Home Blog Page 5861

CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA: Bud Shootout Race Notes

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

BUDWEISER SHOOTOUT

DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY

TEAM CHEVY RACE NOTES & QUOTES

February 12, 2011

REGAN SMITH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW CHEVROLET

ON THE CRASH:

“Things happened pretty quickly out there so I am not exactly sure what happened,” said Smith. “Our crew chief (Pete Rondeau) said that the No. 88 (Earnhardt Jr.) got into me. But I have a feeling that somebody tagged him first. As I said, I am not really sure what happened. The one thing I do know is that I was having fun and felt that we were getting a better hang of the situation when we got wrecked. The first segment I was just not able to hook up with someone and make it work. I hate crashing a car, but it was still good experience as we plan our strategy for next week’s Daytona 500.”

JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER/DUPONT CHEVROLET – FINISHED 6th

ON THE PAIRED RACING

“It’s interesting. It has its own excitement and interest that’s all new that all of us are trying to get adjusted to. But it’s wild out there; it really is. It’s a lot harder than it looks and it’s just trying to get the right guy to either push or push you. Right there at the end we had the right guy I thought, but he kept hitting the rev-limiter and every time he did he fell off me do I just having to back up to him and back up to him. We just couldn’t go anywhere. But we had a good, fast race car so I was excited about that.

IT SEEMS LIKE THIS IS A WHOLE NEW LEARNING PROCESS

“Oh, yeah; for everybody (including) the fans, for NASCAR, for us, it’s pretty crazy.”

JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 BASS PRO SHOPS/TRACKER BOATS CHEVROLET – FINISHED 2ND:

FIRST IN LAST YEAR’S DAYTONA 500, SECOND TONIGHT, HOW DIFFERENT IS THIS TRACK FROM LAST YEAR? “Well the racing is a lot different. I hope it was exciting to watch because it’s so much different than what we had before. I had a really good time tonight. Johnny Morris was here from Bass Pro Shops and obviously McDonalds and Lift Master it was their first race with us so that was a great way to perform for them. I wish I could have pushed a Chevrolet to the front. Kurt (Busch) and I are really good friends though away from the race track.

“We live just a block or so away from each other. And once Juan (Montoya) got wrecked you know I came on the radio and I told Lauren my spotter, I said listen Matt Kenseth or Kurt Busch will be the next two most loyal guys out here to me. So it just worked out that I got behind Kurt and I don’t think he had a very fast car but we put ourselves in the right position right there at the end to win it for him so I’m really happy for him.”

WHAT DID YOU SEE OUT THERE FROM THE DRIVER’S SEAT? “Well, you know, we talked about it before that you use the Shootout and the Duel 150 to kind of determine where you need to be on the last lap.

I think you saw there that third place is kind of the place to be. You know that the guy in second is going to make the move to win. You just have to hope that the guy in fourth will stay on the guy in third. It worked out well. I am really happy for Kurt (Busch). I am good friends with him away from the race track. Once Juan (Pablo Montoya) got crashed (his teammate), I didn’t have a teammate out there. I told my spotter that we need to either get with (Matt) Kenseth or with Kurt. That would be the two most loyal guys to me. It just happened that Kurt wound up in front of me on the restart and I just shoved him around there and it worked out in the end. I am really happy for Bass Pro Shops, McDonald’s, Coke, Lift Master, there first race with us. It was a good night. I hope it was exciting for the fans to watch because it was a completely different kind of plate racing than we have had. But from the driver’s seat, it was actually really exciting to push two-by-two and do the side draft. It is awesome the runs you were able to get so I hope the fans enjoyed it.”

RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 WIX FILTERS CHEVROLET – FINISHED 3RD:

IS THERE ANYTHING YOU COULD HAVE OR WOULD HAVE DONE DIFFERENTLY IN THAT CLOSING LAP? “Well I knew I was a sitting duck. I wish it would have been just a two-car battle instead of a four-car battle but that’s selfish of me. I want to thank WIX first of all for the opportunity and to come here and sponsor us for this race, everybody from Chevrolet and everybody else. I didn’t know what to expect other than the fact that I knew it was going to happen off of (turn) four. I didn’t know if he was going to go high or low and I didn’t know if I was going the right way, pointed in the right direction that the No. 22 and the No.1 were going to go. It’s a unique race and I’m glad we got back to the finish line in the way we did. That’s the least scratched car we’ve ever had at a superspeedway in my history at Stewart-Haas Racing.”

KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 BUDWEISER CHEVROLET, FINISHED 7TH: WHEN YOU GET HOOKED UP WITH ANOTHER CAR, HOW GREAT IS THE SPEED DIFFERENTIAL TO PASS SOMEONE WHO MIGHT HAVE LOST THEIR PARTNER? “It looks like they are blowing up, they are going so much slower, that you have to really be careful.  You go by them so fast that it is pretty amazing how fast you go by them. Then when you get detached it is pretty tough to realize how much slower you are going when you actually come apart from one another?”

IN THIS NEXT WEEK, HOW WOULD YOU LIKE NASCAR TO RESPOND TO THE SPEEDS, RPMS…ALL THAT STUFF? ‘It doesn’t really matter to us. We have to do a little bit better on some rev limiter stuff and we’ll be ready to go either way.”

HOW MUCH HAS THIS RACE MADE YOU RETHINK ABOUT PLATE RACING? “It’s different. When the pace picked up there at the end, we were up on the rev limiter and couldn’t go anywhere; that was what was holding us back. It actually just started there with 15 laps to go and had to manage that. I couldn’t push like I could with the No. 31 (Jeff Burton) in front of me with the No. 24 (Jeff Gordon). All-in-all, we have good stuff and we are right in there, we just have to do a little bit better on the rev limiter and we’ll be good.”

DID YOU REALLY PULL THE WIRES OUT OF IT? “I couldn’t reach it, but I would of, I will promise you that. I would have pulled them out. They gave me the green light, but I just couldn’t reach it.”

HOW MUCH DID YOU FIND OUT ABOUT HOW YOU COULD WORK WITH SOME CARS AND NOT WITH OTHERS? “Yesterday in traffic during practice, I worked just fine with the No. 24 too, it is just when it is up on the rev limiter like that…I was hitting it half way down the straight away and all the way to the end and we were just getting further behind.”

WAS THIS A GOOD TEST SESSION? “Oh yea, I think everybody was looking forward to tonight for sure. It is one of those deals where we needed tonight to figure out some things and we know what we need to do. All we need to do is change one rev chip and we’ll be ready.”

JEFF BURTON, NO. 31 CATERPILLAR CHEVROLET, FINISHED 8TH: ON THE RACE:  “Obviously we are disappointed with the finish. We are going to need to go back and analyze, figure out what didn’t work out. Kevin (Harvick) and I, for whatever reason, Kevin’s car pushed my car better than Clint’s car pushed my car. We need to figure that out. I don’t know why that was. I thought Kevin and I were in great shape. Once we got separated, he didn’t push me the car in front of him as well as well as he pushed me and I didn’t get pushed by Clint (Bowyer) for whatever reason. It is a car thing. That happened late in the race so, game over. We ran well. It is driving me nuts leading these laps and doing all this stuff and not winning races. We did a lot of that last year; it is not my intention to do it this year.”

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET – FINISHED 4TH

WHAT DID YOU LEARN OUT THERE? “It was a whole new game for sure. Interesting and fun to do something different. You can definitely tell the speeds are up so I am not sure what NASCAR’s opinions are going to be about all this. You had the three-four wide thing at the end of the race and that is what the fans came here to see. Exciting night for sure.”

WERE THERE CERTAIN GUYS YOU WORKED BETTER WITH OR WORSE WITH OR WAS IT ALL THE SAME? “As the races go on, everybody is going to understand how to make this work. Greg (Biffle) and I had worked really well together and came up through the pack. When I had a chance there near the end to work with him, I made sure that I did. Your friends change. It is whoever is close enough to you to work with you. Greg and I went out of our way to work together and it worked out for us.”

About Chevrolet: Founded in Detroit in 1911, Chevrolet celebrates its centennial as a global automotive brand with annual sales of about 4.25 million vehicles in more than 140 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. The Chevrolet portfolio includes iconic performance cars such as Corvette and Camaro; dependable, long-lasting pickups and SUVs such as Silverado and Suburban; and award-winning passenger cars and crossovers such as Spark, Cruze, Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly to gas-free” solutions including Cruze Eco and Volt. Cruze Eco offers 42 mpg highway while Volt offers 35 miles of electric, gasoline-free driving and an additional 344 miles of extended range. Most new Chevrolet models offer OnStar safety, security and convenience technologies including OnStar Hands-Free Calling, Automatic Crash Response and Stolen Vehicle Slowdown. More information regarding Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

Busch wins by a nose; Hamlin goes below the yellow line

Denny Hamlin looked to have made the winning pass when he pulled out from behind race leader Ryan Newman and made inside pass for the race lead exiting turn four on the last lap.  But Newman came down the track to block, sending Hamlin below the yellow line, thus per NASCAR’s rules, Hamlin advanced his position and was disqualified for going below the out-of-bounds line.

“That yellow line is there to protect us and the fans in the stands safety and I just chose to take the safer route. A win in the Shootout is not worth sending the 39  through the grandstands. For me, as fast as we’re running, if I get into his left rear, that car will go airborne. For me, it was a tough position.” Hamlin said.

Hamlin was black-flagged and dropped to 12th position, the last car on the lead lap.

[media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”201″][/media-credit]Kurt Busch and Jamie McMurray also made their move to the outside while Newman and Hamlin where fighting for the lead and Busch crossed the finish line a nose ahead to win Saturday nights Budweiser Shootout.

“I knew the 11 was going to split away from the 39.  I was hoping he would do it soon enough.  It worked out in our favor at the end because McMurray stayed with us.  For Shell/Pennzoil to believe in Penske and me, this is unbelievable to deliver them a victory in this 22 car.” Busch said.

This was Busch’s first shootout win in eight tries.

“What an amazing win.  To get to victory lane for Shell/Pennzoil is incredible.  This Dodge Charger was fast and I have to thank my “teammate” Jamie McMurray so much.  What an unbelievable experience, this two-car draft.” Busch said.

Carl Edwards and Dale Earnhardt Jr. spun out after contact from Edwards on lap 27.  Juan Montoya, Regan Smith and Joey Logano were also involved.

“We were all just battling for position.  We were at least three-wide and I had my car up against Dale Jr.’s as best I could and the 78 was on the outside.  I was in the middle and I don’t think he knew my nose was in there.  I was probably hidden by the 88 and he just kept coming down.” Edwards said.

“We were hooked in the rear, the right rear quarter panel and I was watching it and you know, when I saw this gold car coming at me and I thought I had it saved for a second but it’s hard to drive them that fast when they’re out of control. But it was fun. The racing might look kind of crazy but it was pretty fun.” Earnhardt said.

On lap 48, Michael Waltrip gets loose after “bump draft” contact from Tony Stewart.  Waltrip went into the outside wall and then slid down through the grass.

In lap 36, Mark Martin and Kyle Busch spun after “bump draft” contact from by Martin.

“It just went around on him. We were perfect-latched and nothing was different. So I don’t know if our tires being colder or, I don’t know why that happened. I have no answers. I’m sorry. I was doing the same thing everybody else was doing. It’s just a bad deal. I hate that.” Martin said.

2011 Unofficial Race Results

Budweiser Shootout, Daytona International Speedway

February 12, 2011 | Exhibition

Pos. No. Driver Make Sponsor Laps Status
1 22 Kurt Busch Dodge Shell / Pennzoil 75 Running
2 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet Bass Pro Shops / Tracker 75 Running
3 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet Wix Filters 75 Running
4 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet Lowe’s / Kobalt Tools 75 Running
5 16 Greg Biffle Ford 3M 75 Running
6 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet Drive to End Hunger 75 Running
7 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet Budweiser 75 Running
8 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet Caterpillar 75 Running
9 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet Cheerios / Hamburger Helper 75 Running
10 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota Reese Towpower / Highland 75 Running
11 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet Mobil 1 / Office Depot 75 Running
12 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota FedEx Express 75 Running
13 17 Matt Kenseth Ford Crown Royal Black 75 Running
14 64 Derrike Cope Toyota Sta-Bil 73 Running
15 115 Michael Waltrip Toyota NAPA Auto Parts 47 In Pit
16 18 Kyle Busch Toyota M&M’s 41 In Pit
17 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet GoDaddy.com 36 In Pit
18 20 Joey Logano Toyota The Home Depot 27 In Pit
19 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet National Guard / Amp Energy 27 In Pit
20 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet Target 27 In Pit
21 99 Carl Edwards Ford Scotts EZ Seed 27 In Pit
22 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet Furniture Row Companies 27 In Pit
23 97 Kevin Conway Toyota Extenze 26 Running
24 4 Kasey Kahne Toyota Red Bull 7 Out

Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – Kurt Busch VL Quotes

KURT BUSCH (No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Dodge Charger) Race Winner

“What an amazing win.  To get to victory lane for Shell/Pennzoil is incredible.  This Dodge Charger was fast and I have to thank my “teammate” Jamie McMurray so much.  What an unbelievable experience – this two-car draft.  I had no idea what to expect going in.  I was just going to take it one lap at a time and see how it plays out.  I wanted to learn as the race went on how this Shell/Pennzoil Dodge raced.  (McMurray) was the man tonight.  He stayed with us.  He stayed true.  I can’t thank him enough for doing that tonight. I hope it was the show the fans wanted to see.”

TALK ABOUT WHEN YOU DECIDED TO MAKE YOUR FINAL MOVE?  “I wanted to give those guys a push hard getting into Turn 1 and I never got to them.  Then my game plan changed to take whatever I could get.  I knew the 11 was going to split away from the 39.  I was hoping he would do it soon enough.  It worked out in our favor at the end because McMurray stayed with us.  For Shell/Pennzoil to believe in Penske and me, this is unbelievable to deliver them a victory in this 22 car.”

ARE WE GOING TO SEE THIS ACTION NEXT SUNDAY FOR THE 500?  “Absolutely.  It’s going to be those two-car tandems.  No matter who you’re hooked up with, you’ve got to be able to go.  It’s going to be interesting to see what NASCAR does and if they shake out the rules.  I believe in what we’ve got.  NASCAR’s done a tremendous job to give us this package and we’re happy to race it.  Shell/Pennzoil on-board, putting Dodge back in victory lane, we’ve got AAA, Coca-Cola, a bunch of great sponsors.  And I’ve got the greatest crew in the garage.”

Biffle Leads Roush Fenway Effort with 5th-Place Finish in ‘Paired Up’ Shootout

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb 12, 2011) – Greg Biffle finished fifth in Saturday night’s Budweiser Shootout to lead the Roush Fenway effort in the all-star kickoff to the 2011 NASCAR season at Daytona International Speedway. The finish is Biffle’s fourth top-five finish in six career Shootout starts.

The race – the first for NASCAR on the newly paved surface at Daytona – saw 28 lead changes and was characterized by various two-car packs that worked together throughout the race to move through the field.

“It’s kind of different,” said Biffle. “We’ve never done this before, pushing like this, so it’s just something new. I think it would be more fun if it was a bigger pack, but the (Daytona) 500 is going to be different.  There will be a lot more cars out there, so we’ll just have to wait and see.”

Matt Kenseth showed promise early, but could not find the essential dance partner late in the race and finished 13th.

“At the end there I was the odd man out because I couldn’t get with a group of two,” said Kenseth, who competed in his fifth Shootout. “Everybody was grouped up in twos and if you can’t get with one other car in a group, you’re pretty much done and you’re just going to fall back.  It may be a little different next Sunday with more cars.”

Carl Edwards got caught up in a six-car accident on lap 27 and finished 21st in the event.

The teams return to action tomorrow (Sunday, Feb. 13) for Sprint Cup pole day. Qualifying is set for 1:10 p.m. and will be televised live on FOX. Matt Kenseth goes out first of the Roush Fenway cars at fifth.

Ford Budweiser Shootout Quotes

FORD RACING NOTES AND QUOTES Budweiser Shootout, Page 1          

February 12, 2011    Daytona International Speedway    

CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Scotts EZ Seed Ford Fusion (Finished 21st) – “We were three or four-wide back there and I was going between the 88 and the 78 and I don’t think the 78 knew I was in there.  He kept coming down and I just had enough of my car in there.  I laid up against the 88 and then the 78 got me in the right-front, but that’s just everybody going to try and get the best position they can so we can go out there and race.  That’s what this race is for is to learn, but I hate that we tore up all those good cars.  We’ll have to loan them some EZ seed to take care of some of that damage on the backstraight.”

WHAT WAS IT LIKE OUT THERE?  “It was pretty wild.  I’ll be tuned in watching the rest of it, that’s for sure.  I just wish we could have raced a little longer.  I appreciate all the fans coming out here.  I think this race and next week’s race is gonna be wild.  I think the fans are gonna get what they pay for.”  WHAT HAPPENED?  “We were all just battling for position.  We were at least three-wide and I had my car up against Dale Jr.’s as best I could and the 78 was on the outside.  I was in the middle and I don’t think he knew my nose was in there.  I was probably hidden by the 88 and he just kept coming down.

I was like, ‘No, no, no, no,’ and then he got me across the right-front.  I probably could have stabbed the brake and backed out of there, but I didn’t know exactly what was going on behind me.”

WHAT ABOUT THE RACING AND THE NEW ASPHALT?  “It’s just gonna be two cars teamed up.  It’s really difficult.  You have to really trust the guy that is pushing you.  We had our wreck right there in their normal pack, but once you get groups of cars running that last lap, it’s just all about trust.” 

ARE THE RPM’S A LOT HIGHER THAN THEY WERE BEFORE?

“The cars are going so fast that the RPMs are really high.  It’ll be interesting to see if NASCAR lets us race like this or if they change something.  Either way, it’ll be fine.  It’s actually, I think, safer for us to be out there racing two cars away from each other, rather than that pack, but it’s insane.  It’s wild.” 

WHAT IS THE CLOSING RATE LIKE?  IT SEEMS WILD.  “The problem is if you’re the guy pushing you can’t tell what’s going on in front, so you almost need to be on the same radio channel as the guy in front and that’s really hard to do.”

GREG BIFFLE – No. 16 3M Ford Fusion (Finished 5th) – “It’s really hard to see when you’re doing that two-car push what’s in front of you.

Jimmie made a move to the bottom down here and I wasn’t expecting him to do that and it kind of screwed our momentum up and probably cost us there at the end to get back to the front.  It’s kind of different.

We’ve never done this before, pushing like this, so it’s just something new.”  IT’S NEW, BUT DO YOU LIKE IT?  “Well, I think it would be more fun if it was a bigger pack.  I really think we’d have more fun if there was 20-25 of us together, but it’s more fun when the pack is bigger than just pushing two cars around the whole time, but the 500 is gonna be different.  There will be a lot more cars out there, so we’ll just have to wait and see.”

MATT KENSETH – No. 17 Crown Royal Black Ford Fusion (Finished 13th) – “It’s not really that great having a whole bunch of groups of two and when you can’t do anything without that it isn’t really that much fun.

 If you’re the pusher, you can’t see a thing and with going 207 miles an hour and pushing someone when you can’t see, it’s not a lot of fun.

At the end there I was the odd man out because I couldn’t get with a group of two.  Everybody was grouped up in twos and if you can’t get with one other car in a group, you’re pretty much done and you’re just gonna fall back.  It may be a little different next Sunday with more cars, but I don’t know.”

CHEVY NSCS AT DAYTONA: Bud Shootout Race notes – Earnhardt Jr., Martin, Montoya

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

BUDWEISER SHOOTOUT

DAYTONA INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY

TEAM CHEVY RACE NOTES & QUOTES

February 12, 2011

DALE EARNHARDT JR., NO. 88 AMP ENERGY/NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET

ON THE CRASH:

“Well, I was just running along there. Me and Jimmie (Johnson) were trying to work together and get ready for our pit stop. We were hooked in the rear, the right rear quarter panel and I was watching it and you know, when I saw this gold car coming at me and I thought I had it saved for a second but it’s hard to drive them that fast when they’re out of control. But it was fun. The racing might look kind of crazy but it was pretty fun. It’s a new style of racing for sure and I was enjoying it. We were just waiting around and trying to line ourselves up for the pit stop and it was just too many race cars going for the same piece of real estate there, but we’ll be all right.”

MARK MARTIN, NO. 5 GODADDY.COM CHEVROLET

WHAT HAPPENED?

“Well, I don’t know. It just went around on him. We were perfect-latched and nothing was different. So I don’t know if our tires being colder or, I don’t know why that happened. I have no answers. I’m sorry. I was doing the same thing everybody else was doing. It’s just a bad deal. I hate that.”

SOUNDS LIKE PART OF THE LEARNING PROCESS TRYING TO FIGURE OUT THIS TWO-CAR DEAL

“I don’t know if you need to wait until the tires get hotter. I’m not really sure. There was no indication. He did (No. 18) slip quite a bit down in Turn 3 and 4 and I did too. I had somebody pushing me. And he slipped pretty big but I didn’t pay any mind to it. I thought it was because we had three of us hooked instead of two. And then we got down there and when he turned in the corner the back just went around on him.”

“I just don’t know why or how that happened. Kurt and I ran the whole 25 laps hooked together and everything was perfect and Kyle and I got hooked on him and we went into Turn 1 and his back end just started coming around and I don’t know if we needed to wait until the tires got hotter; maybe they were a little cold. I’m not sure. I can’t figure out why that happened. It was just a non-issue. Before that we were able to run through the corners and it wasn’t even a sweat. I hate it. We were doing good and I was having a good time.”

WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO BE IN RACE CONDITIONS WITH THE NEW PACKAGE? “I enjoyed it. I was having a good time. Our GoDaddy.com Chevy was pretty strong. I was wanting to get hooked back up with Kurt (Busch). If Kurt and I could have stayed together the whole time, but the restart broke us up, I think that we could have had a chance.”

JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET: ON WHAT HAPPENED: “In the first segment we were too far behind. It is just early, people are getting desperate.

“They all wrecked in front of us. I missed the big wreck then somebody tangled me and I went toward the fence. Didn’t do much damage to the car, just the right rear quarter panel a little bit. The next thing I see is the No. 20 car (Joey Logano) coming off of the grass straight into me. It sucks.”

HOW DID YOU LIKE TO TWO-CAR DRAFTS? “I don’t mind it”

About Chevrolet: Founded in Detroit in 1911, Chevrolet celebrates its centennial as a global automotive brand with annual sales of about 4.25 million vehicles in more than 140 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. The Chevrolet portfolio includes iconic performance cars such as Corvette and Camaro; dependable, long-lasting pickups and SUVs such as Silverado and Suburban; and award-winning passenger cars and crossovers such as Spark, Cruze, Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly to gas-free” solutions including Cruze Eco and Volt. Cruze Eco offers 42 mpg highway while Volt offers 35 miles of electric, gasoline-free driving and an additional 344 miles of extended range. Most new Chevrolet models offer OnStar safety, security and convenience technologies including OnStar Hands-Free Calling, Automatic Crash Response and Stolen Vehicle Slowdown. More information regarding Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

Edwards Budweiser Shootout Quote

FORD RACING NOTES AND QUOTES Budweiser Shootout, Page 1          

February 12, 2011    Daytona International Speedway    

CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Scotts EZ Seed Ford Fusion – “We were three or four-wide back there and I was going between the 88 and the 78 and I don’t think the 78 knew I was in there.  He kept coming down and I just had enough of my car in there.  I laid up against the 88 and then the 78 got me in the right-front, but that’s just everybody going to try and get the best position they can so we can go out there and race.  That’s what this race is for is to learn, but I hate that we tore up all those good cars.  We’ll have to loan them some EZ seed to take care of some of that damage on the backstraight.” 

WHAT WAS IT LIKE OUT THERE?  “It was pretty wild.  I’ll be tuned in watching the rest of it, that’s for sure.  I just wish we could have raced a little longer.  I appreciate all the fans coming out here.  I think this race and next week’s race is gonna be wild.  I think the fans are gonna get what they pay for.” 

WHAT HAPPENED?  “We were all just battling for position.  We were at least three-wide and I had my car up against Dale Jr.’s as best I could and the 78 was on the outside.  I was in the middle and I don’t think he knew my nose was in there.  I was probably hidden by the 88 and he just kept coming down.  I was like, ‘No, no, no, no,’ and then he got me across the right-front.  I probably could have stabbed the brake and backed out of there, but I didn’t know exactly what was going on behind me.” 

WHAT ABOUT THE RACING AND THE NEW ASPHALT?  “It’s just gonna be two cars teamed up.

It’s really difficult.  You have to really trust the guy that is pushing you.  We had our wreck right there in their normal pack, but once you get groups of cars running that last lap, it’s just all about trust.” 

ARE THE RPM’S A LOT HIGHER THAN THEY WERE BEFORE?  “The cars are going so fast that the RPMs are really high.  It’ll be interesting to see if NASCAR lets us race like this or if they change something.

Either way, it’ll be fine.  It’s actually, I think, safer for us to be out there racing two cars away from each other, rather than that pack, but it’s insane.  It’s wild.” 

WHAT IS THE CLOSING RATE LIKE?  IT SEEMS WILD.  “The problem is if you’re the guy pushing you can’t tell what’s going on in front, so you almost need to be on the same radio channel as the guy in front and that’s really hard to do.”

ARCA: Bobby Gerhart wins Seventh Daytona race with Lucas Oil Slick Mist 200

[media-credit name=”ARCA Racing Network” align=”alignleft” width=”256″][/media-credit]Old pavement, new pavement, it doesn’t matter to Bobby Gerhart as he still continued his Daytona dominance with his seventh Daytona win.

“We didn’t have a good car – we had a great car,” Gerhart said. “That was awesome…..The kid (Chris Buescher) did a tremendous job. I was getting pounched around a lot there.”

Playing the role of Gerhart’s wing man and pushing him to victory was 18-year old rookie Chris Buescher, who stuck with Gerhart the whole race.

“That was pretty cool with coming to Daytona for the first time,” he said. “Congratulations to Bobby Gerhart – he is the best here. He learned a lot here.”

Bobby Gerhart and Chris Buescher pitted early in the race under the first caution and then stayed out under the cautions that followed to take the top two spots with 30 laps to go.

“We’re getting exceptional milage again,” Gerhart’s crew chief Billy Gerhart said. “We went to Talladega three weeks ago and we knew when we came here, it’d be tough to pass. So lets work on the mileage…….We come here to win. I’d rather be leading and run out rather than run second.”

Rookie Matt Merrell finished third while Camping World Truck Series veteran Ricky Carmichael finished fourth. NASCAR All-Star Showdown winner Jason Bowles completed the top five in fifth.

Rounding out the top 10 was Joey Licata, Benny Gordon, Chad McCumbee, Grant Enfinger and Frank Kimmel.

Pole sitter Ty Dillon finished 11th after being involved in an accident earlier in the race.

On lap 63, the big one happened when Hal Martin blew a tire, causing a wreck that involved Steve Arpin, Milka Duno, Kyle Fowler, Steve Blackburn, Bryan Silas and Maryeve Dufault.

“The only thing I saw was smoke and I saw bouncing cars all over the place,” Maryeve said afterwards. “I thought the safest place would be to go down as low as possible, but we still got caught up.”

Other wrecks that happened included Ed Pompa with a tire blowing out on lap 56 and Chad Hackenbracht flipping on lap 45.

“I’m doing pretty fine. going through three and four, all i know is we had a good three-four car draft going,” Hackenbracht said. “I heard something clinking, went to the outside of the 30 car and it wrecked.”

The next ARCA race of the season will be on April 15th at Talladega Superspeedway and will be broadcast live on SPEED.

To see more articles by Ashley McCubbin and live updates from the weekend, check out http://newsfromthepits.blogspot.com/

Ten Years Later, How Do You Explain Dale Earnhardt’s Death?

How do you explain the aftereffects of the 2001 Daytona 500 to someone unfamiliar with the sport? How do you explain an event that, even ten years later, can cause the burliest of men to shed a tear? How do you explain how one singular event can so deeply affect a legion of fans?

For the last ten years there has been countless times where I have attempted to explain why the death of someone I have never met is nonetheless still profound. My wife doesn’t understand, most of my friends don’t understand, and anyone else I explain it to provides an inescapable look of confusion on their face.

It seems silly to some in numerous respects, but in order to understand that fateful day one has to understand the context in which it occurred.

NASCAR Cup racing prior to Nextel, prior to the Chase, prior to the COT, was a massively different sport. On paper, the changes seem minute, but there was an intimacy to the sport that has been lost over the years.

In this era it was our sport and our drivers. Rebuked by the media and fans of the more typical stick and ball sports, we sat alone… and cherished it. Much criticism is expressed about today’s coverage, namely because in those days it almost seemed as if you were watching a race with your buddies.

Whether it was Bob Jenkins, Ned Jarrett, Benny Parsons, Eli Gold or the late Neil Bonnett, you felt as if you were sitting on the couch right next to them. Truly, that was the beauty of that era, the feeling as if there was no divide between the sport and the fans.

Today much is made about the accessibility of sports starts today. From how stars like Shaq or Chad Johnson will respond to fans on Twitter to the way someone like Deion Sanders gives back to his community. The media will tell you that this is the most intimate era of sports in history.

But that isn’t true because in those days it was different. Much, much different.

Drivers were often as accessible as you were to your family and friends. It wouldn’t be unheard of to be hunting deep in the woods of North Carolina and bump into Dale Earnhardt. Or visit a Bill Elliott dealership and actually chat with Elliott himself.

When Harry Gant was in the midst of his record setting winning streak in 1991, a reporter searched high and low for Gant in order to interview him. Eventually resorting to a phone call to Gant’s wife, she informed him where he had been all week… perched on the roof of his house doing some shingling.

These drivers were the same as you, as I, as everyone else. They were truly the every man of the sporting world… and we loved it.

So on Sunday afternoons we weren’t just cheering on our favorite drivers, we were cheering for what could be a family member or a close friend. There was no facade of a public image, what you saw was a person whom, presumably, was just like you and trying to make a living.

They just so happened to be doing so at 200 miles per hour.

[media-credit name=”nascar” align=”alignright” width=”284″][/media-credit]Dale Earnhardt was the epitome of this notion. When I was younger, he was as close to as a deity as anything I had seen. He was my Michael Jordan, a person beyond greatness whom I, and many others, deemed to be infallible.

Over his career, we had witnessed Earnhardt perform remarkable feats on the track that defied belief. Watching him wheel a stock car was like watching Picasso with a brush. It was an utterly breathtaking experience.

Even more so when the camera would pan towards him and you would see Earnhardt’s typical smirk. Sliding a car sideways and snaking it between others would be enough to dirty the shorts of most drivers, but for Earnhardt it was just good ole fashioned fun.

Ironically the last race he completed, the opening IROC event at Daytona, was a micro-chasm of who he was as a man and as a driver. After performing what is arguably the most spectacular save in the history of Daytona International Speedway, he retaliated by spinning the instigator, Eddie Cheever, after the race.

Upon exiting their vehicles, one would expect anger and malice. Instead, their stood Earnhardt, grin and all, mucking it up with Cheever. It was like it was nothing more than a squabble you or any of your bodies would have, culminating in a cold beer and a good laugh.

It was what we loved not only about Earnhardt, but the sport itself.

As the last lap of the 2001 Daytona 500 drew near, we noticed a different Earnhardt. Instead of the Intimidator, there raced the protector as he watched his son and his previously snake-bitten driver, Michael Waltrip, streak to victory.

Much has been written and said about what had happened inside of that black number three on the last lap, but the only certainty is that he possessed his trademark smirk heading into that final corner.

What happened then seems as unbelievable today as it did that day. The epitome of the sport, the infallible driver who once raced with a sternum so shattered and broken it overlapped, was gone.

Every fan has some indelible image stamped in their memories from the first moments after that race. For me, it was the slowness of the ambulance as it made its way to Halifax Medical Center and the scramble to find out what was happening afterwards.

The most popular analogy we give other sports fans is having to watch Michael Jordan die on the court in the midst of a game winning pass or score.

Only it’s not that simple. Fans were not as intrinsically and emotionally connect to Jordan, or any other sports star, during their period of greatness. They were always above the fans because of their greatness, but their death would be nonetheless tragic.

This is different. This is personal.

It’s disconcerting to witness something of this nature. I can only surmise that it is like witnessing the sudden last moments of a loved one or close friend’s life. Every second is re-livable… and every second is just as painful.

Its why, ten years later, I personally have not been able to sit down and watch Earnhardt’s funeral. I’m not sure if that VHS tape will ever move from the shelf in my office. Ten years later it’s still… too real.

A monumental amount of good has come from that inauspicious day. No amount of good will ever be able to erase the pain that we all feel this time of year.

Perhaps it’s easier to explain to others that on that day, part of ourselves died as well. It’s a sore that is as real as if a family member had died. And that each year it becomes a bit easier, but it is something which will never heal.

That’s what happens when you see your hero die before your eyes. That’s what we live with every Daytona Speedweeks.

Is that so hard to understand?

Toyota NNS Daytona Notes & Quotes — Michael Annett

TOYOTA NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Notes & Quotes — Michael Annett Daytona International Speedway — February 12, 2011

MICHAEL ANNETT, No. 62 Pilot Travel Centers Toyota Camry, Rusty Wallace Racing Opening statement from Annett (prior to Q&A): “First of all, I need to start out with making some apologies to some certain people out there.  First off, my family  — they’ve been with me since I started this career and they’ve been behind me the whole way.  I think I let them down the biggest way a son or a brother really could.  Next, would be the Rusty Wallace organization.  They took a big chance on me this year and this obviously is not the way I wanted to start it out.  Definitely disappointed Rusty (Wallace, team owner) and everybody there — my team as well as the No. 66 team.  The next two years are going to be about earning their respect back.  I’m definitely in a position where I’m ready to do that.  With my sponsor, they’ve backed me since I started racing.  Like I said, I think let down and embarrassment is kind of the key words for everybody.  Last, is the NASCAR community.  These people come here each weekend to watch us race and there’s a lot of kids out there that look up to us as role models.  If I had kids I think I would be the last real person that I would point to for them to look up to right now.  I’m definitely owning up to the mistake I made and this is definitely the worst week of my life — the lowest I’ve ever felt as a person.  This can go two ways, it can either be the end of me or it can be the start of a new life and a better person, better driver and the word I used earlier — role model.  This is definitely something that I think is going to end up to be a success story in the end and definitely have the people behind me and the support from Rusty Wallace, my family and everybody I listed earlier.  I have everybody I need behind me to do this in turning this around and being a better person.”

Why did you choose to drive and were you worried about this ever happening? “We’re professional athletes and we need to maintain a certain lifestyle so we have to drive.  Driving while intoxicated — besides shooting somebody, it’s the worst thing you could possibly do.  It was just a huge mistake on my part.  It’s something that no one should ever do.  You can make a lot of mistakes in your life and that’s one that you should just never make.  It was just a horrible judgment call on my part and it’s something that is never going to happen again.  We’re definitely taking steps to make sure that it never happens again.”

Do you dispute anything you have been accused of in this situation? “No, not at all.  I’m owning up to everything I did and there’s no excuse for it, there’s nowhere to point a finger except right back at me.  Taking full blame and just hoping everyone can learn from this.  I know I have.  Honestly, it scared the hell out of me.  It’s something that we’re taking steps to make sure that it never happens again.  There wouldn’t need to be steps — I’m telling you, it honestly scared the hell out of me.  It’s something that’s just never going to happen again and it shouldn’t happen to anybody else.”

Do you feel like you need some counseling to get through this? “I really don’t know.  I know that’s part of the things that we’re doing with NASCAR and Rusty Wallace Racing.  We are going to do some counseling classes and some awareness classes.  After that I might be able to answer that question better and say, ‘Yeah, I did need this’ or ‘No, I didn’t.’  It’s something that I could control on my own.  It’s something I want to do even if they weren’t mandating because like I said, as much as Saturday night scared me, if I didn’t personally want to go to make sure there’s not a problem then I would wonder why other people weren’t helping me out here.  It’s something I want to do voluntarily and if they weren’t making me do it, I would be there.  I have already been there on Wednesday when I went in just to start the program.  I wanted to get that started even before we start racing next weekend.  We’re taking everything and all the steps we need to take.  I can answer that question better after I go to some classes and find out if there is a problem.”

How exactly did the accident scare you? “It scared me that I could have killed somebody or even injured somebody.  I could have injured myself.  Not only just the people that were involved in the accident and I drove a ways until we got to that point.  There’s so many lives that I risked and then also it was a wake-up call, the fact that I made that bad of a decision to get behind the wheel that night.  I need to sit back and think what kind of person am I, and I nee d to better my life and better my decisions and definitely need to start making a lot better judgment calls.”

Has your community service been determined? “No, it hasn’t and that goes along the lines that I am going to do that stuff anyways.  If they say do 20 hours, I will probably be doing 40.  This is the beginning of a new Michael Annett, a new person — not only in the NASCAR community, but as a person in general, as a family member, a better friend to everybody.  It’s just the start of a new person and community service is one of the best ways to get your head in the right place and realize what you really can do to help.”

MICHAEL ANNETT, No. 62 Pilot Travel Centers Toyota Camry, Rusty Wallace Racing (continued) What has the support in the garage area been like this week? “It’s been huge.  I’ve been getting phone calls and text messages from people I’ve never even talked to and that’s just huge.   It shows what our NASCAR community is like.  Everybody talks about it and it just seems like it takes incidents like this to really prove that it’s not all talk.  People really do care about one another and you have disputes on the track, but if you saw them with a flat tire going down the road after the race, you would probably stop and help them.”

Did you ever consider not racing this weekend? “I never thought that I was going to get out of the car and not show up this weekend.  To me, I’m in a position and at a high enough level where obviously what I did was a horrible mistake.  It’s public and everybody can see it.  I can take it from being just the worst thing in the world and making it better.  Somebody else out there who has nothing to do with racing hears about this and they know what happened to me and after they hear it they change their life around and make it better if they see that I have a success story.  It’s something where I’m in a position that I should have been doing this before this happened and should have done a lot better job at being a better person and being out there using the opportunity that I have for the good.  I never once thought about getting out of the car.  I’m taking the position I’m in to use it to its fullest.”

Have you listened to what others have been saying about you? “Rusty (Wallace, team owner) quoted it best yesterday –opinions are like butts, everybody’s got one and I really don’t need to hear their opinions.  I know how I feel inside.  I know the opinions of people that matter to me and those are the only ones I’m really going to listen to.”

How do you plan to change your life? “Really it’s starting out with a zero tolerance policy for myself and that’s being mandated by NASCAR, by Rusty Wallace Racing and with myself.  Alcohol’s a poison and to take a poison out of your body, everything you do throughout the day is going to be better — whether it’s at the gym or whatever.  You’re not going to wake up and not feel good and not want to do anything.  You can be at the shop at 7:00 AM working with your guys and being there and showing them your support and when you’re done you can go out and do some community service.  You’re going to be a better person in general and be a better family member.  Just certain things that when you take a poison out of your life like that, you’re just going to be a better person in general.”

What did Rusty Wallace say to you about the situation? “Huge disappointment was the first thing. I couldn’t blame him you know.  I sat back and took everything.  I owned up to it from the very beginning.  I have never once denied anything that happened, I owned up to it and tried to apologize and just needed to let him know how he felt.  After we got past that part and now it’s all support and that’s a really cool thing because he doesn’t have to do that.  He could have sent me out the door and I would be packing.  He’s behind me 110 percent –the whole Rusty Wallace Racing organization is behind me 110 percent.  When you’re going through the worst time of your life, you need people like that behind you and I definitely am fortunate enough to have that.”

What did you say to your race team following the incident? “That was one of the first things that I thought about — these people have families and if I’m not there — times are tough right now and someone might not be able to jump in the seat and drive that No. 62 car for the full season.  I went in there at 7:00 AM on Tuesday morning, got the whole shop together and stood up in front of them, owned up to what I did, apologized for embarrassing them and told them, ‘I lost a lot of respect from you guys that you’ve given me and I’ve been here a month.  I threw it all away.’  I said this was something I did not expect to get back after this meeting, after two weeks, after three months, six months.  I expect this to be years as bad as this situation is to gain that respect back.  There’s a difference between them supporting me 110 and 200 percent and they’re going to work as hard as they ever have to make sure we’re successful, but respect is something different. It’s something I’m going to earn in the shop, I’m going to earn with them personally and on track.  It’s something that fortunately enough I have the opportunity to do and I’m looking forward to it.”

MICHAEL ANNETT, No. 62 Pilot Travel Centers Toyota Camry, Rusty Wallace Racing (continued) Are you disappointed that no one talked you out of driving that night? “I got behind the wheel, I had the keys in my hand and I turned the truck on.  It was my choice and it was a horrible one, it was a huge mistake — just fortunate that no one got hurt.  I was able to call the family that was involved yesterday and had a nice talk with the man that was driving the car and fortunately enough they were all okay.  The cool thing was that he was really supportive.  He understands that it was a mistake.  He knows that’s not the kind of person I am and luckily enough he was open-minded and understood that we all make mistakes in our life and this was the worst kind possible.  Fortunate enough that this was just another person involved in this that is understanding and supportive.”

What were the circumstances of a previous incident in which you were involved? “I received a ticket for a failure to reduce speed earlier around the race of ORP (O’Reilly Raceway Park) last year.  It was a bad judgment call.  I compete in the Nationwide Series and they have a great program actually about texting while driving — an awareness program.  I’ve participated in them and I’ve talked to kids about it.  I definitely should have been doing a lot more listening than I was talking those days.  That’s part of being a better person.  Put your phone in the backseat until you get to where you’re going.  It’s a judgment call and what kind of call is a good person going to make — what kind of call is a guy that’s not really thinking about others going to make?  Unfortunately it took two times for me to realize that.  It’s sunk in now and hopefully I can go out and explain my situation to other people and learn from the other incident and that one as well.”

How do you feel this will impact your career? “I’m sure it will follow me, but I also hope the fact of where I was to where I’m going to be six months, a year or two down the road.  I hope that’s what they can look at, ‘Yeah, he made a big mistake at 24, but he’s 25 or 26 now and look where he’s at now.  He realized he needed to change and he did.’  They’ll see that in the personal side of me.  My dad said it best, I need to drive my way out of this.  Hopefully we are going to put all this behind us and go out there and be competitive with RWR (Rusty Wallace Racing) this year.  It’s hard to go against success and that’s what we’re going to do — going to have success on and off the track.”

Is Daytona the best track to being your comeback after winning the ARCA race three years ago? “I was actually laying in bed thinking about that last night.  Three years ago this was the best time of my life, standing here in Daytona on this day for the ARCA race and to come back here three years later and it’s the worst time of my life.  If there’s any place I would like to be to turn it around, it’s here and with the people I’m with and the organization I’m with.”