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Tom Hessert Set To Make Camping World Truck Series Debut

It was announced yesterday that Tom Hessert will be making his Camping World Truck Series debut.

This weekend at Phoenix Internationational Raceway in the Lucas Oil 150 and in next week’s Ford 200 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Hessert will be driving the No. 9 Germain Racing Toyota.

Hessert got his start in racing through his father.

“My dad raced in sports car for a long time in the late 80s/90s and I grew up going to the races,” he told me earlier this year. “I went to my first race when I was two weeks old and fell in love with it then.”

His father has been such an influence on him that he calls him one of his idols.

“My dad was a big influence in my career and my life in general,” he said. “He was a good racecar driver and I learned a lot from him.”

This past year, the Cherry Hill, N.J. native finished second in the ARCA Series points standings this past season with one win, 10 top-fives and 15 top 10s, driving the No. 77 Cherry Hill Classic Cars entry for Cunningham Motorsports.

This past year included a lot of highs for Hessert as he won his first race at Iowa Speedway.

“It’s incredible,” he told me of the experience earlier this year. “It’s my first win in a quite awhile and to win it in that fashion and leading all those laps at Iowa Speedway in front of a great crowd and with the Camping World Truck Series teams being on hand and all those people in the garage area and on Speed, it couldn’t have been a better day.”

Down the road, Hessert hopes to be racing in the NASCAR ranks.

“Well, I hope and wish and dream that I’ll be in NASCAR, whether in a truck or Nationwide car or my goal obviously in a Cup car,” he said. “I know that’s a long way but nights like Saturday night go a long way in shortening that distance.”

To others out there who aspire to drive racecars and move up the ranks, Hessert’s advice is to learn as much as you can.

“Learn every time you get on the race track,” he said. “I know it’s cliché but don’t make the same mistake twice. You got to learn in this sport and you got take your knocks and keep plugging at it and put your head down and stay focused and do what you need to do, set up for the races and do what you got to do.”

Away from the track, Hessert likes to play lots of sports, work out and watch movies.

ROUSH FENWAY ADVANCE – PHOENIX

Kobalt Tool 500 K

Sun. 11.14.10, 3:15 p.m. EST

ESPN TV, MRN, Sirius 128

David Ragan, No. 6 UPS Ford

Greg Biffle, No. 16 3M /Scotch Ford

Matt Kenseth, No. 17 Valvoline Ford

Carl Edwards, No. 99 Aflac Ford

Wypall 200

Sat. 11.13.10, 4:30 p.m. EST

ESPN 2 TV, MRN, Sirius 128

Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 6 Blackwell Angus Ford

Colin Braun No. 16 Con-Way Freight Ford

Trevor Bayne, No. 17 Roush Fenway Ford

Carl Edwards, No. 60 Copart Ford

Paul Menard, No. 98 Richmond/Menard’s Ford

Roush Fenway Looks to Carry Momentum to Phoenix

After another strong outing at Texas Motor Speedway last weekend, Roush Fenway will look to carry that momentum into this weekend’s race at Phoenix International Raceway, as the 2010 season winds to a close.

Roush Fenway Success at PIR

Roush Fenway has started 190 combined NASCAR races at PIR, collecting 14 wins (5 Cup, 7 NNS, 2 CWTS), 61 top fives and 102 top 10s, while leading 3,395 laps.

PIR Winning Formula

Roush Fenway has won at Phoenix in all three of NASCAR’s major divisions, with the organization’s first win coming in the fall of 1993. Roush Fenway won the second-ever Nationwide race at PIR in 2000, and the organization has won the last three NNS events at PIR. In addition, Greg Biffle won Roush Fenway’s 100th overall Nationwide win at Phoenix last season and Carl Edwards won there in the fall to give Roush Fenway the sweep. All in all, six drivers have won NASCAR races for Roush Fenway at PIR.

RFR Phoenix Wins

1993 Martin Cup

2000 Burton Cup

2001 Burton Cup

2002 Kenseth Cup

2005-1 Busch Cup

2000 Burton NNS

2001 Biffle NNS

2005-2 Edwards NNS

2006-2 Kenseth NNS

2008-2 Edwards NNS

2009-1 Biffle NNS

2009-2 Edwards NNS

1997-2 Ruttman Truck

2001 Biffle Truck

Sprint Cup Effort at PIR

Roush Fenway has started 106 Sprint Cup races at Phoenix, while finishing inside the top 10 with almost 50 percent of the entries (45.1 percent). In addition, Roush Fenway cars have led 1,897 laps and drove to victory lane on five occasions; the last coming in 2005. Last fall Roush Fenway failed to place an entry inside the top 10 at a Cup race at PIR for the first time since 1991.

Nationwide Effort at PIR

Phoenix is one of the strongest tracks for Roush Fenway’s Nationwide program. In 48 starts, RFR has won seven times, while finishing inside the top 10 almost half of the time (13) and inside the top 10 an impressive 69 percent of the time (33), while leading 1,164 times.

Pointing Up

All three of Roush Fenway’s Chase drivers advanced multiple positions in the Chase standings last weekend. Carl Edwards moved up two positions to fourth and he is now joined in the top five by Matt Kenseth, who moved up three spots to fifth. In fact, Kenseth has now advanced five positions in the last two races. Greg Biffle used one of his most dominating performances of the season two move to spots to 9th in the standings. With only two races remaining in the 2010 season Roush Fenway is the only organization with three teams in the top 10.

Trevor Bayne – Phoenix Advance

Trevor Bayne – Phoenix Advance

No. 17 Roush Fenway Ford

Wypall 200

Sat., Nov.13, 2010

4:30 p.m. EST

ESPN2, TV, MRN, Sirius 128

Bayne in 2010

Starts: 33

Top 5s: 5

Top 10s: 10

Top 15s: 19

Poles: 3

Avg Start: 13.7

Avg. Finish: 16.4

High Finish: 3 (twice)

Bayne Excited for Short Track Run at Phoenix

After making his Sprint Cup debut last weekend in Texas, Trevor Bayne settles back into the Nationwide Series this weekend at Phoenix, where he will welcome the return of a shorter track to the schedule.

Bayne at Phoenix

Trevor Bayne will make his third Nationwide Series start at Phoenix this weekend. In two previous starts, Bayne has averaged a 23rd-place finish. He finished 14th in this race last season, but got caught up in an accident and finished 32nd in the spring.

Sprint Cup Debut in Mirror

Bayne finished 17th in his Sprint Cup debut last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway, turning all 334 laps of the race and staying on the lead lap. Of the 12 drivers that make up the 2010 Chase for the Sprint Cup, Baynes 17th-place finish was higher than the debut of eight of the 12, and only two of those 12 were able to finish the race on the lead lap.

Roush Fenway at Phoenix

Roush Fenway has won seven times in the Nationwide Series. All-in-all Roush Fenway has made 48 starts, while turning in 19 top fives, 33 top 10s and five poles in Nationwide action at PIR. Four different drivers have won in the Nationwide Series at Phoenix, with the first win (Jeff Burton) coming in 2000 and the last win coming in last year’s fall race (Carl Edwards). Roush Fenway swept the Nationwide Series at Phoenix last season, with Greg Biffle winning there in the spring.

Bayne at Phoenix

Starts: 2

Top 15s: 1

Poles: –

Avg Start: 35

Highest Finish: 14

Avg. Finish: 23

On Phoenix:

“Phoenix is not really comparable to any track we go to. It actually reminds me of Concord Motor Sports Park, which is a short track here in North Carolina and one of my favorite race tracks.

“(Turns) three and four are obviously different, but (turns) one and two are very similar at the two tracks. At Phoenix you can hit the bottom, run up to the wall and turn down again for the little dog leg. I love that corner at Phoenix. That section is probably one of my favorite sections of any track we go to. So If I can just get (turns) three and four down where it’s really flat and really sweeping, I think we can have a good weekend.

“I love turns one and two, I just wish that three and four had a little more banking and a tighter corner, because it makes your car drive totally different at both ends of the track.”

Crew Chief Ricky Viers:

“We are taking back the same car the team raced at Phoenix earlier in the year and qualified eighth. After coming off a solid week at Texas, Trevor (Bayne) and the No. 17 team feel we have a great opportunity to score our best finish of the season at Phoenix.”

With 500 Passengers Riding Along, Newman Looking for Phoenix Deja Vu

PHOENIX (Nov. 10, 2010) — Ryan Newman’s memory is crystal clear about his last visit to Phoenix International Raceway (PIR), especially the final two laps.

When the green-flag waved for the two-lap overtime shootout in the April Sprint Cup race at Phoenix’s one-mile oval, Newman jumped from second to first and proceeded to hold off Jeff Gordon to post his 14th career tour win and his first victory for Stewart-Haas Racing.

“It was a special night and a special win,” said Newman, whose first Cup start was at Phoenix, Nov. 5, 2000. “The victory gave us a huge lift when we needed one and hopefully the Phoenix track will give us the same lift again. We’ve had some finishing issues recently and need something good to happen. We know we can run well at Phoenix and look forward to another strong performance in our U.S. Army Veterans Day Chevrolet.”

Newman’s Phoenix car will have a unique look for Sunday’s Kobalt Tools 500 as it will be graced with more than 500 faces of veterans. The paint scheme is an extension of a Veterans Day tribute to the men and women who embraced the military call of duty.

“You talk about inspiration, what could be better than having more than 500 of the bravest men and women ride along with you,” said Newman about his No. 39 U.S. Army Veterans Day Chevrolet paint scheme.

Being inspired and having the support of military veterans will hopefully change the luck scenario for Newman, who has endured a 27.25 average finish in the past four races. In the previous seven races, his average finish was 7.86.

“We were on a good run and looking for it to continue through the end of the season, but then everything just seemed to come to a halt,” stated Newman. “That is the nature of our sport and we need to finish off the final two races with strong results and carry the momentum into 2011.”

Sunday’s race will be Newman’s 17th career start at Phoenix. He has had one win, four top-fives, four top-10s and four poles.

Notes:

The U.S. Army Racing team will have a number of special Arizona guests at Phoenix International Raceway.

.Luis Rodriguez Jr., an 85-year-old WWII veteran whose face will be one of the 500 on Newman’s Veterans Day car. Rodriguez is a resident of Sahuarita, Ariz.

.Staff Sgt. Steve Cerritos, a Tucson recruiter who served in Afghanistan. Cerritos is currently working towards a master’s degree in business administration and plans to pursue a commission from the U.S. Army and complete his military career as an Army officer.

.Todd Peat, a defensive lineman for Corona del Sol High School in Tempe. Peat has been selected to play in the U.S. Army All American Bowl, Jan. 8, 2011 at the Alamadome in San Antonio, Texas. He will receive his Army All American Bowl jersey on stage during Sunday’s prerace ceremonies.

.Christopher Sloan, who plays the mellophone in the Union High School marching band in Casa Grande. Sloan has been selected to be a member of the 2011 U.S. Army All-American Marching Band. He will join an elite group of musicians who will perform at halftime in the Army All American Bowl game. He will also receive his Army All American jersey on stage during Sunday’s prerace ceremonies.

Newman’s Phoenix Career Cup Record:

Year St Fn

2000 10 41

2001 25 40

2002 1 18

2003 1 3

2004 1 2

2005 7 14

11 12

2006 13 39

7 15

2007 19 38

13 5

2008 1 43

6 34

2009 30 16

24 20

2010 14 1

No. 39 U.S. Army Over-the-Wall Crew (city is hometown)

Front-tire changer: Scott Brzozowski, Sterling Heights, Mich.

Front-tire carrier: Josh Mick, Houston, Texas

Rear-tire changer: Brandon Hopkins, Danielson, Conn.

Rear-tire carrier: James Houk, Fair Play, Mo.

Gasman: Michael Moore, Springfield, Mass.

Jackman: Andrew Turner, Coloma, Mich.

Catch Can: Andy Rueger, Seymour, Ind.

8th Man/Windshield: Jay Guarneri, Naples, Fla.

___________________________________________________

Crew Chief: Tony Gibson, Daytona Beach, Fla.

Car Chief: Kevin Pennell, Kannapolis, N.C.

Spotter: Jimmy Kitchens, Hueytown, Fla.

Engine Specialist: Jay Nolan, Jacksonville, Fla.

Engineers: Johnny Klausmeier, Perry Hall, Md.

Wes Gantt, Taylorsville, N.C.

Engine: Hendrick Motorsports

Shock Specialist : Brian Holshouser, Charlotte

Tire Specialist: Jeff Zarrella, Southington, Conn.

Martin’s Crew Captures Tissot Pit Road Award in Texas

Mark Martin’s No. 5 crew claimed the Tissot Pit Road Precision Award in Sunday’s (Nov. 7) Sprint Cup race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth.

It was the first pit road win of the season for the No. 5 crew and the 17th different Tissot winner of the 2010 season.

Martin’s No. 5 CARQUEST/GoDaddy.com Chevrolet spent the least amount of time on pit road – 305.658 seconds — during the AAA Texas 500. The quick work by Martin’s crew helped the veteran driver post a third-place finish.

The No. 5 over-the-wall crew consists of: Kyle Turner (front-tire changer), JD Holcomb (front-tire carrier), Josh Kirk (rear-tire changer), Dion Williams (rear-tire carrier), Bailey Walker (jackman), Brad Pickens (gasman) and Travis Gordon (catch can). The crew chief is Alan Gustafson and the pit crew coaches are Mark Mauldin, Walt Smith and Matt Skeen.

“The No. 5 pit crew had a very solid week in Texas,” said Mauldin. “The team performed above expectations. We had been trying some new things in practice. We implemented them during the race and the guys were very solid with everything we did. We did have one slower pit stop, which really wasn’t all that slow, but we backed that up with another 12 second stop. We were very happy with their performance and hope it continues in Phoenix.”

Four teams are currently tied for first place in the Tissot season standings. The leaders are the crews for Matt Kenseth, Jeff Gordon, Kyle Busch and Jamie McMurray with each team scoring four pit road wins. Clint Bowyer’s crew is one behind with three wins.

The Tissot season championship crew will receive a $105,000 bonus plus Tissot watches for the over-the-wall crew members and driver. Tissot has already paid out $170,000 in prize money with $5,000 going to the weekly-winning crew.

In the event there is a tie at the end of the season for the Tissot Pit Road Precision Award championship, the tiebreaker goes to the team whose driver finishes the highest in the Sprint Cup point standings.

2010 Tissot Pit Road Precision Award Standings

Pos Team No. Pit Crew For Wins Prize Money

T1 24 Jeff Gordon 4 $20,000

T1 18 Kyle Busch 4 20,000

T1 17 Matt Kenseth 4 20,000

T1 1 Jamie McMurray 4 20,000

T5 33 Clint Bowyer 3 15,000

T6 56 Martin Truex Jr. 2 10,000

T6 00 David Reutimann 2 10,000

T6 14 Tony Stewart 2 10,000

T9 42 Juan Pablo Montoya 1 5,000

T9 12 Brad Keselowski 1 5,000

T9 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1 5,000

T9 39 Ryan Newman 1 5,000

T9 2 Kurt Busch 1 5,000

T9 26 Boris Said 1 5,000

T9 16 Greg Biffle 1 5,000

T9 29 Kevin Harvick 1 5,000

T9 5 Mark Martin 1 5,000

2010 Tissot Pit Road Precision Award Winners

Daytona, 2/14 Juan Pablo Montoya Team

Fontana, 2/21 Jeff Gordon Team

Las Vegas, 2/28 Martin Truex Jr. Team

Atlanta, 3/7 Martin Truex Jr. Team

Bristol, 3/21 Brad Keselowski Team

Martinsville, 3/29 Clint Bowyer Team

Phoenix, 4/10 Matt Kenseth Team

Texas, 4/19 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Team

Talladega 4/25 David Reutimann Team

Richmond, 5/1 Ryan Newman Team

Darlington, 5/8 Jamie McMurray Team

Dover, 5/16 Matt Kenseth Team

Charlotte, 5/30 Jeff Gordon Team

Pocono, 6/6 Kyle Busch Team

Michigan, 6/13 Kurt Busch Team

Sonoma, 6/20 Boris Said Team

Loudon, 6/27 Jeff Gordon Team

Daytona, 7/3 Jeff Gordon Team

Chicago, 7/10 Jamie McMurray Team

Indianapolis, 7/25 Jamie McMurray Team

Pocono, 8/1 Greg Biffle Team

Watkins Glen, 8/8 Kyle Busch Team

Michigan, 8/15 Tony Stewart Team

Bristol, 8/21 David Reutimann Team

Atlanta, 9/5 Tony Stewart Team

Richmond, 9/11 Matt Kenseth Team

Loudon, 9/19 Clint Bowyer Team

Dover, 9/26 Kyle Busch Team

Kansas, 10/3 Kevin Harvick Team

Fontana, 10/10 Clint Bowyer Team

Charlotte, 10/16 Jamie McMurray Team

Martinsville, 10/24 Kyle Busch Team

Talladega, 10/31 Matt Kenseth Team

Texas, 11/7 Mark Martin Team

About Tissot

For Tissot, “In touch with your time” is far more than an advertising claim. This phrase expresses the brand’s DNA; its proven dedication to being perfectly in tune with the technology and tastes of each era. Tissot has been growing and developing its tradition of innovation since 1853. From the early days to the present, in its home in Le Locle in the Swiss Jura mountains, Tissot has translated craftsmanship and precision into stylish timepieces now sold in over 150 countries around the world. Special materials, advanced functionality and meticulous design detail join forces to create the luxury of accessibility. Today Tissot is a member of the Swatch Group, the world’s largest watch producer and distributor of Swiss watches, as well as official timekeeper and partner of NASCAR®, International Basketball Federation (FIBA), Australian Football League (AFL), Chinese Basketball Association (CBA), MotoGP and the World Championships of Cycling, Fencing and Ice hockey. The tradition of innovation lives on, keeping closely in touch with the times.

Mike Skinner Phoenix International Raceway Event Preview

No. 5 International Truck/Monaco RVs Toyota Tundra News and Notes

This Week’s Tundra… This weekend the No. 5 International Truck/EXIDE Batteries Toyota Tundra team will utilize chassis RMM-106 at Phoenix International Raceway on Friday night. The chassis was last raced at New Hampshire Motor Speedway where Skinner turned quick laps during the weekend’s two practice sessions before going on to finish in the 13th position.

Past Success at Phoenix International Raceway… Mike Skinner is not only one of the more seasoned NCWTS veterans at Phoenix International Raceway; he is also one of the most successful. The 53-year-old California native has recorded two victories and a record-tying two poles at the one-mile Arizona oval. With 206 laps led around the circuit, he is ranked second on the all-time lap leaders list in NCWTS competition, and his average finish of 5.6 is the highest of all drivers with 10 or more starts around the southwest track.

Most Popular Driver… Be sure to cast your vote for Mike Skinner as the NCWTS’ Most Popular Driver! Voting ends this Friday, Nov. 12, and the winner will be announced at the NCWTS Banquet on Nov. 22. Cast your vote here: http://www.nascar.com/news/features/2010.truck.mpd/index.html.

Watch and Listen… The Lucas Oil 150 from Phoenix International Raceway will be featured live on SPEED Channel on Friday, November 12. Coverage of the 150-mile race will be aired on SPEED, MRN Radio and Sirius XM Radio, Channel 128, at 7:30 p.m. EST. Qualifying will take place just hours before the green flag is scheduled to drop at the Arizona track on Friday afternoon and will be broadcast on SPEED Channel at 4:30 p.m. EST.

Mike Skinner on racing at Phoenix International Raceway

“What’s great about Phoenix [International Raceway] is that it is a great track for trucks—it’s a place like Richmond, Darlington and Loudon—there are just so many cool things and characteristics that the track has that you won’t find at any other track on our circuit. The big mile-and-a-half cookie-cutter tracks are good, but Phoenix [International Raceway] is just a big short track with its own personality.”

Crew Chief Stacy Johnson on competing at Phoenix International Raceway

“Phoenix [International Raceway] is always an exciting place to race. It has just the right mix of short track and intermediate characteristics. You have to have every piece of the puzzle, brakes, downforce and handling to be successful there.”

FEDEX RACING EXPRESS FACTS – PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY

RACE INFO:

Event: Kobalt Tools 500

Date/Time: Nov. 14, 2010/3 p.m. EST

2009 winner: Jimmie Johnson

2009 polesitter: Martin Truex, Jr.

Distance: 312 laps/312 miles

Track Length: 1.0 miles

Banking: 11 & 9 degrees

Track Shape: Tri Oval

 

EXPRESS NOTES: 

Hamlin, FedEx Racing Sweep through Texas on Way to Chase Lead: With a NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship very much on the line heading to Texas Motor Speedway, Denny Hamlin and the #11 FedEx Racing team knew exactly what they had to do. By the time the checkered flag waved at Texas on Sunday evening, they successfully crossed flawless execution, winning at Texas for the second time this season, and heading to Phoenix as the points leader off their list. Hamlin started from the 30th spot on the grid for Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 and the #11 FedEx Racing team steadily improved the car through a combination of great communication and smart, quick stops. With the laps counting down, Hamlin rocketed to the front and then held off Matt Kenseth to claim his eighth win of the season to date, his second consecutive win at Texas and a 33-point lead over rival Jimmie Johnson heading to Phoenix this weekend.

FedEx Delivery Vehicles Take to the Streets in Support of the FedEx Racing Team: To celebrate the on-track success of the FedEx Racing team, a total of 600 FedEx delivery vehicles in Dallas/Ft. Worth, Phoenix and Miami/Ft. Lauderdale markets will carry a special decal showing the company’s support for the #11 team’s Chase for the Sprint Cup campaign.

 

Hamlin at Phoenix International Raceway:  This weekend will mark Hamlin’s eleventh start at Phoenix International Raceway (PIR) and his 186th career start at the Cup level. This spring, only ten days after undergoing reconstructive surgery on his left knee, Hamlin climbed back into the #11 FedEx Toyota at Phoenix determined to put pain to the side in the interest of the team. Despite suffering through the discomfort of the 376 laps around a physical 1.0-mile track, and the agony of losing laps to the leader due to electrical issues, Hamlin never left the seat that he’s occupied full-time since 2006, battling throughout the race to post a 30th place finish in the Subway Fresh Fit 600. A year ago, the #11 FedEx Racing team ran strong on their way to posting a fourth third-place finish at the 1.0-mile track. After a final pit stop on lap 242, Hamlin found himself less that a second behind eventual winner Jimmie Johnson. Hamlin methodically carved into the lead, closing to within .29 seconds with less than 30 laps to run but that was as close as he would get.  When Jeff Burton reached his bumper and passed him on lap 284, there was no recourse for Hamlin but to run out the race in third. In the spring of 2009 the #11 team rolled the dice on Saturday night at PIR, using pit road strategy to score an impressive sixth-place finish in the Subway Fresh Fit 500.  With ten laps to go and the race under caution, Crew Chief Mike Ford called for two tires only and Hamlin lined up the #11 in fourth place for the restart before finishing sixth. In the fall of 2008, Hamlin continued a string of good runs at PIR by posting a fifth-place finish. In the spring race of 2008, Hamlin and the #11 team looked to have nailed their fuel strategy and ran in third place after their last stop on lap 296 only to watch the cars running in first and second stretch their fuel loads to the end.  In the fall 2007 event, Hamlin suffered through an agonizing race that included two pit-road speeding penalties on his way to a 16th-place finish. Earlier that season, Hamlin led 70 laps and was well on his way to challenging for a win before a pit road speeding penalty sent him to the tail end of the field. Despite working his way back, he had to settle for a frustrating third-place finish. Hamlin made his debut at PIR in the fall of 2005 in only his sixth career Cup start and secured his first career pole before finishing 13th on the night.
Race                                      Series                    Date                                       Start                       Finish                    Laps      (Led)     

Subway Fresh Fit 600        Sprint Cup             April 10, 2010                       26                           30                           376/378

Checker Auto Parts 500     Sprint Cup             Nov. 15, 2009                       5                              3                              312/312     23

Subway Fresh Fit 500        Sprint Cup             April 18, 2009                       12                           6                              312/312

Checkers O’Reilly 500       Sprint Cup             Nov. 9, 2008                         8                              5                              313/313

Subway FreshFit 500         Sprint Cup             April 12, 2008                       16                           3                              312/312

Checker Auto Parts 500     Nextel Cup            Nov. 11, 2007                       15                           16                           312/312

Subway FreshFit 500         Nextel Cup            April 21, 2007                       3                              3                              312/312    70

Checker Auto Parts 500     Nextel Cup            Nov. 12, 2006                       22                           3                              312/312

Subway Fresh 500              Nextel Cup            April 22, 2006                       6                              34                           289/312

Checker Auto Parts 500     Nextel Cup            Nov. 13, 2005                       1                              13                           312/312                

Averages/Totals                                                                                                11.4                        11.6                        99.2%       93

 

FedEx Ground Plains Along for the Ride in Phoenix: The #11 FedEx Ground Toyota will carry the letters PLNS on the b-post this weekend at Phoenix International Raceway in recognition of the FedEx Ground Plains district’s excellence in package care. The district’s leadership in this area has been the result of a strong quality focus and the development of innovative processes that have been adopted company-wide. The Plains district encompasses all of Kansas and Missouri, including the Lenexa and Kansas City hubs, as well as satellite facilities in eastern Nebraska and Iowa. 

 

Phoenix Chassis – JGR 276 and 288: The FedEx team will unload Chassis JGR 276 this weekend in Phoenix. 276 last ran at Richmond in September when Hamlin led 251 laps on his way his sixth win of the season. Chassis 288 will serve in backup duty.

 

HAMLIN CONVERSATION – Phoenix:

Leaving Texas with a win and the points lead is all you could have hoped for – what is the strategy going forward?:”At this point we are going to keep racing as hard as if we were down. That’s been our plan all along and having a lead coming to Phoenix doesn’t change that at all. Texas was a good race for us, really what we needed to do in terms of the points, but there is a lot of racing left to do and this is no time to change strategy.”

You had pointed to the final five races as the time when the #11 team would really step up – what is it about these tracks that suit you?: “Really just tracks where we’ve been good in the past and had a lot of confidence that we’d be bringing even better cars back to those tracks this fall.  We had a lot of people asking why we would bring a new car to Texas last weekend instead of just bringing back the car that won there in the spring.  I think we showed that we’ve been consistently improving our cars and that was definitely the case at Texas.  We feel that way about Phoenix and Homestead too and I feel confident as a driver at those tracks as well.”

Is your team doing anything special through the Chase to keep focus?: “I think we’re all just doing our jobs and really not thinking about the points or the standings. There is a lot of work to be done and everyone is really focused on doing their job to the best of their ability. Even though we haven’t won a championship, we’ve been in the Chase before and we’ve won races before.  We’ll keep approaching these races as we have all season long.”

2010 FEDEX RACING – TEAM ROSTER

Crew Chief:  Mike FordMorristown, Tenn.                                                                               

Car Chief: Chris “Spider” Gillin – Smithtown, NY                        

Shocks: Tim Sparkman – St. Louis, Mo.                                                                       

Engineer: Mike Wheeler – Southholt, NY

Tire Specialist: Patrick Mullen – Brick, N.J.

Windshield: Bobby “Spike” Christenson – Spokane, Wash.                                                    

Mechanic:  Rick Bray – Placerville, Calif.

Hauler Driver: Jerry Hess – Lancaster, Pa.                                                                 

Mechanic: John Furino – Long Island, NY

Hauler Driver: Frank Hodel – Blythe, Calif.

Spotter: Curtis Markham – Fredericksburg, Va.                         

 

Front Tire Changer: Jonathan Sherman – Monroe, La.          

Rear Tire Changer: Mike Hicks – Salisbury, N.C.                                      

Rear Tire Carrier: Heath Cherry – Belmont, N.C.

Front Tire Carrier: Brandon Pegram – Statesville, N.C.

Jackman: Nate Bolling – Swanton, Ohio                                                                     

Motor Specialist: Chris Woodward – Franklin, NH

Gas can: Scott Wood – Liberty, S.C.                                                                                             

Catch Can: John Eicher – London, Ky..

JGR Athletic Director: Michael Lepp – Charlotte, N.C.

FEDEX RACING – 2010 SEASON RESULTS:

Race                                      Track                     Date                                       Start                       Finish                    Laps         (Led)_

Daytona 500                         Daytona                 Feb. 14                                  25                           17                           208/208        1

Auto Club 500                      Auto Club              Feb. 21                                  25                           29                           248/250        6

Shelby American                 Las Vegas             Feb. 28                                  27                           19                           267/267

Kobalt Tools 500                 Atlanta                   March 7                                 20                           21                           314/314        32

Food City 500                      Bristol                     March 21                               15                           19                           500/500

Goody’s Fast Relief 500    Martinsville           March 28                               19                           1                              504/504        172

Subway FreshFit 500         Phoenix                 April 10                                  26                           30                           376/378                

Samsung Mobile 500         Texas                     April 19                                  29                           1                              334/334        12

Aaron’s 499                          Talladega             April 25                                  11                           4                              190/190        17

Crown Royal 400                Richmond             May 1                                     30                           11                           400/400

Southern 500                       Darlington             May 8                                     8                              1                              367/367        104

Autism Speaks 400             Dover                     May 16                                   14                           4                              400/400

Coca-Cola 600                    Charlotte               May 30                                   7                              18                           400/400         3

Gillette FusionPro 500       Pocono                  June 6                                    5                              1                              502/502        88

Helluva Good! 400              Michigan               June 13                                 7                              1                              200/200        123

Toyota/Savemart 350         Sonoma                 June 20                                 12                           35                           102/110

Lenox Tools 301                 New Hamp.           June 27                                 20                           14                           301/301

Coke Zero 400                     Daytona                 July 3                                     4                              24                           158/166        4

Lifelock.com 400                 Chicago                 July 10                                   17                           8                              267/267

Brickyard 400                       Indianapolis          July 25                                   18                           15                           160/160

Sunoco Red Cross 400      Pocono                  Aug. 1                                    3                              5                              200/200        19

Heluva Good! At the Glen Watkins Glen       Aug. 8                                    14                           37                           70/90

CarFax 400                          Michigan               Aug.15                                   33                           2                              200/200        12

Irwin Tools 500                    Bristol                     Aug. 21                                  17                           34                           473/500

Emory Heathcare 500        Atlanta                   Sept. 5                                   1                              43                           143/325        74

Air Guard 400                      Richmond             Sept.11                                  14                           1                              400/400        251

Sylvania 300                        New Hamp.           Sept. 19                                 22                           2                              300/300

AAA 400                                Dover                     Sept. 26                                 4                              9                              400/400

Price Chopper 400              Kansas                  Oct. 4                                     12                           12                           267/267

Pepsi 400                              Auto Club              Oct. 10                                   34                           8                              200/200

Bank of America 500          Charlotte               Oct. 16                                   32                           4                              334/334          1

TUMS Quick Relief 500     Martinsville           Oct. 24                                   1                              1                              500/500          40

AMP Energy 500                 Talladega             Oct. 31                                   17                           9                              188/188          4

AAA Texas 500                    Texas                     Nov. 7                                    30                           1                              334/334          31

Averages/Totals                                                                                                16.6                        12.9                        97.6%            994

CHEVY NSCS AT PHOENIX TWO: Team Chevy Advance

TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

KOBALT TOOLS 500

PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY

AVONDALE, AZ

NOVEMBER 14, 2010

 

DID YOU KNOW? Chevrolet has recorded a total of 1.3 million sales in 2010, a 17 percent increase over the first 10 months of 2009. For October, total sales climbed 7 percent over the same month a year ago, driven by increased demand for Silverado, Equinox, and the all-new Chevrolet Cruze compact sedan.

 

CHEVY RACING AT THE TRACK-PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY – JEFF CHEW, MARKETING MANAGER, NASCAR, CHEVY RACING:   “We’re looking forward to bringing the Team Chevy Racing Tour back to Phoenix International Raceway. The fans were very receptive when we visited PIR during the April NASCAR event. The Team Chevy Racing Tour provides an opportunity for fans to experience all of the newest Chevy products, take a test drive of several of our most popular models and join in the festivities when Team Chevy driver Ron Hornaday visits the Display Sunday morning for a question-and-answer session with Riki Rachtman”

·        At the Chevy Test Drive fans can take a spin in one of Chevy’s hottest new rides including Equinox, Silverado, Tahoe Hybrid, Malibu and Traverse; and then get behind the wheel of a Chevy Camaro or Corvette Grand Sport. The Chevy Test Drive at PIR will be open: Friday 10:00 am-5:30 pm and Saturday from 8:00 am-2:00 pm. Fans can skip the line and pre-register at www.teamchevytestdrive.com Transportation from the Team Chevy Racing display to the Chevy Test Drive will be provided

  • At the Team Chevy Racing Display in the PIR Midway located behind the main grandstands, fans can check out Camaro, Cruze, Malibu, Silverado HD, Silverado 1500 Crew. Equinox and Traverse
  • At Team Chevy Display there will be interactive activities including a Victory Lane “green screen” photo opportunity taken at the Team Chevy Winner’s Circle Photo Trailer
  • Fans can bring gently used cell phones to donate to the Cell Phones for Soldiers program in drop boxes around the display
  • The Chevy Display Kid Zone will feature games and prizes
  • Driver appearances for fan Q & A with Riki Rachtman in the Display: SUNDAY –Ron Hornaday-9:50 am
  • The over-the-wall pit crew for Jeff Burton’s No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet AND Kevin Harvick’s No. 29 Shell-Pennzoil Chevrolet crew will sign autographs Sunday at the Display starting at 9:00 am
  • Hours for the Team Chevy Racing Display will be: Friday 10:00 am-6:00 pm; Saturday 9:00 am-6:00 pm and Sunday 8:00 am-1:00 pm

 

TEAM CHEVY AT PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY-PAT SUHY, GM RACING NASCAR GROUP MANAGER: “After a tough weekend in Texas, it’s good to come back to a track where Team Chevy has enjoyed so much success.  A Chevrolet driver has won the last 10 Sprint Cup races at Phoenix International Speedway, and Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup contender Jimmie Johnson has won four of those.

“Phoenix International Raceway is one of my favorite stops on the tour for a lot of reasons.  The track is challenging for drivers and crews alike.  The racing is short track close, but there’s room to pass on both ends of the relatively flat one mile tri-oval. With only nine degrees of banking in the turns, there is a premium placed on chassis setup. The track’s asymmetry means that the drivers have to tolerate being sub-optimized at one end to be optimized at the other.  The best teams will find a compromise that keeps the driver comfortable on the ‘bad’ end and gives them an advantage on the other end where they’ll do the most passing.  With the skill and determination of our Team Chevy Sprint Cup teams, I’m confident that when the dust settles in the desert, we will be celebrating with a Chevy driver in victory lane.”

TEAM CHEVY IN 2010 NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES (NSCS) COMPETITION:

  • Race wins – 18 as of race 34 of 36
  • Poles – 15 as of race 34 of 36
  • Laps led – 5,237 (51.3% of possible 10,199)
  • Top-five finishes – 91 (53.5% of possible)
  • Top-10 finishes – 168 (49.4% of possible)
  • Team Chevy has six (6) drivers in the 2010 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. After eight  (8) of 10 races, the order is:
    • Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Lowe’s/KOBALT Tools Chevrolet – 2nd in point standings
    • Kevin Harvick, No. 29 Shell-Pennzoil Chevrolet – 3rd in the standings
    • Jeff Gordon, No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet – 6th in point standings
    • Tony Stewart, No. 14 Old Spice/ Office Depot  Chevrolet – 8th in the standings
    • Clint Bowyer, No. 33 Cheerios/Hamburger Helper Chevrolet – 10th  in points
    • Jeff Burton, No. 31 Cat Financial Chevrolet – 12th in the points order

 

CHEVROLET ON THE TRACK—PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY:

  • A Chevrolet driver has won 14 of the 27 and 10 consecutive NSCS races at Phoenix International Raceway (PIR)
  • Chevy has 15 poles at PIR
  • Jeff Burton, No. 31 Cat Financial Chevrolet, has two (2) wins at PIR
  • Team Chevy drivers have scored 64 top-five finishes and 124 top-10 finishes at PIR
  • A Chevrolet has led 3,292 laps (40.3% of 8,751 possible) at PIR
  • Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Lowe’s/KOBALT Tools Chevrolet, has four (4) victories at the one-mile oval
  • Dale Earnhardt, Jr., No. 88 Diet Mountain Dew Paint the 88/National Guard Chevrolet has two (2) PIR wins
  • Kevin Harvick, No. 29 Shell-Pennzoil Chevrolet has won twice (2) at PIR
  •  Mark Martin, No. 5 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet, has two (2) PIR victories
  • Jeff Gordon, No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet has won once (1) at PIR
  • Ryan Newman, No. 39 U.S. Army Veterans Day Chevrolet, has one (1) win at PIR
  • Tony Stewart, No. 14 Old Spice/ Office Depot Chevrolet has one (1) PIR win

 

TEAM CHEVY FROM THE DRIVER’S SEAT:

 

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET – 2ND IN STANDINGS: “The last four years we have been in a different position (33 points back going into Phoenix). I have lost plenty of championships in the past and this is racing and it doesn’t come easy and you are not going to get what you want every single year and every single weekend. I can promise you this. I am trying as hard as I can; I know my team is, and we are doing everything we can. Thirty-three points back is not where we want to be but we are going to work to get back on top. I don’t know (if winning a tight point’s race championship brings satisfaction). Initially I react and say not really because the reason we had a lot of points is because we went out and won races and the amount of wins we had in the Chase – it’s not like we backed into a championship and just kind of stumbled upon four in a row. I don’t want to take anything away from the stretches we’ve had and the races we’ve won. We’ve won a lot of Chase races. I guess I’ll know more if that comes together and I can look back on my emotions then. Right now I’m really proud of how we won these races and taken a lot of pride in winning 19 of 64 Chase races right now. That is pretty tough to do so I don’t want to take anything away from the past.”

 

KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 29 SHELL/PENNZOIL CHEVROLET – 3RD IN STANDINGS: “At Phoenix, you’ve just got to get your car turning really well and obviously the asphalt is worn out so the tires fall off a lot and you have to find that compromise between a fast car and a car that lasts long enough to maintain that speed as you go through the run. So the day race is a little bit different than the night race; just because you’ve got a little bit more track temp and it seems like the cars fall off a little bit more than they do at the first race. So, it’s a tough place to find that balance between the whole run. When you look back at Martinsville, we (Denny Hamlin, Jimmie Johnson, and Harvick) spent half the race racing each other.  I don’t think top-10’s are going to cut it.  I think it’s going to come down to putting yourself in victory lane and capitalize on the most bonus points in the next two weeks.”

 

JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DUPONT CHEVROLET – 6TH IN STANDINGS: “We had a good car during at the spring event, and I think we were sitting third before that last caution came out. My crew chief Steve Letarte made a great call for two tires during the caution to give us the lead, but I spun the tires on the restart. I wasn’t too worried about it, but then I saw Ryan (Newman) shoot ahead and I knew I was in trouble. I love the Phoenix track even though it’s a very challenging one. Both ends of the race track are complete opposites and it’s impossible to get both ends to work perfectly. I like that challenge. I’ve driven on the track since I was like 18 years old, so I always look forward to coming here because it’s a lot of fun to drive. We’ve always had a one-team, two-car philosophy with the 24 and 48 cars. The shop personnel work on both cars in the shop, and the crew will lend another HMS team a hand if needed at the track. We want to do everything possible to bring another championship trophy back to Hendrick Motorsports. But I also plan to do everything possible to get another Phoenix trophy for this DuPont team.”

 

TONY STEWART, NO. 14 OLD SPICE/OFFICE DEPOT CHEVROLET – 8TH IN STANDINGS: “How to race the Chase is the thing everybody has asked since day one. It’s not a hard concept to understand. It’s just a 10-race season, basically. You race in that first 26 weeks to get yourself in there and then it’s a short 10-week season. So it’s not like people had to learn how to do this. Everybody in this garage area raced somewhere else before they got here; and raced for championships no matter whether it’s 10 races long or 120 races long like the World of Outlaws. So, they all know how to do it but it’s just a matter of doing the job for those 10 weeks. I know we’re not in contention so it’s fun for me to watch too and watch to see who’s got a chance to win this thing. It’s three great guys and three great teams and organizations right now that still have a really good shot. It’s anybody’s ballgame right now. I’m still trying to win races this year. We’re just staying the course right now, in all honesty. We’ve still got places we’re still racing for in the championship too, so we’re just trying to get the best finishes we can get.”

CLINT BOWYER, NO. 33 CHEERIOS/HAMBURGER HELPER CHEVROLET – 10TH IN STANDINGS: “We have a great car for Phoenix, a great game plan. We ran awesome there in the spring race. I’m looking forward to getting out there. We won in the Nationwide Series there, haven’t in the Cup Series. I think that’s a track where I can win in the future. Phoenix is a great race track for me; it’s where I got my start in the Cup series and we’ve always run well out there. Hopefully this is a place where we can win another race before the end of the year.”

 

JEFF BURTON, NO. 31 CAT FINANCIAL CHEVROLET – 12TH IN STANDINGS: “Phoenix is a really cool race track. Both ends of the race track are completely different. It’s not really a short track. It’s like a small superspeedway. The straightaways are long and restarts are really aggressive. The front straightaway is down hill, which leads to a really sharp turn one corner. The exit of turn two is like nowhere else I’ve ever been. Turns three and four are big, long, sweeping corners. Some people can run the top and some can run below the apron, which gives the drivers different options. It’s a challenge because it’s so different on both ends of the race track. “It’s been a fun year and it’s been a really discouraging year all at the same time. For us, we need to execute in these last couple of races. We’ve run well, we’re fifth or sixth in laps led and we are in that same area in number of races led. Our performance has been good – not been great, but it’s been good.  Our average running position is much better than our average finishing position. That’s why we’re in the spot that we’re in. I want to see us continue to run well. We had a really fast car at Phoenix earlier this season and we led a lot at Homestead last year. These last two races are tracks that we performed well at the last time we raced there. I want to see us be able to do that, but I want to see us get the finishes that we weren’t able to get.  That’s what the final two races are about.”

 

MARK MARTIN, NO. 5 GODADDY.COM CHEVROLET – 13TH IN STANDINGS: “Phoenix has been a good track for me since we first started racing there. I’ve had a lot of success at that track. Short track racing just works for me. I love it. It reminds me of the tracks I grew up racing on. You know, I almost won at Phoenix in 2008, then turned around and got my first win with Hendrick there last year. I’ll never forget that night, so this track will always be special to me for that.”

JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 MCDONALD’S CHEVROLET – 14TH IN STANDINGS:

“Phoenix is a fun race track to run at, but it’s also a challenging track because you have to set up your car for two different corners. Turns one and two are completely different from turns three and four, so your car has to be balanced well enough to turn at both ends due to the unique shape of the track. We’ve had some fairly good runs at Phoenix lately so I hope that this weekend plays out in our favor for the No.1 McDonald’s team. Phoenix is a place that I always look forward to because I really enjoy visiting the area; it’s just a great place to visit and to be able to race at twice a year.”

RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 U.S. ARMY VETERAN’S DAY CHEVROLET – 15TH IN STANDINGS: “We look forward to Phoenix and it’s a fun race track and it’s been a while since we won so it will be nice to go back and have another shot at it.  It’s going to be a better shot at winning it and it’s just another race but it’s one that we won at in the Spring and it would be nice to sweep the season. It was huge deal for Tornados.  It was their third race and when you get to a Sprint Cup victory lane in your third race it’s a big deal.  There are sponsors in this sport who have been here for ten years and have never made it.”

JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET – 17TH IN STANDINGS: “Phoenix is a cool place.  We usually get some decent results there, not great but not bad. The track is different from anywhere else we go during the season. The set-up on the race car can be a little challenging because turns one and two are different from turns three and four. You have to find that right balance in order to run up front. Last week was a rough week for us.  But it’s okay.  Overall the Target team keeps doing an amazing job, brings good racecars, good motors.  Can’t complain. I’m just looking forward to moving on to Phoenix and having a good run.”

DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 DIET MOUNTAIN DEW PAINT THE 88/NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET – 19TH IN STANDINGS:  “Turns 3 and 4 have been the toughest part for me lately at Phoenix. Both ends can be challenging but 3 and 4 is just a longer corner and they are just so different from each other. The car will be good at one end of the track and it changes all the time. Getting around 3 and 4, getting in there hard, through the center real fast is going to help your lap a lot more than what can happen in (Turns) 1 and 2.”

BOBBY LABONTE, NO. 09 C & J ENERGY CHEVROLET – 31ST IN STANDINGS: “We have got a great opportunity this weekend at Phoenix.  My good friends at C&J Energy Services will be on board with us again.  This gives the No. 09 Phoenix Racing team a good chance to perform well.  We’re going to have a good car, a good engine package and we’re looking for a good result. Our first weekend out with C&J was a couple weeks ago at Martinsville. We had trouble overheating and were taken out of the race way too early.  We had a good qualifying run and had high hopes for that weekend.  This weekend, we are looking to salvage that finish and give these great folks at C&J a good show and a strong, solid performance. I really like going out to Phoenix.  The track is very unique.  It’s a challenging race track.  You may have an advantage over a guy in turns One and Two, but when you get to turns Three and Four he is probably going to beat you down the straightaway. Phoenix is like Loudon, it’s short and flat, but it’s different too because of the configuration.  This is a tough place to get your car set-up just right. It is tricky and unique in its own way.  It usually takes a while for your car to get going, so you’re hoping for long green runs.  Once you’re able to get going, there are a lot of different lines to take on the track.  Hopefully we can find the right one and give C&J Energy Services Chevrolet a good run.”

BRENDAN GAUGHAN, NO. 71 SOUTHPOINT CASINO CHEVROLET: “Phoenix is more of a driver’s track. The Phoenix market is very big for us with our South Point Casino.  Also I have done well there in the past which makes it a natural for me to come back into the series for a race. I have been known to over drive everything at Phoenix.  But Phoenix is a place where the driver can make a difference.  Getting through (Turns) 3 and 4 fast, you have to dance that thing through there.  Turns 1 and 2, they’ve moved the wall back a ways which has taken some of the difficulty out, but there is a second lane up there.  The main thing at Phoenix is to be able to get to the throttle early and be as smooth as you can while having the out-of-control-looking dance.”

 

 

Chevrolet NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Statistics

Manufacturers Championships

            Total (1949 – 2010): 34

            First title for Chevrolet: 1958

            Highest number of consecutive titles: 9 (1983 – 91)

Years Won: 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

 

Drivers Championships

            Total (1949 – 2009): 26

            First Chevrolet champion: Buck Baker (1957)

            Highest number of consecutive titles: 6 (1993 – 98)

Years Won: 1957, 1960, 1961, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009

Event Victories

            2010 Race Wins: 18

            Total Chevrolet race wins: 669 (1949 – to date) (2,279 possible = 29.4%)

Record for total race wins in single season: 26 – 2007

Poles Won to Date: 609

Laps Lead to Date: 200,215

Top-Five Finishes to Date: 3,363

 

Top-10 Finishes to Date: 6,873

Total NASCAR Cup wins by Corporation, 1949 – To-Date

            GM: 1,004

            Chevrolet: 669

            Pontiac: 155

            Oldsmobile: 115

            Buick: 65

            Ford: 697

            Ford: 597

            Mercury: 96

            Lincoln: 4

            Chrysler: 456

            Dodge: 207

            Plymouth: 190

            Chrysler: 59

            Toyota: 33

About Chevrolet: Chevrolet is a global automotive brand, with annual sales of about 3.5 million vehicles in more than 130 countries. Chevrolet provides consumers with fuel-efficient, safe and reliable vehicles that deliver high quality, expressive design, spirited performance and value. In the U.S., 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 Malibu, Equinox and Traverse. Chevrolet also offers “gas-friendly” solutions, such as the upcoming 2011 Chevrolet Cruze Eco model that is expected to deliver up to an estimated 40 mpg highway, and 2011 Chevrolet Volt that will offer 25-50 miles of electric driving and an additional 310 miles of extended range with the onboard generator (based on GM testing).  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, fuel solutions, and OnStar availability can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

CHEVY NSCS AT PHOENIX TWO: Jeff Burton NASCAR Weekly Teleconference Transcript

JEFF BURTON, NO. 31 CAT FINANCIAL CHEVROLET, was the guest on the NASCAR Weekly Teleconference. Full transcript:

An interview with:
JEFF BURTON

            DENISE MALOOF: Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to the NASCAR Cam video teleconference in advance of this week’s NASCAR events at Phoenix International Raceway. Joining us today is Jeff Burton, driver of the No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing. Sunday’s Kobalt Tools 500 is the ninth chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup event. Jeff is among the 12 drivers eligible to compete for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series title during the season’s final ten events of the Chase. He heads to Phoenix 12th in the standings and is a two-time winner at PIR. Jeff, I know you’re probably looking forward to moving on this week?

            JEFF BURTON: That’s an understatement. Last three weeks I’ve been in the middle of stuff I don’t want to be in, and last week was no fun. Last night and Sunday night and Sunday afternoon was not why I got into motorsports. I really don’t have any idea that I want to be involved in stuff like that.

             Unfortunately, we did have that incident and, you know, it obviously played out in front of everybody. But I think now we’ve both had a chance to reflect a little bit, and I have a much better understanding of part of what happened.

            Part of it I don’t really understand, but nonetheless, I feel like we’ll be able to move forward.

            Q. I’m going to ask you a question not about the fight. Can you explain how Richard Childress Racing can be so off the lens last year and then this year you all being so good, and talk about some of that specifically in there?

            JEFF BURTON: Last year, the things we were doing this time of the year two years ago is why we got in position last year. We didn’t enter the year with cars that were fast enough. Not from a lack of effort, not from a lack of trying, we just made some decisions that ended up being wrong.

            Those decisions were easy to make because we didn’t have the information that we needed. RCR has always been a team that’s heavily invested in testing, at-track testing. We got better, got smarter through doing that.

            NASCAR made the right decision to very, very, very much limit testing. I think that had a huge negative impact on us, and we weren’t prepared for that. We had to adjust the way we run our company from a competition standpoint. We had to adjust the way we build our cars, adjust the way that we get smarter.

            We couldn’t do it through testing anymore, we had to do it through other means. We made major investments in a lot of different areas and that led us to better answers, better decisions on how we were going to build our race cars and how we were going to set our race cars up and how we were going to drive our race cars and build the engines. And all of that has culminated into faster race cars.

            We just have better information today than we did a year ago.

            Q. Have you talked to Jeff since Sunday afternoon, and if so how did that go?

            JEFF BURTON: Yeah, we did talk. The thing Sunday was a chain of events that led up to obviously the ugliness there. And I’ll go ahead and get it out of the way right now.

            Sunday we had a deal where we ran together for a few laps. Jeff felt like I should have let him go. I felt like I was racing in my line. It was not that big of a deal to be quite honest.

            When the caution came out, he pulled up, as I explained on Sunday, he pulled up really close to me to let me know he wasn’t happy with me. He went in front of me, and when that happened I went to accelerate to go back underneath him to kind of do the same thing that he did to me.

            I don’t know if he was decelerating and I was accelerating and I ended up being — ended up in his rear bumper. Well what happened after that, I understand that part. That was just bad timing.

            What I don’t understand is after that. How the two, both cars, including myself, how we both ended up in the wall. I’ve watched the video a bunch of times. I really don’t have an answer for you. I can promise you this, I did not intentionally turn Jeff Gordon driver-side first into the wall.

            I’ve raced since I was 7 years old. You’d have a hard time walking around and finding somebody that said I wrecked them on purpose. That’s a dangerous way to wreck somebody. I think it’s a malicious way to wreck somebody, and I’ve never, ever, ever been part of that.

            So in Jeff’s line of thinking, and he’s correct, at the time of that event, here comes — he shows his displeasure. The next thing he knows he’s wrecked and he’s wrecked hard. What is he supposed to think?

            He’s supposed to think that I wrecked him on purpose because all the evidence says I wrecked him on purpose. So he obviously expresses his displeasure the way he did.

            And I’ll be honest. I didn’t have a problem with it. He didn’t swing at me. I’m sure he wanted to. He was mad enough to, and I didn’t blame him for being mad.

            You know, I grew up in South Side Virginia. I knew a thing or two about fighting. I could see in his eyes he was way more mad than I was. I was more confused about the whole situation.

            So everybody saw what happened there. To Jeff’s credit, a minute later he had calmed down a tremendous amount. Heard what I had to say. Didn’t believe what I had to say, and I don’t blame him for not believing.

            We spoke again in the infield care center, he had calmed down again, to his credit, and we are where we are today.

            So Jeff and I have spoken. We had a great conversation. We ended up laughing a little bit about some of the things that were said and some of the things that were done. And Jeff and I are moving forward.

            I believe that he knows that we both had frustrating years. And there’s no way that the frustration that the both of us — and I don’t want to bad talk about Jeff. Let me be clear about that. But the two of us collectively the frustrations we had didn’t play a role in all of that.

            For the part that I played in it, and I played the largest part in it, because I was the car that was second in line and the guy that was first in line got wrecked. So I had to take the ultimate responsibility for that.

            I have to understand that even though I wasn’t trying to wreck him, my intentions of letting him know a little of what was said at him led to this, and it is what it is.

            I take responsibility for that. But I can assure everybody that there is no way that I would turn somebody driver-side first into the wall. That is malicious and that’s not just how I am.

            Q. When he talked about it afterwards, he still thought it was intentional. Have you been able to convince him otherwise or do you just have to go on and hope to prove yourself ?

            JEFF BURTON: Well, listen, here’s the deal. Every driver, every driver, not just Jeff, will based on the facts that are in front of them.

            The cool thing about our sport is we’re able to stick a microphone in front of a driver as soon as something happens. The worst thing about our sport is we’re able to stick a microphone in front of a driver as soon as something happens.

            I didn’t disagree with a thing Jeff Gordon said on Sunday. The evidence that Jeff Gordon had, he should have said — I’m not going to speak for Jeff Gordon.

            As far as I’m concerned, Jeff and I have had our conversation and we have no issues going forward whatsoever. But I’m not going to tell you what Jeff Gordon believes. I’m not going to speak for him.

            I feel comfortable that we had a great conversation. We had a chance to laugh a little bit and reflect on several things. I feel comfortable going to Phoenix and moving forward.

            Q. The crew stopped in the middle of the race the other day between the 24 and 48. Afterwards, Denny’s crew chief, Mike Ford, talked a little brash and talked about his pit selection and how that may have played a part in the mind of the 48 guys that are watching the 11 pit all day, and that might have gotten into their heads. Then Chad comes back pretty strong today defending his guys and says no, that wasn’t an act of desperation. My question is do you believe in mind games? Can they play a role in this? And if they can or if people try to do them, would this be the time for championship contenders to start messing with each other?

            JEFF BURTON: Well, listen, I don’t know. I can’t speak to the wherewithal of any pit crew or any person that I’m not really close to. So just because you did something and there was something else that happened, that doesn’t mean that what you did effected the outcome.

            And I think a lot of people take a lot of credit for things that perhaps were just coincidence. But the 48 has not had typical 48 pit stops for a large part of the year, and I’m not being critical.

            Their pit stops because of what they’ve been able to do over the years have gotten to be exceptional. If they’re not, they’re not good enough.

            This wasn’t the first race they’ve had a problem. If this was the first race they’ve had a problem then maybe you could make that case. But this isn’t the first race they haven’t been as good as you would expect them to be. I know they’re all disappointed about that.

            I feel bad for anybody that gets pulled out. That’s a difficult situation. I’ve been part of that before, and it’s not good for anybody.

            But I wouldn’t call it an act of desperation anymore than what the 29 did with the 33 pit crew. If you’ve got something better out there and you’re not taking of it, then shame on you.

            Q. I’m wondering with the top three drivers so close in the standings right now, do you see a favorite out there right now or is it anyone’s ballgame?

            JEFF BURTON: You know what, I said last week, I don’t know. If Las Vegas came to me and said handicap this thing, I don’t know how I’d do that. I don’t know who has the advantage.

            I’m much more knowledgeable of what’s going on with the 29 and how they’ve run it and looked at the racetrack, which one of those teams doesn’t run well?

            I can remember going to Homestead and Phoenix both and the 29 being the dominant car. I can also remember that happening with the other two cars.

            There isn’t a weak point, an obvious weak point coming. They’re all three running very well. I think the 11 car may have a little bit of a — they’re definitely very confident. They have, I’m not going to say — it’s just they’re really confident. They believe in what they’re doing. They believe they’re driving the ship and that others are following.  I think that they look really tough right now.

            But I wouldn’t count anybody out. I know Kevin Harvick is ready to go win this championship. I know all those guys on that team have put every pit bit of effort into it. I don’t know who you’d pick. But I know it won’t be a surprise if any of the three win.

            Q. You mentioned the 11 guys are sort of driving the ship now. What has been the position of Johnson and those guys this late in the season in most recent years? Does the flip-flop that happened on Sunday, is that the dramatic change that puts the 11 in the very best position? Did all of that have to happen Sunday for them to be in the come and get me kind of spot?

            JEFF BURTON: They’re in the best position because they have the most points and there are two races left. They’re obviously in the best position. Anything can happen.

            Listen, who would have gone to Texas thinking that all of the stuff that happened at Texas was going to happen? I mean, you know, the story lines coming from Texas, what do you pick? And that is the way racing is.

            There are so many things that happen in every single race, there is no way to know what’s going to happen. The 11, the 29, the 48, any one of those three cars could run great in the next two weeks and finish in the 20s. So anything can happen.

            So I’d want to be the guy with the most points with two races left. There is no advantage in not having the most points. That is only the positive. So because of that, he’s in the best spot.

            But that doesn’t make him my favorite, because I’ve done this long enough to know that if the 29 goes out and wins the race this weekend and Denny runs really well and the 48 runs really well, and they run fourth, fifth and sixth, you’ve got a heck of a race going into Homestead.

            So running well, you’ve got to run great. They don’t have a big enough point lead to go run well and win a championship with the caliber of people they’re racing. They’re going to have to run great.

            Q. The Hendrick folks are obviously selling this crew swap as simply a team operation that’s not really a big deal. Is that an easy sale? I mean, if you’re involved in a situation like that?

            JEFF BURTON: Yeah, I don’t understand what the controversy is about. You have a team that is in position to win the championship. You have a pit crew that you think is your very best pit crew, what is the controversy? I don’t get it.

            I know that the guys that are on the 48, I know their feelings are hurt. I know they want to be the ones that are in there digging. I don’t blame them.

            At the end of the day, what is the controversy? You have a team in position to win a championship. As a matter of fact, two of the three teams that are in position to win championships have switched crews now. It’s the popular thing to do, you know.

            You’ve got to put your best foot forward. The 48 doesn’t want to do that. They don’t want to change their pit crew guys. It’s not the situation they want to be in. But ignoring a problem and hoping it goes away, that doesn’t fix it.

            With two races left to go in the year, it’s not time in their position to take time to fix it. It’s got to be fixed now. If this was 20 races to go, you wouldn’t be seeing this swap. They believe in those people that are pitting those cars or they wouldn’t be pitting them. But the fact is they’re not getting results right now, and they don’t have time to wait.

            So I don’t know what the controversy is. I think they’re doing what they think gives them the best shot to win the race. The same way that the 33 and the 29 did.

            Q. I was curious when Jeff Gordon was making that long walk up the backstretch, what did you expect he was going to do? Did you expect he was going to launch at you like he did?

            JEFF BURTON: I expected he was going to do something. I knew he was really mad. I knew exactly what was going through his mind because the evidence was in front of him that suggested what happened, and he was going to be hot.

            I had seen Jeff, and Jeff’s a guy that is going to take his stand. I didn’t know exactly what he was going to do, but I knew he wasn’t coming over there to shake my hand. He was mad and he meant for me to know about it. Again, I didn’t know the specifics, but I knew something was coming.

            Q. Looking at the top three guys in this deal, Denny Hamlin, Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick, your teammate is the one chasing those two guys with the 59-point deficit. Do you think he’s in a position going into Sunday’s race at Phoenix where maybe they might need to take more chances, maybe more two tire pit stops or take more chances on fuel or whatever. Are they in a position where they have to attack it a little bit differently than the other two?

            JEFF BURTON: Well, I don’t know. The thing about taking chances is — and we hear a lot about that. When the chips are down, who is going to take the chances and who is not? You’re going to do whatever you think is going to give you the best chance to win.

            I don’t know that you call that taking a chance. I don’t know if you call it gambling. I think you’re just taking your best guess and doing what you think is right in whatever position you’re in.

            And Gill Martin is really good on pit road and making strategic calls and understanding what he needs to do. I don’t see them getting off their game. I see them — Gill’s the kind of guy when something’s working he’s going to stick to it. That is his personality.

            I just don’t see the 29 getting off that. I think that they’ve put themselves in a position by doing it a certain way, and I believe that they believe and I think it’s right, too, that the best chance they have to win the championship is to continue to do what they know to do. Don’t get knocked off your game. So I don’t see Gill changing course. I see him sticking firmly to his course.

            Q. Of the two remaining tracks, do you see one of them that favors the RCR cars a little more or Kevin Harvick himself?

            JEFF BURTON: Kevin Harvick is awesome at Phoenix. If you go back and think about how well the 29 has run with Kevin driving it at Phoenix. I also can remember a lot of times when Kevin has been really, really fast at Homestead.

            But I think Phoenix is kind of like, to me, it’s kind of a home game for him. I think that he feels like he’s got a lot of laps on that racetrack. He’s run a lot of races on that racetrack.

            I think Kevin feels like when he goes there. He’s very, very comfortable. He feels really good about racing there. So I think that this is an important week for them, because I know Kevin has a lot of confidence about his ability there. So, you know, I think this weekend could be a really strong weekend for them.

            Q. You’re one of the most respected drivers in the garage. I was wondering, when Gordon said afterwards on Sunday that he had lost respect for you, I was wondering if that hurt your feelings? Also in light of the conversation you’ve had with Jeff since then, do you think he’s changed his mind?

            JEFF BURTON: Well, I think that any time you’re in a situation with somebody and it’s a negative outcome, that’s got to hurt your standing with them and you have to earn that back.

            I think that Jeff has a lot more respect for me today than he did on Sunday. But, again, I’m going to let Jeff speak for Jeff. I’m not going to speak for him.

            It means a great deal to me that my peers respect me. We’re not always going to agree, and that’s cool. That’s what makes the world go around. I like when people disagree. I think it spurs thought and it makes you a better person when people disagree and you’re able to disagree with them and have a conversation about it. So disagreements are a great thing if handled the right way.

            But I do at the very least if someone may disagree, I want them to respect me. But I have to earn that. You can’t be in situations like I was doing on Sunday and expect everyone to have the utmost level of respect for you.

            I’d like to think that I’ve earned a certain amount of respect and I do screw up my history and my track record helps me. It doesn’t give me a free pass. Doesn’t mean I’m allowed to do a lot of stupid stuff. I have to take responsibility and do the right thing.

            But Jeff is — I’ve always had a tremendous amount of respect for Jeff. I think he conducts himself in a very good fashion. He’s been a great champion for our sport. He’s a great race car driver. In my opinion he’s one of the guys that really helped the greatest sport.

            When you look at when he came in and fighting Earnhardt, it was two completely different personalities. That spurred a lot of interest in our sport and Jeff handled it really well. So he’s a really good person who has done a lot for the sport. He’s a really, really good race car driver, and I want him to respect me because I respect him.

            Q. I was asking this question two weeks ago or so. It was two weeks ago, and I wouldn’t ask it now but I think your answer is going to have a little bit to do with going forward. Given that humans aren’t robots and drivers are certainly human. Do drivers need special skills to control emotions during competition?

            JEFF BURTON: I think a lot of the results that you see are the fact that this happens quickly. This isn’t a sport where you can call timeout. This isn’t a sport where you can step away for just a minute.

            Honestly, think in what other sport does the drive, the guy that’s out there doing it not have a chance to just step away? Basketball, football, baseball, everyone one of those sports, their athletes are able to between innings when you’re sitting on the bench because you’re getting your rest. Whatever it happens to be, all of those athletes are able to get away. Catch their breath, get their head in gear, and that is a huge advantage from a psychological standpoint.

            We’re in the heat of the fire, man. We never get out of the heat of the fire. I think that’s what’s great about our sport. But you do have to control your emotions. You do have to because if you don’t, bad things are going to happen.

            If you go back and look at most events, a lot of things happen. It’s just racing. It’s not necessarily poor judgment or anything. But if somebody’s racing hard, somebody’s trying to take their spot. And there is another guy trying to keep you from taking that spot. Stuff happens, that’s racing.

            But there are events where emotion played a role. It played a role in decision making and played a role in things that went down. So I think it’s really important in trying to control your emotions.

            Q. When asked what happened on Sunday other than when the officials were keeping you separated and the ambulance. Did NASCAR officials say anything to you after when you came off the track? If not, is this something more reflective of the policy to bring more color to the sport?

            JEFF BURTON: I think here’s the deal. I think Jeff and I have been around a long time. And listen, Jeff and I have raced together for almost 20 years.

            I mean, you go back to the Nationwide race, and we have raced against each other almost 20 years. We’ve had incidents just like we’ve had incidences with other people. But nothing ever out of hand. What happened Sunday was obviously wasn’t a good thing for either one of us.

            NASCAR, the only time NASCAR had to do anything was what you saw on TV. I thought took the officials that were out there, they handled it really well. They’re big guys. They could have controlled us two, that’s for sure.

            Jeff calmed down a great deal. He honestly did. He calmed down a lot quicker than I think most people could have calmed down.  And we actually had somewhat of a conversation in the rescue squad.

            So NASCAR wasn’t — what you saw on TV was the only time that NASCAR officials have ever had to be involved in anything.

            Q. The only other topic we haven’t discussed about the strangeness of Texas was Kyle Busch flipping off an official for essentially an electronic call. Do you think the punishment that he received was justified?

            JEFF BURTON: Listen, I have to admit to you. I’ve been a little tied up in other things. I haven’t had a chance to review Kyle Busch’s day. I’m not being a smart ass. But I’ve had enough on my plate, and I don’t need to get into his dinner. I’ll leave that to him.

            Q. I was wondering, we talked to Clint a couple weeks ago and he said he was worried about getting into the Top 10 for the season ending banquet. How important is that now for you when you’ve got one of your biggest goals going forward the last two weeks?

            JEFF BURTON: Listen, that’s been — when we realized that we couldn’t win the championship, we adjusted our goals. We thought we could finish fifth, fourth, fifth, sixth, that area. The last two weeks obviously have been devastating to that.

            The incident at Talladega, we finished 41st, and this weekend we finished where we finished. We had a really good race team, really good drivers and 12th in points. To be honest, we’re a long way from 10. We’re 80 points out of 10th or whatever it is.

            Yeah, it’s really important. I don’t want to go to the banquet and sit there and listen to everybody else talk. That is the worst part about the banquet. At least if you’re going to go, you sure want to have an opportunity to express your feelings about the year and to be able to do that.

            So, yeah, it’s important for us, and we’re going to go do the best we can. It’s going to be hard to do it, to be quite honest. There are good teams in front of us. You look at who is running well now, and it will be hard to finish in the Top 10, but it is certainly our goal.

            DENISE MALOOF: Thank you, Jeff, for joining us today. I know it was an eventful week last week. But thank you for your time and good luck in Phoenix this week.

            JEFF BURTON: Thank you.

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JR Motorsports — NNS Phoenix II Preview

JR MOTORSPORTS TEAM PREVIEW

No. 88 GT Vodka Chevrolet/No. 7 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet

EVENT – Wypall 200 (200 laps / 200 miles)

TRACK – Phoenix International Raceway (1-mile oval)

DATE – Saturday, Nov. 13, 2010

TV / RADIO – ESPN2 (coverage begins at 4 p.m. EST) / MRN (broadcast begins at 4 p.m. EST)

Aric Almirola

No. 88 GT Vodka Chevrolet

“One of the coolest aspects about Phoenix is that it’s a mile track, but it races like a short track. Most everyone in this series grew up racing short tracks, so it will be familiar territory. You’ll see some close-quarters racing and it can get pretty dicey at times because the track gets slick.

“I’ll take any chance I can to race, so I’m grateful to be running triple duty through the end of the year. But I’m still focused on helping Pops (Eury Sr.) and this GT Vodka team prepare for a championship run next season, so we need to do our best to make that a reality this weekend and next.”

Danica Patrick

No. 7 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet

“I remember at Charlotte last month everyone was thrilled to be racing close to home. Now I get my turn for a hometown race. It will be nice to sleep in my own bed. I’m excited for that. It’s going to be a lot of fun to race this close to home at Phoenix. It’s a place I thought was cool in an Indy Car, and I’m sure it will be a handful in a stock car. I think Phoenix is a great track. It’s challenging, and I’m sure it will be even more so in a stock car with less grip.

“Our Go Daddy team has two more chances to get a top-15 finish this season. That still is something I’m aiming for. Our team is certainly good enough, now it’s a battle of staying out of trouble. We failed to do that last weekend at Texas, and it put us a ways behind. Everyone says Phoenix is similar to a short track, which certainly is area I need to work on. I’m looking forward to getting onto the track this weekend.”

JR MOTORSPORTS NOTEBOOK –

GO DADDY’S NASCAR FAN 1ST – Go Daddy drivers Danica Patrick and Mark Martin are participating in Go Daddy’s NASCAR Fan 1st on Thursday, Nov. 11, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. MT at the Chase Field Rotunda in Phoenix. Fans will have the chance to meet the Go Daddy drivers, get their autographs and try for a shot to cash-in on the Go Daddy “Cash Machine.” The event is free to the public and is also open to the media.

DOUBLE HOMECOMING – It will be a homecoming of sorts for both Go Daddy and driver Danica Patrick this weekend at Phoenix. Go Daddy’s headquarters are stationed in nearby Scottsdale, Ariz., while Patrick resides in the Phoenix area.

ALMIROLA AT PHOENIX– Almirola has five starts between NASCAR’s top three series at PIR. His best showing was a top-five finish in the Camping World Truck Series in 2009.

SEASON LONG STATS FOR 88 – The GT Vodka team has notched one win, seven top-five and 15 top-10 finishes on the year. They’ve also led a total of 116 laps. Aric Almirola, Steve Arpin, Kelly Bires, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Ron Fellows, Jamie McMurray, Greg Sacks and Elliott Sadler are all racers that have shared driving duties in the 88. The team is ranked eighth in owner points.

MEDIA AVAILABILITY – Patrick will be available to members of the NASCAR media on Friday, Nov. 12, at 11:45 a.m. in the PIR infield media center.

ALMIROLA WITH JRM – Five of Almirola’s six NNS starts have come in JRM’s flagship No. 88 Chevrolet this season. The native of Tampa, Fla. has one top-five and three top-10 finishes with the team. Almirola has also led laps in four of those five starts, and earned an average finish of 11.0.

NO. 7 TEAM TO DATE – The No. 7 team has secured six top-10 finishes and led 42 laps with seven different drivers in 2010, including Aric Almirola, Steve Arpin, Landon Cassill, J.R. Fitzpatrick, Danica Patrick, Scott Wimmer and Josh Wise. The GoDaddy.com team is ranked 17th in 2010 owner points.

DANICA’S SEASON – Patrick embarks on her 12th race of her rookie campaign in the NASCAR Nationwide Series this weekend. In her previous 11 starts, she’s earned a career-best finish of 21st at Charlotte Motor Speedway, with her season-best qualifying effort of 14th coming at Auto Club Speedway. Patrick has finished no worse than 22nd in her past three starts.

JRM SOCIAL NETWORKING – Join the JR Motorsports team on Facebook at Facebook.com/dalejr

and follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/jrmotorsports.

FREE JR NATION CREW FAN CLUB – Dale Jr. and JR Motorsports encourage fans to join the JR Nation Crew Fan Club for free. The official fan club provides members with exclusive ticket and merchandise offers, in addition to JRM blogs, forums, and chat rooms to interact with other members of JR Nation. For more information, visitwww.jrnation.com.