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Truckin’ at Martinsville: Kroger 200 Notebook

In looking at how things were boiling down for the start of the Camping World Truck Series race at Martinsville Speedway this afternoon, everybody knew it’d be a battle between Ron Hornaday, Kyle Busch, Todd Bodine and Kevin Harvick.

At the beginning, it’d look to be Busch’s race to lose as he led. However, when strategy started taking place, it began changing from one person to the other.

Todd Bodine pitted early due to starting near the back, and then when the leaders pitted, he was able to gain track position and get to the lead.

Bodine led from gaining that spot up front till Kyle Busch caught him and passed him.

Though with less than 20 to go, Hornaday took charge on a late race restart and took the lead the hard way—on the outside—and never looked back.

“I got tears in my eyes,” Hornaday said in victory lane. “This is so cool. I hate to be a baby. There’s a lot of people that have got thing going on. Shane Hmiel, Todd’s mom, it’s just emotional. Harvick said this paint scheme was unbeatable and we kept it going.”

Hornaday Shoots Rumors Down With Win

This marks a highlight in a season that some would call a disappointment for Hornaday, as the four-time champ currently is outside the race for the championship. Rumors began that possibly, Hornaday would be leaving Kevin Harvick Incorporated, though with new crew chief Butch Hilton, those rumors look to be disappearing.

“It’s so cool to have Kevin and Delana have the confidence in me and give me Butch and the guys to do this.” Hornaday said.

“To have Butch and the guys get Ron Hornaday in this victory lane at Martinsville is pretty cool.” Kevin Harvick added.

Owner’s Championship Battle: Germain Racing vs. Kyle Busch Motorsports

While Bodine has the driver’s championship pretty much locked up, the battle for the owner’s championship is heating up. Coming into the race, the No. 30 of Germain Racing, driven by Bodine, led the No. 18 of Kyle Busch Motorsports, driven by Busch, by 36 points. Bodine finished third, though there was no points change as Bodine led the most laps.

“This is how you win championships,” Bodine said after the race, competing just hours after the death of his mother. “We didn’t have the best truck, but we got third.”

Bodine and Busch look to battle it out to the end as they’ve already had their run-ins, including a conversation following Bodine’s win at Kentucky this year. Martinsville was no exception to their battle as they fought hard side-by-side, and at one point, Bodine was accused of trying to fool Busch on a restart.

“If they think I was trying to do a slow restart to fool Kyle Busch, they are wrong,” Bodine said on the radio at that time. “I just didn’t get a good restart. Message delivered—I’ll work on it.”

The Drama Surrounding Kevin Harvick (and others)

Kevin Harvick, who won the spring race at Martinsville, finished 15th after an eventful day that included run-ins with multiple drivers. The run-in that caused the most discussion would be Harvick vs. the Red Horse Racing drivers, Timothy Peters and Justin Lofton.

Battling side-by-side, Peters and Harvick made contact multiple times, which resulted in Harvick cutting a left rear tire down. Harvick then spun out and tried to get the car re-fired while Johnny Sauter got wrecked at the other end of the track, bringing out the caution.

NASCAR deemed that Harvick was part of the reason for the caution, not allowing him to get the lucky dog (giving him his lap back) as he had fallen a lap down in the process. Some could say this changed the entire outcome, as it put Harvick back and made the hole bigger. Had Sauter not spun, there would’ve been no caution as Harvick wasn’t in the way.

Once Harvick got back on the lead lap with approximately 15 to go, he then tried to mount his charge, yet ended up running into issues with Lofton. Lofton made contact with Harvick, causing further damage to Harvick’s truck, during a wreck that started with Sauter and Lofton. Emotions were displayed after the race as Harvick drove up the back bumper of Lofton’s truck on pit road.

Though while we’re here, Sauter should be warned for his actions as instead of answering the black flag and coming down pit road to get the loose sheet metal removed, Sauter brake-checked Lofton down the backstretch, causing a bunch of other drivers to wreck in the corner and a caution.

Hornaday wins the Kroger 200 at Martinsville

The brisk chill of a Martinsville morning in October wasn’t enough to cool the excitement of short-track truck racing Saturday. By drop of the green flag the temperature and the anticipation for Camping World Truck action were both on the rise.

Kyle Busch led the field to the green flag with his sixth season pole start. It wasn’t long however before the forces of KHI were bearing down upon him. Kevin Harvick and Ron Hornaday made their way to the front and for the first quarter of the race they seemed a dominate force to be reckoned with.

With a lot of new blood in the field the cautions began flying and through it all it was not leading the pack through the brunt of the short track furry but Todd Bodine.

With a load on his heart and on his mind Bodine raced his way from 24th starting spot to lead 83 of the afternoons 206 laps. The emotional favorite for Saturday’s victory started to fall of his pace in the closing laps and Hornaday and Busch surpassed Bodine to battle for the Grandfather clock.

As the No. 24 of Cody Cambensey spun on lap 198, it came down to a shootout battle between day’s three top trucks.

Hornaday, Busch, and Bodine restarted for a green-white-checkered finish each determined to push their trucks and their competitors as hard as they could while keeping the battle as clean as possible.

When the final flag flew it was Hornaday with the victory, Busch finished second, Bodine third.

“To win here at Martinsville … the grandfather clock…it’s a big deal,” said the 52-year-old Hornaday. “I’m pretty manly about stuff. I’ve won championships and not cried, but I had a tear in my eye today.”

Busch was disappointed with his second place finish, but congratulated the No. 33 of Hornaday and KHI for their Victory.

“Over all it was a good day.” Busch said. “We ran real competitive. I mean, we were right behind the 2 and the 33 for most of it trying to make our way back to the front, but getting there we were just too tight.”

Bodine retained the points lead with his third place finish, and after the race he spoke to the media about the race.

“We had a really good truck; it kind of went away a bit at the end. I was over driving it a bit probably.” Bodine said.

“This was one of the wild cards we were worried about, with points racing.”

Unofficial Race Results

Kroger 200, Martinsville Speedway

October 23, 2010 – Race 21 of 25

Pos.St.No.DriverMakePts.Bon.LapsStatus
1333Ron HornadayChevrolet1905206Running
2118Kyle BuschToyota1755206Running
32430Todd BodineToyota17510206Running
4723Jason WhiteToyota1600206Running
51551Aric AlmirolaToyota1550206Running
6105Mike SkinnerToyota1500206Running
713181David StarrToyota1460206Running
82060Stacy ComptonChevrolet142026Running
964Ricky CarmichaelChevrolet1980206Running
10288Matt CraftonChevrolet1340206Running
111439Ryan SiegChevrolet1300206Running
12831James BuescherChevrolet1270206Running
13117Justin Lofton *Toyota1240206Running
142548Hermie SadlerChevrolet1210206Running
1542Kevin HarvickChevrolet1235206Running
1693Austin Dillon *Chevrolet1150206Running
17239B.J. McLeodChevrolet1120206Running
181615Jason BowlesToyota1090206Running
19277John KingChevrolet1060206Running
2029116Wes BurtonChevrolet1030206Running
21513Johnny SauterChevrolet1055206Running
2217120Johanna LongToyota970206Running
232685Brent RaymerFord940204Running
243357Norm BenningChevrolet910204Running
253047C E FalkChevrolet880203Running
26346Amber CopeDodge850203Running
272846Clay GreenfieldDodge820202Running
2831187Chris JonesChevrolet790202Running
2919192Dennis SetzerChevrolet760201Radiator
30321Angela CopeDodge730200Running
3121197Matt LoftonToyota00198Running
3236124Cody CambensyChevrolet670198Running
333510Jennifer Jo Cobb *Ford640172Running
341217Timothy PetersToyota610163Accident
351812Mario GosselinChevrolet580116Engine
362293Mike GarveyChevrolet55027Brakes

Richard Petty Motorsports Survival: Is It Possible?

When Dale Earnhardt Jr. left Dale Earnhardt Incorporated in 2007, a lot of people said that it was the end of the team. Tony Stewart went as far as saying that, “DEI is just a museum without Earnhardt.” However, DEI managed to keep things together as they merged with Ganassi Racing to form Earnhardt-Ganassi Racing and have won the two biggest races this year with Jamie McMurray.

With Kasey Kahne’s departure from Richard Petty Motorsports, it looks that they’ll be put in a position where their survival is also in question.

Thursday morning, a meeting took between principals of RPM and Roush-Fenway Racing, supplier of chassis, engines and technical support for RPM, to discuss the long-term financial future of the organization.

RPM was originally formed in January 2009 through the merger of Gillett-Evernham Motorsports and Petty Holdings.

Since then, Ray Evernham has been trying to get out of the fold with his lawyers as he wants to focus on other venues of interest and doesn’t believe in the situation there.

That would seem to equal no surprise as when more details about RPM are released, the more people become to realize the mess that equals RPM right now.

It was reported by FOX Sports that Roush-Fenway had repossessed cars that RPM was planning to use at Talladega Superspeedway at the end of the month due to lack of payment. FOX Sports added also that according to their source, employees were told that they may not have a job past Martinsville this weekend.

Since then, as according to NASCAR.com, this has been settled. The chassis were to be returned to RPM on Thursday morning with the engines being delivered Friday morning.

Despite the quick solve to the problem, it does make you wonder about team’s financial issues.

Along with losing Kahne at season’s end, RPM is also losing Elliott Sadler, who says he doesn’t want to no longer to be in this situation, and Paul Menard, who has signed a deal with Richard Childress Racing. More importantly with Menard, he is taking the Menards sponsorship with him to RCR and Budweiser is following suit as they’re pairing up with Kevin Harvick.

Joining the team in 2011 will be Marcos Ambrose, who will be a teammate to A.J. Allmendinger who just signed a multi-year contract extension.

Ambrose had requested to leave JTG Daugherty Racing early, however Tad Geschickter, current team owner, said the request was turned down due to current sponsor and promotional obligations.

“Our plan at this point is to finish out the year,” Geschickter told NASCAR.com.

Ambrose hasn’t had major success in NASCAR he currently sits 26 in points and has seven top fives and 13 top 10s in 78 career starts.

Allmendinger, the team’s principal driver, currently sits 20 in points and after four years of competition in Sprint Cup, has only two top fives and 15 top 10s in 111 career starts.

Though besides the drivers being an issue, there is also the issue of the relationships between John Henry, part owner of Roush-Fenway Racing, and George Gillett. New England Sports Ventures, which John Henry owns, acquired the English Premier League’s Liverpool soccer team in a forced sale through the Royal Bank of Scotland for $476 million from George Gillett and fellow owner Tom Hicks.

Both principals are heavily involved in sports’ ownership as Henry owns the Boston Red Sox while Gillett sold his controlling interesting in the Montreal Canadiens NHL team.

With each side having a say in what goes on with regards to the partnership, could this outside of NASCAR deal end up hurting RPM?

Secondly, Kahne left under not the best circumstances as he refused to return to his car following a wreck Saturday night after the car had been repaired. The reasons he said were due to sickness, however it has been learned since that there was some tension within the organization.

Sources have told Speed that the reason Kahne was released had to do with the fact that RPM owed him back salary, again citing financial issues.

With those activities, it is certain to leave bad taste in people’s mouths and have them questioning the validity of RPM before going forth with agreeing to possibly sponsor them.

This may not be the end of issues at RPM being discussed as Darrell Waltrip said on twitter last night that there is more to the RPM-Kahne story then many people know.

Either way, the survival of the team is in question and it’ll be interesting to see what the next couple of months hold.

Hamlin captures the Tums Fast Relief 500 pole

Denny Hamlin captured the pole for Sunday’s Tums Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway with a lap of 97.018 (19.518)secs.

“We haven’t had our car in race trim yet. I feel like we have a good baseline setup for here, obviously so we decided today that we were just going to focus on qualifying knowing that the corner pit stall is very, very critical here at Martinsville. I love it when a plan comes together.” Hamlin said.

Marcos Ambrose qualified second, Greg Biffle third, Ryan Newman fourth and Juan Montoya qualified fifth.  

“That was pretty good considering I almost wrecked. I’ve never been so scared in my life. I thought I was gonna hit the fence. I didn’t know it was gonna stop, but I did the best I could. I gave up a little bit on that second lap, but I learned something that will hopefully help me for Sunday.” Biffle said.  

“It was a lot better than what we had in practice and we made some changes trying to do that. So when you can make changes and they turn out to the good that is a good thing.” Newman said.  

“It was okay, not as good as practice. We decided to change what we did in the last part of practice and it bite us a little bit, but we are pretty good.” Montoya said.    

RACE LINEUP

Tums Fast Relief 500, Martinsville Speedway
October 24, 2010 – Race 32 of 36

Pos. No. Driver Make Speed Time Behind
1 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 97.018 19.518
2 47 Marcos Ambrose Toyota 97.003 19.521 -0.003
3 16 Greg Biffle Ford 96.988 19.524 -0.006
4 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 96.973 19.527 -0.009
5 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 96.959 19.53 -0.012
6 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 96.889 19.544 -0.026
7 99 Carl Edwards Ford 96.835 19.555 -0.037
8 0 David Reutimann Toyota 96.825 19.557 -0.039
9 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 96.696 19.583 -0.065
10 6 David Ragan Ford 96.686 19.585 -0.067
11 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 96.666 19.589 -0.071
12 98 Paul Menard Ford 96.657 19.591 -0.073
13 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 96.622 19.598 -0.08
14 82 Scott Speed Toyota 96.607 19.601 -0.083
15 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 96.583 19.606 -0.088
16 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 96.479 19.627 -0.109
17 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 96.46 19.631 -0.113
18 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 96.366 19.65 -0.132
19 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 96.352 19.653 -0.135
20 13 Casey Mears Toyota 96.342 19.655 -0.137
21 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 96.244 19.675 -0.157
22 20 Joey Logano Toyota 96.229 19.678 -0.16
23 9 Bobby Labonte Chevrolet 96.19 19.686 -0.168
24 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 96.166 19.691 -0.173
25 12 Brad Keselowski Dodge 96.136 19.697 -0.179
26 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 96.132 19.698 -0.18
27 38 Travis Kvapil Ford 96.107 19.703 -0.185
28 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 96.024 19.72 -0.202
29 2 Kurt Busch Dodge 95.888 19.748 -0.23
30 164 Landon Cassill Toyota 95.888 19.748 -0.23
31 19 Elliott Sadler Ford 95.859 19.754 -0.236
32 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 95.767 19.773 -0.255
33 83 Kasey Kahne Toyota 95.685 19.79 -0.272
34 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 95.675 19.792 -0.274
35 9 Aric Almirola Ford 95.641 19.799 -0.281
36 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 95.521 19.824 -0.306
37 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 95.208 19.889 -0.371
38 26 Ken Schrader Ford 95.098 19.912 -0.394
39 37 David Gilliland Ford 94.78 19.979 -0.461
40 34 Tony Raines+ Ford 94.092 20.125 -0.607
41 7 Kevin Conway+* Toyota 93.868 20.173 -0.655
42 71 Hermie Sadler+ Chevrolet 93.77 20.194 -0.676
43 81 J.J. Yeley Dodge 94.855 19.963 -0.445

TOYOTA NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) Post-Qualifying Notes & Quotes Martinsville Speedway

1st, Kyle Busch 7th, Jason White 10th, Mike Skinner 11th, Justin Lofton 12th, Timothy Peters 13th, David Starr 15th, Aric Almirola 16th, Jason Bowles 17th, Johanna Long 21st, Matt Lofton 24th, Todd Bodine

KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 Toyota Tundra/Z-Line Designs Toyota Tundra, Kyle Busch Motorsports Starting Position:  1st How do you feel about the four women competing in the Truck race? “I think it’s great.  I think that Johanna (Long), she’s done a really nice job in the starts that she’s been able to make.  Unfortunately she had an engine failure  right off the get-go at Vegas.  I think the Martinsville, the way this place is and of course going through the NASCAR approval process, obviously it’s easy for them to make some starts here at Martinsville.  I think it’s just another car number when you come up to them, you have to pass them.  It’s not that they’re going to be treated or looked at any differently than anybody else.” Were you able to practice around any of the female drivers today? “I think the biggest thing is just confidence and being able to have the truck under you and being able to believe in it and knowing how far to push it.  Being able to have them just get the track time and the track time they need and deserve is always beneficial.  With the way our testing rules are, you can’t go test anywhere so they get their first hands on the race track when they get there.  I was never around any of them today, but the more track time you get and the more laps you get, the more comfortable you feel and the better you do.” Does winning the pole help get you closer to winning the owner’s championship? “I don’t really think it sets us any closer unless there were points for qualifying.  For us, I look forward to it.  We’ve got a good set of five races here left to go, of course Talladega being sort of a crap shoot knowing anything can happen there.  Running well there in the past so I look forward to it.  I feel like we have a good shot at this and it’s something that I really, really want to do.  I know that Todd (Bodine) and the Germain Racing team, they want to make sure that I don’t win the owner’s championship, but Bob’s (Germain) won one before so I’m hoping that I can go out there and maybe steal a little bit of his thunder and bring Kyle Busch Motorsports home with a championship the first year out.” How important is it for you to have sponsorship for the rest of this season in the Truck Series? “It’s really big and it’s a great help that we’re able to go out there and race knowing that we can race and we’re not racing on my money or we’re not racing race to race.  It’s pretty good.  I feel like the sponsors I’ve had behind me have really been a great story and a great help to me whether it’s been in the Cup Series with M&M’s or the Nationwide Series with Z-Line and NOS or the Truck Series with the abundance of partners that we’ve had this year.  I’m looking forward to it.  I feel like the rest of this year we can race hard, we can race for wins and we can go out there and do the best we can for all these people.  Interstate Batteries is the lone one that kind of doesn’t fit in with what we’ve done so far this year at Texas.  They’ll be on board with us there.  Next year, again, same thing I said in Charlotte, I’m not any further along than I was there.  I’ve sold five races, but we’ll be announcing that partner hopefully shortly in the next couple weeks and get on to 2011 trying to get everything else squared away and sold where they’re no more inventory left would be great.” Where does your love of the history of NASCAR come from? “I’ve been wanting to be here since I was a child – eight, nine, 10-years old or whatever it was.  Finally got my opportunity and a crack at it when I was 16 and then went away for a year-and-a-half because I wasn’t old enough and then came back when I was 18.   Ever since I got here, I’ve kind of never really been really well-represented I guess.  The fans haven’t quite taken to me.  I’ve been battling that uphill battle forever and I presume it will be a long time yet that I’ll be doing that.  I’ve got great people that work with me on the side that know who I am and know that I have a heart and that I’m not the scarecrow or the lion that didn’t have the heart or whatever in the Wizard of Oz.  I am a person and I do have thoughts.  The tin man – the lion was the coward – well, I’m all of those anyway.  Regardless of my point there, scratch that.  I know a lot about the sport and I’ve grown up watching it and paying attention to it and just kind of learning about it.  I like watching the old day races – sitting back and watching the races from the 70s, the 80s – the Tim Richmond special that was on.  I didn’t get to catch all of it, but I was watching parts and pieces and it was pretty cool.  You watch cars going through the esses at Watkins Glen and they’re sideways – the old bias-ply tires and stuff like that.  It’s just fun to pay attention to the sport and you want to know about what you’re doing and how you got there and how the sport has gotten to where it is.  A lot of credit goes to those guys that were before me.”

JASON WHITE, No. 23 Gunbroker.com/Pursuit Channel Toyota Tundra, Green Light Racing Starting Position:  7th How was your qualifying lap? “It wasn’t bad.  First time in a Toyota, so it’s pretty exciting.  Great, great power and these things turn really good, so I’m pretty excited about the race.  Basically, we want to be good on the long runs tomorrow.  We were one of the faster trucks on long runs.  You pit once here and that’s it.  We made our truck for the long runs and I think it will be pretty good in the race.”

MIKE SKINNER, No. 5 International Trucks/Monaco RV Toyota Tundra, Randy Moss Motorsports Starting Position:  10th How was your qualifying lap? “We were a little bit tight in the middle of the corner in our qualifying run.  That’s usually a good sign for me and we tried to make it perfect.  We took too much wedge.  We took wedge out and made a tire pressure adjustment and a track bar adjustment.  We just did too many things.  We fixed the center.  The center was perfect.  The truck got in the corner and through the center of the corner, I felt, perfect.  But, when I picked the throttle up, she just lit up that big old Triad Racing Technologies motor and she spun the tires halfway down the straightaway.  When you’re spinning the tires instead of hooking them up, you’re losing time.  All in all though, we got a good race truck this week.  I’m pretty pumped up about driving it tomorrow.”

JUSTIN LOFTON, No. 7 visitPIT.com Toyota Tundra, Red Horse Racing Starting Position:  11th How was your qualifying lap? “It was pretty good.  We were fighting the truck all day, getting it to rotate in the center.  We definitely hit on something there.  The guys did a great job all practice.  We kind of got a little loose off turn four the first two laps and that warm-up lap.  The second lap, I just didn’t want to push the issue and thought it’d be better to get a lap in.  I’m really proud of all the guys on the No. 7 Toyota Tundra, and we’ll go racing tomorrow.”

TIMOTHY PETERS, No. 17 Nelson Toyota Tundra, Red Horse Racing Starting Position:  12th

DAVID STARR, No. 81 Zachry Toyota Tundra, Green Light Racing Starting Position:  13th How was your qualifying lap? “It’s pretty exciting.  I’ll tell you, our Zachry Toyota Tundra was pretty awesome.  First lap, the front tires didn’t come in.  Turns one and two were pretty good, but I came down in there to turn three right past the center and it just pushed up on me really bad.  I needed to hit my marks, so second lap, drove it just as hard, but the front tires stuck.  Not a bad lap for us.  I wanted to get into the 19s (seconds).  We hadn’t done that all day and we’re in pretty solidly.  I just wanted t a decent starting spot for the race because I feel like our Toyota is pretty strong.”

ARIC ALMIROLA, No. 51 Billy Ballew Motorsports Toyota Tundra, Billy Ballew Motorsports Starting Position:  15th

JASON BOWLES, No. 15 Billy Ballew Motorsports Toyota Tundra, Billy Ballew Motorsports Starting Position:  16th

JOHANNA LONG, No. 20 Panhandle Grading & Paving Toyota Tundra, Panhandle Motorsports Starting Position:  17th

MATT LOFTON, No. 97 Strutmasters.com Toyota Tundra, Lofton Motorsports Starting Position:  21st T

ODD BODINE, No. 30 Germain.com, Germain Racing Starting Position:  24th

TOYOTA NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Post-Qualifying Notes & Quotes Martinsville Speedway

1st, Denny Hamlin 2nd, Marcos Ambrose 8th, David Reutimann 14th, Scott Speed 16th, Martin Truex Jr. 20th, Casey Mears 22nd, Joey Logano 26th, Kyle Busch 30th, Landon Cassill 33rd, Kasey Kahne 37th, Joe Nemechek 41st, Kevin Conway DNQ, Robby Gordon DNQ, Terry Cook DNQ, Johnny Sauter

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Starting Position:  1st Do you feel like it paid off to work on qualifying in today’s practice session? “Hopefully it’s a good thing.  We haven’t had our car in race trim yet.  I feel like we have a good baseline setup for here, obviously so we decided today that we were just going to focus on qualifying knowing that the corner pit stall is very, very critical here at Martinsville.  I love it when a plan comes together.” How nerve-wracking was it to watch the final cars take their qualifying laps? “I beat a hole through every cabinet and door in the front of the hauler.  The 24 (Jeff Gordon) had a good shot at us and the 16 (Greg Biffle) had a great shot at us getting into turn three on their last lap.  I wasn’t wishing bad luck, but I was just like, ‘Slip, slip, slip, slip.’  It came true for us.  I’m proud of this whole FedEx team.  We’ve had to work extra hard today because we have worked just on qualifying.  Kudos to them for working hard today and obviously tomorrow as well.” Are you pleased to have the number one pit stall for Sunday’s race? “It’s the biggest thing and this is only the first or second race we’ve had all year that we’ve actually just worked on qualifying on Friday.  I know the 48 (Jimmie Johnson) does that a lot and they typically out qualify us every single week.  This is the first time for us doing that and obviously we executed really well today.  Object one is accomplished and we just have to move on and change our mindset from here on out to what’s going to make our car last for 500 laps.” Have there been any changes related to pit stops at your team? “No, we’ve kept the same core group of guys for the last four years really of my career and really these are the same guys that I was probably complaining about earlier in my career.  They’ve just hit their stride and I think we’ve had the chemistry for so long now.  Even though we have strings of two or three bad weeks in a row where we had bad pit stops early in my career – we just figured that we had the right group of guys.  It’s just the chemistry and we needed to work on that part of it.  It seemed like it got better.  It definitely would from our standpoint.  If we were struggling in that area, a change like that would be open.  The 18 (Kyle Busch) car has got great pit stops every single week and they’re one of the best on pit road.  My guys have really stepped up big time in the last six months or so.  Keeping them together paid off instead of the changing like we were thinking about doing years ago.” Do you plan to keep your confidence up throughout the race tomorrow after sitting on the pole? “I forgot the last time I had a pole – I don’t get very many of them and it seems like I would remember.  We know here is a completely different beast than Atlanta or one of those tracks.  We know that when we do qualify on the pole, our car is really strong because we typically don’t qualify very well.  We always seem to race well.  It feels good to set out a plan and execute it.   We set it out days ago and said that we won’t even worry about what happens in race trim on Friday and just worry about getting that number one pit stall.  That’s optimistic being that you’re going up against 42 of the best guys in the country, but when you’re able to execute it like we are and like we’ve done, it gives you a lot of confidence.”

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing (continued) Was getting the pole here today phase one of your plan for the final five races? “Odds are that the 48 (Jimmie Johnson) isn’t going to stay where he’s at and the 29 (Kevin Harvick) isn’t going to stay where he’s at so that gap is going to close.  All we can do is try to win.  I feel like it’s going to be much easier coming from first.   We’re going to be able to be much easier on our equipment throughout the day where I’ve started back where those guys are before and you really have to use up a lot of your race car and sometimes you don’t have anything left by the time you get up front.  It’s going to be much easier on us starting there.  We can kind of set the tone, hopefully lead a lap early and obviously try to keep everyone behind us because the more we lead, the less for those other guys.” Will you have more left in your car at the end by starting up front? “I think it’s just because I’ve saved so much and I did a lot at Richmond earlier this year.  It’s about conserving equipment and I do feel like I’m good at saving brakes and things like that.  Parts have gotten so reliable on these cars nowadays – the brake packages and everything that guys are really hammering them and running as hard as they can each and every lap and they still have something left.  I think it’s a great start to the weekend and people might read into where Jimmie’s (Johnson) starting and where Kevin’s (Harvick) starting and where I’m starting, but we know as soon as the green flag drops those guys are going to be coming.” What is pit road like at Martinsville? “There’s about three good pit stalls.  What’s good for us is that hopefully the 48 (Jimmie Johnson) gets to pick a pit stall and he won’t have ones that work out for timing lines because a lot of guys here cheat pit road quite a bit in the sense that they’ll gas the cars up.  They know where the timing lines are so they’ll cheat where they are on pit road to work those timing lines.   Hopefully those good timing line pit stalls where guys cheat that will be gone by the time those guys get to pick a stall.  That will help us pretty much all day.  Hopefully we stay up front then we should have nobody in front of us when we’re going into pit road and obviously no one when we’re leaving because the number one pit stall.  It’s going to be important for us.  That was our biggest thing.  I think the 11th pit stall out there was the second-best one.  We wanted to be one of those two spots.”

MARCOS AMBROSE, No. 47 Dollar General Country Million Sweepstakes Toyota Camry, JTG-Daugherty Racing Starting Position:  2nd How has your short track program evolved? “We’ve had a great short track program all year and we’ve been looking forward to coming here to Martinsville.  It’s been a good day for us.  Started off pretty loose – had a little spin there early in practice, but we got lucky and didn’t hit anything.   Switched over to qualifying trim and really it was a good lap – I didn’t think it was going to be as good as the front row, but we’ll take it.” Do you feel like you run a separate race from the Chase contenders? “I’m excited to be on the front row and I’m going to try to stay there as long as I can.  There haven’t been as many opportunities as I would like to be at the front of the field so I’m going to try to take advantage of it.  At the end of the day I have to be mindful of who I’m racing around.  I appreciate the sport and if you’ve made the Chase you deserve to fight it out for the championship without a guy doing the wrong thing by you.  I’m mindful of who I’m around at the same time I’m racing my own race.” Why do road course racers do well at Martinsville? “I’m not sure I can answer that for you.  I’ve run well at Bristol and here – those are two good tracks for me.  Richmond I finished fifth as well.  I feel like in my case, our short track program has been strong and we’ve been able to take advantage of it.  I’m frustrated with my performances on the intermediate ovals so that is really my Achilles heel I guess if you like.  I feel like we’re running as well as we should, but then deserve to be with our team here – it’s nice to highlight it, it’s just a shame we can’t be more consistent with that.  Road racing guys, it doesn’t feel like a road race course to me, this place is very tricky to get around.  You have to run the car pretty loose getting in the corner and you have to trail brake – different to what I do in a road course so I don’t think there are a lot of similarities between them.”

DAVID REUTIMANN, No. 00 Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Starting Position:  8th How was your qualifying lap? “We were okay.  Just a little tight on throttle.  The guys did a good job.  Both of our mock runs we were really, really good and that was the first time it had been tight on exit all day.  Little confused as to why it did that.  All in all, hopefully it will hold up to be a decent lap.”

SCOTT SPEED, No. 82 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Starting Position:  14th How did your car handle during your qualifying laps? “We gave a little bit up on our first timed lap – we should have been better, but I didn’t have enough rear traction off of turn four and I just kind of had a big drift all the way to the start-finish line.  I think I lost a couple hundredths.  The second lap I was just conservative and put together a good, solid lap.  Hopefully it will hold up solid for us.”

MARTIN TRUEX JR., No. 56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota Camry, Michael Waltrip Racing Starting Position:  16th How did you feel about your car in qualifying? “It wasn’t what we were looking for, but it was better than practice.  We were fighting a lot of things.  This is a tough little place to get around.  It’s small and flat and it looks simple, but it’s really hard to get the car balanced good in all three parts of the corner – entry, center and exit.  We’ve  been complete opposites in all three corners today so we’ve been kind of battling it.   First lap was okay, but it was a little on the free side and the second lap the right-rear couldn’t hang in there anymore and just chattered out from under me.  Of course you lose three or four tenths in every corner when it does that so the second lap – you usually pick up on the second lap if you get things right, but the right-rear tire just couldn’t hold on that long.  Little disappointed, but at the same time it was faster than we ran in practice and a lot of guys slowed down.  Look at the positives and work hard on it tomorrow.”

CASEY MEARS, No. 13 GEICO Toyota Camry, Germain Racing Starting Position:  20th

JOEY LOGANO, No. 20 GameStop Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Starting Position:  22nd

KYLE BUSCH, No. 18 M&M’s Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Starting Position:  26th

LANDON CASSILL, No. 64 Little Joe’s Auto Toyota Camry, Gunselman Motorsports Starting Position:  30th

KASEY KAHNE, No. 83 Red Bull Toyota Camry, Red Bull Racing Team Starting Position:  33rd

JOE NEMECHEK, No. 87 Toyota Camry, NEMCO Motorsports Starting Position:  37th

KEVIN CONWAY, No. 7 Extenze Toyota Camry, Robby Gordon Motorsports Starting Position:  41st

ROBBY GORDON, No. 07 Extenze Toyota Camry, Robby Gordon Motorsports Starting Position:  DNQ

TERRY COOK, No. 55 Toyota Camry, PRISM Motorsports Starting Position:  DNQ

JOHNNY SAUTER, No. 66 Toyota Camry, PRISM Motorsports Starting Position:  DNQ

CHEVY NSCS AT MARTINSVILLE TWO: Team Chevy Driver Qualifying Notes and Quotes

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

TUMS FAST RELIEF 500

MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY

TEAM CHEVY DRIVER POST QUALIFYING QUOTES

October 22, 2010

Four Team Chevy Drivers to Start in Top-10 at Martinsville

 

Martinsville, VA (October 22, 2010) Team Chevy drivers Ryan Newman, Juan Pablo Montoya, Tony Stewart and Jamie McMurray will start in the top-10 at Martinsville Speedway on Sunday.

Newman scored the fourth starting spot in his No. 39 Tornados Chevrolet with Montoya, No. 42 Target Chevrolet, completing the top-five qualifiers.  Stewart will roll off sixth in the No. 14 Office Depot/Old Spice Chevrolet.

Charlotte winner McMurray will be the ninth place starter in the 43-car field in the No. 1 Bass Pro Shops/Tracker Chevrolet.

A total of 15 Team Chevy drivers will start race five of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

Denny Hamlin (Toyota) is the pole winner. Marcos Ambrose (Toyota) and Greg Biffle (Ford) will start second and third respectively.

The 500-lap/263-mile race is set to take the green flag at 1:00 p.m. EDT with live coverage on ESPN TV, MRN Radio and Sirius NASCAR Radio Channel 128.

RYAN NEWMAN., NO. 39 TORNADOS CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 4th: ON HIS LAP:

“It was a lot better than what we had in practice and we made some changes trying to do that.  So when you can make changes and they turn out to the good that is a good thing. We were really disappointed with the race here last spring because we got rained out and we were P-1 in the last practice and now we were P-25 and we have beat a bunch of guys that beat us in practice so we have redeemed ourselves a little bit with the Tornados Chevrolet but we’ll see where it ends up but hopefully it’s a top-10 starting spot.”

 

JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 5th: HOW WAS YOUR QUALIFYING RUN? “It was okay, not as good as practice.  We decided to change what we did in the last part of practice and it bite us a little bit, but we are pretty good.”

TONY STEWART, NO. 14 OFFICE DEPOT/OLD SPICE CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 6TH: ON HIS LAP: “I’m happy with our lap and happy with Ryan’s. Everyone at Stewart-Haas Racing has worked really hard and to put both cars in the top-six is great for this team. I think we’ve got a really good Office Depot/Old Spice Chevy for Sunday and we’ve got two practices tomorrow to make it even better.”

JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 BASS PRO SHOPS/TRACKER BOATS CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED 9th: ON YOUR QUALIFYING: “It wasn’t horrible. I thought we were really good in race trim earlier today. When we put our qualifying trim, we just never seem to have the speed that we need. I was ok with that but I think we are going to be better in race trim than we qualified there.”

MARK MARTIN, NO. 5 EBAY MOTORS/GODADDY.COM CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 21st: ON HIS LAP: “Real disappointed with that.  I thought we really got around there good and I was psyched about my lap and I really thought I got it all.  And I did…….I just……the time was not very fast so it’s a little disappointing.  I thought that was going to be pretty good and I felt like I got a lot out of the race car and it all did what I needed it to do.”

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 to gas-free” solutions including the Cruze Eco and Volt, both arriving in late 2010. Cruze Eco will offer up to 40 mpg highway while the Chevrolet Volt will offer up to 40 miles of electric, gas-free driving and an additional 300 miles of extended range (based on GM testing; official EPA estimates not yet available). 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.

Ford Martinsville Qualifying Quotes

ARIC ALMIROLA – No. 9 Budweiser Ford Fusion (Qualified 35th) – “It’s gone pretty good. I’m having fun working with Kenny Francis. He’s a lot of fun to work with and really smart. Our Budweiser Ford is pretty decent. We’ve been struggling a little bit in qualifying trim, but in race trim it seems really good. I’m looking forward to tomorrow and Sunday. I don’t know that we’ll get a great starting spot with that lap, but, nonetheless, I think we’ll be in good shape come tomorrow and better shape Sunday, hopefully.” WHAT’S IT LIKE TO JUMP INTO THIS CAR? “I’ve jumped in a lot of race cars this year, so you just try to adapt as quick as you can and make the most of it.”

ANYTHING BEYOND THIS WEEKEND? “I’d love to keep doing it, but right now, I’m just focused on Martinsville and as far as I’m concerned I’m just worried about Martinsville. Whatever happens next week will happen next week.”

DAVID RAGAN – No. 6 UPS Ford Fusion (Qualified 10th) – “I don’t know that the draw hurt that much, I just missed my mark by a couple of thousandths and we just didn’t get a great lap in. I’m pretty disappointed at myself for that because I thought we could have run a high four or something, but I still think overall that’s a good lap – just not as good as what we should have run.”

CARL EDWARDS – No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion (Qualified 7th) – “That was pretty good. I’m pretty happy with that. I didn’t do the best job I could. I think it still might hold up for a top 10 and that would be big – to start here in the top 10 and have a good, solid day. We’ve already out-qualified the point leader, that’s a big deal, we’ll have a good pit stall selection hopefully. There are still a lot of cars to go, but that felt pretty good.”

GREG BIFFLE – No. 16 3M Ford Fusion (Qualified 3rd) – “That was pretty good considering I almost wrecked. I’ve never been so scared in my life. I thought I was gonna hit the fence. I didn’t know it was gonna stop, but I did the best I could. I gave up a little bit on that second lap, but I learned something that will hopefully help me for Sunday. We weren’t that great in race trim, but since we switched over to qualifying trim we’ve been pretty decent. I just keep trying to do the best I can.”

TRAVIS KVAPIL – No. 38 Long John Silver’s Ford Fusion (Qualified 27th) – “It’s always nerve-wracking when you have to qualify in on speed.

Even as solid as I thought we were today in practice, you just never know. You slip a little bit and anything can go wrong. I’m just really proud of my team. Everybody at Front Row Motorsports did a really good job this week. We went to a little short track up the road here and shook down yesterday and just kind of made sure we had everything covered, and had a solid day there. We came here and didn’t really have to change much. It’s just a really good piece under me. I’m happy with our Ford and excited about Sunday.

Hopefully, we don’t have to worry about this going into Talladega.”

YOU’RE ONLY A FEW POINTS OUT OF THAT 35TH SPOT. “Obviously, you want to get the best results you can, but the motivation for this 38 team the last month has been getting back into that top 35. If we go out there on Lap 50 and wreck, we’re not gonna be able to accomplish our goal, so we need to be there at the end of the day and race smart. I think we can get a good, solid top 20 finish, that’s what we’re shooting for, but if it’s not there, just a couple spots in front of those other two guys would be mission accomplished after Martinsville.”

FORD RACING NOTES AND QUOTES Tums 500 Qualifying, Page 8

October 22, 2010 Martinsville Speedway

PAUL MENARD – No. 98 Menards Ford Fusion (Qualified 12th) – “We picked up a little bit. In practice, the last run that we made I could have run a lot faster and got kind of free. We tightened it up a little bit and the car drove really good there, but the track has less grip than it had earlier. To be able to pick up some time makes me pretty happy. I think we could have got a little bit more, but we’ll talk about it and see if there’s anything more we could have done.”

GREG BIFFLE PRESS CONFERENCE – “I tell you, I got axle-hopping on my warm-up lap there and thought I was gonna not get to qualify, and then turned around and got it going. I’ve never gone that fast here, so I really didn’t know what I was doing, but I got it right up front there, so we’ll take it. I went in and watched the lap-tracker, which is probably worse. I was green all the way until about 50 feet before the start-finish line, so it was a good lap and the car is real fast.

I just need to take care of it on Sunday.” IS IT A CASE WHERE YOU GO INTO SUNDAY JUST READY TO RUN YOUR OWN RACE? “I know how angry you are about the 48 possibly winning the fifth title, so I’m not gonna do anything to that 11 car starting in front of me (laughing). I promise you.” IT’S BEEN EIGHT YEARS SINCE FORD HAS WON HERE. IS THERE AN ODD REASON FOR THAT? “I think a couple things come to mind. One, as a company, we haven’t been that good here – and when I say we I mean Roush Fenway. If you look back, it’s really been Yates and Roush Fenway that have carried the Ford banner, so they haven’t had multiple teams throughout the sport like GM and some other manufacturers have, so it’s really limited to us. As a company, we haven’t run that good here, so that’s probably some of the reasons why Ford hasn’t been in Victory Lane. I don’t think it has anything to do with the vehicle itself, it’s just probably us as an organization and getting better at this place. Richard Petty Motorsports has definitely helped our program this year and our short-track program has gotten a little bit better. That’s why we’ve all run a little bit better here this weekend – myself and Carl and David. We all qualified fairly well and hopefully we’ll break that streak.” DO YOU HAVE MORE OPTIMISM THAT YOU CAN DENT THIS POINT DEFICIT? “Absolutely. I’d love to finish second or third or fourth in points. That would be great. Obviously, winning the title is our goal first and foremost. It would be a feather in our cap to finish in the top four, so if I can stay up front this weekend and learn something from that 11 car and learn something from Marcos, that’s what I need to do is pay attention, learn, pick up on what I can and try to save the brakes and stay off the curb and be there at the end. I like to think we have a chance to win here. We certainly had a chance to be on the pole and it was really, really close. Gosh, it gives me great excitement to know that we might have a chance to win here.” WHAT KIND OF ENGINE DO YOU NEED HERE? “I think you want something that accelerates real smooth.

That’s what’s real important – for the power to be real consistent coming off the corner. When you put the gas down in the middle of the corner with low RPM, you don’t want that engine to really come alive halfway off the corner and have your foot all the way in it. I think something that has throttle response and responds well and accelerates up off the corner, but, you’re right, when you have good tires on it you want all the power you can get. When it starts to get later in the run, you want something that’s maybe a little easier. You want something that’s real consistent, though, for probably not spinning the tires.”

CHEVY NSCS AT MARTINSVILLE TWO: Jeff Gordon Press Conf Transcript

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

TUMS FAST RELIEF 500

MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY

TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

October 22, 2010

 

JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DUPONT/NATIONAL GUARD FAMILIES APPRECIATION CHEVROLET met with media and discussed his chances in the Chase, racing at Martinsville, mind games, Talladega, and more. FULL TRANSCRIPT:

 

HOW WAS PRACTICE?

“It was pretty good. We were just working on qualifying runs. We weren’t able to get that really good lap up there like some guys did right there at the end, but all in all, so far a good day.”

IN A CHAMPIONSHIP RUN, WHEN DO THE MIND GAMES START? HOW MANY MIND GAMES ARE THERE IN TERMS OF WHEN YOU’RE SPEAKING TO THE MEDIA AND USING THEM AS A MESSAGE TO SOMEONE ELSE? ARE YOU FAMILIAR WITH THAT TACTIC?

“No. You know what? Fast race cars are the best kind of mind games you can have. In all my experience I think that’s what speaks the loudest and what we’ve been able to utilize; just going out there and performing. That’s the way I’ve always looked at it. But in some tight battles I think the guys that play the mind games are the ones that feel the weakest; you know the ones that are trying to compensate for something that they’re lacking. That’s my opinion.”

 

THIS IS ONE OF YOUR BEST TRACKS, BUT THE NO. 48 (JIMMIE JOHNSON) AND THE NO. 11 (DENNY HAMLIN) HAVE BEEN BETTER RECENTLY. HOW FRUSTRATING IS IT THAT THIS COULD HAVE BEEN A GREAT OPPORTUNITY EXCEPT FOR THOSE GUYS?

“Yeah, you know it’s just the cycle with the way things go in racing. It doesn’t matter how good you were the last race or in the past, it’s what you’re doing currently in putting up those numbers. While we still come here and lead laps and at certain parts of the race I feel like we’ve got the best car; it seems like the second half of the race we haven’t been as strong as the guys you mentioned like Hamlin and Jimmie. We’re always taking notes and trying to come back stronger and address those things.

“So far we’re just kind of business as usual here at Martinsville and tomorrow we’ll focus on some things. One thing that’s difficult is to mimic exactly what the track does during the race because this track lays rubber in the middle part of the race towards the end and it never does that in practice. So, you’re working around it. In the race I’m having to change my line and change the car and in practice we are never having to deal with that. So it’s hard to try to find out exactly what we need to be better in that situation. And it seems like some of our competitors have done a little bit better job of that.”

HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE YOU TO GET OVER A RACE LIKE LAST WEEK WHEN YOU LOST SO MANY POINTS? ARE YOU OVER IT BY SUNDAY NIGHT OR ARE YOU STILL DISAPPOINTED NOW AS YOU WERE SUNDAY?

“Yeah, I’m pretty good at moving on past things. I’ll still reflect when the season is over and next week it might flash into my head a little bit like gosh I wish that race hadn’t gone that way. But I was so busy with my family this week, and that’s a great thing about going home and having a three-year-old and a two-month-old is you just sink yourself into that and you focus on the important things and put days like that behind you; things that you can’t control or get them back. And then you just start thinking about the next weekend. I’ve been excited about Martinsville for several weeks. I love this track. We run good here. And so I guess if we weren’t coming to Martinsville it would be a little bit harder to put a race like Charlotte behind us. But yeah, I felt like we had an opportunity there to maintain that points gap that we had. And to lose as many points as we did was certainly no fun. But we moved past it pretty soon, pretty quick.”

(INAUDIBLE) ON PUTTING A MARTINSVILLE RACE BEHIND THAT SHOULD HAVE BEEN HIS

“I would say that I’ve won enough races to know that when it’s meant to happen, it’s going to happen. And that one wasn’t meant to be for us. You know, we didn’t have the best car. Steve (Letarte) did a great job making the right call in the pits there and it would have been nice to have pulled it off. We’ve pulled races off like that in the past. This year we don’t seem to be able to pull those off. So what we need to focus on now is having the best car and put ourselves in position to have the fastest car and win the race that way. That’s our mindset right now and continues to be that way until the race is over on Sunday.”

DO YOU THINK YOU’RE OUT OF IT?

“Yeah, unless some major things happen I think we are. I know it’s not something that I’m thinking about. We’re approaching the races the same way. It doesn’t change how we do that. But I can’t say that we’ve got this weight on our shoulders of the pressure of a championship. I feel like in some ways, that’s been taken off of us because I think we’re too many points back.”

NEXT WEEK AT TALLADEGA WITH FIVE LAPS TO GO, WHERE IDEALLY DO YOU WANT TO BE?

“Second or third, probably; it just depends on who you’re pushing and who is pushing you. The lead is not a bad place but it depends on who is behind you. If it’s a teammate, then you probably feel like your chances of finishing first or second are pretty good. If it’s somebody else, you might get shuffled earlier and you could end up 15th. So, I think that probably it’s better to be 2nd or 3rd.”

WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE DRAFTING PARTNER?

“Whoever is pushing me. It doesn’t matter who it is. You kind of get a sense throughout the race who is working with you, who you’re working with, you build up sort of a commitment to one another and you kind of talk on the radio and say hey, let him know I’m going to push him, I’m not going anywhere.  It gets to a point at Talladega nowadays where you’re just happy to finish in the top five. It’s not just about the win. A top five is like a win at a place like Talladega because you survived. So if you find a guy you’re working well with that you think you can get up there and worst case scenario finish second or third because you’re pushing him, you’re going to try to win the race but you’re not going to risk too much and you’re going to do what you can to finish the race. If you can work with a guy and have a pretty good shot at finishing second, then that’s a good guy. That’s a good guy to be working with.”

IS IT BETTER TO BE LUCKY OR GOOD AT TALLADEGA?

“Talladega, I don’t think, has a whole lot to do with skills, so I would say luck will play out a lot more.”

HAVE YOU FOUND THAT YOUR LINE STAYED PRETTY CONSISTENT HERE OVER THE LAST TWO OR THREE YEARS?  IT SEEMED LIKE YOU WERE EXPERIMENTING A LOT DURING PRACTICE. 

“Well that’s what we were just talking about—the line changes a lot during the race because rubber gets laid down from the right side tires and you don’t have that in practice, so you can’t really experiment with it, it doesn’t do the same thing that it does during the race.  But during the race, I’ll experiment with my line.  As soon as that rubber gets laid down, I’ll experiment with it quite a bit—car changes, line changes, and you can adjust.”

EVERYBODY TALKS ABOUT JIMMIE HERE, BUT THIS IS A TRACK WHERE YOU’RE ALSO EXTREMELY SUCCESSFUL.  DO YOU THINK PEOPLE OVERLOOK YOU?
“We might not have had the wins here in recent years like those guys have, but we have been really, really strong.  All we have to do is get a little bit better and we can pull ourselves right back into victory lane here.  Even when we’re not winning, we’re putting those guys in position not to make mistakes—if they make a mistake we’re going to be right there and pounce on them, but they haven’t made a lot of mistakes over the last few years.”

WILL WE FIND OUT ABOUT YOUR SPONSOR NEXT WEEK?

“You’ll find out about one of them on Wednesday, I believe.  I don’t know what all they are going to put into that announcement, so I don’t know all the details.” 

YOU’VE GOT THE FANS SAYING THEY WANT SOMEONE OTHER THAN JIMMIE TO WIN; YOU’VE GOT THE COMPETITORS SAYING THAT JIMMIE IS A NICE GUY, BUT THEY’D LIKE TO SEE SOMEONE ELSE WIN.  WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS?

“Well, I mean, I just want to see myself win the championship, but if we can’t win it we want Jimmie to do it.  We want Hendrick Motorsports to win another championship and keep that streak alive.  It’s an incredible thing that they’re doing and you’ve got to respect that.  I think we’ll look back at it somewhere down the road if they pull this off and go for six next year, it’s history making.  It’s hard to appreciate it when you’re in it for any of us—even them.  It’s easy to say that you want somebody else to win, but what they’re proving right now is that if somebody else wants to win, they’ve got to come and fight really hard for it.  They’ve got to be a better team, and right now I have not seen a better team out there but anything could still happen and I think that it’s easy to say, ‘sure, we’d like to see someone else,’ when someone else has won four years in a row.”

THERE WAS A TIME WHEN DALE JR. WAS REALLY CONFIDENT AT TALLADEGA—WON FOUR OR FIVE RACE.  WHAT DO YOU THINK THE DIFFERENCE IS BETWEEN NOW AND TODAY?

“Car.  The car is different.  Has he won a COT race?  I mean a COT race to me, means that you’re going to see someone different win all the time.  It just changes how you go about it, getting yourself in position and drafting is so much different.  With the old car, you really could put yourself in a position to win that race and work through it and think about it and plan it and know what your car is going to do.  Nowadays, you just look for the revolving door—you just try to figure out who is going to get through it at the right time.  We’ve got these two-car breakaways now, so that has played a little bit more of a role too.  If you get two guys that get themselves into position and know how to do that well—I think that’s about the only skill set that has really set in over the last few races at Talladega is two guys hooking up.  It seems like we work on that more and more now in practice and more guys are able to figure it out.  Then it goes back to the team—can you keep your engine from overheating, how long can you hook up like that without blowing the engine.  I don’t think Jr. has lost anything at the restrictor plate tracks, I just think the style of racing is different.”

DO YOU THINK THE RELAXED BUMP DRAFTING RULES HAVE HELPED THE PRODUCT OF RACING AT TALLADEGA?

“I don’t know if that relaxed bump drafting is associated with Daytona and Talladega—I think that ‘boys have at it’ thing is not geared at Talladega.  So I guess I’m not on the same page as you, and I think the bump drafting has been addressed.  It was addressed more this past time at Talladega than it was the year before, so I still think the bump drafting is something that we have to cautious and conscious of because that’s not ‘guys have at it.’  That just gets some kind of stupid, so we have to manage that.  I think NASCAR might not be cracking down on it, I think it somehow polices itself but I think it does get to a point where they have to step in.  That is the one place where I would like to see them step in—still—and see them police is that because that’s not the same as some of the ‘aggressive’ driving that you’re seeing at some of these other tracks.”

IN THE SPRING RACE HERE, DENNY CAME IN HERE, TOOK TIRES AND WENT ON TO WIN THE RACE.  OBVIOUSLY THAT WASN’T THE ONLY THING THAT HAPPENED IN THE SCENARIO, BUT WITH HOW THAT PLAYED OUT DO YOU THINK FOUR TIRES IS THE WAY YOU HAVE TO GO WITH 20 LAPS LEFT? 

“That same statement and those words are the reason why we haven’t won races this year.  At the times when we should’ve taken four tires, it seemed like taking two tires is what worked or staying out worked out.  At times when we came in and took two tires, four tires worked.  And it all comes down to cautions—you never know to plan when those cautions are going to fall.  So because of that, it’s kind of like flipping a coin for a crew chief as to which route is the best to take.  Had the caution not come out they way it did Denny probably wouldn’t have won the race, but I’m pretty sure that even if we had taken four we still would have finished behind the 11.  So I think that’s kind of the route that Steve [Letarte, crew chief] took—that was our chance at winning the race so let’s go for it.  We weren’t as good as the 11 at that point in the race.”

DO THE MYSTERIOUS CAUTIONS FOR DEBRIS FRUSTRATE THE DRIVERS AS MUCH AS THEY DO THE VIEWERS?
“I can only answer from my experience—there were really no mysterious cautions here at Martinsville.  Kyle Busch wrecked and they had to throw the caution.  If you’re leading a race and the caution comes out and you don’t think it’s justified, that’s frustrating, it is.  Sometimes it’s a mistake and sometimes you never really get the answer as to why it happened, but that’s just a part of racing that you have to deal with.  When you’ve been around this sport long enough those go for you and against you all the time.”

 

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Kurt Busch Open Interview – Martinsville

Friday, Oct. 22, 2010

Denny Darnell

Scott Sebastian

Kurt Busch Open Interview

TUMS Fast Relief 500

Martinsville Speedway

www.media.chrysler.com

KURT BUSCH (No. 2 Operation Home Front/Miller Lite Dodge Charger) WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS HEADING INTO MARTINSVILLE THIS WEEKEND? “I thought it was a good practice session for us. It was based off of some things that we learned off of a short track test about a month ago that we feel are similar to Martinsville Speedway. This place is very unique. It’s a very tough race track. It’s one of those tough circuits for me, where I’ve struggled over the years. Each time that I come back, I’m anxious and eager for a better run than I’ve had previously. When you have a tough track that’s going to challenge you, that’s where I like to step it up and make it a good track. Practice was OK for us. It’s just really tight in qualifying; one-hundredth of a second will be the difference between a few spots. That’s just the way it is with the tough competition in Sprint Cup. We’re just trying to make some things special the last races of the season, the last carrying the “Blue Deuce” and the Miller Lite Dodge.”

WHAT’S YOUR PERSPECTIVE ON WHAT YOU CAN GAIN BACK IN THE LAST FIVE RACES? “There’s the top three that have separated themselves and then there’s the group of cars from fourth to 10th, 11th, 12th. Anything can happen with points. We had a loose wheel here (in the spring race) and lost two positions and finished in the 30s in April. That can happen at any given time out on the race track. Short track racing, you know how quick the action can happen. Next week at Talladega, the high-speed restrictor plate battle where the draft comes into play, anything can happen at any given time. You don’t wish badly upon anybody else. You want to go out there and race them fair and hard. We’re just starting to get too far behind to compete for that championship spot, so now we’ll just go out and get the most that we can each and every week.”

TALK ABOUT THE IMPORTANT OF CONCISE COMMUNICATON WITH YOUR CREW CHIEF?

“It’s always a matter of being on the same page. When you feel like you’re not on the same page, you have to come clean and admit what you’re thinking or why you decided to do that. It’s always important to know what the other individual is thinking in the process. The crew chief is the head coach and the driver is the quarterback. I see things out on the track; he sees things out on the track from on top of the pit box. It’s the same things as being in the pocket or on the sideline; you just have to know what game plan you have and how to adjust around it for the day. A place like Martinsville is different than Talladega. That process changes each and every week depending on what track we have to attack.”

WHO’S GOING TO WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP?

“That’s what makes this Chase exciting, the fact that every week you’re getting close and closer to the end which is less opportunity to gain points on guys. What I’d like to see is these three guys battle and somebody else jump in there all the way down to Homestead. The atmosphere of as many guys as possible having a shot at it at Homestead is what the Chase was created to do. Back in 2004, we had five guys that had a shot at it (winning the championship) mathematically. If I had to throw down a choice on this year’s Chase, am I sentimentally rooting for the Shell/Pennzoil car? Maybe I am.”

GOING INTO 2011, HOW MANY CHANGES DOES YOUR TEAM NEED TO MAKE TO WIN A CHAMPIONSHIP? WHAT CHANGES DO YOU NEED TO MAKE?

“We’ve got an interesting scenario right now. With our tough result from last week and where we are with the point’s situation, we need to worry about the future and keep the present intact. Whether its personnel changes at the end of the year, trying a different chassis configuration, we’ve got quite a few things to do the next few weeks to help us find a solid direction for 2011. We won’t do anything dramatic. Roger (Penske) is one that thinks things through and likes to analyze every situation. I like the next few weeks for us with the Charlotte tire test. I think that we’re going to go back to the old Rockingham and run some more laps. We’ve got a good track like Texas coming up with Phoenix and Homestead finishing off the season. Those are good tracks for us as well. We need to throw something just a little bit different at the program and see what we can make up for 2011 because right now, we’re sitting ninth in points and our chances of winning the championship are slim. Let’s worry about the future as well as take care of the present.”

PUT INTO PERSPECTIVE WHAT JIMMIE JOHNSON HAS BEEN ABLE TO DO THE LAST FIVE YEARS?

“Their ability to overcome hurdles during the race is what separates them from everybody else. At the beginning of the Charlotte race last week, he spins out all on his own off of Turn 2, an ill-handling race car. They work on it and end up with a top five. We had the same scenario at Charlotte with a race winning setup that won the race in May and we limped home to a 30th-place finish. That’s not going to cut it to win championships. What wins championships is what the 48 team does and that’s overcome those hurdles each and every week. It’s amazing how they do it. There’s no written way to do it. It’s just that they’re able to…Chad Knaus is, Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick, that whole program. Just when you think you’ve got them, they do something out of the world again to put themselves on top.”

WITH THE SUCCESS OF KESELOWSKI THIS YEAR IN NATIONWIDE WITH THE NEW CAR, HAS THERE BEEN A COORDINATED EFFORT BETWEEN PENSKE’S NATIONWIDE AND CUP PROGRAMS?

“That’s been a very good program for us this year, that Nationwide new car. There were a lot of questions going in. Brad was actually skeptical that it might take away from his (Nationwide) effort and it actually helped polish it up. The way that those front ends are setup on those Nationwide cars is how our Cup cars need to be. We need to be back off those bump stops. The front fascia and how it looks to make it more appealing. I would like to drive those cars right now in Cup and that would turn our program around on where we need to go. Everything that is wrong with our car is put into those Nationwide cars to make them more comfortable, more appealing and put on a better race. That’s what I hope we end up with for our Cup program here shortly.”

WHAT IS PENSKE’S LINEUP FOR NEXT YEAR?

“With our big changes on the 22 car, we’re going to be the Shell/Pennzoil No. 22 and Brad Keselowski will be in the No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge. We’re still looking for sponsorship for Sam Hornish. On the Nationwide program, we’ll probably see a change on it. Brad will still be running full-time; I’m not sure what the plans are for the 12 in Nationwide. It’s just a matter of building the best quality cars that we can and making sure that our drivers are communicating at top levels to make our program stronger.”