s neat deal that BodyArmor did around the Charlotte area, giving out some of the Ryan Blaney bottles. I think they produced only like 2000 of them and I got a lot of things on social media last week saying people went in and bought the whole load of them. And more people have gone on social media this week and said they can’t find them because they’re all gone, so that’s neat. Actually, I didn’t know this but I was the first athlete with a specific bottle that BodyArmor has done that was sold to the public, so that made me feel special. They’re such a great company and it’s been cool to grow with them for the past three years and for them to be on the car again this weekend I think it’s very cool that they are getting very involved in the sport and they’re still growing. They’re pretty young. They started up in like 2011 or 2012 and they’re on pace to really give challenges to the other big sports drink companies, so that part is good, but the bottle thing has been really neat and I love to see fans have them.”

    WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THE PATRIOTISM NASCAR SHOWS? “I think it’s second-to-none. I’ve seen it growing up around this sport, coming here for the 600 weekend with dad and you kind of learn more and more about, ‘OK, what are we doing here,’ and you learn the appreciation for everyone who has served and who are currently serving. It really makes you think about how grateful you should be and you get to meet great people along the way, whether it’s the families or things like that. That part is very special to me and whatever we can do to show them a good time and our appreciation for what they’ve done and continue to do that really means a lot for us and hopefully them too. It’s nice to watch it form afar as a kid and now to be a part of it I feel like is even more special.”

    DOES ALL OF TEAM PENSKE AND WOOD BROTHERS RACING COME INTO EACH WEEKEND WITH THE SAME APPROACH OR DIFFERENT AGENDAS? “The same approach. The Penske group and the Wood Brothers car, we all have the same stuff. No one is getting prioritized over there. We all have equal opportunities to run well and win races. I think that’s how it should be. You shouldn’t prioritize a team or a car, but it’s all just hard work that goes into it. We’re all just working together and trying to figure out what’s best for the whole company. We want to run first through fourth every week, so that part has been nice. Honestly, I want to have three wins like Brad does, but you have to figure out how to get there. It’s not because he’s getting something special that I’m not, it’s just they’re doing a really good job and they’re figuring out how to win races. That’s what we’ve got to do.”

    WILL THOSE TEAMS SWITCH TO R&D FOR THE PLAYOFFS? “I don’t think you really see much of that anymore with the benefit of winning now and it helps you throughout the Playoffs. That’s why it was invented. It used to be win and you’re in, but you wouldn’t get any extra bonus points towards the Playoffs so teams would just go into R&D mode. Now, you get so much benefit from winning after your first one throughout the year that it helps you throughout every round of the Playoffs, so you don’t see teams doing that. I’m not saying the R&D is not your best stuff, but you just don’t really see that anymore. No, I don’t really think that’s the case. Even us without a win we’ve kind of tried, I wouldn’t even call it R&D, just kind of new pieces. You choose if you want to run them or not and that’s just a decision by crew chiefs and teams. I know our group doesn’t do that very much. Some others might, but I just think with how great it is to continue to win throughout the year you don’t really see teams going into that mode.”

  • TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE 1: Kurt Busch Breakout Session Highlights

    TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE 1: Kurt Busch Breakout Session Highlights

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MAY 17, 2019

    KURT BUSCH, NO. 1 GEARWRENCH/MONSTER CAMARO ZL1 Media Breakout Session Highlights:

    COULD YOU TELL ANYTHING DIFFERENT FROM PRACTICE?
    “I couldn’t tell much. It felt about the same.”

    WITH THINGS GOING WELL FOR YOU THIS YEAR, IS THERE ANYTHING IN THE WORKS WITH GANASSI FOR THE FUTURE?
    “We haven’t really started any kind of talks, so it’s hard to give an update on anything.”

    IS THE WEATHER GOING TO PLAY ANY FACTORS FROM QUALIFYING IN THE SUN TO RACING UNDER THE LIGHTS?
    “It always does a little bit. It’s a shame we don’t really practice around when we are going to race. We just have to hope to find a balance that we would find in a normal practice session from last year’s notes. Being my first year with Ganassi, we have to sort through a lot to make sure we don’t get too far off on weather conditions.”

    IS IT A WASTE OF TIME TO PRACTICE IN DIFFERENT CONDITIONS?
    “We are a new team together, so we need to be out there and getting those notes. If we were trying to tune in on those last five percent, then yes, it’s tough to do. We have a brand new package with all different types of feels with the splitter and the suspension, so we need to be out there.”

    BEFORE THE SEASON, WE ASKED YOU ABOUT INDIANAIPOLIS AND THE ITCH BEING WITH CHIP. WITH THAT BEING A WEEK AWAY, ARE YOU STARTING TO FEEL THAT A LITTLE MORE?
    “To be honest, just watching the aero package at Indianapolis, it seems like guys are having way more trouble with dirty air and finding the consistency that they are looking for. It gets back again to that top five in IndyCar that are the elite group and they are the ones that are going to have the best feel for the car. How am I going to jump in and be the best I need to be without running more often? I’m definitely gauging a lot off of Fernando Alonso. It’s a lot of newness for that whole program. He is a very experienced driver and I’m very curious as to how that car is going to turn out.”

    THEY’VE TALKED ABOUT MOVING THIS RACE TO OTHER VENUES. ARE YOU UP FOR THAT?
    “Yeah, I feel like the race itself, the energy and excitement, it can go anywhere. I still think it would have that type of feel. This track always seems to race really unique with the temperature changes. Could Bristol put on a good atmosphere and a good feel for an All-Star type of event? Yes. Would there be criticism from the change? Would it be the best fit? I don’t know.”
    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 CHARLOTTE 1: Ross Chastain Breakout Session Highlights

    TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE 1: Ross Chastain Breakout Session Highlights

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MAY 17, 2019

    ROSS CHASTAIN, NO. 15 VIPRACINGEXPERIENCE.COM CAMARO ZL1 Media Breakout Session Highlights:

    HOW ARE THINGS WITH OPPORTUNITIES AND SPONSORSHIP?
    “My dad said I could come back and work the watermelon field any day. We are just plugging along. There is your normal turmoil that every race team goes through. Anyone that says they aren’t, they probably aren’t telling the whole truth. Everything in Niece world is great. Other than that, we are just plugging along and just trying to make the best decisions long-term. We are trying to align ourselves with the best group of people we can.”

    WHAT HAS THIS DONE FOR NIECE? THIRD YEAR IN, I DON’T THINK ANY EXPECTED YOU GUYS TO DO WHAT YOU HAVE DONE. WHAT HAS THE WIN DONE FOR YOUR ORGANIZATION?
    “It has been incredible. I flew straight to New York for a campaign with the Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee up there, so I haven’t been around much. In the post-race interview with our Crew Chief, he mentioned that he didn’t have a 1/16 wrench when he started the team. I thought it would be good to get him and the General Manager two-sets of 1/16 wrenches, put them in a shadow box and put a plaque with the first win. How are we suppose to expect it until you win and know if you can do it? You have to prove it. We all thought we could, but until you do it, you don’t know.”

    HOW IS THE TRUCK WIN DIFFERENT THAN THE XFINITY WIN?
    “I can’t rank one above the other, but I can tell you that I celebrated this one a lot harder. In the truck after the race, I just jumped around because I was so excited. Fast forward to this, no one expected it and it came on so quick at the end of the race. For a second, I didn’t know if I could get him or not, but I was pushing as hard as I could. I was going to make one last attempt on the last lap. I don’t like point racing and I don’t like when people talk about points so much. I can’t rank one above the other, but I celebrated and enjoyed this one a lot more.”
    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 CHARLOTTE 1: Austin Dillon Breakout Session Highlights

    TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE 1: Austin Dillon Breakout Session Highlights

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MAY 17, 2019

    AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 DOW CAMARO ZL1 Media Breakout Session Highlights:

    EVERY WEEK, IT SEEMS LIKE YOU GUYS ARE DEALING WITH A TRACK WITH A NEW RULE CHANGE AND THAT’S NOT GOING TO CHANGE THROUGHOUT THE SUMMER. WHAT DOES IT FEEL LIKE TO BE DEALING WITHOUT A NOTEBOOK WEEK AFTER WEEK?
    “You just have to figure out how to find some consistency in all of it. We all still know what makes the cars go faster. There are only a few things you can do to make them faster, so that’s what we have to focus on. I do think it’s been more of handling track; a lot more people lifting and not running as wide open. The cars aren’t handling great, so you have to work on them and make them drive better. We did a lot of that today and a lot of other cars did too. It was nice to have some speed in practice.”

    WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR IN QUALIFYING TONIGHT?
    “Giving my pit crew a chance to make a good pit stop. I think that’s the biggest thing. Everybody is separated by a couple tenths in qualifying, so the biggest thing is that I don’t want to screw it up and not let my pit crew beat all the other pit crews. I think that is where all the speed is made up. It is more about the pit crew in qualifying and I don’t want to put too much pressure on myself to get a ton of speed and take it out of their hands.”

    IS IT FUN TO GO UP AGAINST SOME OF THE VETERANS IN THE ALL-STAR RACE?
    “We race them every week. I think the biggest thing is cherishing the moment of being in the All-Star Race because the following year you could be out of it if you don’t get a win. I would like to go out there and try to win the million and lock myself in for life. I think Newman is in a really good spot. He didn’t win last year, but he’s won an All-Star Race so he’s locked ind and doesn’t have to run the Open Race. It’s good to win this one. It’s a big race for the year, even though it’s not a points race.”

    OTHER SPORTS HAVE HAD ISSUES WITH PRIDE. WHAT’S YOUR SENSE OF PRIDE AND THE FACT THAT SEEMS TO BE SOMETHING THAT NASCAR DOES TO SHOW PATRIOTISM THROUGHOUT THE SEASON?
    “For me, it’s meeting different military members from all different branches. They love when you stand and hold your hand over your heart for the flag. The only reason I’m allowed to do what I do on the weekends is because of the country that we live in and the people that have lost their lives defending our freedom. I’m proud to stand with my hand right over my heart in front of the flag every time. It’s important to me and my family and I’ve always felt like that was right.”
    
    HOW DOES LAST YEAR’S ALL-STAR RACE COMPARE TO THIS YEAR?
    “I think seeing what this package does. I thought last year’s All-Star Race was a success and we’ve developed a little bit away from the fact that we’ve added more power, we’ve done some different downforce things. Looking back at the race, I thought it was a success. With the hood scoops and the splitters, hopefully that is just a positive approach forward for us all to be able to make us race closer together.

    ANY DIFFERENCE GOING FROM 10 TO 15 LAPS IN THE FINAL STAGE?
    “Your tires really start to wear after 10 laps, so 15 laps is still the area where you have to worry about how they are handling. You have to have a car that handles good for 15 laps to win it.”

    HOW DO YOU FEEL WHERE YOUR TEAM AND RCR IS AT?
    “It’s nice to show speed each week. We have to figure out how to race better each week. The positive thing is that we haven’t had speed in the past, so now we have some speed and we have to figure out how to race with that speed. We do that and we can do some great things. The consistency is what frustrates me. I want to be able to run the top 10 each and every weekend. We haven’t been able to find that consistency. Last week, we were close. We were running 9th to 12th most of the race, but we were just a step behind. Really making smart decisions is key in these new package switches, trying not to be one extreme or the other. We need to have consistent cars so we can find the balance each week.”
    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 CHARLOTTE ALL-STAR: Jimmie Johnson Press Conf. Transcript

    TEAM CHEVY AT CHARLOTTE ALL-STAR: Jimmie Johnson Press Conf. Transcript

    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
    CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR ALL-STAR RACE
    TEAM CHEVY PRESS CONF. TRANSCRIPT
    MAY 17, 2019

    JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 ALLY PATRIOTIC CAMARO ZL1 met with media and discussed his multiple wins at Charlotte Motor Speedway, the rules package change for the All-Star race, the tribute paid to service men and women on Memorial Day, his visit to Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and more. Full Transcript:

    AS A FOUR-TIME WINNER OF THIS EVENT, TALK ABOUT YOUR SUCCESS AND WHAT MAKES YOU SO SUCCESSFUL AT THIS NON-POINTS EVENT
    “I’ve been in circumstances and some situations and can remember back to some inverts that worked out well for us. A fast race car certainly was a big part of that. But there is just so much excitement that comes with this race and when you’re able to win, the celebration that follows definitely leaves a mark and is a lot of fun. But, it’s been a few years. I would love to get back to Victory Lane and obviously; the payday is unlike anything we see in the sport in today’s world and the way that the purse is structured now, so this is really a huge payday. Not that money matters, but it certainly doesn’t hurt and it helps you make some aggressive decisions out there.”

    OTHER THAN YOU, THIS RACE HAS PROVEN TO BE DIFFICULT FOR DRIVERS TO FIND SUCCESS MULTIPLE TIMES. YOU’VE OBVIOUSLY DONE IT. WHAT MAKES THIS RACE SO DIFFICULT TO CONQUER AND HAS IT GOTTEN TOUGHER TO WIN OR REPEAT A WIN OVER THE YEARS?
    “Track position just continues to be more and more important. Depending on how you qualify and how the stages work out and if it’s accumulated points, leads to the final stage and where you start or a draw or they draw for inversion. I think that really has a big influence. When you get down to a 15-lap shootout at the end, your winner is really coming from the front row, maybe the second row. So, whatever leads to that point in time is really what makes that happen.”

    YOU’VE HAD A CHALLENGING FEW MONTHS. HOW MUCH MORE OF A CURVE BALL IS IT WHEN THEY THROW IN ANOTHER CHANGE LIKE THE HOOD SCOOPS IN THIS CAR? HOW MUCH OF A CHALLENGE IS IT THIS WEEKEND?
    “It definitely is a challenge. We’re working through a lot of different issues that we didn’t anticipate seeing. Some of the components aren’t staying on the car. That’s kind of an important issue (laughter). So, we’ve had crew members going to and from the shop. Thankfully it’s only a couple of miles away; and trying to keep the car up to spec. We’ve had an issue with the splitter that our guys are working on now. So, some of these new parts that have come to the cars this weekend haven’t been run before, so there’s just a lot of work that goes into that. If you went and asked one of my crew guys right now, you’d hear a lot of foul words some out of their mouth. I get to sit back and watch. But, it throws a curveball at all of us.”

    AFTER YOU VISIT YESTERDAY TO INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY, HOW MUCH ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO THE INDY 500? AND, THERE HAS BEEN TALK ABOUT MAYBE A COLLABORATION OF A RACE WEEKEND BETWEEN NASCAR AND INDYCAR AT SOME POINT. DID YOU SEE EVIDENCE IN PERSON, OR OTHERWISE, THAT THE INDYCAR SIDE IS EVEN OPEN TO SOMETHING LIKE THAT OR HAVING A JOINT WEEKEND WITH NASCAR AT SOME POINT?
    “I was unaware of that conversation and didn’t sense anything like that when I was there. It was strictly an opportunity to see my friends at McLaren, and also the garage area, especially the old guys in IndyCar that I know really well. Often times I’ve sat at home and have watched their practice and thought man, I could have gone. I had an open day. So, I didn’t let that be the case this year. I have never seen an IndyCar come down the front-stretch at Indy, so I had to step out there and watch one of those bullets go flying by, which was really cool. Frankly, the last IndyCar race I have been to was probably in the late ‘90’s in Milwaukee, Wisconsin when I used to live up there. So, it was a nice change of pace. I spent a lot of time with Johnny Rutherford and Mario Andretti. Unfortunately, Fernando (Alonso) had a pretty free schedule as they were putting his car back together. So, I hung out with him quite a bit. It was nice and really just a social thing for me to go up and see some old friends. Many of you remember Jay Frye. I was able to see Jay and catch-up with him. I saw Mr. Penske. I saw Helio (Castroneves). So, it was cool. It was good to just go up there and socialize. I left shortly after lunch; once the teams really got into things and were busy. A driver can only stand and watch other drivers so long. So, after I did my social piece, I came back home.”

    INAUDIBLE
    “Yeah, it’s such a spectacle. And the amount of people that were there on a Thursday just to see practice was impressive. I was also thrown off by golf carts driving through the garage area and scooters moving around. Pit Lane was a way different environment. It was just cool to see how things are done. It was just a different look on it. And I wanted to go up and see that place packed full of people and feel the energy that I’ve heard about so many times.”

    YOU MADE A COMMENT AFTER THE KANSAS RACE LAST WEEKEND THAT YOU WERE NOT THAT CONFIDENT ABOUT GOING TO CHARLOTTE LIKE YOU USED TO BE. IS THIS GETTING MORE FRUSTRATING TO YOU AS TIME GOES ON? YOU ALWAYS TRY TO PUT A POSITIVE SPIN ON IT, BUT IS IT STARTING TO WEAR ON YOU?
    “Yeah, it is challenging. There’s no way around it. Every week I’m able to go to the shop and check in and see what we’re working on and how hard everybody is working. You get excited for the week. You get to Friday and I let things roll off my shoulders and hit the weekend. I was pretty frustrated when I got out of the car in Kansas. The first half or first two-thirds of the race was pretty bad. I rallied back to sixth, which was respectable. And then I realized I was in fourth and before that restart, I was hopeful our outside lane could advance and maybe have a look at a win or a second place finish behind Eric (Jones). It was nice to be back in that moment, but certainly the frustration is coming through. I’ve never worked so hard to run where I do. I’ve never seen our team work so hard to not be able to get back to where we want to in a short period of time. That’s the hard part.”

    SO AT THIS POINT, WHAT IS THE WORST PART OF THIS? WHAT’S THE MOST FRUSTRATING PART OF THIS? OR, IS IT PEOPLE LIKE ME BRINGING THAT UP THAT’S PART OF THE FRUSTRATION?
    “No, you’ve got a job to do and that’s part of it. I’ve been racing my whole life. I’ve been through all the ups and downs. I’ve sat at this very desk with a lot of highs and enjoying those moments. Racing is racing. You’re going to have all that stuff. So, it’s not that. Some of the nice people on Twitter can bother you from time to time. But really, when you put in such an effort and you don’t get the return; and we’ve all experienced that in different ways in life, that’s the frustrating part. But, I’m not smart enough to quit. I’m not smart enough to walk away. I love what I do. I want to be out there racing. I love driving for Rick (Hendrick) and Ally has been an amazing sponsor. So, just keep on digging. That’s all I can do.”

    AS AN AVID ATHLETE AND MARATHON RUNNER, CONTRAST THE DIFFERENCE OF THE INDIVIDUALITY OF WHAT YOU DO AS A RUNNER VERSUS MAYBE RACING BEING MORE OF A TEAM-TYPE EFFORT.
    “I guess the marathon is a perfect example. If I wasn’t happy with my time, I could look in the mirror and find the answer pretty quick (laughs). There are times on the race track where that reality is there and I can see it. There are other times where the responsibility may shift and fall heavier in other areas. That’s the team sport. That happens to everybody. But that is the one beauty of my hobby in those moments. If I don’t hit my goal that I’m after, I know where to look.”

    THE OTHER DAY YOU MENTIONED YOUR IMPATIENCE OVER NOT WINNING AND ALSO NOT KNOWING WHAT YOU’RE GOING TO BE DOING IN A COUPLE OF YEARS. IS THERE NOT A CONTRACT EXTENSION OUT THERE? ARE YOU CLOSER TO GIVING IT UP THAN WE REALIZE?
    “No, I just don’t have anything signed beyond 2020. So, those conversations usually start probably a year out, so Rick and I will get into that before long. But, the real reality is I don’t have 10 years left. I probably don’t have five years left (laughs), so being impatient in the comment that I made there is there’s less runway than there was when I first started. And, I’ve been able to be patient through my career in a lot of ways and it’s served me well. I feel like now, where I am, I don’t have that luxury any longer if I want a shot to win eight or nine or whatever it is; more wins. I don’t have that luxury. This year is almost halfway through. And then, next year will be here before we know it. So, I’m just aware of my opportunities to accomplish what I want to. There are just fewer of them left and we need to get after it.”

    YOU JUST UNVEILED YOUR PAINT SCHEME FOR THE 600. WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO YOU TO HAVE THE DONLAN FAMILY ON THE HOOD? ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO THE 600?
    “Yeah, I’m proud to have the Donlan family involved this weekend; and then the numerous fallen soldiers that will be on all the race cars for the 600. We love our camo scheme. The car looks really good. Ally loves to give back and do things right. They are certainly using this opportunity Memorial Day weekend to do some really great things. So, I’m excited about it. I love the notion of a marathon. And the 600 is our marathon of sorts for Cup racing, so I’m excited about the weekend.”

    SPEAKING OF NOT HAVING THE PATIENCE, WITH DARRELL WALTRIP RETIRING, WOULD IT MEAN MORE TO YOU TO TIE HIS MARK BEFORE HE LEAVES THE BOOTH?
    “Honestly, that’s not crossed my mind. The individuals at 84 victories I know and respect very well, but it’s never been about anything against them or trying to beat them. There’s never been anything competitive between me and them. It’s more of an honor that I’m at 83 and I’ve been able to equal Cale (Yarborough), and if I was to equal them. But that memory may have been around a couple of years ago when I won 83 and was thinking about 84 and the fact that I would be in that opportunity to honor them and equal them. But, it’s been a while. I haven’t even thought about that. It’s just about a trophy. It’s just about a checkered flag. There really isn’t anything else with it.”

    WHAT IS YOUR SENSE OF PRIDE IN THE WAY THAT NASCAR AND CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY HANDLES MEMORIAL DAY AND THE WAY WE HONOR THE COUNTRY?
    “It’s amazing, simply amazing. And, I think NASCAR and Charlotte Motor Speedway have set the bar over the years and continue to raise it. And at tracks across the country, we continue to see other track owners and operators pay their respects as well. At Talladega we see the American flag go by behind that semi-truck, and flyovers and parachutes with American flags flying and service men and women all over the place. It is great to see. And certainly, on Memorial Day, it’s kind of the peak of the year for us to say thank you. But, it’s really nice that week in and week out we see service men and women at track and can thank them for their service.”

    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.