Tag: lance mcgrew

  • Chase Elliott and Erik Jones Make ARCA History With One, Two Finish at Pocono

    Chase Elliott and Erik Jones Make ARCA History With One, Two Finish at Pocono

    Two seventeen year olds, Chase Elliott and Erik Jones battled royally at the Tricky Triangle to score a one, two finish in the Pocono ARCA 200.

    And in so doing, they made history, becoming the youngest winner and runner up finisher in the ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards.

    “It was a lot of fun,” Chase Elliott said of his race win after starting from the 32nd position. “We had to start in the back and had some work to do.”

    “Lance (McGrew, crew chief) made some good calls getting us off sequence,” Elliott continued. “Being able to take advantage of that and get out in front when the cautions fell, I feel worked out to our advantage.”

    “We got out front and stayed there so it worked out.”

    The driver of the No. 9 Aaron’s-Hendrickcars.com Chevrolet admitted that it did not hurt having his father Bill coaching him prior to the race and from atop the hauler, especially with his history of winning at Pocono.

    “I talked to him a lot by phone and then at the track,” Elliott said. “He gave me some good advice about this place.”

    “But the big thing is that he never raced on this surface so a lot of things are different than how they used to be,” Elliott continued. “A lot of things have changed but it is still the same old Pocono and he helped me a lot.”

    What did it mean to have his father with him in Victory Lane at Pocono?

    “It means a ton to me,” Elliott said. “It wasn’t a little over ten years ago that I was in Victory Lane with Dad and I’ve got some pictures from that.”

    “I just think that’s really cool,” Elliott continued. “To come up here to Pocono where Dad raced and to get that opportunity is really cool.”

    “I knew it would mean a lot to win and we were fortunate that it worked out.”

    Proud father Bill Elliott did have some first words for his young race winner in Victory Lane. And Chase Elliott definitely heeded that advice.

    “First thing he said that he was going to keep the champagne because I wasn’t old enough to drink it,” Elliott said. “But I think it meant a lot for dad to go back to Victory Lane with me.”

    “I’m not a dad but I feel like that would be cool,” Chase Elliott said. “I’m glad I could take him there today and hope to do it a lot more this year.”

    Bill Elliott was indeed proud of his young son, who has become the focus of his racing expertise.

    “Someone showed me a picture when I was in Victory Lane in 2002 and here is Chase in Victory Lane now in 2013,” Bill Elliott said. “He did a good job.”

    “Everything came together and he did real well,” Elliott continued. “It’s a dream come true for me.”

    “He’s done a good job in all he’s raced,” Elliott said. “This is just another era.”

    Bill Elliott acknowledged that he was one who pushed the ARCA Series to consider relaxing their rules to allow 16 and 17 year olds to race in the series.

    “The kids today have so much more experience and there was a real void there at age 16 or 17,” Elliott said. “ARCA is giving these kids a little extra time to get their feet wet.”

    Bill Elliott was not the only proud parent with his son’s historic ARCA win.

    “I’m just really thrilled for him,” mom Cindy Elliott said. “They tell me that he is the youngest winner.”

    “So, I’m just thrilled for him and for the team and for Lance McGrew, winning now in every division,” Cindy Elliott continued. “What they’ve accomplished today is just wonderful.”

    Crew chief Lance McGrew was also very proud of his young racer and felt fortunate that he could showcase his skills on the big track of Pocono.

    “Chase is an extremely talented race car driver,” McGrew said. “He is young but he was born and bred that way.”

    “He’s got years and years of experience,” McGrew continued. “We were fortunate enough that ARCA made a rule change this season to where we could run on a bigger race track.”

    “I felt like with the backing we had and Chase’s experience that we could come here and do well,” McGrew said. “And we did.”

    Seventeen year old Erik Jones, behind the wheel of the No. 15 ToyotaCare Toyota, finished runner up to Chase Elliott. And he had to battle his own demons and mistakes before being able to move forward to contend for the lead.

    “We ran ourselves out of fuel right before the first pit stop on Lap 42,” Jones said. “We had the whole field lapped at that time.”

    “We had to start at the tail end and a violation coming off pit road,” We just didn’t have time to run him back down.”

    “We’ll come back in August and see if we can get the win.”

    Veteran driver Frank Kimmel, in the No. 44 Ansell-Menards Toyota, finished third. And he was feeling very good about that finish after just getting a few laps on the track because of the rain.

    “Pretty good day,” Kimmel said. “We were one of the teams that didn’t test so we just had about three laps before the race.”

    “I smacked the wall and I thought I had a flat,” Kimmel continued. “That kind of ruined our day and I couldn’t run with those two.”

    “So, we rode it out.”

    Kimmel had nothing but praise for the youngsters who beat him on the race track. And yes, he acknowledged that they were really young, with both of them combined having less years of life than he had alone.

    “What a remarkable deal these young kids are,” Kimmel said. “I have underwear that old.”

    “Chase is a chip off the old block,” Kimmel continued. “I asked Bill (Elliott) who Chase’s  father was because he’s an awfully nice kid.”

    “These young kids are a lot of fun to race with.”

    Tom Hessert, behind the wheel of the No. 77 Barbera’s Autoland Dodge, and Mason Mitchell, driving the No. 99 Happy Cheeks-BeavEx-Reliance Tool Ford, rounded out the top five finishers in the Pocono ARCA 200.

     

     

     

  • Earnhardt Jr., Gordon and Martin Get New Crew Cheifs and Crews for 2011

    Earnhardt Jr., Gordon and Martin Get New Crew Cheifs and Crews for 2011

    Rick Hendrick announced yesterday that he would be switching the crew chiefs up at Hendrick Motorsports to benefit all four teams.

    [media-credit name=”Simon Scoggins” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]The championship combination of Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus will remain together with the No. 48 team. Also, Knaus would get his original No. 48 crew back. Though changes will be made to the team via the struggles they went through this past year.

    The rest of the teams would then be swapped aroumd.

    Mark Martin will work with Lance McGrew, who was crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Jr. this past year.

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. will work with Steve LeTarte, who was crew chief for Jeff Gordon this past year.

    Jeff Gordon will work with Alan Gustafson, who was crew chief for Mark Martin this past year.

    In a sense, Hendrick is cycling the “drivers” around as he calls it to “improve the organization across the board”. Hendrick clarified today that the drivers are just moving around as each crew chief will keep their core members in place.

    Basically, you’ll have the same crew chief, car chief, crew members and shop members, yet different driver, number and sponsors on each team.

    With this swap, the “248″ and the “5/88″ shop will now become the “48/88″ and the “5/24″ shops via the swap of drivers within the two buildings.

    Today, Hendrick held a press conference at 10a.m. EST to talk about the changes to the media.

    Hendrick said that you ”never know until you try. Staying where you are is not going to make you that much better.”

    When it was announced that there’d be a new crew chief for Earnhardt Jr. a couple weeks ago, some people pointed towards Ron Malec, car chief on the No. 48 team. Hendrick discounted doing that, saying Malec is helping to write history there, is happy in his current position and doesn’t want to move up at this time.

    Malec and Johnson have worked together for years, before NASCAR, so it doesn’t make sense to have them seperate via their friendship. Also, Knaus has stated that he only wants to be a crew chief for five to eight more years, so he currently may be putting Malec through the training to take over his role if Johnson chooses to drive beyond that point.

    Hendrick made the choice to bring LeTarte over to Earnhardt Jr. instead as LeTarte is best friends with both Earnhardt and has already brought observations to the table that he wasn’t aware of. Hendrick noted their team debriefs where LeTarte made observations about Earnhardt.

    Hendrick went on to say that, “I feel like Letarte is a seasoned crew chief. He has been in every Chase, he’s never missed one.”

    He also noted that “he’s got some broad shoulders. Jeff gets excited on radio, too. Stevie works through that.” in reference to the fact that Earnhardt can be a handful at times. He added that, “”Steve is a leader and he is a no nonsense guy when it comes to racing. Stevie will be the perfect person for Dale Jr.”

    A lot of people have noted that Earnhardt needed someone he could connection on a “people-connection” level, and Hendrick said that “LeTarte, out of all the crew chiefs, is more of a people person. He is very smart, but has a tremendous personality.”

    Though Hendrick was quick to note that the problems on the No. 24 team weren’t due to LeTarte, yet due to “being dumped by Busch & Burton & then losing a motor.”

    Hendrick went on to add, with reference to the No. 88 team, that he has never had a more perplexing challenge as Dale Jr., though vows to get the team right and fulfill his promise.

    “I knew when I brought Junior on that the world was watching and we needed to make it right for him.” Hendrick said.

    With that extending over to Gustafson now going with Gordon, Hendrick said, “Alan with an engineering background is very technical, not a lot of talk – all business. I think that fits Jeff well.”

    Fans have had numerous theories and one discussed is some people have argued that Mark Martin is getting the short end of the stick as he’s getting what some call the weakest link of the organization. Some say this is due to Mark Martin leaving at the end of the year. Hendrick countered this saying, “I talked to Mark and asked him for his help. He has one more year in our organization. We have to look down the road. I have made a commitment to Mark Martin. The make up of what he’s going to have next year is mostly what he had in 2009.

    “”We’re not going to have a lame-duck situation. We’re going to go for wins and championships.

    “We’re going to do whatever it takes for Mark Martin to win races and have the opportunity to go for the championship again. Mark’s not getting the short end of the stick. He’s gonna get all the stick he wants. And that comes from me.”

    Hendrick also said, “Lance is a technician. Mark Martin is a guy that understands chassis as well as anyone I’ve ever listened to on the radio.

    “I have total confidence in Lance and Chris (Heroy, lead engineer). With Mark’s tech expertise with those 2 guys. Will be a match that surprises a lot of ppl.”

    Heroy has worked along side Martin before as he worked with Martin and Gustafson in 2009, yet was moved to the No. 88 team for 2010 to help improve them.

    In looking at the changes as a whole, Hendrick is just placing those together whom he feels have the best connection to therefore create the best situation for the team overall.

    Lastly, some people have questioned Hendrick bringing championship crew chief Ray Evernham back in the picture at the team now that he has no connection to Richard Petty Motorsports. Hendrick said that wasn’t the case as Evernham isn’t looking for a full-time role.

    “I can see Ray being involved with us in many areas,” Hendrick said. “I’m sure Ray and I will be doing something together.”

    Hendrick added that him and Evernham have been in discussions, though they center more towards maybe producing high performance parts together.