Category: XFINITY Series

NASCAR XFINITY Series news and information

  • TOYOTA NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Post-Race Notes & Quotes Charlotte Motor Speedway

    TOYOTA NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Post-Race Notes & Quotes Charlotte Motor Speedway

    Camry driver Kyle Busch (third) was the highest finishing Toyota in Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

    Steve Wallace (seventh) and Brian Scott (eighth) also earned top-10 finishes for Toyota.

    Camry driver and 2007 Formula 1 champion Kimi Raikkonen made his NNS debut and finished 27th.

    Camry drivers Joey Logano (11th), Michael Annett (14th), Cole Whitt (15th), Kenny Wallace (20th) and John Jackson (37th) were also in the field.

    Five Camry drivers are currently in the top-20 in the unofficial NNS point standings following 11 of 35 races in the 2011 season — K. Wallace (seventh), S. Wallace (eighth), Scott (ninth), Annett (11th) and Ryan Truex (18th).

    KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 Z-Line Designs Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position: 3rd How was your race today? “Race was good. We had a really good car there in the beginning and through the middle stages of the race. Unfortunately, we just weren’t fast enough there at the end. The car didn’t really change much. We actually got the balance better, but we just didn’t have the speed to carry up with those Roush cars today. Our Z-Line Designs Camry was decent — I appreciate the guys and everybody at Joe Gibbs Racing for doing a great job. It’s funny — Matt (Kenseth) comes and runs a one-off and beats us both. Feel kind of bad, but it’s a little reminiscent almost of 2003 as well too when he beat me. We had a good day today — we come home third and get ourselves a little bit better in the owner’s standings. I won’t be in it next week, but the next race we get to, we’ll be ready.”

    Did the tires fall off during the race? “The tires were really good — same compound and everything as the Cup side. It didn’t seem like they were falling off much. Maybe a half a second to a second — that’s actually a little less than normal. Tires had really good grip all day. Surprising for as slick as this place is typically how good the tires wore and how much grip that we did have today. All in all, the cars all seem to drive relatively good, I guess — mine did anyways. Some of the other guys were probably struggling.”

    Were you surprised by the Roush cars? “I mean came out of nowhere where they ran me down from a half a straightaway and drove by me and then took off for another half a straightaway. It wasn’t like they just ran up to me and then we raced for awhile. Once they got to me, I was a sitting duck and they just drove by and took off. They were really fast. I got past Kevin (Harvick) and was leading the race there and was just driving away from everybody and I was like, ‘This is pretty good.’ Then we had a pit stop and ran a few laps and had a caution and then we got back going and I stretched my lead out again to about 10 car lengths and I’m like, ‘This is good.’ Then the 60 (Carl Edwards) and the 16 (Matt Kenseth) got clear of traffic back there and they come out of nowhere. They just ran me down and passed me.”

    What did you think of Kimi Raikkonen’s race today? “I saw him (Kimi Raikkonen) a couple times today — unfortunately, as we were lapping him once. I think the caution came out right before that and then we ended up lapping him there. He seemed that he was doing alright. It didn’t look like he was too loose. Maybe he was tight and kind of struggling with being able to get to the bottom of the race track. With experience, he just seemed to let it float in there and kind of slide up the race track and they need to get in the gas instead of just slowing the car down and making sure he got to the bottom and running a particular lane, he would let the car go where it wanted to go. That’s experience and not sure how he ended up, but hopefully he had a fun time and didn’t get too hot.”

    Are you disappointed at not equaling Mark Martin’s win record today? “Chicago is the race next week and I’m not going — I’m going to Kansas. I’m not going back and forth. There’s a little disappointment, but there’s plenty of time left in order to get there. Those guys were definitely faster than us today. They had the cars to beat and so we just have to wait for another week and when we can get it done. Maybe it’s not too far away.”

    STEVE WALLACE, No. 66 5-Hour Energy Toyota Camry, Rusty Wallace Racing Finishing Position: 7th How did your car handle in the race? “Our car wasn’t bad. Worked real, real hard in practice to improve on our setups and we ran a totally different — I mean totally different package compared to what we’ve ever run. Our intermediate stuff has been absolutely awful this whole year, but we came here with a whole different setup. It ran really good — we finished seventh. From fourth to 10th — it’s just a half-a-tenth and that’s the frustrating part. We have to get that figured out. Our pit stops were good and the cars are handling better so that’s what’s awesome.”

    BRIAN SCOTT, No. 11 Shore Lodge Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position: 8th How was your race? “It was a long day. We fought hard all day. We had a pit road penalty — the guys didn’t do anything bad, just a freak deal. Kevin (Kidd, crew chief) gave me a good car and we were able to drive back up through there. Just kind of picked them off one by one and we were able to come home with a decent day today. We battled all day to get into the top-10. We had a good Shore Lodge Camry and a little track position would have done wonders. We gave up some — we started seventh on that last restart and just was too tight, couldn’t get going and kind of got trapped in the wrong line and gave up some positions. Spent the rest of the run trying to drive back up there. After the month we’ve had — I’ll take an eighth — it feels like a win and hopefully move on to a consecutive streak here of top-10s.”

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 20 GameStop Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position: 11th

    MICHAEL ANNETT, No. 62 Pilot/Flying J Toyota Camry, Rusty Wallace Racing Finishing Position: 14th

    COLE WHITT, No. 99 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Pastrana-Waltrip Racing Finishing Position: 15th How did the car perform in your first NNS start of the season? “We had a good car for about two laps and that’s about it. I don’t know what happened. We had a really good race run car yesterday, but — I don’t know — it just slipped away from us here today. We just could never get the thing freed up. We could never get it to turn. I tried to charge forward on one of those restarts with new tires and I thought we did alright. We just never quite got the setup.”

    How different was the NNS race at Charlotte compared to last week’s NCWTS race at the track? “It wasn’t a whole lot different. Motors are real similar. I mean, there wasn’t a big difference. The only thing different was you could kind of race with people a little more, you know. Trucks get a little more out of control when someone gets on your right side, but these not so bad. If anything it might have been a little bit easier, but at the same time we just never got the setup right. If we could have got it freed up maybe it would been a different story.”

    KENNY WALLACE, No. 09 G-Oil Toyota Camry, RAB Racing with Brack Maggard Finishing Position: 20th

    KIMI RAIKKONEN, No. 87 Perky Jerky Toyota Camry, NEMCO Motorsports Finishing Position: 27th What happened that made the race car so hot? “The floor got really hot under the seat. I don’t know why the car was so hot inside. It was hurting on the heels, but I couldn’t really do anything. Just tried to keep my foot off the floor and just hold them up.”

    Did you enjoy racing in the Nationwide Series? “In the beginning, yes, but the car was getting more and more difficult. It was nice in the beginning and I could overtake on the restart and the car felt really good. It really turned out to be a really bad day with the handling just because I couldn’t get the car to turn and had to almost stop in the corners because it was pushing all the time. The same thing happened in the first and second practice and then we could improve it in the second practice, but somehow something is not right.”

    Did the car handle good at any point during the race? “The car was nice after the restart and I could really go high or low and go faster. If the car would have stayed like that then I think we could have finished really high.”

    What are your future NASCAR plans? “My plan was always to do these first two races and then I have to go back to Europe and do some Rallies and then we will see what happens.”

    Rick Ren, crew chief, No. 87 Perky Jerky Toyota Camry, NEMCO Motorsports Do you think Kimi Raikkonen was struggling with the handling of the car? “The aero package on these cars is — the front running guys are saying the exact same thing. These things just do not handle very well and like where he’s (Kimi Raikkonen) talking about he feels the front end solid, you’ll hear race car drivers say their tires feel like they’re basketballs. If you look at the air pressure that come in on those tires, that’s what it is. It’s just a new feel to him. I’m sure he has never raced cars with that much air pressure in the tires. It feels abnormal to him, but it’s part of how these cars react.”

    How did Kimi Raikkonen perform on the restarts? “I was really impressed with his (Kimi Raikkonen) restarts. He did a really good job. One of the other teams got on the spotter because he was pushing him out of the way and he needed to go. When we unloaded for practice Thursday, he was aggressive and attacked the race track where he was very apprehensive the first Truck practice here. I feel like he adapted a lot better. Whether it’s the car or the truck or whether it was because he had run the week before. In practice, he passed some cars low and passed some cars high and I really felt good when we went home Thursday night that he was prepared to come and do this.”

    What lessons did you learn from today’s race about cooling these cars in the heat? “We’ll just add some more blowers in the driver’s area. You can put a blower in there to blow across the driver’s feet or another blower to get into their back. I heard Kyle (Busch) say he (Kimi Raikkonen) was hot today too. It’s just part of what we do. We’ve got some extra electrical outlets in there that we can put some blowers into. Just moving the air because they have a side window in there so just moving the air will help keep a driver a little bit cool. You can blow hot air on you, but if it’s blowing on you, at least it feels cool so that is something we’ll work on.”

    JOHN JACKSON, No. 72 crashclaimsR.US Toyota Camry Finishing Position: 37th

  • Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NNS Race Final – Charlotte

    Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NNS Race Final – Charlotte

    Saturday, May 28, 2011

    Dodge Motorsports PR

    Charlotte Motor Speedway

    Top Gear 300

    Post-Race Quotes NASCAR Nationwide Series

    BRAD KESELOWSKI (No. 22 Discount Tire Dodge Challenger R/T) Finished Sixth “An uneventful day for us. We were about a sixth or seventh-place car all day. We want to win these Nationwide Series races, but we’re just missing something with our car. The Roush cars are really dialed-in right now. We didn’t unload like we needed to and had to make some big changes last night. Track position was so important here and when you don’t qualify well, it makes a difference. We just need a little bit more. If we can get our race cars to turn better (in the center of the corner), I know that we’ll see victory lane.”

    WHAT AREA DO YOU THINK YOUR CAR IS MISSING ON FOR RACE DAY? “I think we’re off just a little bit everywhere. It’s going to take a little bit more attention to detail preparing these race cars. Our performance isn’t due to a lack of hard work. These guys are busting their tails in giving me a fast race car. We’re just off a bit.”

    TODD GORDON (crew chief, No. 22 Discount Tire Dodge Challenger R/T) “We sat down last night and made a lot of changes to the car because we didn’t feel that practice went that well. We just went back and looked at all the data we had and the off day actually gave us a chance to go back to the shop and get some better balance for today. I think we made strides with our Discount Tire Dodge today. I still think that we need a little bit more. We just need to find a little bit more every week. The guys did a good job getting the car where it needed to be from where we were in practice. Our car is just fighting the center of the corner too much. When we get that figured out we’ll be OK.”

    SAM HORNISH JR. (No. 12 Alliance Truck Parts Dodge Challenger R/T) Finished 12th “A solid day except for our pit stops. We were as good as the 22 (Brad Keselowski) and they ended up sixth. I think we could have been right there with the 22, but we had a pit violation with a tire and on the last set, they left the right front just a little bit loose. It was good enough to get us back up to the first car a lap down before it started vibrating, but the caution never came out. The car handled pretty good. I’m proud of Chad (Walter, crew chief) and the guys that work on the Alliance Truck Parts Dodge. We just need to get our pit stops better.

    “On that first pit stop, we tried to go with two (tires) and the car was way too tight. That got us back a little bit. We were working our way forward and then we had the pit violation. I think we had a fifth-place, at least a sixth- or seventh-place car. We want to be better than that. We’ll just keep working at it. The way we practiced the other day, I thought we had an opportunity to compete for the win. We tried to gamble a little bit there at the beginning, but made the wrong call (two tires). We worked our way back up into the top 10 with plenty of laps remaining, but then had the pit road penalty.”

  • Kenseth Wins Top Gear 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway

    Kenseth Wins Top Gear 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway

    CHARLOTTE – Matt Kenseth was the last car to qualify this morning for the 30th running of the Top Gear 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. It looked as though Kenseth would start from the pole on Saturday but fell just short and started third.

    [media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Kenseth made sure that the same didn’t happen at the end of the race. Carl Edwards was leading in the closing laps, Kenseth was able to slip by Edwards with five laps to go and pull away for the victory. This was his Kenseth’s first Nationwide Series win of the season.

    “What a great day for Fastenal and Ford Mustang.  It was intense there. I cleared Carl the one time and he passed me right back. We had new tires and were able to get him there at the end. It was the first time I’ve driven a Mustang out there and just had a blast. I’m glad Trevor is feeling better and will be back next week, but I had a blast driving for him today.” said Kenseth in victory lane.

    “It really wasn’t easy,” added Kenseth. “But the cars are just really fast. It feels good to beat Carl. He’s really one of the best out there and when you can beat him, you know you had a good game.”

    Last week’s winner, Ricky Stenhouse, Jr sat the fast time in qualifying with a speed of 186.994. He led the first 41 laps, giving the lead over to Edwards. Stenhouse finished fourth.

    “Our Fastenal Mustang was pretty solid all day. It was a top-five car all day, just not good enough to win.” Stenhouse said.

    Kyle Busch was strong in the early running, but ended up with a third place finish. Two drivers that were in the top five all day ran into bad luck in the closing laps.

    “We had a really good car there in the beginning and through the middle stages of the race. Unfortunately, we just weren’t fast enough there at the end.” Busch said.

    Kevin Harvick was strong all day, but a front left fender rub, the result of a green flag restart, forced Harvick to pit road. He was able to battle back for a 16th place finish.

    Kasey Kahne started 22nd, but showed that he had a strong car, working his way into the top five, but he had to pit with 10 laps to go for fuel and then got penalized for speeding on pit road. Kahne finished 22nd.

    Reed Sorensen finished fifth. The remainder of the top ten were Brad Keslowski, Steve Wallace, Brian Scott, Aric Almirola and Elliott Sadler.

    Toytota Camry driver and 2007 Formula 1 champion Kimi Raikkonen made his NNS debut and finished 27th.

    “It really turned out to be a really bad day with the handling just because I couldn’t get the car to turn and had to almost stop in the corners because it was pushing all the time. The same thing happened in the first and second practice and then we could improve it in the second practice, but somehow something is not right.” Raikkonen said.

    As for his future plans, “My plan was always to do these first two races and then I have to go back to Europe and do some Rallies and then we will see what happens.”

    Cole Whitt finished 15th in his NNS debut driving the No. 99 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Pastrana-Waltrip Racing.

    “We had a good car for about two laps and that’s about it. I don’t know what happened. We had a really good race run car yesterday, but — I don’t know — it just slipped away from us here today. We just could never get the thing freed up.” Whitt said.

    Sadler remains the points leader, but only by one point over Stenhouse and two points over Sorenson.

  • Early race contact with wall slows Richardson’s chances for  success at Charlotte in Nationwide race

    Early race contact with wall slows Richardson’s chances for success at Charlotte in Nationwide race

    CONCORD, N.C. (May 28, 2011) – Robert Richardson, Jr. and the No. 23 FunnyDanRaceCarMan.com | North Texas Pipe Dodge of R3 Motorsports never got the chance to get going in the right direction during the NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Saturday.

    From the initial green flag, Richardson started moving forward picking up four spots on the first, of 250, circuits. With a pre-determined competition caution coming on lap 25, Walter Giles and team knew they had an early opportunity to make any needed adjustments for improvement.

    After the driver radioed in to the crew the car was tight on entry and tight on late exit, Giles called for fuel, four tires and an air pressure adjustment to both rear tires. Aiding to their efforts to pick up spots was the ever-efficient pit crew for the No. 23 team of R3 Motorsports as they earned three positions for the lap 30 restart.

    This lined him up as the third car one lap down to the leaders. With new tires and the adjustment, Richardson started to gain on the two spots in front of him to get in the Lucky Dog position.

    As he was coursing through Turn 4 on lap 33, he got tight racing under the No. 28 car and moved up the banking into that car. This also caused Richardson to slide up into the outside wall making heavy right-side contact with his car.

    Richardson brought the car to pit road where a hole in the radiator was detected when fluids started leaking in the pit box. Giles directed him to the garage area on lap 36 for repairs to the right-side fender, quarter panels and radiator.

    The crew leapt into action and did what was needed to get Richardson back into the race. What looked like cosmetic damage to the right side was actually more detrimental on the inside of the car causing for a very long period for repairs.

    Giles directed the crew’s efforts to get Richardson back out on lap 89 while the race was under caution. The driver radioed in the car was handling terribly so Giles called him back down pit road on lap 94 to make a massive chassis adjustments and again on lap 97 to check the car over again.

    By lap 104, it was deemed the car was damaged beyond repairs to return to action for the sake of Richardson’s, and the other competitor’s, safety. This ended the team’s race much too early with a disappointing 36th-place finish.

    Robert Richardson, Jr. Quotes: “That was not what this team wanted with this brand-new car we built for this race. Man, it is so frustrating to keep having things like this happen to us when we know we can do so much better. I just got tight up under the No. 28 there in Turns 3 and 4, got up into him a bit then just slid up the track even higher and hit the wall there in Turn 4 hard enough to end our day early.

    “It didn’t seem like we hit that hard, but it was hard enough to knock us out of the race. The guys on this team work so dang hard to get our cars ready, to build them just right and then we have to call it quits just 104 laps into a 250-lap race.

    “All we can do is load ‘em and line ‘em up again next week in Chicagoland and look for better things.”

  • Stenhouse Jr. Continues Wild Week of Momentum; Wins Nationwide Pole at Charlotte

    Stenhouse Jr. Continues Wild Week of Momentum; Wins Nationwide Pole at Charlotte

    Fastenal Fleet Fast at Charlotte; All three Roush Fenway Fords to start top five

    Roush Fenway Wins 13th Nationwide Pole at Charlotte

    CONCORD, N.C. (May 28, 2011) – Ricky Stenhouse Jr. continued to traverse his recent wave of momentum, winning the pole for Saturday night’s Top Gear 300 Nationwide Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Stenhouse, who scored his first career Nationwide Series victory last weekend at Iowa Speedway, qualified ninth on Thursday for his Sprint Cup debut in tomorrow’s Coca-Cola 600. It is the third career series pole for the 2010 NNS rookie of the year. The pole is the 13th NNS pole for Roush Fenway at Charlotte.

    “We have a really fast Fastenal Ford Mustang for tonight’s race and it’s great to be starting in the front,” said Stenhouse. “All three of the Fastenal fleet will be starting in the top five and hopefully we’ll all be up there racing for the win at the end.”

    Matt Kenseth – making his first NNS start of the season qualified his No. 16 Fastenal Ford third and Carl Edwards will start fifth in the No. 60 Fastenal Ford.

    It is the second pole of the 2011 season for Stenhouse and his first in four races at CMS. It is the sixth NNS pole for Roush Fenway this season and the 10th NASCAR pole for Roush Fenway in 2011. It marked the 13th time Roush Fenway has won a Nationwide pole at the 1.5-mile track of Charlotte Motor Speedway.

    “It’s been a crazy week for sure,” added Stenhouse. “I feel like our Nationwide program was where we could win, it was just a matter of putting everything together toward the end of last year. These are the same (No. 6 team) guys that went through the battles with us last year and came out a lot better off. I won Rookie of the Year with them. We wanted to get a race win and get it under our belt, and now we can focus on championship racing.”

    Today’s Top Gear 300 is set for 2:30 p.m. EDT and will be televised live on ABC. Roush Fenway has won 10 times in the Nationwide Series at Charlotte.

  • RWR signs Best Western Timber Creek Inn for Chicagoland

    Fort Worth, TX. (May 28, 2011) — Through a partnership with Linkous Enterprises, Inc. (LEI), Best Western Timber Creek Inn & Suites and Convention Center will host Rick Ware Racing for the upcoming NASCAR Nationwide Series event at Chicagoland Speedway. The Best Western Timber Creek Inn & Suites logo will be prominently displayed on both RWR entries, the No. 15 Chevrolet driven by Timmy Hill and the No. 75 Chevrolet driven by Carl Long in the STP 300, the first-ever stand-alone Nationwide Series event at the Chicagoland Speedway.

    “We are very appreciative of the support that the Timber Creek Inn & Suites has extended to Linkous Enterprises and our race team,” said team owner Rick Ware. “As owner of the ‘Biggest Little Team in Motorsports’ we realized long ago that our sport and our team thrives with the support of companies such as Timber Creek Inn & Suites and we look forward to having their guests join us for the race and putting on a good show for them. We’re already excited about heading into the Chicagoland area; we know we’re going to have a great place to stay and it’s easy to get back and forth to the track. Hopefully we’ll have some great race fans staying there with us and we can all enjoy the first ever stand-alone Nationwide Series race at Chicagoland Speedway together.”

    Rick Ware Racing competes in both the NASCAR Nationwide Series and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, and has also participated in the Grand American Road Racing Series Rolex 24 at Daytona. Not only is Ware the team owner, but he is also a former driver, having made numerous starts in all three of NASCAR’s national touring series. He finally hung up his helmet in 2003 to focus on building a competitive multi-faceted race team.

    “We’re excited at our first opportunity to work with LEI and their NASCAR race team clients, and we’re very pleased it’s with Rick Ware Racing,” said Cindy Prohl, the director of sales for the Best Western Timber Creek Inn & Suites. “Rick’s team has started from the ground up and in less than two years has really blossomed into a team that can compete for top ten finishes. We watched our hotel being built from the ground up less than two years ago too, and we’re proud to be one of the destinations for race teams and race fans alike whenever they come to the Chicagoland Speedway.”

    The STP 300 for the NASCAR Nationwide Series at Chicagoland Speedway is scheduled for Saturday, June 4 with the green flag expected shortly after 8 P.M. Eastern. The race will be televised live on ESPN and can be heard on select affiliates of the MRN Radio network nationwide and on Sirius XM Radio Channel 90.

    For information on race weekend lodging and rates at the Best Western Timber Creek Inn & Suites, please visit www.timbercreekinnandsuites.com.

  • Plenty of ‘Winning’ to Go Around at Roush Fenway Racing

    Four different Roush Fenway drivers have visited NASCAR victory lane in the past two weeks

    CONCORD, N.C. (May 27, 2011) – A great deal has been made of the phrase ‘winning’  over the past two months, but for Roush Fenway’s diverse and talented stable of drivers, winning has become fast reality. In the past 10 days, four different Roush Fenway drivers have visited a NASCAR victory lane, hoisting the coveted hardware high in the air as their teams celebrate around them.

    “I think it says a lot about the organization that we have been able to put together,” said team owner Jack Roush. “Not only to be able to recruit and attract the type of talent that can compete at the highest level week in and week out, but to be able to hang on those guys for a prolonged period of time. Once they reach a certain level of success and accolades, they have options and we have been able to hang onto a diverse group of talented drivers that can consistently run up front and compete each week at this level.

    “We can do this because we work hard and efficient across the board and we expect all of our teams and drivers to be competitive and each of them fully expects to run up front, and compete for wins and championship year in and year out.”

    Furthermore, five of Roush Fenway’s six drivers have taken home a NASCAR trophy in 2011.  In addition, Greg Biffle won segment one and led a race-high 46 laps in last week’s Sprint All-Star Race. No other stable in motorsports racing can boast this type of success with as many different drivers, competing at such a high level, while – winning.

    Throw in Jack Roush Jr., and Billy Johnson’s win at Virginia International Raceway in the Grand-Am CTSCC Series last week, and team owner Jack Roush has a plenty to smile about as the NASCAR Series heads into the Memorial Day weekend.

    Success across the board is nothing new for Roush Fenway. In 24 years of racing, the organization has visited NASCAR victory lane 289 times with an impressive 14 different drivers.

    Roush Fenway Racing is NASCAR’s largest team operating seven motorsports teams. Four in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series with drivers Matt Kenseth, Greg Biffle, Carl Edwards and David Ragan; and three in the Nationwide Series with Edwards, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and Trevor Bayne. For more information on any of the Roush Fenway Racing teams, log onto www.RoushFenway.com (http://www.roushfenway.com/ ).  Become a fan of Roush Fenway Racing on Facebook by going to http://www.facebook.com/roushfenway and follow us on Twitter @roushfenway. For sponsorship inquiries please contact Robin Johnson at 704.720.4645.

  • Trevor Bayne Emerges from Cone of Silence; Kyle Busch Sticks to His Story

    Trevor Bayne Emerges from Cone of Silence; Kyle Busch Sticks to His Story

    After five weeks of being out of sight due to an undisclosed illness, Trevor Bayne emerged from the cone of silence that had been surrounding him and his condition. Although Bayne will not race this weekend, he will return to his Nationwide ride at Chicago and his Cup ride in a few weeks at Michigan.

    [media-credit name=”Brad Keppel” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Kyle Busch, on the other hand, who has been in the spotlight all week due to an excessive speeding citation, is sticking to his story, as well as showing great remorse and contrition. Busch was ticketed for driving 128 miles per hour in a 45 mile per hour zone at 1:52 PM this past Tuesday in a residential section of Mooresville, North Carolina.

    Both drivers faced the media today as part of the racing weekend activities at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Yet the two could not have been more opposite in their reactions on entering the media center, with Bayne ebullient to be back at the track while Busch appeared polite but subdued.

    “I missed you guys,” Bayne, driver of the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford in the Cup Series and the No. 16 Roush Fenway Ford in the Nationwide Series, as he took to the media stage. “It has been bad being away.”

    “I have been fine for over a week now,” Bayne continued. “Last weekend I took it off as a caution and this week they made me take it off as a caution.”

    The caution was also out for Kyle Busch, but for a very different reason. Busch’s caution resulted from a very speedy shake down behind the wheel of a Lexus sports car that had been loaned to him by the manufacturer.

    “Obviously I had a lack of judgment and just made a mistake,” Busch said as he told his story to the sport’s media corps.

    “And I’m sorry for making that mistake,” Busch continued. “Fortunately there was no one hurt, but that doesn’t make any kind of any excuse for what happened and for my lack in judgment for what I did.”

    In contrast to Busch, Bayne was so anxious to be back on the track and back in a race car that he was even more irrepressibly happy and excited than usual. The 20 year old driver, however, still had no explanation for the double vision, fatigue and general malaise that had kept him sidelined.

    “The cause isn’t exactly sure yet,” Bayne said. “Their biggest hope is that it was an isolated event that is temporary and is gone now.”

    “The diagnosis, I don’t have it yet,” Bayne continued. “It could be just a series of events where you get a bug bite and your immune system is down. Whether that is it or not, only time will tell that.”

    “I still don’t have an official diagnosis but they treated everything they thought it could be and since then everything has gone away,” Bayne said. “To me, they hit something.

    Just as Bayne cannot explain his physical ailments, Busch had no real explanation for his unlawful behavior.

    “I’m certainly sorry that it happened and my actions led me to speed,” Busch said. “It was a lack of judgment and all I can do is apologize to the public, my friends, my fans, my sponsors and everybody.”

    “All I can do is say me piece here and let it be.”

    While both Busch and Bayne could not explain their behavior and illness respectively, the two certainly have one thing in common. They both are taking away ‘lessons learned’ from their experiences.

    “I look at this experience as a learning experience,” Busch said.

    Busch’s team owner, Joe Gibbs, echoed the fact that Busch had much to learn from his offense. In fact, the team owner is even considering possible sanctions.

    “Any disciplinary action is something we’re going through (deciding),” Gibbs said. “That’s things we talk about and discuss.”

    “Obviously we didn’t think suspending him was something we were going to do,” Gibbs continued. “We’re going through a process to try and make sure we do the right thing and treat this as a serious issue.”

    “I’m hoping that somehow out of this something positive will come out of it.”

    Bayne has also learned quite a few life lessons from his time away from the sport being poked, prodded, and tested.

    “I think the biggest thing I have learned through all of this is how supportive everyone in our sport is,” Bayne said. “It has been incredible to me and a real eye opener.”

    “Carl Edwards flew up and saw me in Minnesota and Tony Stewart was using his plane to fly my family back and forth,” Bayne continued. “Everybody in the garage texted me at least once to see how I was doing and that means a lot to me.”

    “Another thing that has sometimes been put into perspective for me is how blessed we are to be race car drivers,” Bayne said. “You get wrapped up sometimes and go through the motions, but when you have to sit there for four or five weeks and watch races you realize how cool it is that you get to be the one driving.”

    “I am actually in a sense thankful for this eye opener.”

    While Bayne has indeed been cleared to return to the track, Busch on the other hand has not been cleared of his charges, with a court date instead of a return to the track date in his future.

    “I leave that to the court system,” Busch said. “This matter will be handled through that as best we can handle it and as best the authorities decide to handle it.”

    Ironically, the young driver Bayne, who has spent so much time recently away from the sport he loves, had this sage advice to share with the more veteran driver Busch.

    “We all need to be responsible and I think we are all young or whatever,” Bayne said. “Hopefully I learn from everybody else and don’t do anything like that.”

    “I am blessed and happy to be a race car driver.”

    Bayne will be on hand at Charlotte to cheer his good friend and teammate Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., who will not only substitute for Bayne in the Coca Cola 600 but also make his own Cup debut. Stenhouse Jr. qualified the No. 21 race car in on time and will start in the ninth position.

    “I think he will do a great job in the Cup car,” Bayne said. “I told him to just enjoy it a little bit and not stress out too much about it.”

    Busch will also be busy during the Memorial Day weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway. He will be running the Top Gear 300 Nationwide race as well as the Coca Cola 600 Cup race.

  • Elliott Sadler Happy Now But Doesn’t Want to End Career in Nationwide Series

    Elliott Sadler Happy Now But Doesn’t Want to End Career in Nationwide Series

    Elliott Sadler made no bones about it when saying he felt given the right situation he’d be in the thick of things in the Sprint Cup Series. While in the midst of what might eventually be known as his rebirth in the Nationwide Series, Sadler isn’t willing to settle for not running with the big boys.

    [media-credit name=”CIA Stock Photo” align=”alignright” width=”240″][/media-credit]Speaking Thursday at the Charlotte Motor Speedway where the NNS is preparing for Saturday’s Top Gear 300, Sadler was candid about both his current and past situation. Even before he did so though, it was clear as it has been since the season started, that he’s perfectly happy racing for Kevin Harvick Inc in the NNS where he’s leading the points. He’s competitive, he’s happy and he’s relevant again for all the right reasons. But he did admit that some things just aren’t the same.

    “I do miss the Cup Series,” he said. “I’d be lying if I told you I don’t miss racing on Sunday’s. Do I miss the situation I’ve been in the last couple of years? I don’t want to cuss, but heck no. I have learned that this sport is a lot more fun when you have a team around you and a supporting cast around you that believes in you and wants to do [well] at the racetrack week in and week out. That’s whether your racing go-karts, Trucks, Nationwide, Cup or what have you.”

    It’s the reason Sadler says, that should he ever get the opportunity to race on Sunday’s again, he’s going to make sure he does so with a competitive team. With a team that acts as one and not, not ride around just for the sake of saying that he’s a NSCS driver.

    “I’ve had the most fun this year I’ve had since I drove the 38 car for Robert Yates,” he said.

    That was during a time when Sadler not only ran up front in the Cup Series but won races. Perhaps, the best years of his life. In 2004 he found the winner’s circle twice and finished eighth in points. But the last few seasons Sadler has been nowhere to be seen and struggled at Richard Petty Motorsports where he said he learned to bit his tongue.

    Sadler though wasn’t done revealing. He stated that no matter how hard a driver works in the racecar if the team doesn’t believe in you, it’s not going to work.

    Now with a team of proven winners and with many preseason predictions of a championship, Sadler doesn’t feel pressure. That’s easy when as he says, he’s got an “army” of guys around him and an owner who will do anything to make sure they’re fast. That, according the Virginia native is cool.

    “I’ll give you a perfect example,” said Sadler. “I see all you guys in here with your cool computers and probably have the latest and greatest technology. Say I give you a story right now to break, it’ll be the biggest story ever and I give one of you guys a computer and I give one of you guys a hammer, a chisel and a stone. I want you to write the story before the other guy finishes it. If not I don’t want to hear no excuses, you should be able to do that. That’d kind of be the same thing I went through.”

    It’s not what he’s going through now. But Sadler made it clear that he couldn’t say that he would be happy racing in the Nationwide Series the rest of his life.

    “If my career ending as a Nationwide driver would I be happy, heck no. My goal is to one day make it back to Sprint Cup because I feel like I can drive circles around half the guys over there if I was in their equipment or in the same situation they were in. My goal is to win a championship this year in the Nationwide Series maybe next and if something good comes along, go back.”

  • NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: DANICA STAYING? DANICA LEAVING? WE HAVE A NEW MYSTERY TO SOLVE

    NOTES FROM THE NASCAR NATION: DANICA STAYING? DANICA LEAVING? WE HAVE A NEW MYSTERY TO SOLVE

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”218″][/media-credit]Remember last fall when we had all of that fun trying to unravel the mystery of where driver Kasey Kahne was going land for the 2011 season? Kahne needed a one year deal with a team while waiting to take over his new ride with Hendrick Motorsports in 2012. We had a ball trying to figure out his 2011 mystery.

    Now we have a new racing riddle to solve and this one is going to be very special because it involves Danica Patrick. On Tuesday we were treated with published reports that said she was moving to NASCAR full time next year and her management team, the highly reputable IMG, were finalizing all of the details.

    However, the following day, Patrick issued a statement saying she had no idea where that information came from and called the reports “speculation.”

    Let the game begin.

    Tuesday’s report was initially released by “ESPN Dot Com”, also highly reputable, and seemed to focus on five major points regarding Patrick’s next move in her career:

    1. Danica Patrick will compete full time in NASCAR’s Nationwide Series in 2012.

    2. She will also drive in a selected number of NASCAR Sprint Cup events next year.

    3. She will move up to the Sprint Cup Series full time in 2013.

    4. She will make a brief return to the Indy Racing League to compete in the 2012 Indy 500.

    5. Her long time sponsor, Go Daddy Dot Com, will follow her to NASCAR.

    The timing of this announcement seems to fit. Her Indy Racing League contract with Andretti Auto Sport, as well as her NASCAR Nationwide Series contract with J R Motorsports, expires at the end of this year.

    However, on Wednesday, Patrick threw a major monkey wrench into machine when she denied any knowledge of her future racing plans being in place. In an interview with “SI Dot Com” she said “I’m watching TV and see it scroll across the bottom of the screen. I don’t know where it came from but it’s all speculation. Anybody can speculate that and write that. I don’t know where it came from but there’s no truth to it; it’s just speculation.”

    Expressing her own form of speculation, she said she found it “curious about the timing of such a story coming out a few days before the Indy 500.”

    I have two basic problems with this denial. First, I’ve never had a second’s hesitation in believing anything that I’ve seen or read from ESPN. They have a long standing reputation of cultivating sources and double checking the facts. I’m inclined to think that their report last Tuesday was spot on.

    Secondly, this would not be the first time a major announcement was denied in order to protect the timing of the official announcement. The catalyst here would be Patrick’s management team taking advantage of every marketing concept available that comes with a glitzy press conference.

    If we’re going to get accused of speculating, then that’s all the reason we need to roll up our sleeves and do exactly that: speculate. It seems that our brand new racing mystery has one element that hasn’t been addressed: what NASCAR team will Danica Patrick sign with?

    The first, and rather obvious, choice is J R Motorsports, the NASCAR Nationwide Series team owned by Dale Earnhardt Jr, that Patrick used to launch her NASCAR venture. That #7 Go Daddy Chevrolet has been Patrick’s NASCAR learning curve since last year. The culmination of the hard worked peaked last March when Patrick finished fourth in the Nationwide Series race at Las Vegas.

    J R Motorsports could easily cover Patrick’s Nationwide Series needs next year, but what about the proposed Sprint Cup events? The answer to that question may lie in yet another high profile contract negotiation. In recent days we learned that team owner Rick Hendrick is very close to signing Dale Earnhardt Jr to a contract extension that will keep NASCAR’s most popular driver in the Hendrick Sprint Cup racing stable for the next several years to come.

    There has also been speculation that says one of the final negotiation points to this new contract involves Rick Hendrick’s increased participation in J R Motorsports. Could that possibly mean that a small fleet of Hendrick built Cup cars could be delivered to Earnhardt’s race shop? It makes sense when you think about it. Hendrick cannot sign Patrick to drive one of his Sprint Cup cars. That’s due to the NASCAR mandated owner’s cap that limits team ownership to four cars implemented just prior to the start of the 2010 season. Hendrick’s four car Cup stable is full at the moment and will be for the next several years. But placing some Cup cars in Junior’s shop would be rather easy.

    There’s also been some speculation regarding a liaison between Danica Patrick and Tony Stewart although the plans for the Nationwide Series could turn out to be a deal breaker. The owner/driver from Stewart-Haas Racing fully understands what it takes to complete the transition from Indy cars to NASCAR stock cars. He has been very generous in the past by discussing the process with Patrick and offering his advice.

    Stewart has always maintained that he’s wide open to expanding his operation from two cars to four under he right set of circumstances. While he hasn’t conducted any formal contract talks with Patrick, he did say he would be interested in having her join Stewart-Haas if she would be willing to make the leap of faith to the Cup level. Stewart made it clear that he was not interested in fielding a Nationwide Series team.

    We can stretch the Danica speculation one giant step further by including Joe Gibbs Racing in this mix. Their existing operation would be perfect for Patrick’s transition because they already have one of the best Nationwide Series operations in place. Bringing Patrick to the Cup level would also be an easy accomplishment because Gibbs Racing currently has three teams with room for one more.

    In the past team President J D Gibbs has said they would seriously consider expanding to a four car Cup operation under the right set of circumstances. A high profile driver like Danica Patrick, backed with Go Daddy dollars, would definitely be the right set of circumstances.

    So there you have it racing fans. We have a new mystery to solve. I think it’s going to be a lot of fun. I’m also wondering where I can purchase one of those really cool Sherlock Holmes hats.