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  • Kahne captures the pole at Martinsville

    Kahne captures the pole at Martinsville

    [media-credit id=5 align=”alignright” width=”234″][/media-credit]Following Sprint Cup qualifying, Kasey Kahne won the pole for the Goody’s Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway. This marks Kahne’s 24th career Coors Light Pole Award and his first pole at Martinsville.

    “It was a really solid lap,” he says. “The team did a good job yesterday.  We didn’t have the most speed yesterday but I felt like the car was balanced really well.  I felt pretty stable going around the track. It was the same in qualifying today.  It was a good lap.  First pole here for myself.  It’s a tough track to qualify.  It’s a tough track to race, always has been one of my tougher ones over the years.  I’m glad we can start up front and have a great pit stall in that number one stall.  I think that helps throughout the whole race with track position.  Hopefully we will have a solid day tomorrow.  That is what we need to do.  We have had great Friday and Saturday’s and just haven’t put together a Sunday yet.”

    Kahne drove a lap of 19.496 seconds, to beat Kevin Harvick by 16 hundredths of a second.

    “The guys have done a great job this weekend,” Harvick says. “The track conditions have changed a lot since the beginning of practice until where we are now.  Obviously the race conditions are where we will have to take a little bit of a guess like we did for qualifying based on the rubber being on the track from yesterday.  They have done a good job and I just slipped the tires off both corners a little bit but all-in-all they have stepped the program up this year.”

    Four-time Martinsville Speedway winner Denny Hamlin qualified third with a lap of 19.521 seconds.

    “We didn’t really show a lot of good qualifying speed or really front end speed of a long run yesterday,” he says. “That’s good for us to be that close and after only a couple laps. I feel like once the race gets into a groove and gets going — things get strung out, I think we’ll be pretty good.”

    Clint Bowyer and Ryan Newman rounded out the top five.

    Brian Vickers, making his second start of the season, starts sixth. He is followed by Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch, seven-time Martinsville winner Jeff Gordon and Joey Logano. Six-time Martinsville winner Jimmie Johnson qualified 22nd while points leader Greg Biffle is 26th.

    Tony Raines was disqualified from the starting field after his car was found to be too low in post-qualifying inspection. That moved J.J. Yeley into the 43-car field.

    Starting Lineup
    Goody’s Fast Relief 500, Martinsville Speedway
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/qual.php?race=6
    ===========================================
    Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time
    ===========================================
    1 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 97.128 19.496
    2 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 97.048 19.512
    3 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 97.003 19.521
    4 15 Clint Bowyer Toyota 97.003 19.521
    5 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 96.988 19.524
    6 55 Brian Vickers Toyota 96.765 19.569
    7 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 96.751 19.572
    8 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 96.745 19.573
    9 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 96.731 19.576
    10 20 Joey Logano Toyota 96.706 19.581
    11 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 96.701 19.582
    12 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 96.627 19.597
    13 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 96.583 19.606
    14 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 96.43 19.637
    15 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 96.322 19.659
    16 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 96.215 19.681
    17 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 96.2 19.684
    18 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 96.18 19.688
    19 43 Aric Almirola Ford 96.049 19.715
    20 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 96.049 19.715
    21 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 95.971 19.731
    22 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 95.854 19.755
    23 98 Michael McDowell Ford 95.849 19.756
    24 34 David Ragan Ford 95.83 19.76
    25 13 Casey Mears Ford 95.796 19.767
    26 16 Greg Biffle Ford 95.743 19.778
    27 22 AJ Allmendinger Dodge 95.738 19.779
    28 99 Carl Edwards Ford 95.607 19.806
    29 10 David Reutimann Chevrolet 95.607 19.806
    30 26 Josh Wise* Ford 95.583 19.811
    31 83 Landon Cassill Toyota 95.511 19.826
    32 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 95.477 19.833
    33 23 Scott Riggs Chevrolet 95.352 19.859
    34 93 Travis Kvapil Toyota 95.347 19.86
    35 74 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 95.223 19.886
    36 32 Ken Schrader Ford 95.127 19.906
    37 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 94.936 19.946
    38 38 David Gilliland Ford 94.78 19.979
    39 30 David Stremme Toyota 94.609 20.015
    40 51 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 94.566 20.024
    41 33 Hermie Sadler Chevrolet 94.486 20.041
    42 36 Dave Blaney+ Chevrolet 93.18 20.322
    43 249 J.J. Yeley Toyota 93.212 20.315
  • J.R. Fitzpatrick Set to Tackle Martinsville Paperclip This Weekend

    J.R. Fitzpatrick Set to Tackle Martinsville Paperclip This Weekend

    [media-credit id=4 align=”alignleft” width=”266″][/media-credit]A couple weeks before the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season opener at Daytona International Speedway, fans learned that J.R. Fitzpatrick had struck a deal to drive for TurnOne Racing this season. However, it wasn’t just a quick last minute deal.

    “Stacy and I had been talking well over a year, putting this deal together,” Fitzpatrick says. “Even though we still got a couple gaps to go for the remaining parts of the year to be able to run full season here.”

    The opening race at Daytona didn’t go as Fitzpatrick would’ve hoped as he finished 34th due to debris hitting the radiator.

    “It’s just unfortunate that we didn’t have a truck that was very fast by itself, so obviously we had to start at the back,” he says. “It worked really well, it sucked up in the draft really well. I think if we would’ve missed the wreck, we would’ve been good.

    “I hung around the back, tried to stay away from all the wrecks, but ended up involved in one. So you go to front, you go to the back, I don’t know. Its just a big chess game. So our strategy didn’t work.”

    Now focus shifts to this weekend at Martinsville Speedway where Fitzpatrick is hoping to have a good finish.

    “The track is exciting,” he says. “Obviously it’s a little more familiar to what I’m used to, in terms of short track racing. Even though it’s definitely a lot bigger than tracks at home, it’s definitely something I’m comfortable on. I’ve already been there twice.

    In his last two starts on the paperclip, despite running strong, he finished 21st both times due to being caught up in wrecks. However, so far this weekend things look good as he was 15th in final practice and tested well.

    “We tested extremely well so I think going into the race this weekend, I think we have one of the best trucks ever,” he says. “So looking forward to it.”

    Hoping the rest of the season goes well, Fitzpatrick is hoping to finish in the top 10 in points.

    He got started in racing at the age of six running a Jr. Late Model at Sauble Beach. Then he was 13 years old, he moved to Delaware Speedway and got a late model.

    Fitzpatrick then moved up to the CASCAR Super Series, where he finished second in the Rookie of the Year standings in 2004 at the age of 16. At the age of 17, he scored his first win and got three top-fives and five top-10 finishes.

    [media-credit name=”TurnOne Racing” align=”alignright” width=”301″][/media-credit]Then in 2006, he became the youngest Canadian National Series Champion winning the CASCAR Championship with a win, five podium finishes and two pole awards at the age of 18.

    Between 2006 and 2007, NASCAR took over the series, renaming it the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series. Since then, Fitzpatrick has scored six wins, 22 top fives and 36 top 10s in 54 starts while finishing as high as second in 2010.

    Heading into this year, he is hoping to win the championship.

    “I haven’t been able to piece that together,” he says. “Last couple of years, I’ve been second, third in points, due to mechanical failure. I think now with the new stuff that we’ve got, I don’t think that’s going to be a problem anymore.”

    The first race on the schedule is Canadian Tire Motorsports Park (Mosport), which is set to happen on May 20th.

    “We’re going for the win,” he says. “I think there’s only two of us that are two time winners at that place and we’re both going to be at that race so it’s going to be exciting. That’s one of my favourite tracks and to be one of the guys everybody watches every week when we go there, it’s kind of a cool feeling. Having new road course equipment, it makes that program better. So I think we’re going to be a threat to win one.”

    When he is not racing at the NASCAR ranks, you can still find Fitzpatrick racing somewhere as he often goes go-karting.

    “It’s a lot of fun,” he says. “When I’m not working on a car or doing anything of that nature, I go out with a bunch of people and go-kart whenever I can. The place I normally go to, I know inside and out, so it’s a lot of fun.”

    Looking forward 10 years down the road, he says he can’t plan that far ahead, but still wants to be racing.

  • NASCAR’s West Coast Marketing Team Leader Manny Poveda Reaching Diverse Fan Bases

    NASCAR’s West Coast Marketing Team Leader Manny Poveda Reaching Diverse Fan Bases

    [media-credit id=50 align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]NASCAR’s West Coast swing came to a very surprising and a very promising end on Sunday at the conclusion of the Auto Club 400 in Fontana, California. The three race sequence which also included stops at Phoenix Raceway, and Las Vegas Motor Speedway could be looked upon as a big success, and a victory for the sport as far as the attendance numbers are concerned.

    Auto Club Speedway which has had its problems filling the stands in the past, along with being criticized by the fans as a track that should be taken off the schedule, because they feel it is one of the less exciting races on the schedule.

    But after arriving at the track and watching fan after fan fill the stands even though there was a threat of rain in the forecast, it was great to see that NASCAR racing hasn’t lost its appeal in the Southern California market even though one the more popular short tracks in the Nation closed its gates in January.

    Because of a solid marketing effort by Manny Poveda, who is NASCAR’s Consumer Marketing Manager for the West Coast, and his team the attendance at all three tracks was able to compete with the one of the more popular tracks on the schedule, and that being Bristol the following weekend.

    Marketing has always been the backbone for any business to survive, and the same can be said for any sport which includes NASCAR. It takes a strong and persistent marketing team to push the sport into areas that have never been reached before, in order to boost the ratings and help the sport flourish.

    “We are doing more consumer marketing and letting sports fans know that NASCAR is around and that the MLB and the NBA and the rest are not the only sport in town,” said Poveda during the recent Daytona 500 viewing party at ESPN Zone located in Downtown Disney.

    Poveda also added that, “Throughout the year we do a lot of events where we bring out show cars and displays where people can get up close and personal to the cars and take pictures.”

    Reaching out to the different fan bases, along with reaching out to the wide range of demographics in view of the fact that fans of all ages enjoy watching these weekend warriors do battle on a weekly basis is one of a few tasks the marketing team pursues.

    Poveda, along with Josh Avila who works at Auto Club Speedway as the Hispanic Marketing & Communications Manager, and Mario Cobian who is the CEO at Pochteca Media began to reach out to the Hispanic community when NASCAR gave Poveda the go ahead to pursue this ethnic group.

    Diversity in the sport has come a long way since the early days, when the majority of the drivers were southern bred men whose ancestors were tied in with moonshining during the prohibition era. Another trend that is becoming popular are the drivers from the different motorsports series who are seeking to expand their driving skills by competing for seats in this lucrative series, that at one time were for occupied by drivers who came up through the lower level developmental series.

    NASCAR as we see it today is a business along with being a form of entertainment for all ages and ethnic groups to enjoy, and it’s no wonder the governing body has chosen to reach out to the Hispanic community since their fan base is expanding at an incredible rate.

    Poveda being Hispanic himself noticed the trend, and with his vast knowledge in marketing decided to tap into the market and work together with NASCAR to bring this fan base to the sport.

    “NASCAR is shooting for different ethnic groups including the Hispanic market and pushing the Hispanic awareness. We are in our fourth season and it’s going good, and we have a five to six year working plan that will reach the different parts of the marketing world, it’s a process and we know we will get there, “said Poveda when talking about NASCAR’s long term plan.

    Poveda also added that, “Brian France and Mike Helton are 100% behind us and they are the ones who brought up the idea and knows our initiative, and he knows the Hispanic fans are out there and it’s up to us to get them educated. They see them at the race track and know they wear the Tony Stewart, Jimmie Johnson, and the Carl Edwards jackets and not just the Juan Montoya merchandise.”

    Poveda finished with, “The idea is to get them to the track so they can experience and get familiar with the sport and hopefully they become a fan.”

    To see how diverse the fan base has become and how popular racing in the NASCAR has become among the Hispanic community, look no further than this weekend’s K&N East Series race at Greenville Pickens Speedway.

    There are six Hispanics in the field, which will include Sergio Pena-Colombia, Bryan Ortiz-Puerto Rico, Jorge Arteaga-Mexico, Jorge Contreras Jr.-Mexico, Daniel Suarez-Mexico, Carlos Ianconelli-Brazil, along with Duarte Ferriera from Angola, and Australian Scott Saunders.

    Whether it be having a NASCAR viewing party such as the one that was put together for the Daytona 500 at ESPN Zone in Downtown Disney in Anaheim, California, or setting up a display booth for one of the many charity foundations to promote the sport.

    The marketing team is reaping the fruits of success by reaching out and bringing a broader and more diverse fan base to the sport, along with a new breed of drivers from different countries that are willing to spend their hard earned money to compete in this great sport of ours.

  • It’s all Matt Puccia says Greg Biffle of his big turnaround, early success

    It’s all Matt Puccia says Greg Biffle of his big turnaround, early success

    [media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus. Tony Stewart and Greg Zipadelli. Jeff Gordon and Ray Evernham.

    Those are just some memorable driver and crew chief combinations and ones that happened to be pretty successful. By the end of the 2012 season there might be a new pair to add to the list: Greg Biffle and Matt Puccia.

    They would be the Roush Fenway Racing team who is leading the NSCS points after the first five races. While they haven’t yet won a race, Biffle continues to sing Puccia’s praises for having the team off to a fast start.

    They’ve led the point standings since Las Vegas following another third place finish. Sitting on the outside of the front row for the Daytona 500, then winning the pole at Bristol has also helped Biffle and company ride the success wave.

    “I’ve had a lot of success and I’ve had a lot of failure in racing over the years,” Biffle said on Wednesday afternoon. “We’re focused and prepared, getting prepared every week, to go do the best we can. I know and probably the team knows, we won’t lead the points the entire season or up to the Chase, however you want to say it.

    “I know that we’re probably not going to lead the points the whole way. So I’m happy and proud of our team fighting to stay in the points lead running as good as we can every week. But the reality is I know that we may not. If and when that happens, certainly I’m not going to let that take the wind out of our sails. We’re going to work as hard as we can to keep the points lead, keep in the top five, keep in the top three.”

    Should he continue to lead the points, Biffle called it a bonus. The goal right now is to show up each week and try to win the race. Then go on to make the Chase, which will only happen if the team continues to the positive attitude they have, even if they aren’t leading the points.

    But should they, the credit will go to Puccia. After joining the team midway through 2011 he’s taken the team from pretenders to serious contenders. Their great relationship and how easily the two have gelled have them in prime position to do what teammate Carl Edwards did last season, challenge for the championship all the way down to Homestead.

    Only Biffle believes that Puccia is the man to not only get him that far but lead him back to the promise land. The Washington native is attempting to become the first NASCAR driver to win a championship in all three series.

    “That guy, I promise you, if anybody can take me to winning a championship, it’s Matt Puccia,” said Biffle. “He never gives up, never leaves a rock unturned. He’s the hungriest guy I’ve ever seen in my whole life and is the most focused to win a race. I cannot wait. I can’t wait till we win a race because he deserves it.

    “In my opinion, I’m a little prejudice, but he’s working harder than anybody in the garage, all 42 other crew chiefs. I feel like he’s working the hardest. When he does win, when we win here hopefully in the near future, it will be well-deserved. I think he’s totally capable of winning a championship. Very good under pressure, is not going to waiver from his plan, and his stuff is going to be the best prepared out of the 43 cars when it shows up.”

    The same should apply this weekend when the series rolls into Martinsville, the second short track of the season. At Bristol two weeks ago the team won the pole and led the first 41 laps but faded out of contention and finished 13th.

    A week ago he started fourth and finished sixth, yet never led a lap at a track he’s won at before. Acknowleding that he had a top 10 car in both events, Biffle still said the team was unsatisfied with the results. Upset they weren’t as competitive as they thought they’d be.

    Attention now turns to Martinsville, where he has yet to win. Last fall Biffle started and finished 15th and carries an average finish of 22.4 at the paperclip. The most important stat that stands out: only two top 10 finishes, that being a 10th place in 2010 and his best finish coming in the fall of 2007 when he finished seventh.

    It has Biffle’s hunger for more than a Martinsville hotdog burning badly.

    “I want a grandfather clock so bad, I got a spot picked out for it,” he said with a laugh. “You look at the stats, Martinsville hasn’t been out best place as a company, let alone me as a driver. Although I’ve run very well there in the Trucks and Nationwide, qualified third, ran good.

    “So if the car’s right – we have a light weight car we’re bringing, we’ve been working on brakes extensively – if all the stars line up, we’ve led some laps there too, we have a chance. Not sure if we have a chance of winning but we have a solid chance of running in the top five.”

    A belief Biffle hasn’t had before, this year however, it’s apparent that he’s excited to head to the track every weekend, no matter which track it is. He’s got a team he wholeheartedly believes in and a crew chief who it seems he wouldn’t trade for anything. Martinsville will be a challenge he knows, but so far Biffle and Puccia have met every challenge head on and haven’t slowed down.

    “A lot of credit is due there,” said Biffle of Puccia. “A lot of credit is due to the shop, our engine program, fuel injection. This has been a really seamless transition for us. It’s been a good year for our cars mechanically, our cars aero-wise and competition.

    “Matt has got a plan and he’s leading this team like a 10-year veteran crew chief or a five-year veteran crew chief that’s won multiple races or championships. It’s just clear he’s got a great group of guys together. I give him a lot of credit for where we’re at today.

    “I’m telling you, I’m not doing a lot different behind the wheel. I’m giving it a hundred percent all the time, focused. My head’s in the game, paying attention to the car’s setup, stopping in the pit box. I’m doing all the things that I had been doing. It’s just the results are different.

  • Paulie Harraka Takes Martinsville Truck High Tech

    Paulie Harraka Takes Martinsville Truck High Tech

    [media-credit name=”Photo Credit: Scott Hunter” align=”alignright” width=”226″][/media-credit]Paulie Harraka is not only competing in the Camping World Truck Series and finishing his senior year at Duke but, this weekend, the Rookie of the Year candidate will be taking his Truck high tech at Martinsville.

    The native New Jersey driver has a new sponsor partner for his No. 5 Wauters Motorsport Ford F-150, the high tech company MC10. This company reshapes electronics to create thin systems that stretch, bend and flex, including body-worn sensors for high quality data collection.

    “We’re really excited,” Harraka said. “MC10 is certainly a company that is at the fore front of high tech development and has such wide reaching applications.”

    “When you think about what you could do if you could take all these electronics that we use and make them flexible, you realize there are applications pretty much everywhere.”

    MC10, a new company based in Boston, was looking for an innovative marketing platform for their products. After meeting Harraka, they decided that NASCAR would indeed match their company’s needs and agreed to go racing with him at Martinsville, including using him as a bit of a guinea pig for their products.

    “MC10 sensors have huge capabilities, from measuring heart rate to anything that we have a way to measure,” Harraka said. “I’ll actually have a sample of their electronics on me during the race.”

    “So, the possibilities are almost endless,” Harraka continued. “I know this is the beginning of a long partnership.”

    The partnership between MC10 and Harraka actually began at a conference and flourished from there. Although the company was not familiar with NASCAR, it was not a ‘hard sell’ once they reviewed the statistics of the reach of the sport and the loyalty of the fan base.

    “When I was up at the Sports Analytics Conference, I met with the CEO of MC10 and he expressed an interest,” Harraka continued. “We explored ways that MC10 technology is applicable to NASCAR.”

    “When they began to see how their technology applied to the sport of racing, that’s how the discussion turned to how to promote this,” Harraka said. “And the sponsorship discussion began.”

    “While the CEO was not generally a fan of the sport himself, people are generally familiar with the sport and how big the fan base is, how loyal the fan base is and what the reach is,” Harraka continued. “You can bring somebody in and they get it pretty quickly.”

    Marrying his business savvy with his racing acumen has been just one of the elements that has made Harraka unique in the NASCAR racing world. And through his education and connections made at Duke, the young driver has been committed to exposing new corporations to the sport.

    “One of the hallmarks of what we’ve done is to bring in a lot of business partners,” Harraka said. “And without a doubt, this is a unique way to approach motorsports.”

    “On one hand, it’s a great way to raise capital initially,” Harraka continued. “But on the other hand, the big pro to it is to bring these different businesses, with all their accolades, from marketing to venture capitalists, in to learn about NASCAR.”

    “They understand very quickly the opportunities and ways to bring their businesses into the sport,” Harraka said. “It’s unique and the payoff is just starting.”

    With his new sponsor in hand and planning to attend the upcoming race at Martinsville, Harraka cannot wait to get back to racing after the month-long break since Daytona.

    “Daytona was kind of a tease and then you have a lot of time off,” Harraka said. “I would much rather be racing every weekend.”

    “But the guys have been hard at work building trucks and getting us ready,” Harraka continued. “After Martinsville, we have a week off but then we go to Rockingham and then, boom, we head to Kansas.”

    “So, we go into a little stretch of racing, which is exciting,” Harraka said. “I’m excited to get into the meat of the racing season starting at Martinsville.”

    Harraka acknowledged that nothing he learned on the high banks of the superspeedway of Daytona will apply to the paper-clip shaped track at Martinsville. Yet he also feels that he will be returning to his roots, racing on a short track.

    “Daytona is most certainly a unique place,” Harraka said. “But all that we learn at Daytona really only applies there and Talladega, so Martinsville will be a completely different animal.”

    “But it is definitely one that is more in my element and where I have my experience base,” Harraka continued. “So, I’m excited to get back to a nice little half mile.”

    Harraka has no different expectations for his upcoming race weekend than he ever does when he gets behind the wheel. He expects to be in victory circle at the end of the race.

    “I expect us to run well,” Harraka said. “I expect that we can run up front and lead laps and that we can bring home a good finish.”

    “We’re going to the race track to win and I really do believe that we can come home with a great finish.”

    While Harraka may be confident about his race expectations, he is reserving judgment on one Martinsville tradition. He is just not sure about having one of those infamous Martinsville hot dogs.

    “We’ll see,” Harraka said. “I’m not sure how my stomach will do with those. So, I make no predictions there.”

    Most of all, Harraka looks forward to returning to racing with his new sponsor MC10 on the race truck and cheering him on in the pits.

    “I think everyone in this sport recognizes that the best thing for our sport is to bring in more companies that haven’t been involved in our sport,” Harraka said. “To expose them to the power of NASCAR is just exciting.”

    “To go outside the reach of a normal motorsports sponsorship and bring in a company totally outside of that to show the value of the sport is great for them,” Harraka continued. “And it’s great for us and for the sport as a whole.”

    “I expect that the relationship will grow into a lot of partnerships moving forward,” Harraka said. “We already have some cool things cooking post-Martinsville.”

  • Jeb Burton: Famous Last Name But Just A Regular Guy

    Jeb Burton: Famous Last Name But Just A Regular Guy

    [media-credit name=”Photo Credit: Jeb Burton Racing Facebook Page” align=”alignright” width=”245″][/media-credit]As the son of Daytona 500 winner Ward Burton and nephew of NASCAR Cup driver Jeff Burton, the teenager Jeb Burton most certainly bears that famous last name. But in spite of that, the young up and coming racer says he is “just a regular guy.”

    “I have a full-time job at a transmission shop,” Burton said. “It’s 30 hours a week but it’s still a pretty good job.”

    “I work like most everybody does, getting up and going to it every Monday morning and being stressed just like they are.”

    Burton also says he is pretty much of a ‘regular guy’ when it comes to his hobbies and what he likes to do when he is away from the hustle and bustle of the transmission shop.

    “I like to hunt and fish and go to the lake,” Burton said. “That’s what I do when I’m not working.”

    This weekend, however, the young man will be trading in his ‘regular guy’ status to follow in the footsteps of his famous racing family names.

    In fact, Jeb Burton will be making his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series debut, piloting the No. 27 State Water Heaters Chevrolet for Hillman Racing, in the Kroger 250 at Martinsville Speedway on March 31st.

    “I’m really excited,” Burton said. “I just want to go out there and keep my nose clean at Martinsville and hopefully come out with a top ten finish.”

    “I don’t want to tear anything up so I don’t cost us any money,” Burton continued. “And I want to finish top-10 or top-12 every race and not tear things up.”

    “Anything can happen when you don’t tear stuff up and run well.”

    In this instance, Burton’s famous last name definitely helped in putting his Truck racing deal together. After much investigation, Jeb and his father settled on a deal to race for Mike Hillman with veteran crew chief Trip Bruce and State Water Heaters on the hood of the race truck.

    “My dad went down to Charlotte to look at ARCA teams and some K&N East teams and realized that it didn’t cost much more to run trucks,” Burton said. “So, we went after our sponsor State Water Heaters. They’ve been helping Dad for the last couple of years and they seem really interested.”

    “We got with Mike Hillman and he was parting with Bob Germain and had a bunch of good equipment and thought it would be good for us to come with him,” Burton continued. “I started working with him, worked with him for a few days, and we’re all communicating well.”

    Burton is also communicating well with Trip Bruce, probably one of the most important member of the team as the youngster’s new crew chief. Burton is also looking forward to Bruce’s sharing his veteran knowledge of the sport, having crew chiefed for other drivers such as Johnny Benson and Kasey Kahne.

    “Me and Trip get along good,” Burton said. “We’ve only been to the race track twice together so we probably need to get a little better with that.”

    “It just takes time for him to find out what I want in the car and the adjustments he needs to make to make me go fast,” Burton continued. “I think me and Trip will work well together.”

    In spite of his ‘regular guy’ status, has the young driver learned any lessons from the other famous race car drivers with the same last name? Or does having that famous name sometimes become more of a hindrance than a help?

    “Dad gives me his input and help,” Burton said. “But me and Dad don’t see eye to eye on some things sometimes. So, he kind of stays out of it.”

    “I watch the races every Sunday and I see not only what my uncle does but what other people are doing, making mistakes and what they’re doing that is good,” Burton continued. “I just try to soak all that in.”

    “I’m sure Jeff and my Dad will talk to me a lot this week,” Burton continued. “I know they’re both probably excited about it for me.”

    Burton acknowledged that he has another mentor, to whom he often turns on and off the track. And this mentor will be in his ear for his Martinsville Truck debut.

    “I’ve got a good buddy who is my crew chief in my late model car and me and him get along great,” Burton said. “There is good chemistry there.”

    “He’s probably going to spot for me because he’s my spotter in my late model car,” Burton continued. “He keeps me calm on the radio.”

    “He believes in me and I believe in him,” Burton said. “When you have somebody that’s spotting for you and you don’t know him well, they make think you’re just not driving well. He knows I’m driving the wheels off it.”

    “That’s another reason I like him so much,” Burton continued. “He knows I can get it done and he believes in me.”

    “That’s a big part of this sport.”

    Burton also acknowledged that his late model racing experience will serve him well as he prepares for his Truck Series debut.

    “Definitely late models have prepared me best for Trucks,” Burton said. “I tried ARCA and ran one race and on the first lap I got wrecked going down the back straightaway. That wasn’t a very good race.”

    “The late models have definitely trained me,” Burton continued. “It’s a tough division to run in and win races. There’s a lot of good drivers.”

    Burton will most certainly be experiencing plenty of good drivers as he kicks off his Truck season with his new team at a track that is right in his back yard. In spite of that, however, the young driver is not claiming any home field advantage.

    “I think every race is a home race because it’s on national television,” Burton said. “I’m not going to think about that kind of pressure.”

    “I just need to work on getting the truck handling right and then the rest will fall into place.”

    While Burton has his focus completely on this weekend’s racing, he is also hoping that he can parlay a good run into racing more than just the next few that he has been promised. Currently, Burton is scheduled to compete in five races after Martinsville, including Rockingham, Kansas, Charlotte, Dover and Texas.

    “We’ve just got the next five right now and then we have to find some more opportunities with sponsors,” Burton said. “I think State Water Heaters, once they see us run well, they’ll probably continue sponsoring us.”

    And as with all young racers today, whether with famous racing last names or just ‘regular guys’, Burton took the opportunity to pitch all of his social media ties, as well as thank his fans.

    “You all can follow me on my Facebook racing page,” Burton said. “Or you can follow me on Twitter @JebBurtonRacing.”

    “If it weren’t for the fans following me, I wouldn’t get to do what I love to do,” Burton said.

  • Hot 20 over the past 10 – Smoke ‘em if you got him

    Hot 20 over the past 10 – Smoke ‘em if you got him

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”266″][/media-credit]Taking Tony Stewart as part of your fantasy team usually doesn’t pay off too much this time of year. Apparently, Tony just decided that March is the new June, to add two wins in five events to the five in ten he chalked up in the fall.

    In fact, it is the quickest he has ever won two in a season, which he has done in all but one of his 14 campaigns. The previous best was May 5, 2002 at Richmond, the eleventh race of that year. Now, with two wins in March, he already has pretty much secured a place in the Chase. Talk about sitting pretty, which is something few have ever accused Tony of being.

    Here is a look at our hottest twenty drivers over the past ten events, going back to Talladega last fall.

    1. Tony Stewart – 401 pts – (5 wins, 6 Top Fives, 7 Top Tens)
    NASCAR, all Tony all the time.

    2. Carl Edwards – 346 pts – (0-5-7)
    The gap between Mr. Consistency and Mr. Victory is starting to widen.

    3. Denny Hamlin – 338 pts – (1-3-5)
    What is there not to like about Denny? Well, my space here is limited…

    4. Clint Bowyer – 336 pts – (1-2-6)
    Life isn’t fair. I go bald, but Clint went blonde.

    5. Greg Biffle – 336 pts – (0-4-5)
    My Biffle’s back and you’re gonna be in trouble, hey-la-day-la…

    6. Kevin Harvick – 335 pts – (0-3-5)
    Take away Talladega, and Happy is even better than Edwards.

    7. Dale Earnhardt Jr – 325 pts – (0-2-5)
    It might be weird, but don’t be afeared of the man with the beard, but if he wins be a-skeered.

    8. Martin Truex Jr – 322 pts – (0-2-7)
    This is what happens when you finish in the Top Twenty over the past 10.

    9. Jeff Burton – 316 pts – (0-3-6)
    If poor results were a tad less poor he could be a contender

    10. Matt Kenseth – 307 pts – (1-4-4)
    When Matt is good, he is very, very good, but when he is bad, he is horrid.

    11. Ryan Newman – 297 pts – (0-2-4)
    If I had to pick a Rocket Man, I would give Ryan the nod over Elton John.

    12. Paul Menard – 293 pts – (0-0-4)
    The Rodney Dangerfield of NASCAR has to be getting some respect about now.

    13. Jimmie Johnson – 292 pts – (0-3-5)
    Happy he got the points back, but tired of Chad trying to hit him up for a loan.

    14. Brad Keselowski – 280 pts – (1-3-3)
    Got his win and staying close in points, it is good to be Brad Keselowski.

    15. Kasey Kahne – 271 pts – (1-2-4)
    If not for his Red Bull stats his 10-race performance would be pure bull.

    16. Joey Logano – 257 pts – (0-0-2)
    Not a front runner, not a tailgater, just a middle of the road kind of guy.

    17. Jeff Gordon – 254 pts – (0-2-4)
    Gas man figures Jeff should go through the self-service line.

    18. A.J. Allmendinger – 249 pts – (0-0-2)
    Might not be exactly dominating just yet, but he is here and neither Busch is.

    19. Mark Martin – 243 pts – (0-0-2)
    Probably afraid to retire. Look at what happened to Rusty.

    20. Juan Pablo Montoya – 236 pts – (0-0-1)
    When your season highlight is crashing into a jet dryer, you got some work to do.

  • Tony Stewart: Its nice to get off to a good start this year

    Tony Stewart: Its nice to get off to a good start this year

    [media-credit name=”Credit: By Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”232″][/media-credit]Tony Stewart had become known for going on these awesome summer stretches, winning races from the summer on. However, so far this season, he has two wins in the first five races.

    “It’s been nice to get off to a good start this year the way we have,” Stewart says. “I’m really excited about the start that we’ve got going. We’ve been strong everywhere we’ve been.”

    So far this season, Stewart sits fourth in points, despite finishing outside the top 15 twice this season to open the year.

    “We’ve had top 10 cars and top five cars every race this year after that,” Stewart continues. “So really, really proud of what (crew chief) Steve (Addington) and all our guy sat Stewart-Haas Racing have done.”

    If you look back to last season when he won five races late in the year, he has now won seven of the last 15 races. The last time a driver did that was Jimmie Johnson in 2009-10.

    “Gene Haas is a big factor in that,” Stewart says. “Gene has always give us the flexibility and the tools to do what we think needs to be done at the shop.”

    Stewart adds that whenever he has asked Haas for something, Haas has delivered.

    “There’s been some key pieces that we’ve needed in the shop and he’s been behind it a hundred per cent,” he continues. “That gives all of our guys the confidence that we’re doing everything that we can to give ourselves the best opportunity to be successful.”

    The team has been able to get better, as Stewart notes, due to how Addington has adjusted to the team.

    “A lot of times when crew chiefs change race teams, they bring the whole team with them,” he explains. “Steve came by himself to our organization and had to learn a whole different group of guys to work with.  I think he’s settled in quickly and really gets along good with our guys, learned our system really quick. He brings so much to the table.  We’ve learned a lot from him.  He’s made great adjustments through the off-season and those results are showing right now.”

    Addington adds to that by saying that Stewart has a group of dedicated guys at the shop.

    “It’s just racers, guys that want to work,” Addington says. “There’s a lot of smart people that give you support.  You can ask a question and somebody will have you an answer really fast. Getting in there, getting to know personalities, things like that, you learn how to work and deal with each person.”

    This weekend, Stewart goes to a track where he has had success before as he won the race last fall at Martinsville. In 26 races, he has had three wins, nine top fives and 14 top 10s.

  • HOORAHS & WAZZUPS: REWINDING THE VERY WET AUTO CLUB 258

    HOORAHS & WAZZUPS: REWINDING THE VERY WET AUTO CLUB 258

    [media-credit name=”Simon Scoggins” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]In 1972 a British pop singer named Albert Hammond had a smash hit with his song “It Never Rains In Southern California.” Of course it rains in So Cal. It just wasn’t supposed to rain during the NASCAR Sprint Cup weekend at the Auto Club Speedway in Fontana. That’s how the Auto Club 400 became the Auto Club 258.

    But during the course of this rain shortened event we did learn a few things. In the case of Tony Stewart, we learned that not even the rain could dissipate the “Smoke.” In the case of Jimmie Johnson, we learned that sometimes oil and water can be a good mix. In the case of the condition of the track’s racing surface, we learned that asphalt, like a fine wine, gets better with age. With those thoughts in mind, let’s begin with:

    WAZZUP with Mother Nature for raining on our NASCAR parade? Traditionally the southern California rainy season is observed from late February to mid March. The queen of all things environmental was far away from her normal schedule and that’s why a scheduled 200 lap race was called after 129 laps.

    HOORAH to the fans for turning out despite week long warnings that said weather was going to be a huge factor. According to NASCAR’s official post race report, an estimated 90,000 turned out for the Sunday’s Sprint Cup race while an estimated 40,000 turned out for Saturday’s Nationwide Series event. In this time of harsh economics, which has hit California harder than most states, getting that many people to turn out for literally anything is quite remarkable. God bless the fans and their loyalty

    *************************

    HOORAH to the Auto Club Speedway staff who went above and beyond the call to provide the fans with a wide variety of special events in addition to the racing schedule. Some of the special programs that stood out involved activities for the kids. “Lefty”, the speedway’s official mascot, debuted his Fun Zone that featured educational and interactive activities and, most of all, a lot of fun. “Lefty” had some help with this project from NASCAR driver Trevor Bayne, actress Nancy Cartwright, the voice of TV’s Bart Simpson, and Tillman, the skateboarding bulldog from the “Animal Planet” Network. Let’s not overlook the fact that programs like this tends to develop a speedway’s future fan base.

    HOORAH to Steve Boyer. The Director of Engineering for Michael Waltrip Racing joined the Auto Club Speedway’s annual Math and Science Day and explained the relationship of math, science and NASCAR racing to approximately 600 middle school students from the Fontana area.

    *******************

    Okay, let’s go racing. HOORAH to Tony Stewart and his team for a job well done that led to his 46th career Sprint Cup win, his second win at the Auto Club and his second win within the last five series races. Dating back to the end of the 2011 season, Stewart has now won seven of the last 15 Sprint Cup races.

    WAZZUP with some post race critics who basically said Stewart won a “rain race?” The fact of the matter is: not even the rain could stop the “Smoke” from rising to the top. If this race had gone the full distance, under the best weather conditions, it’s still likely that the same driver would have won. The driver, the team and the car were that good.

    *****************

    HOORAH to Jimmie Johnson for relocating that seemingly missing golden horseshoe. In the midst of winning his fifth NASCAR championship, back in 2010, driver Kevin Harvick at the time suggested that Johnson may have a golden horseshoe placed in his interior compartment located in the back of his front: (for those of you who shun the concept of the politically correct, that means someone placed a horseshoe in Johnson’s butt. Does NASCAR have a template for that?)

    The magic of that horseshoe hit huge for team #48 last week. First there was that stunning reversal of fortune when the NASCAR appellate process overturned the penalties from the Daytona race. It was only natural that this would be a hot topic at Fontana. A HOORAH goes out to the interviewed Sprint Cup drivers who diplomatically side stepped the question. This is especially true of Carl Edwards who basically said “I really haven’t been following that very much, I’ve been keeping my focus on my car and my team.”

    The magic of Johnson’s horseshoe worked overtime at the end of the Auto Club 400. In the final moments of the race, an oil leak developed during the one and only yellow flag of the race that turned into a red flag. Johnson wisely kept the car on the bottom of the track’s apron while making sure he maintained minimum caution speed. Moments later the race was called due to rain. A sure fire pit road disaster became a tenth place finish as well as an elevation to ninth in the points standings. It now appears that “Jimmie Five Time’s” campaign to become “Jimmie Six Pack” is on again. Oh yeah, the horseshoe is back. It was also one of those rare moments when oil and water do mix.  If you are into betting, bet on Johnson’s horseshoe at topbet.com.

    WAZZUP with crew chief Chad Knaus not immediately noticing the white smoke coming from the back of his race car? A transmission, between spotter Earl Barber and Knaus, went something like this: (EB),” something’s wrong, we’ve got an oil leak.” (CK) “what makes you think so?” (EB) “the 17, (Matt Kenseth’s spotter) told us and we’re smoking.”

    HOORAH to Johnson for keeping his sense of humor under such stressful circumstances. After the race, he sent a “Twitter” message that read: “anyone have a few quarts of oil that I can borrow?”

    HOORAH to SPEED Channel analyst Kyle Petty’s observation when he said: “isn’t it amazing that NASCAR can make it rain so they can help out Jimmie Johnson’s team? JOKING-I’M JOKING !”

    HOORAH to SPEED Channel’s Jimmy Spencer who, commenting on Chad Knaus being seemingly unaware that his car was belching smoke, said “Chad must have left his glasses at the appeals hearing.”

    **************

    Meanwhile pit road literally became THE PITS !

    WAZZUP with nine pit road penalties during this race? Under normal circumstances that number might not be considered to be that high. But nine penalties in 129 laps is a little steep.

    WAZZUP with Jeff Gordon receiving two of those penalties? The first came on lap 107 for a seemingly routine gas and tire stop. When Gordon sped away, the gas can was still attached to the car. Gas man Brad Pickens deserves a HOORAH for doing everything he could, including a crash landing on pit road, to dislodge the can. Unfortunately, the man and the can fell outside of the pit box area and that’s why a drive through penalty had to be assessed. The second penalty came towards the end of the race when, during a pit stop, an errant tire got away from the team. That placed Gordon at the tail end of the field for a restart that never happened due to the heavy rain. A strong top five finish turned into a 26th place finish.

    Whether the decision by Denny Hamlin, and crew chief Darian Grubb, to come down pit road during the race’s only yellow flag, with more rain coming, is a WAZZUP or a HOORAH probably depends on how you feel about the diverse opinions that followed this move.

    For example: Larry McReynolds, from the Fox broadcast booth, first said he was shocked the race even started on Sunday with that much rain in the forecast. He was also quite surprised that Hamlin was called to pit road with a certain red flag coming. He compared the weather situation to a wall of rain that was like a scene from the movie “The Poseidon Adventure.”

    After the race Hamlin said “I didn’t know that rain was really coming, I wasn’t told to push, I thought we had a little more time. It was a move to win the race.” Grubb said they were looking at two different radar models. One said extremely heavy rain was imminent. The other model said there was going to be a break in the weather that might have allowed the race to resume. This was a hero or zero moment. If the plan would have worked, it could have led to a race win instead of an 11th place finish.

    ***********

    HOORAH to Joey Logano for winning the Royal Purple 300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race. Logano handed his boss, Joe Gibbs, his eighth consecutive Nationwide Series win at the Auto Club Speedway. He parked his Toyota in victory lane to accept what many are now calling the Joe Gibbs trophy.

    WAZZUP with the racing disaster experienced by the Kyle Busch Motorsports Nationwide Series team? The problems started before the race when Busch missed driver introductions which led to a penalty and having to start at the rear of the field.

    However, the worst damage was yet to come. During the final caution flag, late in the race, Busch came in for fuel and two tires. There was a huge miscommunication regarding the tire change. The right sides went on and the jack was released from the car just as the rear tire changer ran to the left side and started removing lug nuts. It forced a last moment audible and all four tires were changed. The loss of track position was huge and Busch found himself restarting 17th with only 12 laps remaining in the race. After spending the majority of the race charging from the very back to the front of the pack, he had to settle for an eighth place finish.

    How would you like to be a KBM team member and have to attend a Monday morning meeting after what happened at Fontana?

    ************

    The final  WAZZUP goes to critics who truly believes that the Auto Club Speedway needs to be completely renovated? They’re calling for new banking, similar to Talladega, and a new track surface. Did they not learn anything from watching the NASCAR weekend at Fontana? It appears that the track’s surface, like a fine wine, is getting better with age. The drivers raved about the track condition. Kevin Harvick went so far to say that over time it has gone from “bland to fantastic.”

    The proof can be found in some of the video highlights of the races. Tony Stewart’s slide jobs, while passing Harvick and Kyle Busch, were fantastic but it wasn’t that many years ago when a move like that would have been extremely difficult at Fontana. Yet another example is the final restart of the Nationwide Series race when the cars fanned out five wide in an effort to improve their track position. Those cars had plenty of grip to make those moves work.

    We simply do not need a “left coast” version of Talladega. The track is just fine. Auto Club Speedway President Gillian Zucker, during a media presentation, probably put it best when she said “there’s not a driver in the entire garage that wants to see this track changed.”

    *************

    The final HOORAH goes to Greg Biffle for his response to a rather unique question during a Friday press conference. The question was: “describe the importance of your rear end to your job.” Without hesitation, Biffle responded “it’s very important, it’s my computer center. It has lots of data and, thank God, it’s connected to my brain.”

    What did we learn from that? All the modern technology in the world will never top a finely tuned butt.

  • NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: California

    NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: California

    [media-credit name=”Simon Scoggins” align=”alignright” width=”211″][/media-credit]Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

    1. Tony Stewart: Stewart won the Auto Club 400 in a race shortened by 71 laps due to rain. Stewart overtook Kyle Busch on lap 85 and held on until the weather forced the race’s first caution, and ultimately its cancellation. It was Stewart’s second win of the year and seventh in the last 15 Sprint Cup races.

    “When there’s a sky full of clouds all with silver linings,” Stewart said, “should one expect a golden shower? Maybe for Denny Hamlin. I faked, and Denny bought it. That has to hurt, so I guess Denny’s ‘Stinging In The Rain.’

    “But the No. 14 Office Depot team is picking up right where we left off last year. No, I’m not firing my crew chief. I’m winning races. And the ‘reign gauge’ is full.”

    2. Greg Biffle: Biffle finished sixth at Auto Club Speedway, following Roush Fenway teammate Carl Edwards, who finished fifth, across the line. Biffle has scored top-10 finishes in four of the season’s five races, and leads the Sprint Cup point standings.

    “If nothing else,” Biffle said, “I’m consistent. And, as Edwards showed last year, consistency will take you places. Unfortunately, it will also leave you there.”

    3. Kevin Harvick: Harvick finished fourth in California, posting his second top-5 result of the year. He remained second in the point standings, and trails Greg Biffle by seven.

    “I hear Kyle Busch slapped the wall on Sunday,” Harvick said. “Just as I suspected, it didn’t leave a mark.”

    4. Dale Earnhardt, Jr.: Earnhardt continued his solid start to the season, taking third in the Auto Club 400. He improved three places in the point standings, and now trails Greg Biffle by 17.

    “I was hoping the race could have been restarted,” Earnhardt said. “But, when it rains, it pours. As someone who’s riding a 134-race winless streak, I know that better than anyone. Oh yes, they call me ‘The Streak.’”

    5. Jimmie Johnson: Rain showers salvaged what could have been a disastrous day for Johnson at Auto Club Speedway. After the caution flew when rain started falling on lap 123, Johnson pitted, and the No. 48 Lowe’s Chevy started smoking soon after. The race was red-flagged on lap 129, with Johnson’s car still spewing smoke.

    “If you ask NASCAR,” Johnson said, “they’d say those fumes were from the ‘smoking gun.’ I say the heat that created the smoke could be used to cook ‘crow’ before you eat it.

    “We feel fortunate to finish 10th, and fortunate to have our points reinstated. We’re thrilled to be the first beneficiaries of NASCAR’s ‘Boys, have it back’ policy.”

    6. Matt Kenseth: After a penalty for a loose tire in the pits, Kenseth and the No. 17 EcoBoost Ford limped away from Auto Club Speedway with a 16th-place finish. He fell three spots to sixth in the point standings and trails Greg Biffle by 22 points.

    “This is one time,” Kenseth said, “that I’m sorry to say ‘We were on a roll.’ We missed our setup so bad, tires were trying to escape from being attached to the car. I can’t say I was impressed with my pit crews’ performance, but the Three Stooges were.”

    7. Martin Truex, Jr.: Truex finished eighth at Auto Club Speedway, recording his third top-10 result of the year. He now stands fifth in the Sprint Cup point standings, 20 out of first.

    “Not everyone believed I’d be in the top 10 in points after five races,” Truex said. “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard someone say, “When will this end?” And that was before it started to rain inFontana.”

    8. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin started on the pole in California as Joe Gibbs Racing swept the front row, with Kyle Busch on the outside. Hamlin was in second before pitting during the race’s only caution, which flew for rain on lap 123. He finished 11th after the race was called on lap 129.

    “Tony Stewart threw the fake on me,” Hamlin said. “And, like Jeff Gordon’s gas man, I got taken for a ride. Ironically, I got hung out to dry. They say there’s a sucker born every minute. By that reasoning, I should have a twin, or, better yet, a ‘dupe­-licate.’”

    9. Kyle Busch: Despite scraping the wall late in the race, Busch finished second, earning his first top 5 of the year. He led 80 laps on the day, but lost the lead when slower traffic allowed Tony Stewart to pass him on lap 85.

    “Without the rain,” Busch said, “I’m not sure we could have finished second. The rain was my friend. In fact, the rain may be my only friend.”

    10. Carl Edwards: Edwards opted to stay out when the caution flew for rain on lap 123, and his decision proved to be the right one. Edwards earned a fifth-place finish when rain halted the race shortly thereafter on lap 129. It was his second top-5 finish of the year, and vaulted him three places in the point standings to 12th.

    “The No. 99 Subway Ford was good enough to win,” Edwards said, “but the rain prevented us from proving that. My car was really fast, possibly faster than the speed of sound. But once the rain came, my shot at winning was gone, having disappeared faster than the ‘speed’ of Mayfield.”