Category Archives: Chevrolet Racing

Chevy Racing–Ricky and Jordan Taylor Give Chevrolet Corvette Daytona Prototype the Win in the Chevrolet Sports Car Challenge in Detroit

Ricky and Jordan Taylor Give Chevrolet Corvette Daytona Prototype the Win in the Chevrolet Sports Car Challenge in Detroit
 
DETROIT (May 31, 2014) – Ricky Taylor held off a last-lap challenge from fellow Team Chevy driver Richard Westbrook to score the win for Chevrolet  and the Corvette Daytona Prototype in the Chevrolet Sports Car Challenge on the Raceway at Belle Isle Park. It was the first win for the “Brothers Taylor” as season-long teammates in the No. 10 Konica Minolta Wayne Taylor Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype.
 
Jordan started the race and maintained position in the top-three during his stint.  Ricky took over and got the lead due to great pit work by the team, and brought it to the checkered flag in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Prototype class 100-minute race in the shadows of Chevrolet’s world headquarters in Detroit. The win propelled the pair into the lead in the Series’ driver point standing.
 
“That was a tremendous one-two Chevrolet finish for Ricky Taylor in the No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype and Richard Westbrook in the No. 90 Spirit of Daytona Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype,” said Mark Kent, Director of Chevrolet Racing.  “This is an important weekend for Chevrolet here at Belle Isle, so a win in the shadow of our world headquarters is very special. Also, congratulations to Ricky and Jordan Taylor on their first win as teammates.  Based on their outstanding performance today, it should be the first of many to come!”
 
This is Jordan’s third consecutive victory at Belle Isle. In 2013, teamed with Max Angelelli, Jordan also was on the top-step of the podium. In 2012, he was victorious in a Camaro GT.R in the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series.
 
Westbrook, the pole winner for today’s race, made a hard charge in the final laps behind the wheel of the No. 90 VisitFlorida.com Spirit of Daytona Corvette DP,  but had to settle for the runner-up finishing position in round five of the  11-race season.
 
Michael Valiante took the green flag in the No. 90 Corvette DP, and like J. Taylor, maintained a strong presence at the front of the field, in position to make a run at the end.
 
After a strong run, the No. 5 Action Express Corvette DP piloted by Joao Barbosa and Christian Fittapaldi had to settle for sixth in class as a result of on-track contact causing a flat rear tire.
 
Mechanical woes forced an early exit for the No. 31 Marsh Racing Corvette DP driven by Eric Curran and Boris Said.
 
Next on the schedule for the Chevrolet Corvette Daytona Prototype teams will be the Sahlen’s Six Hour of The Glen, Watkins Glen International (New York) June 27-29, 2014,
 
DRIVER QUOTES:
RICKY TAYLOR, NO. 10 KONICA MINOLTA WAYNE TAYLOR RACING CORVETTE DP: YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE RACE AND VICTORY TODAY: “Great race and I have to put it up to the guys and our Corvette DP was a great car today.  I just had to keep it up there and defend like mad but I couldn’t have been out there if not for the guys, Corvette and everybody that supports the team.  And now we might be leading the championship and that’s what we want.”
 
HOW HARD WERE THOSE LAST FEW LAPS ON YOU?: “It’s used up the last bit of life I had to hold him off.  He made it really hard and he was really good but putting us in the wall like that was a little uncalled for.  But we were racing for the win and I will take it.”
 
JORDAN TAYLOR, NO. 10 KONICA MINOLTA WAYNE TAYLOR RACING CORVETTE DP: TELL US ABOUT WATCHING THOSE LAST FEW LAPS: “I was trying to not listen or watch anything because it was so stressful but we had the right guy in the car at the end.  Ricky was awesome.  Couple years ago we had to finish there against Garcia where Ricky held him off for an hour.  So we knew we had the right guy in the car and although I don’t think we had the fastest Corvette, we had the strongest guys in the pits and the right guys in the car in traffic.  So we can’t really complain and it got a little aggressive unnecessarily at some points in the race but thankfully Ricky brought it home for the win.”
 
DURING YOUR STINT YOU MADE SOME FORWARD PROGRESS IN A BIG WAY: “Yeah, it was obviously a great start as we went from 5th to the lead in my stint, so I couldn’t have asked for much more.  Then the guys in the pits and then Ricky obviously doing a great job in the end.  So it’s still a team effort.”
 
WAYNE TAYLOR, TEAM OWNER NO. 10 KONICA MINOLTA WAYNE TAYLOR RACING CORVETTE DP: DID YOUR HEART JUST SINK WHEN YOU SAW HIM GET IN THE WALL THERE? “You know, my initial thought was, ‘that was a disgraceful move’.   You know, it’s fine to challenge and put yourself inside but to push somebody into the wall…..they got what they deserved.  It was incredibly disappointing to have competitors that operate like that.  They are certainly a team that should be better than that, it’s a disgrace.   Anyway, we beat them and we beat everybody.  Of course for Ricky, Jordon and me as a family – I cannot put into words what this means.”
 
YOU NOW HAVE TWO STRAIGHT HERE: “Yeah, I mean think about it.  Jordon won in a Camaro here, and now he has won in this Corvette here, and now he and Ricky have won.   The great thing was that Ricky finished the race.  Confidence-wise for them it was really, really good but they are totally interchangeable.  I keep thinking and hoping everyone is watching these two and recognizing what they can do.  I can’t be doing this the rest of my career and they should be in big places.   We have Konica Minolta here and I can’t thank them enough for what they have done for me.  We got them a win and I think we are leading the championship.”

RICHARD WESTBROOK, NO. 90 VISIT FLORIDA SPIRIT OF DAYTONA RACING CORVETTE DP: WAS THAT EXCITING FOR YOU? “No.  I mean it’s great to be back on the podium and I think we deserve it, but it’s just frustrating to have such a fast car and just can’t get any temperature in the tires after the restart.   It took several laps to come in and when it did it was spot on like in qualifying.  Unfortunately when you have a half-an-hour sprint at the end you need more weaponry than that.   So it’s something to work on and Rome wasn’t built in a day and we have come from a long way down.  To get second is a good result.  Especially in Detroit.”
 
DO YOU FEEL LIKE THIS COULD BE A TURNING POINT? “Yes, definitely.  We have a pacey car and we just have to fine tune now.   Had there not been another yellow, I think it could have been our day.   We just have to work on that tire issue, but we will get there.”
 
MICHAEL VALIANTE, NO. 90 VISIT FLORIDA SPIRIT OF DAYTONA RACING CORVETTE DP:  THAT WAS AN EXCITING FINISH THERE AT THE END? “These races are so close and you never know what is going to happen.  Unfortunately I got caught up in traffic, lost a couple of positions, and that is pretty much what determined the outcome of the race here.  So it’s great that the car has the pace, Richard is doing a great job, and we just want to keep the momentum going.  We have had some bad luck the last couple of rounds when we should have been on the podium if not won.”

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Belle Isle–Race One Qualifying

CHEVROLET INDYCAR V6
VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
CHEVROLET INDY DUAL IN DETROIT
RACE ONE QUALIFYING
THE RACEWAY AT BELLE ISLE
 
DETROIT (May 31, 2014) – Helio Castroneves put his Chevrolet IndyCar V6 powered No. 3 Hitachi Team Penske Dallara on the pole for Race One of the Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit with a lap of one minute, 17.5362 seconds.  It is the first 2014 Verizon P1 Award for Castroneves.
 
That was a great job for the entire Team Penske. They did a heck of a job,” said an elated Castroneves.  “It was great. The car is spectacular – even brushing the wall a little bit, Montoya style, it was great, man. The car is on rails, man. It’s awesome.”
 
Other Team Chevy drivers in the Firestone Fast Six around the 13-turn, 2.36-mile temporary street course named The Raceway at Belle Isle Park were: Mike Conway, No. 20 Fuzzy’s Ultra Premium Vodka Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet – 4th; Ryan Briscoe, No. 8 NTT Data Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet – 5th and Juan Pablo Montoya, No. 2 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet – 6th.
 
James Hinchcliffe (Honda) and Jack Hawksworth (Honda) completed the Firestone Fast Six for Race No. One of the Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit.

Chevy Racing–Corvette Racing–Belle Isle

Richard Westbrook Puts Corvette Daytona Prototype on the Pole at Belle Isle
 
DETROIT (May 30, 2014) – Richard Westbrook made the most of the final minutes of qualifying count with pole-winning run for the Chevrolet Sports Car Classic on The Raceway at Belle Isle Park. He put the No. 90 Visit Florida Spirit of Daytona Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype in the number one starting position for the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship race with a fastest lap time of one minute, 25.011 seconds (1:25.011) to capture his first pole of the 2014 season, and his fifth career Prototype pole.
 
“Winning the pole for the Chevrolet Sports Car Classic is a great way to start the weekend at Chevrolet’s home race here in Detroit,” said Jim Lutz, Chevrolet Racing Program Manager, TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Prototype. “Richard Westbrook and the No. 90 Spirit of Daytona Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype team were well prepared to make pole run for the race.  With the race being only 100 minutes, track position is going to be critical. Our Corvette DP teams have been working very hard to be well prepared for this event.  We are looking forward to a very competitive race on Saturday.”
 
Christian Fittapaldi turned in a top-five qualifying effort in the No. 5 Action Express Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype securing the third starting position.
 
Giving Chevrolet three of the top-five, Jordan Taylor qualified the No. 10 Konica Minolta Wayne Taylor Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype in the fifth starting position.
 
The No. 31 Marsh Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype driven by Boris Said will start ninth in the 100-minute race.
 
The Chevrolet Sports Car Classic is slated to start at 12:10 p.m. ET on Saturday, May 31. Live coverage by MRN Radio will be aired on IMSA.com along with live timing and scoring as well as select MRN outlets. Fox Sports One will air the race tape-delayed on Saturday May 31 starting at 1:30 p.m. ET.
 
POST QUALIFYING PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:
 
RICHARD WESTBROOK, NO. 90 VISIT FLORIDA SPIRIT OF DAYTONA RACING CORVETTE DP:
 
CONGRATULATIONS ON THE POLE, LOOKED LIKE IT WAS REALLY TIGHT BETWEEN YOU AND THE SECOND PLACE QUALIFIER OUT THERE
 
“Yes, it was like déjà vu in Laguna.  There was so much chatter on the radio and it was like “P1, now you are P2, now you are P1 and then P2”.   Then I did a twenty-five one I think with three laps to go and I thought, yes I am done now.  I did a cool down lap and then fortunately they came on the radio on the last lap and said you are going to have to go a twenty-five zero.  Then I just threw caution to the wind and sometimes you get rewarded for that on a street circuit and sometimes it can bite you.   But today just felt like our day.  It was a welcome surprise when we rolled off the truck and we weren’t that competitive but it’s nice to see all the boys smiling at SDR.  We found some pace at Sebring and we are definitely on the up.  The results will come but for me it’s just great that we got our pace back again.”
 
WHAT WOULD A WIN IN THE SHADOW OF THE REN CENTER MEAN FOR YOUR TEAM, OBVIOUSLY A CORVETTE TEAM, BUT THE SEASON HASN’T BEEN EVERYTHING YOU HAVE WANTED YET?
 
“No, you are right.  Results-wise it hasn’t and I don’t want to hex it by talking about a win tomorrow so I am going to say we are aiming for the podium.  To get a good result in Detroit, the backyard of Chevy, and give yourself a nice big smile on the way to Le Mans as well………..it’s obviously an important week next week as well, it would mean so much to do well here.  Let’s see because there is a lot of work to do and like I said, we have a good pacey car now and that is the really pleasing thing right now.  Let’s see if we can convert it tomorrow.”
 
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE LOGISTICS PROBLEMS FOR WHEN YOU HAVE TO GET OUT OF HERE TOMORROW AND GET TO LE MANS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MANDATORY TEST?
 
“Well, it’s not that straightforward as we found out a year ago when we missed our flight and then missed scrutineering. So Mr. Fehan was not a happy person.  So we are under strict orders this time and he looked at our flight details to make sure we are on the safest route.  So thank god the race isn’t starting too late so we have plenty of time to get to the airport and we fly direct to Paris.  Then we get a train from Paris to Le Mans and can just about make the afternoon session.  Fingers crossed that it doesn’t rain for that afternoon session in Le Mans

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Belle Isle Practice

CHEVROLET INDYCAR V6
VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
CHEVROLET INDY DUAL IN DETROIT
FRIDAY PRACTICE RECAP
THE RACEWAY AT BELLE ISLE
 
DETROIT (May 30, 2014) – After two practice sessions, the Chevrolet IndyCar V6 powered drivers showed strength with three drivers in the top-four fastest on the combined practice time sheet to kick off the Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit.
 
Mike Conway, No. 20 Fuzzy’s Ultra Premium Vodka Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet, turned in the second fastest time of the day. However, the winner of the 2013 Saturday race in the Raceway at Belle Isle Park, was atop the leaderboard for most of both the morning and afternoon sessions.
 
Helio Castroneves, No. 3 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet, posted the third fastest in today’s combined practice session. He was followed closely by his Team Penske teammate, Will Power in the No. 12 Verizon Chevrolet.
 
Qualifying for Race Number One of the Dual in Detroit will take place on Saturday May 31 at 8:35 a.m. The format will be the familiar Firestone Fast Six to determine the Verizon P1 Award winner for Saturday afternoon’s race.
 
DRIVER QUOTES:
 
MIKE CONWAY, NO. 20 FUZZY’S ULTRA PREMIUM VODKA ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, 2ND IN PRACTICE: “It felt good to come off the trailer and run well here.  I really like this track and the ECR/Fuzzy’s team has worked hard in the last eight to nine weeks on the engineering program.  Ed (Carpenter, team owner and oval driver for ECR) had a very good month at Indy except for the last 25 laps Sunday.  We came here with the setup we had at Long Beach when we won.  So things have been progressing well with our street program.  I really like sliding the car around here and it is fun.  The surface changing from pavement to concrete makes the car jump around and you really have to be on your toes at all times here at Detroit.  It is very encouraging to be in the top six in the first practice and we only ran one set of tires.  I think qualifying will be very exciting with the Firestone red tires added to the mix.  You could see some low 76s (seconds) laps.”
 
PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:
THE MODERATOR:  We’ll continue with Mike Conway.  Mike finished second fastest in today’s combined practices.  He won race one in 2013.
Mike, obviously very successful at this track here.  Coming back it seems like you’ve been able to pick up where you left off.
MIKE CONWAY:  Yeah, seems that way.  Obviously couldn’t do that without a good car from Ed Carpenter Racing.  I think we picked up where we left off at Long Beach.  Seemed to be a good base to start with here.
Haven’t touched it much.  All credit to the team.
I do love this place.  It’s a lot of fun.  Each lap gets your attention, that’s for sure.  Non-stop action around here.  Yeah, pretty happy so far.  Obviously a bit different tomorrow with the reds and stuff.
 
THE MODERATOR:  Any significant changes you noticed?  I believe last year it was actually warmer than it was today.  Anything different about the track that you noticed?
MIKE CONWAY:  No, not really.  To start with, I thought there was more grip than there was last year.  Felt pretty hooked up to start with.  Just some curve changes down in three and seven were really the biggest things.  Opened up seven a lot more now.  Entry speed is a lot quicker than last year.  Maybe a bit of time gained there.
I don’t know.  Just the grip laid down, I suppose, helped us out too.
 
THE MODERATOR:  Questions.
Q.        (No microphone.)
MIKE CONWAY:  No, I mean, no ambitions to be out there really at all.  I felt like I was a bit out of the loop, a bit of a spare part.
It’s still good to be there, a great place to be, the Speedway, especially when the 500 is on.  Good to see Ed doing so well.  A shame it didn’t end too well.  But they ran well all month.  I think they’ll be a threat on all the ovals coming up.
But, yeah, still good to be there.
 
Q.        Mike, two different years, two different teams, but still showing success.  What do you bring as a driver to be successful at a track that you like?
MIKE CONWAY:  Just tried to bring as much back from last year as I could this year.  The car rolled out.  As soon as I went out on pit lane I felt like the car had a lot of grip.  Small input in terms of setup from where we started back in Sebring.
We’ve been trying to push the car as much as possible, developing things, dampers.  We come to this point where we can roll out and be in the top six, which is where you always want to be.  It’s always where you want to be, especially with the doubleheaders.
All credit to the team though.  They’ve been working hard, flat out.  Late night last night.  Non-stop, big effort from the boys.  They’ve been flat out for the last eight, nine weeks.  They’re still pushing all the time.  They’re so competitive.  It’s good.
 
Q.        How much more is left in the car?  What is your favorite passing place here?
MIKE CONWAY:  We started on new tires.  Didn’t get to run a second set in the first practice.  We did run a second set in this practice, but didn’t get a time out of it with the yellows.  Hopefully more time to be had.  Little tweaks to the car, I don’t want to change it too much.  Always a risk.
But, yeah, I think it should be pretty quick tomorrow on the reds.  It’s going to be, I don’t know, 76 or something.
And passing, down into three.  Get a good run through one and two, car is pretty hooked up through there.  Down into seven as well.  That’s always harder because you sweep over to the right anyway to approach the corner.  You can make your car a bit wider than it needs to be sometimes.
 
Q.        What do you like about this track?  It seems to be made to order for you.
MIKE CONWAY:  Yeah, I don’t know.  It’s a real challenge around this place.  Every lap, as I said, gets your attention.  Very bumpy, very challenging.  There’s some corners that have got a lot of grip.  Sometimes you go into corners and you’re like, Oh, am I going to make it?  You come through it.
It’s always like that around here really.  Just because of the bumps, quick change of direction, it’s a lot of fun.
 
Q.        It seems like watching the cars in general, they look like they’re sliding, then at the last second the driver catches it.  Is that part of the problem with the bumps?  Do you expect problems during the race?
MIKE CONWAY:  I wouldn’t expect any problems.  You can easily get caught out here, cold tires, restarts, stuff like that.  You’ve got to keep your wits about you.
It’s all part and parcel of the circuit, the way the bumps are.  You can get your car set afterwards.  That’s the biggest thing with the dampers, getting the thing to catch afterwards.  A lot of corners, you’re going in, the car is very neutral on entry, then you catch the bumps.  You got to make sure you’re going to make the corner, then get out.
Even on a quick lap around here, you seem to have quite a few slides.  Most circuits don’t seem to get as much as that.  But it’s fun though.
 
Q.        (No microphone.)
MIKE CONWAY:  Simon is standing next to me.  I can’t say too much.  I don’t want to give him any secrets (laughter).
But Simon was bloody quick around here last year, too.
 
Q.        (No micro
phone.)
MIKE CONWAY:  I don’t know.  I think it’s being comfortable with letting the car slide on you.  If you don’t like a car loose on entry or sliding around, if you drive it in too much, you’ll get a lot of understeer around here.  That’s something you don’t want.
True or not?
THE MODERATOR:  Mike, we’ll let you go.  Thank you for joining us.
 
HELIO CASTRONEVES, NO. 3 HITACHI TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, 3RD IN PRACTICE: “Today was a good day for the Hitachi team. We were quick in both practice sessions and were able to try some new things in the terms of our pit stops which I think will be very beneficial to us during the race. Hopefully our speed will carry over into tomorrow’s qualifying and then race.”
 
WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, 4TH IN PRACTICE: “The No. 12 Verizon Chevy is slowly making progress. We definitely have to put everything together so we can get it done for qualifying tomorrow.  We’ll be ready.”
 
SCOTT DIXON, NO. 9 TARGET CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, 6TH IN PRACTICE: “I wasn’t too happy with the car in the session this morning.  Traffic was a bit of an issue and it was hard to get a clear lap.  We made some changes to the Target car and picked up some speed in the afternoon session. We still need to get the car better though.  It looks like we’re about six tenths of a second off still.”
 
RYAN BRISCOE, NO. 8 NTT DATA CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, 9TH IN PRACTICE: “Today was a pretty solid day of practice for the No. 8 NTT DATA Chevrolet.  It’s always a bit of a challenge after the month of May to make sure that you’re in a street course mindset, just because we’ve spent almost a month thinking about nothing but ovals.  We used today to tweak a few things and just make sure that we’re ready to go for the doubleheader.  You don’t get as much time to prepare for doubleheaders, so we made sure to take advantage of the few hours we did have on-track today.”
 
TONY KANAAN, NO.10 ENERGIZER CHIP GANASSI CHEVROLET, 11TH IN PRACTICE:  “Obviously this is the way we should be starting each race weekend – in the top five.  We know we have the team and personnel to do it, it just takes time working together to get to know each other and making it all happen.  We have a good Energizer car so far this weekend in Detroit and we’ll start working to move up further on the speed chart for qualifying tomorrow.”
 
SEBASTIAN SAAVEDRA, NO. AFS 17 KV AFS RACING CHEVROLET, 13TH IN PRACTICE: “Welcome to Detroit and the home of Chevrolet. It’s an amazing track….very bumpy and tricky, which makes it hard for the drivers to put a fast lap together. With it being a doubleheader this weekend, double points are on offer so we need to stay focused all weekend. Today’s practice session wasn’t too bad, we were a little looser than we would want especially when we have to drive so close to the walls but with a little bit of work with the engineers tonight, I think we are going to have a nicely balanced car for qualifying and race one tomorrow.”
 
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 2 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, 19TH IN PRACTICE:    “A tough day for the No. 2 Verizon Chevy. We are fighting some shifting issues that have kept us from really focusing on making the car faster. It’s not bad, just a bit of understeer in the second session. Unfortunately the red flags fell at bad times for us as well. We’ll just have to put our heads down tonight and come out with a plan to qualify well tomorrow.”
 
CHARLIE KIMBALL, NO. 83 NOVO NORDISK CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, 20TH IN PRACTICE: “Overall I think today’s practice sessions went pretty well for the No. 83 NovoLog FlexPen Chevrolet.  It felt good to get back in the car after the disappointing 500 we had.  We don’t have a ton of time to prepare for doubleheaders, especially when we come straight from the 500 so we made sure that we worked everything out today that we needed to.  We have a really good car, and I’m very confident about our chances here.”
 

Chevy Racing–Dover–Qualifying

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
FEDEX 400 BENEFITING AUTISM SPEAKS
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST QUALIFYING DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
MAY 30, 2014
 
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON LEADS TEAM CHEVY IN QUALIFYING AT DOVER
Five Chevrolet SS Race Cars to Start in Top 12
 
DOVER, DE – May 30, 2014 – Jimmie Johnson, who has won eight times in 24 starts at Dover International Speedway, qualified his No. 48 Lowe’s/Kobalt Tools Chevrolet SS in fourth place with a speed of 163.362 mph for Sunday’s FedEx 400 Benefiting Autism Speaks NASCAR Sprint Cup race.  He was the first of five fast Chevrolet SS race cars to earn spots in the Top 12 positions in the final round of multi-car qualifying at the ‘Monster Mile’.
 
Kyle Larson was the fastest Rookie of the Year contender (163.080 mph) by qualifying fifth in his No. 42 Cottonelle Chevrolet SS.   Jeff Gordon, a four-time winner on the concrete track, will start his No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevy SS from the sixth position; Kevin Harvick qualified eighth in the No. 4 Budweiser Chevrolet SS and AJ Allmendinger was 11th quick in the No. 47 Scott Products Chevrolet SS.  Allmendinger knocked Dale Earnhardt Jr. out of the top 12, but the No. 88 National Guard Chevy SS will start Sunday’s race 13th.
 
Brad Keselowski (Ford) was the pole winner; Kyle Busch (Toyota) qualified second and Joey Logano (Ford) starts third to round out the top five starters.
 
The FedEx 400 Benefiting Autism Speaks is scheduled for 1p.m. Sunday, June 1st and will be aired live on FOX.
 
KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 COTTONELLE CHEVROLET SS, QUALIFIED FIFTH, TOP ROOKIE OF THE YEAR CONTENDER
 
ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN:
“Qualifying was pretty good for us I think we ended up fifth.  We had a Cottonelle Chevy in practice and then worked on it a little bit there in our qualifying runs and got a little bit better.  Happy with a top-five starting spot for Sunday’s race.  Just have to get our race car a little bit better and we should be right up there with the top guys.”
 
TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT YOUR COMFORT LEVEL HERE AT DOVER?
“I don’t know sometimes I like this place and sometimes I hate it.  In the Nationwide car so far today we have been off pretty bad. I feel like we handle okay, but it’s really slow.  That is going to be frustrating over there, but then when I come over to the Cup car I actually like the track.  It all just depends on how good the car is.  This track is definitely tricky and a little bit on the edge.  I feel like I’m pretty comfortable around here.  It feels like a bigger Bristol for me and I like that place.  The big drop into (Turn) 1 doesn’t really feel bad to me at all.  It’s more in Turn 3 where I get upset the most.  All in all it’s not that uncomfortable feeling here.”
 
AJ ALLMENDINGER, NO. 47 SCOTT PRODUCTS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 11th
ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN:
“It was pretty good.  I think the first run I probably under drove a little bit trying to be too smooth with the car.  I could see everybody had slowed down a little bit so I was trying to be smooth with it and probably under drove.  I was really happy the second run to pick up time and make it into the second group.  The last one I probably just over drove a little bit.  I knew we were going to have to really put down a lap with the third run on the tires, but so far I think the car has been pretty balanced.  I’ve been happy with it overall.  We will just try to keep up with the race track now for the rest of the weekend.”
 

Chevy Racing–Dover–Qualifying

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
FEDEX 400 BENEFITING AUTISM SPEAKS
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
MAY 30, 2014
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S/KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 4th
ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN:
“Good lap did have a moment off of (Turn) 4.  Certainly drug some speed out of the car with that.  I think we could have been a little bit better.  I’m not sure where it would have put us, but a strong day.  We unloaded fast and we made it through each round and had a lot of speed in the car.  I’m excited about the weekend.”

KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 COTTONELLE CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 5th
ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN:
“Qualifying was pretty good for us I think we ended up fifth.  We had a Cottonelle Chevy in practice and then worked on it a little bit there in our qualifying runs and got a little bit better.  Happy with a top-five starting spot for Sunday’s race.  Just have to get our race car a little bit better and we should be right up there with the top guys.”
 
JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 6th
ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN:
“Pretty solid effort.  Our car was good all day and the first run out was a little bit better lap time.  But I knew that we were going to be pretty tight.  We made a big adjustment and it helped, just not enough to put that lap down that we really needed to compete for the pole.  All in all I’m very excited about this race on Sunday the car is really excellent.”
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 13th
OUR TELEMETRY SHOWS YOU WERE LOOKING GOOD UNTIL TURN 4:
“Oh, really? I thought we were real tight. I didn’t think we got through (Turns) 1 and 2 real good. And we were really pretty happy with the car. We made some good adjustments in practice and freed the car up a good amount. But it was just not enough. I was happy with the car earlier in race trim today. It’s not too bad a qualifying spot. It’s a little bit of an improvement for us. So, we’ll see what we’ve got tomorrow when we get into race trim and have a shot to work on it.”
 
DANICA PATRICK, NO. 10 GODADDY CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 28th
ON HER QUALIFYING RUN:
“There were some signs in practice that should have pushed us in another direction for qualifying. Unfortunately, we kind of left things. We didn’t want to make too big a change; just hoping to make it just a little bit better. I feel like the more methodical we are, the better we do. But in hindsight, we probably should have gone back on some of that. We were about a change behind on our balance I think. Because when I went out for the second round, I went about the same speed but we’d only really kept up with the track. So, it was just too tight. I was trying to do some things too that I had seen in the data that might help me go faster. I’ve got to see if it worked or didn’t work. When you’re not at the top, you might as well try something. Unfortunately I tried it on the driving side and maybe we should have tried on the car side. But hey, it’s all right. We’ve got all kinds of time on Sunday.”
 

Chevy Racing–Dover–Jeff Gordon

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
FEDEX 400 BENEFITING AUTISM SPEAKS
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
MAY 30, 2014
 
JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET SS met with media and discussed his back issues, questions regarding retirement, the challenges of the Dover track, and more. Full Transcript:
 
TALK ABOUT YOUR EXPECTATIONS THIS WEEKEND AT DOVER
“We’re certainly looking forward to this weekend. I really enjoy Dover and I always have. Our team is really bringing great race cars to the track right now, so honestly I look forward to every weekend. Today has gone very well and I’m looking forward to qualifying and to the race.
 
“But this is a challenging race track for a lot of reasons. The surface, the banking, and the loads that we go through, and some of the bumps really create quite a challenge for the teams and the drivers and I feel like our team has done a great job with that so far. We came here and unloaded close, and we’re just fine-tuning right now, which is always good to be able to do that.
 
“That’s what we’ve been doing a lot of this year and why I think we’ve been as successful as we have been because the team has just done such a great job over the off-season and in preparation for each week to come in and work on the small details instead of trying to recreate set-ups to find big gains that we’re missing.”
 
COULD YOU UPDATE US ON YOUR BACK AND HOW YOU ARE FEELING? REGAN SMITH SAID HE WASN’T ON STANDBY, SO ARE WE TO ASSUME YOU DON’T HAVE TO TAKE THAT MEASURE THAT WEEK? DO YOU GET ANYTHING OUT OF THIS DOVER RACE TO HELP YOU PREPARE FOR COMING BACK DURING THE CHASE?
“I wouldn’t say I’m 100%. I’m back closer to normal, which is just always aggravation and some discomfort. I’m still feeling some of the affects of what went on last week, but I felt good in the car. I didn’t have any sharp pains, so that’s good. I just had a week of rest and normal activity. Lots of ice this week. I was pretty sore on Monday and Tuesday after that long 600, but that’s not totally unusual; but probably just a little bit more than normal because of all that I went through. So, I feel good for this weekend.
 
“As far as this race, yeah, I think that every time we come to a track that is going to be in the Chase, we’re not just looking at how we can perform well at that race, but we’re looking for as much information as we can gather to make sure that if we’re in the Chase and come back, we can be competitive enough to go win the championship and be strong at that race. So, there’s no doubt that this is an important track. We recognize that this is a track that you can win this championship with.”
 
LAST WEEK, DID YOU HAVE ANY PHYSICAL THERAPY FOR YOUR BACK? AND HAS THIS MAKE YOU THINK ANY MORE ABOUT RETIREMENT?
“The issues that I’ve had in the past never really were like what I dealt with last weekend. That’s the first time that something like that happened in the car, on qualifying day, into a race weekend. I’ve rolled out of bed and had things like that happen, and that’s just being tight and just not having the muscles with blood flow and being loose, and that’s part of just getting older. So, it was a little bit foreign to me to have that and that’s why I had to get out of the car. The treatment that I had was I had an epidural as well as another type of injection. I don’t know what they call it. It’s some type of Cortisone that’s fairly typical and common. I don’t know all the different stuff that was in there that made the pain go away and helped more of the inflammation, is I think what they were trying to accomplish. So, that’s the first time I’ve ever had to do that on a race weekend. I’ve done that before on a different part of my back that didn’t really do much for me. This one luckily did.
 
“I think that it really more pointed toward some things that I have to address throughout a race weekend and how I handle the downtime. I’ve been working a lot harder on my training and riding a bike and exercising and the problem with that is that it tightens everything up even more so than normal. If I don’t stay loose and ice and do other things that keep me loose when I get to the race weekend, what happened could possible occur again. So, that’s the biggest thing I’m focused on; not thinking or focusing on anything else. I can tell you if that happens many more times, I won’t have a choice (regarding retirement).”
 
HAS THE TEAM HAD TO ALTER YOUR DRIVER’S SEAT FOR THIS WEEKEND?
“There is nothing they can do any different. The seats are fine. It’s not about the seat. Over the years I’ve tried lumbar support, I’ve tried all kinds of things (like) different positioning and all that stuff. The position that I’m in is the best I could ask for. I’ve talked to the doctor about that. We shortened-up the throw on the clutch pedal last week because I was having some issues when I extended my left foot all the way out. We’ve taken that out this week. I didn’t like it in the car last week.
 
“Most of it is just in the treatments that I went through that are going to help that pain and then ice and some different types of stretches. And it’s just not sitting. The biggest contributor was we practiced on Thursday and we had about a three-hour delay in between practice and qualifying. And I just sat in the truck for too long in one place and I really think that those issues that I have all the time just got inflamed and irritated. And then when I went in the car kind of cold and tight, it just made it inflamed and agitated more. And that’s where the pain came from. And then, once that happened, there was nothing that was going to fix it until I had those injections on Saturday.”
 
WHAT IS THE PART OF BEING IN THE CAR AND AT WHAT TRACK IS THE MOST SENSITIVE TO A DRIVER’S BACK?
“I’m sitting here fine. I can walk fine. It’s just sitting in the car and pushing on the pedals and turning the steering wheel. Doing this for 30 or 40 years (laughs) has definitely contributed to those things. It’s not unlike any other profession whether you are a golfer or a tennis player. That continuous motion and pushing those muscles and parts of your body; and I do have some degenerative disc (which are) again, very common for a lot of people. But when you put that into racing, it just makes it a little bit tougher. It’s just something I continue to learn and push through. It’s no big deal.”
 
LAST WEEK AFTER THE 600 YOU WENT TO VICTORY LANE TO CONGRATULATE JIMMIE JOHNSON AND IT REALLY DIDN’T SEEM LIKE IT BOTHERED YOU MUCH
“I iced it for a while so it was numb by then (laughs). Once the blood is flowing and the Adrenalin and all those things get going, it’s not so bad. Monday and Tuesday were a lot tougher.”
 
WITH THE INJURY IT MAKES THE QUESTION EASIER TO ASK, BUT EVEN WITH YOUR BACK CONDITION DO YOU FEEL AGGRAVATED THAT PEOPLE CONTINUE TO ASK YOU WHEN YOU ARE GOING TO RETIRE AS IF WE ARE PUSHING YOU OUT THE DOOR ALREADY?
“No, it doesn’t bother me.  You guys can ask me whatever you want to ask me.  I will try to answer it the best that I can.  My focus is not on that.  My focus and I feel like if you are going to be a good race car driver you better be willing to handle distractions and maybe have some questions asked to you that you prefer not to have asked.  And get your mind back refocused on what your job is and that is what I’m doing.  I understand I got out of the car on Saturday.  I knew, one is it was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done in my life, in my racing career for sure to make that decision.  It was not an easy one and I doubted myself while I was doing it.  But my body was telling me that I thought it was the right thing to do.  I knew that there would be repercussions that came from that which would bring up a lot of these questions
.  Luckily Sunday went well and we got through it and we actually had a really strong car and a strong race up until that last caution came.
 
“I think that if anything that only built more momentum for our race team to go through what we went through and to go have that kind of a race to show the team what kind of determination I have as well as kind of show our competitors that it’s going to take a lot to get us down.  I think that did more good for us for this season and our chances for a championship than anything else.  That is where my focus is.  But you guys feel free to ask me all the questions that you want about retirement.  I don’t have an answer for you.  When the day comes and that decision is made I will be more than happy to share it with you.”
 
DESPITE THE DIFFICULTY AND UNIQUENESS OF THIS TRACK WHAT IS THE APPEAL AND THE ATTRACTION OF THIS TRACK?  WHY IS IT A FUN TRACK TO COME TO?
“It’s the only track that we have that is like this.  One-mile, oval, high-banked, big sweeping corners and it’s concrete.  Those are all the ingredients to make it unique.  Trying to describe it from a driver’s standpoint you carry a lot of speed in the corner.  The car sort of gets light and drops into that banking then it really picks it up heavily.  You put a lot of wheel input into the front tires and today especially, these cool temperatures and the cars with the more downforce in them we are flying out there.  So you have to be really committed to the throttle and the steering wheel.  You are in that corner for a long time.
 
“That is something we don’t have on the circuit.  We have some fast race tracks, Charlotte is certainly one of them, but it is 1.5-miles and it is pavement.  This definitely challenges everybody and if it gets warmer throughout the weekend then the track will get slicker and that will challenge us even more.  I’m anxious to get these two rounds of qualifying in today to see how this goes.  It’s something we have never done here before.  Every time we go to the track the first time with this new format it’s always a learning experience for every one of us.”
 
HOW TOUGH IS DOVER GOING TO BE ON YOUR BACK?
“Yeah, this is typically a pretty tough race.  The thing that made me get out of the car last week is I got in the car, I pushed in the clutch pedal to take off out of the garage and I had shooting pain in my back.  Then I went out onto the track and when I drove into the corner and loaded up into the banking I had more shooting pain.  I knew the very first lap I ran in practice that I probably was not going to run the rest of the day.  So, that is what I’m looking for now.
 
“When I go to a track I’m looking for if there is shooting pain then I’m going to get out.  There was no shooting pain.  Yeah, there were loads and there were muscles in my back that were being used a lot because it’s a high-banked very fast race track with big sweeping corners.  Those are the toughest places that we go to that I feel it and that is on a normal basis as well as with what is going on right now.”
 
YOU SAID AFTER KANSAS YOU FELT LIKE YOU WERE 25 AGAIN.  DO YOU STILL FEEL THAT WAY?
“If I win this race on Sunday I will.  It’s amazing how a win takes away all your pain.  I didn’t say I felt 25 on Monday (laughs).”
 
GOING TO POCONO NEXT WEEK CAN YOU TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT HOW YOU THINK THE QUALIFYING FORMAT MIGHT PLAY THERE?  12 RACES IN NOW HOW DO YOU LIKE THE QUALIFYING FORMAT?
“Pocono is usually one of those tracks and a lot of these places really here and Pocono – this is different because you hold your breath shorter.  But this is a white knuckle hold your breath experience that you kind of go out there and do it for one or two laps and you say ‘okay whew boy I’m glad that is over’; where this weekend we are going to have to hopefully do that more than once if you make it to round two especially.  Where Pocono it’s the same kind of thing that’s a long lap, it’s a tough qualifying session you’ve really got to be committed and put the car on the edge.  And even though you can breathe down those long straightaways you are holding your breath through those corners with the shifting and all the things that are involved and there being an extra session there.  There will be three sessions there and whether or not drafting is going to come into play.  I’m not saying we would be bumper to bumper, but you might want a car out in front of you to get a little bit of a draft off at Pocono.  We won’t really truly know until we go there and experience it.
 
“I love the format.  Even though we haven’t done very well at it or I haven’t done very well at it.  It doesn’t mean I don’t like it, I do.  We just have to get the balance of the car a little bit closer for this type of format.”

Chevy Racing–Dover–Jimmie Johnson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
FEDEX 400 BENEFITING AUTISM SPEAKS
DOVER INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
MAY 30, 2014
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S KOBALT TOOLS CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Dover International Speedway and discussed his thoughts on the races coming up in June, qualifying at Pocono and many other topics.  Full Transcript:
 
TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT COMING INTO THIS WEEKEND AND YOUR EXPECTATIONS FOR THE RACE:
“Just looking to expand on a great performance last weekend.  We are coming to my favorite race track and by the stats probably our best track as well.  Excited to be here, look forward to getting on the race track and seeing how this new rules package works here.  Over the years we have been able to adapt to a variety of generations of car and hopefully we can adapt quickly to what is needed here and what the set-up needs to be to get around the ‘Monster’ once again.  Looking forward to the race on Sunday.”
 
HOW DO YOU VIEW THE NEXT STRETCH OF THE SCHEDULE WITH THE LACK OF 1.5-MILE TRACKS AS FAR AS DRIVERS THAT HAVEN’T WON YET THIS YEAR?  ESPECIALLY WITH THE WAY THE CHASE RULES ARE SET UP THIS YEAR.  IS THAT AN OPPORTUNITY FOR DRIVERS THAT HAVEN’T WON WITH THE UNIQUE TRACKS COMING UP TO WIN THOSE RACES?
“I would say outside of the two road course races your favorites would still be your favorites.  I think the road course races open it up to a lot of drivers.  You naturally think of the road course specialist, but guys like myself and Kasey Kahne have won in Sonoma too.  Sonoma I think really opens the door for a lot of people.  Fuel strategy can play a role in there and really take it into somebody else’s hands that is willing to take a big risk.  But Michigan, Pocono, Indy, I just feel like your teams that are running well now will prevail at those tracks.  I think who runs well at Pocono will naturally run well at Indy.  I think Michigan, even though it’s a two-mile track, it still fits kind of a mile and a half style set-up.  Should be a familiar face there and I am kind of lost for the other tracks we are going to.  I guess New Hampshire is out there at some point which is an important race with it being in the Chase so right now with how tough it’s been to understand the new package I think whoever is strong now will continue to be strong.  We are deep enough into the season where people are kind of on their course and have the set-ups that they think is best under their car.  You won’t see a lot of change I don’t think.  Everybody is kind of locked in I guess with their speed.”
 
WAS IT IRRITATING TO YOU WHEN MATT KENSETH DROVE YOU LOW ON THE BACKSTRETCH AT THE END OF THE RACE AT CHARLOTTE LAST WEEK?  IS THERE ANY KIND OF UNWRITTEN RULE BETWEEN DRIVERS OF AT WHAT POINT IN THE RACE IT IS OKAY TO BLOCK OR NOT TO BLOCK?
“When it comes to the end of the race everything is out the window at that point.  I don’t expect somebody to be polite and courteous and give me all kinds of room.  I hadn’t been run down the straightaway low like that before, but once we got low enough where I kind of knew ‘this is about as far as I want to go’ Matt (Kenseth) kind of held his line at that point.  We were about off the track, but again its racing. It’s the end of the (Coca-Cola) 600, it’s the end of the race and you expect people to race you real hard.  If it’s right one your quarter panel or your door through the center of the turn whatever it may be.  I wasn’t totally shocked and I knew it wasn’t going to be easy to go by the No. 20 car.  There was no way that was going to happen.  The unwritten rule is really fall into the line of contact and where somebody bumps you.  Going into the corners that opens up a can of worms and usually leads to some hurt feelings and pushing and shoving if not punches thrown, especially in the old days.  Contact through the center of the corner or off or even some bumping down the straightaway is fine, but the big unwritten rule is contact on corner entry.”
 
AS A PAST POLE WINNER AT POCONO HOW DO YOU THINK THE NEW QUALIFYING FORMAT WILL PLAY OUT THERE AND WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS 11 RACES IN ON THE NEW FORMAT?
“Qualifying there it’s such a long lap that you usually end up kind of out of grip by the third turn.  You leave pit road you’ve got a long way to get around, you get up to speed and then complete that long lap that we might see a fair amount of fall off in speed.  Just due to the tire getting more miles on it than what you would normally have.  That is kind of my first question that I have is how much fall off will there be.  But it’s the same for everyone and there is enough room on that race track you should be able to get a clean lap and not have to worry about traffic.  I think the format will work well.  If you are fortunate enough to time it and get a tow down the front straightaway when somebody is finishing their lap and you are getting up to speed that could be beneficial for you.  There are a couple of things there to think about and I think it’s such a big track it’s tough to see it all from a fan perspective.  But inside the car and the challenge that the crew chief face there is a lot going on around that race track. I know it’s Chad’s (Knaus) favorite race track to go to because all three corners are different, the loading is different, the banking is different, there are a bunch of tools and options to adjust the race car all the way around the track.  That is what Chad really enjoys about that place.”
 
WE HAVE HAD SOME MOISTURE HERE THE LAST COUPLE OF DAYS. HAVE YOU HAD A CHANCE TO CHECK OUT THE TRACK AND SEE IF THAT IS GOING TO BE A FACTOR AT ALL?
“With the Trucks being on track they will have it dusted off pretty good for us.  I feel bad for their first 10 or 15 minutes of practice.  The dirt that it has drug across the track makes this place pretty slick.  Those guys are putting up with it right now and it will be in good shape once we get out there.”
 
YOU’VE HAD A LOT OF SUCCESS AT DOVER IN THE PAST WHAT DO YOU KEEP DOING TO ADJUST TO THE DIFFERENT AERO PACKAGES THAT NASCAR PRESENTS AT THESE TRACKS?
“Really at the end of the day there is a feel a sensation I look for to get around this race track.  We all have a feel and sensation we look for it’s just if it yields the speed and fits the track.  Everything has worked well for me, for Chad, for the team, our equipment; it’s just been a very strong track for us.  Over time as things change I just pay attention to the feeling I’m looking for and we are able to work through whatever challenges are thrown at us with different tires that are brought in and also generations of car.  This is still the Gen-6 cars, but a different rules package under it.  Regardless of change there are just some tracks that work well for you and you are able to still find that feeling you are looking for regardless of circumstances.”
 
WHAT IS THE MOOD OF THE TEAM WHEN COMING OFF A WIN?
“Coming off a race win, the Monday to Friday routine is very comfortable and nice. Everybody is smiling and has a spring in their step. But truthfully, when we get here and check in, last week seems so far away. And then here, in an hour or so when we get on the race track for practice and NASCAR’s timing and scoring goes hot again, it’s completely out of your mind and you’re focused on the present. There has been a lot of pressure and expectations put on us as a team and a lot of things written about us and the long winless streak, but that pressure that people might see and suspect that might be wearing on us is nothing compared to the pressure we put on ourselves as a race team. We expect a lot out of ourselves. We feel like wins have gotten away from us this year that
we weren’t happy about and we also feel that there are tracks that we went to where we just had poor performances. So, the win is great, but we kind of hold ourselves to that standard and we’re coming to one of our best tracks and the expectations are very high for this weekend.”
 
LAST SEPTEMBER YOU BECAME THE ALL-TIME WINNINGEST DRIVER HERE. LAST WEEK YOU BECAME THE ALL-TIME WINNINGEST POINTS RACE DRIVER AT CHARLOTTE. DO THOSE RECORDS MEAN ANYTHING SPECIAL TO YOU OR IS IT JUST ANTHER DAY AT THE OFFICE?
“No, no, they definitely have a ton of meaning. When I look at the people that I’m tying or have the opportunity to beat for those great titles, it’s the heroes of our sport and the guys that are put in the Hall of Fame. When you look at their stats and what they’ve done for our sport, household names, it is no small feat to tie or have the opportunity to beat these guys for races won at any track.”
 
WHEN YOU TALK ABOUT THE PRESSURE YOU PUT ON YOURSELVES, CAN YOU BE MORE SPECIFIC AS FAR AS TEAM MEETINGS OR DO YOU GET SNIPPY WITH EACH OTHER OR WHAT IS THE KIND OF PRESSURE YOU GUYS PUT ON YOURSELVES?
“All the above. Depending on the day and the point of the day, it changes. But, to start the process, the amount of time that’s put into our race cars and the set-ups and the preparation that goes into it that starts the week; and then as the weekend unfolds, if you have speed and you’re okay, it’s easy to not be snippy and to maintain whatever mindset that works but still eye on the prize. If you’re not where you want to be, especially (crew chief) Chad (Knaus) and my group of guys who spend so much time to come to the race track and to be prepared, that in a way their feelings are hurt. It’s not fun to work so hard and then to be on the right side of the board in practice or qualifying; to not make it to the second round of qualifying. That stuff just eats us up because we work way too hard to be in that position. The sport isn’t easy. This garage area is so tough and strong that it happens. And when it does, you’ve just got to pull your boots up and get to work and work harder.
 
HOW MUCH DIFFERENT WAS IT THIS WEEK AFTER THE WIN IN CHARLOTTE?
“It’s been good. There’s certainly been a little spring in everyone’s step. And then really expanding on the sensations I had in the race car during the events and what I liked about the car and what I didn’t like about the car; going through practice and qualifying and practice and the race, and seeing what put speed in the car and what took speed out of the car. And really trying to help last weekend’s performance plow a road for us in where we need to go with this new rules package.”
 
WHEN YOU GO OUT FOR A RUN AT THE RACE TRACK, KIND OF LIKE YOUR HOME AWAY FROM HOME, IS IT DIFFICULT WHEN YOU ENCOUNTER RACE FANS AND THEY WANT YOU TO POSE FOR PICTURES OF GIVE THEM AN AUTOGRAPH? IS IT HARD TO COPE WITH THAT?
“It depends. Most of them have got to catch me first and they’re usually not sober enough or in shape enough to do that. Do, it just depends. I’ll get up early at sunrise, that’s usually the most fun. You run up and down Talladega Blvd. Texas is good for it. There’s a variety of tracks where an early morning run is more entertaining than it is a workout. You see people halfway in their tents and still passed out in lawn chairs and all kinds of good things. In the afternoons, I’ll run this afternoon, usually people see me coming, they think; and as they go by they’ll say, ‘Hey Jimmie, is that you?’ And I’ll wave and give them a thumbs-up or something and keep on digging. Guys on bikes and golf carts can run you down. But they’re usually pretty good about it.”
 
WHEN YOU LOOK AT THIS STRETCH ON THE SCHEDULE, CHARLOTTE, DOVER, & POCONO, YOU’VE HAD A LOT OF SUCCESS AT THOSE TRACKS. IS THERE ANY PARTICULAR REASON SINCE THOSE TRACKS ARE ALL SO DIFFERENT?
“That’s a good question. They are totally different race tracks. I’d have to say they’re probably the most technical tracks we go to. Set-up is key. Communication between driver and crew chief is key. At Charlotte and Dover you have such loading characteristics, as you’re on the straightaway and kind of lunge off the corner, that you can draw some similarities between those two tracks. Pocono is so different. I don’t even know how to even draw a parallel other than it’s tough to get around. Dover isn’t easy. Charlotte isn’t easy. And neither is Pocono.”
 
WE’VE JOKED ABOUT YOUR LONG WINLESS STREAK. FOR YEARS IT WAS JIMMIE WINS TOO MUCH AND THEN IT BECAME WHY HASN’T JIMMIE WON THIS YEAR? AFTER CHARLOTTE, WHAT HAS BEEN THE FEEDBACK ON SOCIAL MEDIA FROM FANS AND COMPETITORS?
“I think a lot of joking about the long winless streak being over. That’s been the common theme among friends and social media and about. So, I’m just having fun with it and trying to remind myself that it’s a backhanded compliment, I guess, that we have done so well as a team and been fortunate to win a lot and win often, that we put ourselves in this corner. So, I’m glad I don’t have to answer those questions any longer and we’re looking forward to winning again soon and especially later in the year, winning often.”
 
YOU HAVE EIGHT MONSTER TROPHIES FROM DOVER. DO YOU HAVE THEM ALL IN ONE SPOT OR SPREAD OUT; CONSIDERING THEY ARE ONE OF THE LARGEST TROPHIES YOU CAN WIN?
“They’re all in one spot. I have a great man cave. It’s a big warehouse and I have a huge bar that I restored and it’s got a big top shelf on it. And I think five of them are up there. And then others are scattered about through this kind of pub area that I set-up inside my warehouse where I have some old cars and stuff that I collected. They stand out. They’re a big trophy and they certainly draw a lot of attention.”
 

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Belle Isle Park

 Chevrolet IndyCar V6 Teams Ready for Doubleheader Challenge on Home Turf at The Raceway at Belle Isle Park for the Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit
 
      DETROIT (May 28, 2014) – The Chevrolet IndyCar V6 teams head ‘home’ to Detroit for the Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit, races six and seven of the 18-race 2014 Verizon IndyCar Series season and the first of three doubleheader events on this year’s schedule.
 
Returning to the backyard of the world headquarters of Chevrolet for the third consecutive year, the Chevy IndyCar V6 2.2 liter twin turbocharged direct injected powered teams and drivers face a unique challenge as they compete in a pair of races that both pay valuable championship points over the course of one weekend. The temporary street circuit named The Raceway at Belle Isle Park is an intricate 2.36-mile/13-turn temporary road course on the Detroit River Island. The teams and drivers will have to adapt to the changes and be prepared for the mental toughness it will take to focus on not one, but two races during the three-day event.
 
“This hometown event on Belle Isle in Detroit is always special for Team Chevy and our technical partners,” said Chris Berube, Chevrolet Racing Program Manager for the Verizon IndyCar Series. “Racing in view of our corporate headquarters and in front of our families and friends adds a uniqueness to the events.  The double header format gives fans the chance to witness more street course action that the Verizon IndyCar Series is known to provide.  Numerous positive changes and learnings from prior year races on Belle Isle has Team Chevy ready to earn the top spot of the podium on Saturday and Sunday.”
 
In 2012 Chevrolet was an integral part of bringing IndyCar back to the Motor City for the first time since 2007.  While every race on the schedule is important and demands dedicated attention to every detail, for the Chevrolet IndyCar V6 drivers racing in the shadows of Chevrolet’s Detroit headquarters in the Renaissance Center towers just to the west of the track adds the element of hometown pride, and determination to stand atop the Victory Lane podium.
 
For several current Team Chevy IndyCar drivers, returning to The Raceway at Belle Isle Park Street Circuit has special meaning. Team Penske’s Helio Castroneves won his career-first race on the challenging course in 2000 and backed it up with another victory in 2001. Target Chip Ganassi Racing’s Tony Kanaan took the trip to Detroit Victory Lane in 2007. Kanaan’s teammate Scott Dixon was the winner in 2012 and Ed Carpenter Racing’s Mike Conway, the winner earlier this season at the Long Beach Grand Prix, won Dual No. 1 in 2013.
 
After its successful debut as the Indy 500 pace car, Chevrolet will again roll out the all-new 2014 Z/28 Camaro to take center stage as the Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit pace car.  All of the Chevrolet IndyCar V6 drivers in the field for Saturday and Sunday’s races will follow the 2014 model of the iconic nameplate to the green flags.
 

Chevy Racing–Corvette Racing–Jordan and Ricky Taylor

JORDAN AND RICKY TAYLOR, NO. 10 KONICA MINOLTA CHEVROLET CORVETTE DAYTONA PROTOTYPE WAYNE TAYLOR RACING DRIVERS WERE THE GUESTS ON THIS WEEK’S TELECONFERENCE.
 
BELOW IS THE TRANSCRIPT: 
 
NATE SIEBENS:  Thank you to everybody for joining us on the call today as we head into this Saturday’s TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Chevrolet Sports Car Classic presented by Metro Detroit Chevy Dealers, which will be at Detroit’s Raceway on Belle Isle.  This weekend’s 100‑minute race features the TUDOR Championships Prototype and GT Daytona classes, and it will take the green flag at 12:10 p.m. eastern time.  The race will be televised on FOX Sports 1 beginning at 1:30 p.m. eastern time.
 
Joining us on the call today are brothers Jordan and Ricky Taylor, who co‑drive the No. 10 Konica Minolta Corvette DP for their father’s Wayne Taylor Racing team.  Ricky has seven career professional sports car victories, his best result in Detroit so for was a fifth place run last year in the GRAND‑AM Rolex Sports Car Series race.  Jordan has won both of his previous visits to Detroit.  He won the Rolex Series GT class in 2012, and in Daytona Prototype last year alongside Max Angelelli on their way to the 2013 Rolex Series DP championship.
 
Immediately following Saturday’s race both Jordan and Ricky will be headed to Le Mans to participate in the mandatory test day on Sunday. Jordan will be part of the No. 73 Corvette Racing Chevrolet Corvette C7R driver lineup alongside TUDOR Championship regulars Jan Magnussen and Antonio Garcia in the GTE Pro class.  Ricky will share the No. 50 Larbre Competition Morgan‑Judd in the LMP2 class.
 
Jordan, let’s start with an opening question for you.  Detroit has been very good to you so far.  What are you and Ricky going to do to continue that momentum this weekend?
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Well, looking back at the past few years, we didn’t necessarily have the fastest car both years, but Detroit is a street course, and it’s a difficult place to pass, and I feel both times that we’ve been there, both with Auto Haas in 2012 and then last year with Wayne Taylor Racing that we were good in the pits, and after the last pit stop they left in the lead, and I think that really set the tone for the races, being that track position and basically controlling the race from front.
 
Our team has been notoriously good this year and last year in the pits, so as long as we can keep that trend going and both Ricky and I can keep it up somewhere near the front, I think we’ll have another shot at another win.
 
NATE SIEBENS:  Thanks, Jordan.  Ricky, you and Jordan obviously off to a solid start this season, three second‑place results from the first four races.  How do you guys break into the win column this weekend, and also, how important is it to win again in Detroit with a Corvette DP?
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  I think it’s one of our most important races of the year, being that we’re in GM’s backyard and on a street course.  It’s in a very important part of the season, so we’re putting a lot of pressure on ourselves to perform well.  And then in terms of winning races, I think we’ve been right up there.  I think it’s just a little bit of track position here and there.  I think we just weren’t the strongest car at Laguna, so we settled for good points and second place and then Long Beach and Daytona we were right there.  I think it was just a matter of being in the right place at the right time.  We’re just going to have to keep pushing, and if we keep running this strongly, I’m sure the wins will come.
Q.  Hi, guys.  Just a question about parity.  We’ve had long races and we’ve had short races this year, so far, and I was wondering what you guys thought about the parity between the DP and the P2 cars the way it is now.  How do you think they’ll do against each other in Detroit, and do you think the two cars are able to live happily racing against each other in the series?
RICKY TAYLOR:  I think the parity is actually really good.  I think it’s hard to kind of get over the hump of the first Daytona where everybody knew the DPs would be favored, and then we went to Sebring, and I thought it was very evening.  I think a P2 car ended up with the fastest lap of the race, but the way the races went, it favored the DP, and then Long Beach I thought was pretty close, maybe a little bit favored to the DP, and then Laguna was a P2 track.
 
I don’t think you can ask for everything.  You’re never going to match the two cars on the straights and you’re never going to match the two cars on the corners.  I think they’ve found a very good middle ground, and I think our team is very happy with the parity of the series in that we’re still having to fight really hard for wins.  We never thought it would be this close, to be honest.
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, I mean, I think since Sebring, it’s actually been quite good.  I remember battling with Simon Pagenaud in the Extreme Speed car and I was one of the first people, I didn’t really say it out loud, but I never really thought the cars could be close, a DP and a P2, and once I was around Pagenaud for around 45 minutes straight at Sebring, the cars were shockingly close, not just in the corners but also in the straights.  I think certain types of corners that lead into straights suit us, and certain types of corners suit them.  Different tracks can suit different cars, and just like Ricky said, you can’t ask for everything.  You can’t have cornering speeds and straight line speeds.  It’s got to be a balance of the two.  Different tracks, different people are going to be complaining, but we did as well as we could have done at Laguna finishing second to a P2 car, and they’ve been up front like Muscle Milk was up front at Daytona when that was a DP track. As long as teams are executing well, I think the balance of the performances have been quite good.
Q.  Somebody told me that I may not be able to tell that you’re brothers when I get there.  Have you always been the type that did your own thing, or what can I expect?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  What to expect between us?
Q.  Just the visual.  I haven’t been on the scene for a while.
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I’ve got a mullet, so that will be pretty easy to spot, I think.
Q.  So I won’t have to see a name tag or anything.  But I did want to ask you a more serious racing question.  Detroit is a track that sort of just has been going through a few years now, and it seems to be the racing there is good.  How about the competition between manufacturers there in this race?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Well, thankfully the past two years Chevy has been winning it, and 2012, the first year there, the Camaro won in GT and a Corvette Daytona Prototype won in the Prototypes and then last year we won in the Prototypes again, and I think Stevenson won with their Camaro again in 2013.  Both years Chevrolet has been on top, and hopefully we can continue that trend this year.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I mean, same with me.  I think GM puts a lot of pressure on us for this weekend, right in their backyard, and for us it’s our No. 2 race to the 24‑hour, and we’ve always been strong here.  For some coincidence the DPs ‑‑ the Corvette DPs have always been competitive here, so we’ll just see how we match up versus the P2 cars, but I think we’re used to the GTD/Prototype battle together on the track.  I think with that experience we should have a good opportunity here.
Q.  This question would be for both of you gentlemen.  What would be the most demanding portion of the actual race on the track?  Where on the track will you meet your most demand this weekend?
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I think for me it’s at the end of the back straight.  The track is very difficult bei
ng a street course with obviously walls everywhere, so there’s not room for error.  But off the end of the back straight you have to turn and brake and it’s really bumpy, but there’s a wall really close on the exit.  You’re trying to get past GT cars and it’s one of the only passing opportunities for interclass battles, so it’s very narrow and easy to make a mistake.  So that would be my pick for the most difficult one.
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, I’d say the biggest challenge for this weekend is traffic.  Last year we went there with sort of this class split with the Prototypes and GTD cars, but this year we’re a bit faster, and then there’s going to be a lot more GTD cars, as well.  I think just the mental strain and being a little bit more cautious but also aggressive at the same time because the sprint race is going to be the toughest part of the race trying to get through traffic clean and not make any mistakes because you’ll lose or gain so much time.
Q.  Jordan and Ricky, talk about shifting gears quickly from Detroit to Le Mans, if you can talk about what your plans are when the race is over, going over to Le Mans for the test day and maybe just a general comment looking ahead to the race itself, and same for you, Ricky.
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, that’ll be the third year now that I’ve done this crazy trip to get over to Le Mans for the test day.  Basically the race will finish and then we’ll basically try and get off the Belle Isle island as fast as possible to get to the Detroit airport for a flight at I think 6:30 p.m. that gets to Paris sometime Sunday morning, then we’re straight on a train down to Le Mans, then hopefully someone is there to pick us up to take us to the track, and then basically we’re straight in the race car for the afternoon session at Le Mans.
 
Hopefully we get a good three or four hours of testing under our belt.  It’s not the most ideal situation, obviously, but we only get one day of testing at Le Mans, and that’s our one day.
 
I remember in 2012, I think, I won the race in Detroit, didn’t get to go to the podium, didn’t eat dinner that night, slept on the plane, didn’t eat breakfast the next day because I was on the train down to Le Mans and straight into the race car.  It’s definitely a unique experience.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  I mean, I’m on the same schedule as Jordan in terms of getting out of Detroit and then into Le Mans.  After the test day, I think me, Richard and Jordan are all going to do the afternoon session, and then we all have to ‑‑ they’re going to fly home, and my team has a training camp scheduled for three days after the test, so we’ll go to Val de Vienne, their test track, and we won’t do any on‑track stuff but just some kind of team bonding and physical training stuff, and I’ll be hanging out in France until the race weekend, and Jordan will come back and meet me there for the race.
 
Like Jordan said, in addition to what Jordan said, the biggest challenge for me is the mental preparation for three race weekends, such different cars and such different events to give everything 100 percent of your focus and attention is very difficult.  I want to ‑‑ I want to be our best on every weekend, and it’s just hard sometimes to give everything to each weekend.
Q.  Ricky, what have you been doing to adapt, to prepare yourself for an LMP2 car?  Is there any advice you’ve gotten from anybody in particular or any preparation for that?
RICKY TAYLOR:  I haven’t been able to get too much information.  I think we tested a couple weeks ago in the DP, and it’s all a new era.  I learned my neck is not quite strong enough.  I’ve been doing a lot of neck training because I think the DP is going to have quite a bit more G‑forces, and then with three drivers there’s going to be a lot of seat time.  I’ve been doing a lot of training to get ready for that, especially in my neck, and a little bit of iRacing because they have a P2 car in there.
 
The one good thing is that Le Mans is the one track that the car is going to be completely trimmed out, so it’s not going to be such a crazy downforce machine that it’s going to be too alien to me.  I’m doing everything I can, watching On Board, did a little bit of simulator last week, but doing what I can at the moment.
Q.  And Jordan, tell us a little bit about your preparation here and what you’re going to be doing at Watkins Glen in a few weeks.
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, well, obviously I’ve been growing a mullet now for about a year and a half, and I’m getting kind of tired of it, so I got talking with a couple of charities Camp Boggy Creek and Camp Anokijig, and we’re basically giving money, doing a raffle, and whoever wins the raffle is going to get two tickets to the Watkins Glen Six‑Hour, a ride in the two‑seater Daytona Prototype from Continental Tire, and then the runner up in the raffle will be getting a set of Continental Tires.  So trying to raise as much money for the charities, and then whoever wins it is going to come to the event and cut off some of my hair and have a great weekend.  Hopefully we can raise a bunch of money for it.
Q.  Jordan and Ricky, yesterday I was talking to Courtney Force over in NHRA about getting the 100th female win in NHRA.  She obviously has a strong racing background like you guys do.  I asked her a question that I’ve really asked Mario Andretti a number of years ago about talented kids racing and growing up racing go‑karts, and I asked Mario if he could see talent in those kids, and he smiled and said, not all kids are created equal.  Maybe Mario could see it, but did you guys when you were growing up, obviously you grew up around racing.  Did you think in your past you felt you had that driving talent all along?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I think initially in go‑karts we didn’t think it at all.  We didn’t have any success in go‑karting for about four or five years, and then I guess we only started really winning races when we moved to cars, when we got into Skip Barber doing the racing school there and then doing the racing series.  I think we were pretty late bloomers, and success took a while to find.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I think Jordan is right on.  I think we didn’t see a lot of success early, but I think the main thing about having those genes is that he was around to teach us what he knew, and that’s been a part of a learning curve so much, more than just whatever genes we might have, I think it was the knowledge that he gave us, all those days at the racetrack where he could tell us what we’re doing wrong and how to go about racing professionally and what to expect at higher levels.  We weren’t just treating it like another sport, we were kind of treating it more as our living and as a profession.
Q.  As far as Courtney also kind of mentioned that she was so driven, everybody thought it was just a pipe dream for a female to do it, but when she got her driver’s license, one month later she was in drag racing school.  Did you guys have that kind of a passion that you couldn’t wait to get into it?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I think we definitely wanted to ‑‑ I wouldn’t say immediately, but we were always around the track, so we were always around it.  But I think it took a little bit of go‑karting to really get the buzz for it and really want to do it for a living.  I think once we started taking go‑karting seriously, even with the lack of success that we had to begin with, we weren’t focusing on anything else.  It was pretty much racing was everything, and if that didn’t work out, I don’t think we knew what we were going to do after that.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, same here.  Once we got into it and got serious and stuff, it was all we could really see ourselves doing.
Q.  I’ve asked Jimmie Johnson, John Force.  Courtney said she didn’t really catch on right away.  J
immie Johnson, he couldn’t win in motorcycles, and look where everybody has gone.  What’s your comment on that?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I don’t know, it’s an interesting question, I guess.  But I think everyone, their style suits different things, so if Jimmie Johnson didn’t suit a motorcycle, he’s obviously suited in NASCAR quite well.  Our driving styles must not have suited go‑karting or things like that.  I think a big thing for Ricky and I is we were really serious about the sport, we love learning about it and everything.  So growing up around my dad, always being around his teammates and his teams and his engineers, we had all of this information available to us to learn from, and not a lot of kids at our age when we were younger were getting that kind of information. To be getting it at such a young age and trying to absorb it definitely sped up that learning curve a lot.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I think everybody learns differently and everybody adapts to some things differently, as well.  Like when we were racing in Skip Barber and kind of coming up through the ranks, a lot of the other drivers were coming up at the same time, and you’d see a lot of drivers not adapting to their cars really quickly.  Some drivers would get in and immediately go really fast, and other drivers would take a little while to get there and might overtake the other guys in terms of a learning curve.  But I think for us, or for me especially, I think we really struggled in go‑karts and maybe just didn’t suit our driving style.  Max will tell you the same thing.  Max was useless in go‑karts, as well. I think it’s just what suits you.  As we’ve both kind of come up, we’ve both found a good home in the Daytona Prototype, and it’s suited us both very well.
Q.  You’ve kind of sort of answered this already, and I apologize, but what was the key to this form of racing that drew all the talent from you and made you successful?
RICKY TAYLOR:  It’s hard to tell.  I think it goes back to that thing we said about growing up in a sports car racing family, and our dad has always taught us like little things about how to grow up in this sport and specifically sports car racing.  I remember one of the first things he taught me when I drove a car was to drive down the middle of the straight away at Road Atlanta, and normally he’d say take the shortest route, which it’s kind of a corner, and he said just because all the debris gets pushed to the outside.  That’s not something an IndyCar dad would tell you, that’s something a sports car dad would tell you.  So little things like that I think have helped us grow with this sport as opposed to oval racing, especially oval racing or open wheel racing or something like that, and I think it just kind of suits us how we’re both easy‑going mentalities, we’re both open to working with a teammate, which also kind of fits in well with how this style of racing works.
Q.  Do either one of you take the opportunity, though, to go and watch other forms of automobile racing and do you appreciate what those drivers are doing in those events?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, obviously.  We’ve huge fans of the sport, not just sports car racing, so we’re watching V‑8 Super Cars, DTM, Formula 1, IndyCar.  If there’s a race on TV we’ll be watching it.  Everyone has different things to learn from, and they may be different animals, but at the end of the day a race car is a race car and you can learn a lot from different guys, even if it’s in a massively different car.
Q.  My question is about the event.  The city of Detroit has taken a lot of body shots the last few years, and it seems to have fought its way off the ropes anyway.  How important do you think having a first‑class event like this weekend is, and do you sense out there, is there a buzz about the event, and do you think ‑‑ I’m thinking along the right track that an event like yours can bolster people’s confidence and pride in the city?
RICKY TAYLOR:  It’s definitely good.  I think we go to a lot of races throughout the year, and we’ll go into town and mingle with some of the locals if there’s an opportunity.  But when we come to Detroit, everyone is always asking are you in town for the race or obviously they see the shirts and stuff. Are you in town for the race and they ask questions and they’re enthusiastic, and then at the track there’s a lot of volunteers.  There’s a good buzz, and I don’t think we see that, other than maybe the 24‑hour and Sebring, throughout the rest of the year.
 
I’m not a politician, but I think it’s nice to see the positive attitudes of all the local people and how much everybody seems to be behind it.
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I guess I can add just that if you look all around the world, sporting events always bring people together no matter what it is.  I think having a big event like we have with IMSA being there and IndyCar and I think World Challenge, as well, is great, and I think Roger Penske promotes the event.  When you’re at the track, it’s top‑notch.  The big thing for me is always bathrooms, and they’ve got the cleanest bathrooms of any racetrack that we go to.  From the highest level of things for the event to the lowest things as bathrooms, it’s a great event, and it overlooks the Detroit skyline.  It’s a really nice event.
 
NATE SIEBENS:  With that, let’s wrap up today’s teleconference.  Thanks again to Jordan and Ricky and all of you who called in for joining us again.
 

Chevy Racing–Corvette Racing–Jordan and Ricky Taylor

JORDAN AND RICKY TAYLOR, NO. 10 KONICA MINOLTA CHEVROLET CORVETTE DAYTONA PROTOTYPE WAYNE TAYLOR RACING DRIVERS WERE THE GUESTS ON THIS WEEK’S TELECONFERENCE.
 
BELOW IS THE TRANSCRIPT: 
 
NATE SIEBENS:  Thank you to everybody for joining us on the call today as we head into this Saturday’s TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Chevrolet Sports Car Classic presented by Metro Detroit Chevy Dealers, which will be at Detroit’s Raceway on Belle Isle.  This weekend’s 100‑minute race features the TUDOR Championships Prototype and GT Daytona classes, and it will take the green flag at 12:10 p.m. eastern time.  The race will be televised on FOX Sports 1 beginning at 1:30 p.m. eastern time.
 
Joining us on the call today are brothers Jordan and Ricky Taylor, who co‑drive the No. 10 Konica Minolta Corvette DP for their father’s Wayne Taylor Racing team.  Ricky has seven career professional sports car victories, his best result in Detroit so for was a fifth place run last year in the GRAND‑AM Rolex Sports Car Series race.  Jordan has won both of his previous visits to Detroit.  He won the Rolex Series GT class in 2012, and in Daytona Prototype last year alongside Max Angelelli on their way to the 2013 Rolex Series DP championship.
 
Immediately following Saturday’s race both Jordan and Ricky will be headed to Le Mans to participate in the mandatory test day on Sunday. Jordan will be part of the No. 73 Corvette Racing Chevrolet Corvette C7R driver lineup alongside TUDOR Championship regulars Jan Magnussen and Antonio Garcia in the GTE Pro class.  Ricky will share the No. 50 Larbre Competition Morgan‑Judd in the LMP2 class.
 
Jordan, let’s start with an opening question for you.  Detroit has been very good to you so far.  What are you and Ricky going to do to continue that momentum this weekend?
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Well, looking back at the past few years, we didn’t necessarily have the fastest car both years, but Detroit is a street course, and it’s a difficult place to pass, and I feel both times that we’ve been there, both with Auto Haas in 2012 and then last year with Wayne Taylor Racing that we were good in the pits, and after the last pit stop they left in the lead, and I think that really set the tone for the races, being that track position and basically controlling the race from front.
 
Our team has been notoriously good this year and last year in the pits, so as long as we can keep that trend going and both Ricky and I can keep it up somewhere near the front, I think we’ll have another shot at another win.
 
NATE SIEBENS:  Thanks, Jordan.  Ricky, you and Jordan obviously off to a solid start this season, three second‑place results from the first four races.  How do you guys break into the win column this weekend, and also, how important is it to win again in Detroit with a Corvette DP?
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  I think it’s one of our most important races of the year, being that we’re in GM’s backyard and on a street course.  It’s in a very important part of the season, so we’re putting a lot of pressure on ourselves to perform well.  And then in terms of winning races, I think we’ve been right up there.  I think it’s just a little bit of track position here and there.  I think we just weren’t the strongest car at Laguna, so we settled for good points and second place and then Long Beach and Daytona we were right there.  I think it was just a matter of being in the right place at the right time.  We’re just going to have to keep pushing, and if we keep running this strongly, I’m sure the wins will come.
Q.  Hi, guys.  Just a question about parity.  We’ve had long races and we’ve had short races this year, so far, and I was wondering what you guys thought about the parity between the DP and the P2 cars the way it is now.  How do you think they’ll do against each other in Detroit, and do you think the two cars are able to live happily racing against each other in the series?
RICKY TAYLOR:  I think the parity is actually really good.  I think it’s hard to kind of get over the hump of the first Daytona where everybody knew the DPs would be favored, and then we went to Sebring, and I thought it was very evening.  I think a P2 car ended up with the fastest lap of the race, but the way the races went, it favored the DP, and then Long Beach I thought was pretty close, maybe a little bit favored to the DP, and then Laguna was a P2 track.
 
I don’t think you can ask for everything.  You’re never going to match the two cars on the straights and you’re never going to match the two cars on the corners.  I think they’ve found a very good middle ground, and I think our team is very happy with the parity of the series in that we’re still having to fight really hard for wins.  We never thought it would be this close, to be honest.
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, I mean, I think since Sebring, it’s actually been quite good.  I remember battling with Simon Pagenaud in the Extreme Speed car and I was one of the first people, I didn’t really say it out loud, but I never really thought the cars could be close, a DP and a P2, and once I was around Pagenaud for around 45 minutes straight at Sebring, the cars were shockingly close, not just in the corners but also in the straights.  I think certain types of corners that lead into straights suit us, and certain types of corners suit them.  Different tracks can suit different cars, and just like Ricky said, you can’t ask for everything.  You can’t have cornering speeds and straight line speeds.  It’s got to be a balance of the two.  Different tracks, different people are going to be complaining, but we did as well as we could have done at Laguna finishing second to a P2 car, and they’ve been up front like Muscle Milk was up front at Daytona when that was a DP track. As long as teams are executing well, I think the balance of the performances have been quite good.
Q.  Somebody told me that I may not be able to tell that you’re brothers when I get there.  Have you always been the type that did your own thing, or what can I expect?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  What to expect between us?
Q.  Just the visual.  I haven’t been on the scene for a while.
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I’ve got a mullet, so that will be pretty easy to spot, I think.
Q.  So I won’t have to see a name tag or anything.  But I did want to ask you a more serious racing question.  Detroit is a track that sort of just has been going through a few years now, and it seems to be the racing there is good.  How about the competition between manufacturers there in this race?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Well, thankfully the past two years Chevy has been winning it, and 2012, the first year there, the Camaro won in GT and a Corvette Daytona Prototype won in the Prototypes and then last year we won in the Prototypes again, and I think Stevenson won with their Camaro again in 2013.  Both years Chevrolet has been on top, and hopefully we can continue that trend this year.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I mean, same with me.  I think GM puts a lot of pressure on us for this weekend, right in their backyard, and for us it’s our No. 2 race to the 24‑hour, and we’ve always been strong here.  For some coincidence the DPs ‑‑ the Corvette DPs have always been competitive here, so we’ll just see how we match up versus the P2 cars, but I think we’re used to the GTD/Prototype battle together on the track.  I think with that experience we should have a good opportunity here.
Q.  This question would be for both of you gentlemen.  What would be the most demanding portion of the actual race on the track?  Where on the track will you meet your most demand this weekend?
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I think for me it’s at the end of the back straight.  The track is very difficult bei
ng a street course with obviously walls everywhere, so there’s not room for error.  But off the end of the back straight you have to turn and brake and it’s really bumpy, but there’s a wall really close on the exit.  You’re trying to get past GT cars and it’s one of the only passing opportunities for interclass battles, so it’s very narrow and easy to make a mistake.  So that would be my pick for the most difficult one.
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, I’d say the biggest challenge for this weekend is traffic.  Last year we went there with sort of this class split with the Prototypes and GTD cars, but this year we’re a bit faster, and then there’s going to be a lot more GTD cars, as well.  I think just the mental strain and being a little bit more cautious but also aggressive at the same time because the sprint race is going to be the toughest part of the race trying to get through traffic clean and not make any mistakes because you’ll lose or gain so much time.
Q.  Jordan and Ricky, talk about shifting gears quickly from Detroit to Le Mans, if you can talk about what your plans are when the race is over, going over to Le Mans for the test day and maybe just a general comment looking ahead to the race itself, and same for you, Ricky.
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, that’ll be the third year now that I’ve done this crazy trip to get over to Le Mans for the test day.  Basically the race will finish and then we’ll basically try and get off the Belle Isle island as fast as possible to get to the Detroit airport for a flight at I think 6:30 p.m. that gets to Paris sometime Sunday morning, then we’re straight on a train down to Le Mans, then hopefully someone is there to pick us up to take us to the track, and then basically we’re straight in the race car for the afternoon session at Le Mans.
 
Hopefully we get a good three or four hours of testing under our belt.  It’s not the most ideal situation, obviously, but we only get one day of testing at Le Mans, and that’s our one day.
 
I remember in 2012, I think, I won the race in Detroit, didn’t get to go to the podium, didn’t eat dinner that night, slept on the plane, didn’t eat breakfast the next day because I was on the train down to Le Mans and straight into the race car.  It’s definitely a unique experience.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  I mean, I’m on the same schedule as Jordan in terms of getting out of Detroit and then into Le Mans.  After the test day, I think me, Richard and Jordan are all going to do the afternoon session, and then we all have to ‑‑ they’re going to fly home, and my team has a training camp scheduled for three days after the test, so we’ll go to Val de Vienne, their test track, and we won’t do any on‑track stuff but just some kind of team bonding and physical training stuff, and I’ll be hanging out in France until the race weekend, and Jordan will come back and meet me there for the race.
 
Like Jordan said, in addition to what Jordan said, the biggest challenge for me is the mental preparation for three race weekends, such different cars and such different events to give everything 100 percent of your focus and attention is very difficult.  I want to ‑‑ I want to be our best on every weekend, and it’s just hard sometimes to give everything to each weekend.
Q.  Ricky, what have you been doing to adapt, to prepare yourself for an LMP2 car?  Is there any advice you’ve gotten from anybody in particular or any preparation for that?
RICKY TAYLOR:  I haven’t been able to get too much information.  I think we tested a couple weeks ago in the DP, and it’s all a new era.  I learned my neck is not quite strong enough.  I’ve been doing a lot of neck training because I think the DP is going to have quite a bit more G‑forces, and then with three drivers there’s going to be a lot of seat time.  I’ve been doing a lot of training to get ready for that, especially in my neck, and a little bit of iRacing because they have a P2 car in there.
 
The one good thing is that Le Mans is the one track that the car is going to be completely trimmed out, so it’s not going to be such a crazy downforce machine that it’s going to be too alien to me.  I’m doing everything I can, watching On Board, did a little bit of simulator last week, but doing what I can at the moment.
Q.  And Jordan, tell us a little bit about your preparation here and what you’re going to be doing at Watkins Glen in a few weeks.
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, well, obviously I’ve been growing a mullet now for about a year and a half, and I’m getting kind of tired of it, so I got talking with a couple of charities Camp Boggy Creek and Camp Anokijig, and we’re basically giving money, doing a raffle, and whoever wins the raffle is going to get two tickets to the Watkins Glen Six‑Hour, a ride in the two‑seater Daytona Prototype from Continental Tire, and then the runner up in the raffle will be getting a set of Continental Tires.  So trying to raise as much money for the charities, and then whoever wins it is going to come to the event and cut off some of my hair and have a great weekend.  Hopefully we can raise a bunch of money for it.
Q.  Jordan and Ricky, yesterday I was talking to Courtney Force over in NHRA about getting the 100th female win in NHRA.  She obviously has a strong racing background like you guys do.  I asked her a question that I’ve really asked Mario Andretti a number of years ago about talented kids racing and growing up racing go‑karts, and I asked Mario if he could see talent in those kids, and he smiled and said, not all kids are created equal.  Maybe Mario could see it, but did you guys when you were growing up, obviously you grew up around racing.  Did you think in your past you felt you had that driving talent all along?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I think initially in go‑karts we didn’t think it at all.  We didn’t have any success in go‑karting for about four or five years, and then I guess we only started really winning races when we moved to cars, when we got into Skip Barber doing the racing school there and then doing the racing series.  I think we were pretty late bloomers, and success took a while to find.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I think Jordan is right on.  I think we didn’t see a lot of success early, but I think the main thing about having those genes is that he was around to teach us what he knew, and that’s been a part of a learning curve so much, more than just whatever genes we might have, I think it was the knowledge that he gave us, all those days at the racetrack where he could tell us what we’re doing wrong and how to go about racing professionally and what to expect at higher levels.  We weren’t just treating it like another sport, we were kind of treating it more as our living and as a profession.
Q.  As far as Courtney also kind of mentioned that she was so driven, everybody thought it was just a pipe dream for a female to do it, but when she got her driver’s license, one month later she was in drag racing school.  Did you guys have that kind of a passion that you couldn’t wait to get into it?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I think we definitely wanted to ‑‑ I wouldn’t say immediately, but we were always around the track, so we were always around it.  But I think it took a little bit of go‑karting to really get the buzz for it and really want to do it for a living.  I think once we started taking go‑karting seriously, even with the lack of success that we had to begin with, we weren’t focusing on anything else.  It was pretty much racing was everything, and if that didn’t work out, I don’t think we knew what we were going to do after that.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, same here.  Once we got into it and got serious and stuff, it was all we could really see ourselves doing.
Q.  I’ve asked Jimmie Johnson, John Force.  Courtney said she didn’t really catch on right away.  J
immie Johnson, he couldn’t win in motorcycles, and look where everybody has gone.  What’s your comment on that?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I don’t know, it’s an interesting question, I guess.  But I think everyone, their style suits different things, so if Jimmie Johnson didn’t suit a motorcycle, he’s obviously suited in NASCAR quite well.  Our driving styles must not have suited go‑karting or things like that.  I think a big thing for Ricky and I is we were really serious about the sport, we love learning about it and everything.  So growing up around my dad, always being around his teammates and his teams and his engineers, we had all of this information available to us to learn from, and not a lot of kids at our age when we were younger were getting that kind of information. To be getting it at such a young age and trying to absorb it definitely sped up that learning curve a lot.
 
RICKY TAYLOR:  Yeah, I think everybody learns differently and everybody adapts to some things differently, as well.  Like when we were racing in Skip Barber and kind of coming up through the ranks, a lot of the other drivers were coming up at the same time, and you’d see a lot of drivers not adapting to their cars really quickly.  Some drivers would get in and immediately go really fast, and other drivers would take a little while to get there and might overtake the other guys in terms of a learning curve.  But I think for us, or for me especially, I think we really struggled in go‑karts and maybe just didn’t suit our driving style.  Max will tell you the same thing.  Max was useless in go‑karts, as well. I think it’s just what suits you.  As we’ve both kind of come up, we’ve both found a good home in the Daytona Prototype, and it’s suited us both very well.
Q.  You’ve kind of sort of answered this already, and I apologize, but what was the key to this form of racing that drew all the talent from you and made you successful?
RICKY TAYLOR:  It’s hard to tell.  I think it goes back to that thing we said about growing up in a sports car racing family, and our dad has always taught us like little things about how to grow up in this sport and specifically sports car racing.  I remember one of the first things he taught me when I drove a car was to drive down the middle of the straight away at Road Atlanta, and normally he’d say take the shortest route, which it’s kind of a corner, and he said just because all the debris gets pushed to the outside.  That’s not something an IndyCar dad would tell you, that’s something a sports car dad would tell you.  So little things like that I think have helped us grow with this sport as opposed to oval racing, especially oval racing or open wheel racing or something like that, and I think it just kind of suits us how we’re both easy‑going mentalities, we’re both open to working with a teammate, which also kind of fits in well with how this style of racing works.
Q.  Do either one of you take the opportunity, though, to go and watch other forms of automobile racing and do you appreciate what those drivers are doing in those events?
JORDAN TAYLOR:  Yeah, obviously.  We’ve huge fans of the sport, not just sports car racing, so we’re watching V‑8 Super Cars, DTM, Formula 1, IndyCar.  If there’s a race on TV we’ll be watching it.  Everyone has different things to learn from, and they may be different animals, but at the end of the day a race car is a race car and you can learn a lot from different guys, even if it’s in a massively different car.
Q.  My question is about the event.  The city of Detroit has taken a lot of body shots the last few years, and it seems to have fought its way off the ropes anyway.  How important do you think having a first‑class event like this weekend is, and do you sense out there, is there a buzz about the event, and do you think ‑‑ I’m thinking along the right track that an event like yours can bolster people’s confidence and pride in the city?
RICKY TAYLOR:  It’s definitely good.  I think we go to a lot of races throughout the year, and we’ll go into town and mingle with some of the locals if there’s an opportunity.  But when we come to Detroit, everyone is always asking are you in town for the race or obviously they see the shirts and stuff. Are you in town for the race and they ask questions and they’re enthusiastic, and then at the track there’s a lot of volunteers.  There’s a good buzz, and I don’t think we see that, other than maybe the 24‑hour and Sebring, throughout the rest of the year.
 
I’m not a politician, but I think it’s nice to see the positive attitudes of all the local people and how much everybody seems to be behind it.
 
JORDAN TAYLOR:  I guess I can add just that if you look all around the world, sporting events always bring people together no matter what it is.  I think having a big event like we have with IMSA being there and IndyCar and I think World Challenge, as well, is great, and I think Roger Penske promotes the event.  When you’re at the track, it’s top‑notch.  The big thing for me is always bathrooms, and they’ve got the cleanest bathrooms of any racetrack that we go to.  From the highest level of things for the event to the lowest things as bathrooms, it’s a great event, and it overlooks the Detroit skyline.  It’s a really nice event.
 
NATE SIEBENS:  With that, let’s wrap up today’s teleconference.  Thanks again to Jordan and Ricky and all of you who called in for joining us again.
 

Chevy Racing–CORVETTE RACING AT LE MANS

CORVETTE RACING AT LE MANS: First Steps Toward Eighth Class Victory
Annual Test Day serves as dress rehearsal for Corvette C7.R’s Le Mans debut
 
DETROIT (May 28, 2014) – The biggest challenge yet for the new Chevrolet Corvette C7.R beckons across the Atlantic. Sunday is the annual Test Day ahead of the 24 Hours of Le Mans and eight hours of track time for the C7.R and Corvette Racing’s six drivers. It’s the only time cars can run on the 8.3-mile circuit ahead of official practice and qualifying for the world’s most grueling auto race June 14-15.
 
Le Mans is the biggest event on Corvette Racing’s schedule, and for good reason. It tests man and machine like no other in some of the most extreme conditions imaginable. And it’s one where Corvette Racing has a strong history – seven class victories since 2001. Once again, the team will compete in the GTE Pro class.
 
The driver lineups are the same in each Corvette for the third straight year. Antonio Garcia, Jan Magnussen and Jordan Taylor will drive the No. 73 Corvette C7.R. Oliver Gavin, Tommy Milner and Richard Westbrook will share the No. 74 Corvette. The group has a combined 12 victories at Le Mans – four each for Gavin and Magnussen, three for Garcia and one for Milner.
 
All six drivers tested the Corvette C7.R in a low-downforce aero package during a two-day test earlier this month at Road America. It marked a significant change in feel and handling from the high-downforce setup the two Corvettes use in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship. The team hopes the success in North America transfers to Le Mans. Garcia and Magnussen are on a two-race winning streak and stand second in the GT Le Mans championship. Gavin and Milner are tied for third.
 
The Corvette C7.R debuts at Le Mans nine years after its predecessor – the C6.R – made its first start in 2005. Much has changed with new design and engineering efforts that will aid Corvette Racing and its drivers at the 24 Hours. Even with limited downforce, the C7.R is much more stable and predictable than the previous generation Corvette, drivers say. That will make the Corvettes that much stronger in the medium- and high-speed corners that dot the Le Mans layout.
 
This also is the first race at Le Mans for a Corvette with a direct-injection engine since the final GT1 race for the C6.R in 2009. Corvette Racing engineers expect a 3 percent gain in fuel economy over the C6.R which could mean one less pit stop over the course of 24 Hours – a potentially huge advantage.
 
Sunday’s test sessions at Le Mans run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 6 p.m. Central European Time or 3 to 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. to noon ET.
 
ANTONIO GARCIA, NO. 73 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Benefits of Road America test) “Every single lap we do is important. We did all we can to get to Le Mans with the maximum amount of knowledge about the car and maximum amount of development. It took me a few laps to get used to the car in a low-trim setup. Even Road America isn’t a low-downforce track. You have to adjust your style to the aero more than the track. What I remembered about Road America was completely different because we ran a completely different aero configuration. You have to focus on driving the car and forget about where you are. We know we could have adjusted the car to go faster around there, but the focus was our Le Mans program and gain as much data as possible.”
(Test Day outlook) “When we left Road America, we were happy with how things progressed and how the car behaved on the track. Now we have to wait to see how this new C7.R is around Le Mans and where we are compared to our competition. The test will be important considering the weather. It has been difficult the last three years. If we have a week like we had last year – with almost no dry running – it will be difficult for us. We hope to have a good, clean run Sunday with nice weather that is good enough to confirm that all we have is good enough for the race and what we expect.”
 
JAN MAGNUSSEN, NO. 73 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Road America test) “As usual at Le Mans, everyone is looking for top speed and stability. I think we got through a good number of things at the test that will help us at Le Mans. But we won’t know how we stack up against the competition probably until the race at Le Mans. Even at the Test Day, people are testing stuff and not exactly going for a lap time. But we will get a good idea of where we are on the Test Day. Unfortunately if we are not near the top, there is not a lot we can do between the test and the race other than some fine-tuning. But I do think we are much better prepared this year than we were last year.”
(Outook): “We are in a much better position this year. Last year we were a huge amount of time off the fastest cars. This year I don’t think the gap will be that big. But if you are a half-second or a second off, that’s still a problem. We’ve done everything we can to be as well-prepared as possible.”
 
JORDAN TAYLOR, NO. 73 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Being back with Corvette Racing) “It’s been a long time since I drove the C6.R – since last year’s Petit Le Mans. It was nice to finally get laps in the C7.R. It’s a way different car –everything from the cockpit to the way it drives and the seating position. I sat in it at Daytona and Laguna Seca to get a feel for it, and to get to drive it at Road America was really fun. Getting up to speed in a car like that in such a competitive class is always difficult. It’s great having guys in the car with you like Antonio and Jan, who are obviously on it in the class and won the last two races. So I have the perfect guys to compare my data to and really figure out the car.”
(First C7.R impressions) “The biggest thing for me is how much more comfortable to drive and how much more predictable it is. The C6.R was always on edge; when it started to slide, it would slide quickly and it was hard to catch. Finding the limit of the car was always a little intimidating because there wasn’t much time to react when the car started to break loose. But once I got in the C7.R, I could instantly feel the grip and a much better sensation of where the car is in the corner. You know what’s about to happen and you can react much quicker. For our type of racing, it’s huge to have that predictability just for consistency over a run.”
 
OLIVER GAVIN, NO. 74 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Road America test) “It’s always good to go to Road America and test. I felt pretty confident in the car. You know from many years of going to Le Mans what the car needs to be fast at Le Mans. Did we tick all those boxes? I’d say we ticked some of them but you never know if you ticked all of them until you get to Le Mans and you see what your pace is like and what your straight-line speed is like. Le Mans is so unique and it’s so hard to replicate that and reproduce it anywhere in the world.”
(High-downforce vs. low-downforce setups): “Fundamentally the balance of the car is very similar. Just the level of grip in medium- and high-speed corners go down when you have a light-downforce package. So you know you have to be a little more delicate with the wheel, the brakes and slow with your hands and feet so as to not upset the car under braking – the sort of mindset that you need for when you go back to Le Mans. And that was another great thing about having that test at Road America. After running the cars with the highest levels of downforce possible for first part of the year, it was a bit of a culture shock to how the car needs to be set up and how it needs to be in order to go fast around 8.3 miles at Le Mans. You have to make those adjustments so not only is it good for us to go to Road America to test the car and see what it’s like in those configurations, it’s good for the drivers to get that experience and feel.”
 
TOMMY MILNER, NO. 74 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Driving with low-downforce settings) “It was a big
difference in general from what I’m used to. But you have to reset your brain a little bit on what the car feels like in high-speed corners and under braking. Certainly for a first stab at it, the car wasn’t too bad. But over the two days (at Road America), we worked really hard on making it more comfortable to drive. We definitely achieved that – as comfortable as it can be with very little downforce. At a place like Road America, if you can be pretty comfortable in the Carousel with little downforce, then that usually bodes well for Le Mans.”
(Team preparations) “The atmosphere within the team doesn’t change much. But everyone on the team is a little more anxious to see how the car feels, how fast it can be and what we say about it over the radio because in some ways it is our first taste of what to expect for Le Mans. The biggest difference is just those first impressions and they make a bigger impact on the mood of the team a little bit early on. The car was obviously not very fun to drive to start with (at Road America) but nobody panicked. We put our heads down and started working on the car. We definitely left the test feeling pretty optimistic about going to Le Mans with a car that should be quick and one that is fairly nice to drive. But having said that, I’d trade a comfortable car to drive for a fast car at Le Mans any day. That’s part of Le Mans – trying to find that elusive balance.”
 
RICHARD WESTBROOK, NO. 74 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Back with Corvette Racing) “It’s great to be back in the Corvette Racing family. It feels like it has been too long. I had to sit out Daytona and Sebring because of my duties with the Corvette Daytona Prototype, so I was really excited to get back with the team and I was keen to try out the Corvette C7.R. I certainly wasn’t disappointed. It’s an amazing piece of machinery and engineering. Everyone at Pratt & Miller and Chevrolet did a fantastic job in improving on the successful C6.R in every department. It was a very encouraging test.”
(First impressions) “The thing that struck me was the lower center of gravity in the car. You can feel that right away. You can feel the added stability especially at high speed. The thing that was a big, big step is the lateral grip. The advancements in the center of gravity are just incredible. It was a real joy to drive and I have to say it was a little easier to drive and step into than what I was used to before. It feels much more like a racing car – something you can grab hold of and drive. When you have quick sections like the Porsche Curves, it’s all about confidence and this car really introduces a lot of confidence into its driver.”
 
DOUG FEHAN, CORVETTE RACING PROGRAM MANAGER
“I know all our fans are anxious to see the new Chevrolet Corvette C7.R turn its first laps at the upcoming test day at Le Mans. Experience tells us that any track time there proves to be extremely valuable and fundamental to success. While our recent two-day test at Road America was beneficial to get our first taste of running the car in a Le Mans-style, low-downforce setting, you simply can’t simulate actual Le Mans conditions at any other track in the world. That’s what makes the challenge and allure of Le Mans special and why it is the cornerstone of our racing program year in and year out.”

Chevy Racing–CORVETTE RACING AT LE MANS

CORVETTE RACING AT LE MANS: First Steps Toward Eighth Class Victory
Annual Test Day serves as dress rehearsal for Corvette C7.R’s Le Mans debut
 
DETROIT (May 28, 2014) – The biggest challenge yet for the new Chevrolet Corvette C7.R beckons across the Atlantic. Sunday is the annual Test Day ahead of the 24 Hours of Le Mans and eight hours of track time for the C7.R and Corvette Racing’s six drivers. It’s the only time cars can run on the 8.3-mile circuit ahead of official practice and qualifying for the world’s most grueling auto race June 14-15.
 
Le Mans is the biggest event on Corvette Racing’s schedule, and for good reason. It tests man and machine like no other in some of the most extreme conditions imaginable. And it’s one where Corvette Racing has a strong history – seven class victories since 2001. Once again, the team will compete in the GTE Pro class.
 
The driver lineups are the same in each Corvette for the third straight year. Antonio Garcia, Jan Magnussen and Jordan Taylor will drive the No. 73 Corvette C7.R. Oliver Gavin, Tommy Milner and Richard Westbrook will share the No. 74 Corvette. The group has a combined 12 victories at Le Mans – four each for Gavin and Magnussen, three for Garcia and one for Milner.
 
All six drivers tested the Corvette C7.R in a low-downforce aero package during a two-day test earlier this month at Road America. It marked a significant change in feel and handling from the high-downforce setup the two Corvettes use in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship. The team hopes the success in North America transfers to Le Mans. Garcia and Magnussen are on a two-race winning streak and stand second in the GT Le Mans championship. Gavin and Milner are tied for third.
 
The Corvette C7.R debuts at Le Mans nine years after its predecessor – the C6.R – made its first start in 2005. Much has changed with new design and engineering efforts that will aid Corvette Racing and its drivers at the 24 Hours. Even with limited downforce, the C7.R is much more stable and predictable than the previous generation Corvette, drivers say. That will make the Corvettes that much stronger in the medium- and high-speed corners that dot the Le Mans layout.
 
This also is the first race at Le Mans for a Corvette with a direct-injection engine since the final GT1 race for the C6.R in 2009. Corvette Racing engineers expect a 3 percent gain in fuel economy over the C6.R which could mean one less pit stop over the course of 24 Hours – a potentially huge advantage.
 
Sunday’s test sessions at Le Mans run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 6 p.m. Central European Time or 3 to 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. to noon ET.
 
ANTONIO GARCIA, NO. 73 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Benefits of Road America test) “Every single lap we do is important. We did all we can to get to Le Mans with the maximum amount of knowledge about the car and maximum amount of development. It took me a few laps to get used to the car in a low-trim setup. Even Road America isn’t a low-downforce track. You have to adjust your style to the aero more than the track. What I remembered about Road America was completely different because we ran a completely different aero configuration. You have to focus on driving the car and forget about where you are. We know we could have adjusted the car to go faster around there, but the focus was our Le Mans program and gain as much data as possible.”
(Test Day outlook) “When we left Road America, we were happy with how things progressed and how the car behaved on the track. Now we have to wait to see how this new C7.R is around Le Mans and where we are compared to our competition. The test will be important considering the weather. It has been difficult the last three years. If we have a week like we had last year – with almost no dry running – it will be difficult for us. We hope to have a good, clean run Sunday with nice weather that is good enough to confirm that all we have is good enough for the race and what we expect.”
 
JAN MAGNUSSEN, NO. 73 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Road America test) “As usual at Le Mans, everyone is looking for top speed and stability. I think we got through a good number of things at the test that will help us at Le Mans. But we won’t know how we stack up against the competition probably until the race at Le Mans. Even at the Test Day, people are testing stuff and not exactly going for a lap time. But we will get a good idea of where we are on the Test Day. Unfortunately if we are not near the top, there is not a lot we can do between the test and the race other than some fine-tuning. But I do think we are much better prepared this year than we were last year.”
(Outook): “We are in a much better position this year. Last year we were a huge amount of time off the fastest cars. This year I don’t think the gap will be that big. But if you are a half-second or a second off, that’s still a problem. We’ve done everything we can to be as well-prepared as possible.”
 
JORDAN TAYLOR, NO. 73 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Being back with Corvette Racing) “It’s been a long time since I drove the C6.R – since last year’s Petit Le Mans. It was nice to finally get laps in the C7.R. It’s a way different car –everything from the cockpit to the way it drives and the seating position. I sat in it at Daytona and Laguna Seca to get a feel for it, and to get to drive it at Road America was really fun. Getting up to speed in a car like that in such a competitive class is always difficult. It’s great having guys in the car with you like Antonio and Jan, who are obviously on it in the class and won the last two races. So I have the perfect guys to compare my data to and really figure out the car.”
(First C7.R impressions) “The biggest thing for me is how much more comfortable to drive and how much more predictable it is. The C6.R was always on edge; when it started to slide, it would slide quickly and it was hard to catch. Finding the limit of the car was always a little intimidating because there wasn’t much time to react when the car started to break loose. But once I got in the C7.R, I could instantly feel the grip and a much better sensation of where the car is in the corner. You know what’s about to happen and you can react much quicker. For our type of racing, it’s huge to have that predictability just for consistency over a run.”
 
OLIVER GAVIN, NO. 74 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Road America test) “It’s always good to go to Road America and test. I felt pretty confident in the car. You know from many years of going to Le Mans what the car needs to be fast at Le Mans. Did we tick all those boxes? I’d say we ticked some of them but you never know if you ticked all of them until you get to Le Mans and you see what your pace is like and what your straight-line speed is like. Le Mans is so unique and it’s so hard to replicate that and reproduce it anywhere in the world.”
(High-downforce vs. low-downforce setups): “Fundamentally the balance of the car is very similar. Just the level of grip in medium- and high-speed corners go down when you have a light-downforce package. So you know you have to be a little more delicate with the wheel, the brakes and slow with your hands and feet so as to not upset the car under braking – the sort of mindset that you need for when you go back to Le Mans. And that was another great thing about having that test at Road America. After running the cars with the highest levels of downforce possible for first part of the year, it was a bit of a culture shock to how the car needs to be set up and how it needs to be in order to go fast around 8.3 miles at Le Mans. You have to make those adjustments so not only is it good for us to go to Road America to test the car and see what it’s like in those configurations, it’s good for the drivers to get that experience and feel.”
 
TOMMY MILNER, NO. 74 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Driving with low-downforce settings) “It was a big
difference in general from what I’m used to. But you have to reset your brain a little bit on what the car feels like in high-speed corners and under braking. Certainly for a first stab at it, the car wasn’t too bad. But over the two days (at Road America), we worked really hard on making it more comfortable to drive. We definitely achieved that – as comfortable as it can be with very little downforce. At a place like Road America, if you can be pretty comfortable in the Carousel with little downforce, then that usually bodes well for Le Mans.”
(Team preparations) “The atmosphere within the team doesn’t change much. But everyone on the team is a little more anxious to see how the car feels, how fast it can be and what we say about it over the radio because in some ways it is our first taste of what to expect for Le Mans. The biggest difference is just those first impressions and they make a bigger impact on the mood of the team a little bit early on. The car was obviously not very fun to drive to start with (at Road America) but nobody panicked. We put our heads down and started working on the car. We definitely left the test feeling pretty optimistic about going to Le Mans with a car that should be quick and one that is fairly nice to drive. But having said that, I’d trade a comfortable car to drive for a fast car at Le Mans any day. That’s part of Le Mans – trying to find that elusive balance.”
 
RICHARD WESTBROOK, NO. 74 CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7.R
(Back with Corvette Racing) “It’s great to be back in the Corvette Racing family. It feels like it has been too long. I had to sit out Daytona and Sebring because of my duties with the Corvette Daytona Prototype, so I was really excited to get back with the team and I was keen to try out the Corvette C7.R. I certainly wasn’t disappointed. It’s an amazing piece of machinery and engineering. Everyone at Pratt & Miller and Chevrolet did a fantastic job in improving on the successful C6.R in every department. It was a very encouraging test.”
(First impressions) “The thing that struck me was the lower center of gravity in the car. You can feel that right away. You can feel the added stability especially at high speed. The thing that was a big, big step is the lateral grip. The advancements in the center of gravity are just incredible. It was a real joy to drive and I have to say it was a little easier to drive and step into than what I was used to before. It feels much more like a racing car – something you can grab hold of and drive. When you have quick sections like the Porsche Curves, it’s all about confidence and this car really introduces a lot of confidence into its driver.”
 
DOUG FEHAN, CORVETTE RACING PROGRAM MANAGER
“I know all our fans are anxious to see the new Chevrolet Corvette C7.R turn its first laps at the upcoming test day at Le Mans. Experience tells us that any track time there proves to be extremely valuable and fundamental to success. While our recent two-day test at Road America was beneficial to get our first taste of running the car in a Le Mans-style, low-downforce setting, you simply can’t simulate actual Le Mans conditions at any other track in the world. That’s what makes the challenge and allure of Le Mans special and why it is the cornerstone of our racing program year in and year out.”

Chevy Racing–CORVETTE DPs AT DETROIT:

CORVETTE DPs AT DETROIT: Seeking More Hometown Heroics
Chevrolet hopes to continue Motor City dominance just blocks from RenCen
 
·         Corvette Daytona Prototype going for three-peat on Belle Isle

·         Consecutive 1-2 finishes and pole positions on Chevrolet-sponsored weekend

·         Chevrolet comes home with lead in Prototype Engine Manufacturer Championship

 
DETROIT (May 27, 2014) – The sound of Chevrolet Corvette power will thunder throughout Detroit again this weekend as the contingent of Corvette Daytona Prototypes returns to Belle Isle for the next round of the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship. It’s a home race for the Corvette DPs, which will run in view of the GM Renaissance Center just minutes away from the circuit.
 
Saturday’s 100-minute Chevrolet Sports Car Challenge features the series’ Prototype – of which the Corvette DPs are part – and GT Daytona. It takes place on a 2.35-mile, 13-turn temporary street circuit on the island in middle of the Detroit River.
 
The home-track advantage has suited the Corvette DPs well the last two years with a near clean sweep of race honors. There’s nothing to suggest that expectations for this year’s race should be any different. Chevrolet comes to Detroit holding a one-point lead in the Prototype Engine Manufacturer championship. The Corvette DP is the only car to finish on the podium at each TUDOR Championship event this year including a sweep of the top four spots in the Rolex 24 At Daytona, the opening round of the season.
 
Given the last two years on Belle Isle, another good points haul may very well be in the offing. Action Express Racing won two years ago in the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series – actually a 1-2 team finish with the fastest race lap for Joao Barbosa. Wayne Taylor Racing took victory last season behind Jordan Taylor’s pole position. Action Express backed up its victory with a runner-up finish for Barbosa and Christian Fittipaldi.
 
Coincidentally, it’s that pairing that leads the driver’s championship after four rounds with Taylor and brother Ricky tied for second.
 
The Belle Isle circuit is the second street race for the TUDOR Championship, the first being Long Beach in early April. Jordan and Ricky Taylor were second with Barbosa and Fittipaldi third.
 
The track characteristics are varied with a number of short chutes into 90-degree corners but also a fair mix of long straightaways. Opportunities for passing within a class are likely to be at a premium.
 
“Naturally this is an important race for everyone involved in the Corvette DP program,” said Jim Lutz, Chevrolet’s program manager for Corvette Daytona Prototypes. “We have experienced great success the last two seasons on Belle Isle, which is always fantastic for Chevrolet employees and fans in attendance. From a competition standpoint, this is the second year we will race on a revamped layout that has a longer straight-line section from just past the pit exit. However the additional downforce and power the Corvette DPs have for the TUDOR Championship means there will be a few adjustments to make in each of the practice sessions. Patience and precision are keys here, as with any street circuit race. We will need a good result to maintain our advantage in the Prototype Engine Manufacturer standings.”
 

Chevy Racing–Coca-Cola 600 Post Race

CHEVROLET’S JIMMIE JOHNSON CRUISES TO FIRST WIN OF ’14 SEASON AT COCA-COLA 600
 
HARVICK GIVES CHEVROLET SS 1-2 FINISH
 
CONCORD, NC – May 25, 2014 – With just eight laps remaining in the Coca-Cola 600, six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson moved to the front of the field for the final time in the 400-lap race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (CMS).  Johnson captured his first victory of the 2014 season in his No. 48 Lowe’s Patriotic Chevrolet SS snapping a 12-race winless streak. Throughout the lengthy endurance race, Johnson led 10 times for a total of 164 laps.
 
The win marked Johnson’s 67th NASCAR Sprint Cup career victory; his seventh win at Charlotte and fourth Coca-Cola 600 trophy. Also of note this is the third time Johnson has won from the pole at the 1.5-mile track. This win also broke the tie with NASCAR Hall of Famers Bobby Allison and Darrell Waltrip and Johnson is now the all-time series points-paying win leader at CMS. The 38-year old Cup Series veteran took team owner Rick Hendrick to Victory Lane in the prestigious Coca-Cola 600 for the 11th time.
 
Kevin Harvick, who has collected wins at Phoenix and Darlington thus far this season, brought his No. 4 Budweiser Folds of Honor Chevrolet SS home in second place, giving Chevrolet a one-two finish.
 
Last week’s million-dollar Sprint All-Star race winner, Jamie McMurray, also had a strong No. 1 Cessna Chevrolet SS and finished in fifth-place.  Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon overcame back spasm challenges running a strong race in his No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet SS and was able to finish seventh overall.
 
Gordon continues to lead the current standings and holds an 11-point advantage over second place. Paul Menard finished eighth in the No. 27 Serta/Menards Chevy SS, his sixth top-10 finish of 2014, to put five Chevrolet SSs in the top 10 finishing order.
 
Matt Kenseth (Toyota) was third and Carl Edwards (Ford) was fourth to round out the top five finishing order.
 
The Sprint Cup Series travels to Dover International Speedway in Dover, DE to compete on June 1.
 
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S PATRIOTIC CHEVROLET SS – RACE WINNER
POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT WITH JOHNSON, CHAD KNAUS, AND TEAM OWNER RICK HENDRICK:
KERRY THARP:  Let’s hear now from your race winner, Jimmie Johnson.
            Jimmie, certainly your fourth win here at the Coca‑Cola 600, your seventh points win here at Charlotte.  That’s the most ever in the history of the sport.
            Jimmie, talk about winning this race, such a big race on our schedule, in our sport, and it culminates a big day for motorsports.  You were the last one standing.  Talk about how this race unfolded for you.
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah, I mean, it means a lot.  Through the years a lot of references to this race as one of our majors.  I certainly agree with that.  600 miles around here is no easy task.
            To deal with all the things that are thrown at a race team through the evening with the track changing, the mechanical obstacles that you have to overcome, keeping an engine alive, tires alive, all of it.  It’s a serious team effort to finish 600 miles.  And then win here, especially as hard as we had to run throughout the night, the pace we had to keep up, certainly proud of that.
            This weekend, so much great racing today.  Obviously the big celebration.  I shouldn’t say celebration, but to be able to honor the men and women that have served our country and given the ultimate sacrifice.  Certainly tomorrow is Memorial Day.
            To have patriotic paint scheme on our racecar, to say thank you to the families that have lost loved ones, then to the men and women out there serving, to see us out there on the racetrack, I know it means something to them.  Proud to be a part of that.
            KERRY THARP:  Chad, certainly a great effort by the 48 team throughout the whole weekend.  Sat on the pole Thursday night.  Very impressive.  Talk about the whole experience, what it means.
            CHAD KNAUS:  Obviously this is a very special place in my heart.  My first victory in the Sprint Cup Series came here with Jeff Gordon back in 1994.  To be able to win this race again with Jimmie, couple times we won it, it’s pretty special.  It’s really neat.
            I have to definitely say thank you to Kenny Francis and Kasey Kahne.  We definitely robbed the bank on those guys.  They came over here last week and had a very fast racecar.  We pillaged their notes a little bit and came back with some of the ingredients they had in their racecar and put that in the Lowe’s 48 car.  Jimmie definitely responded well to that.  Thank you to those guys.
            It was a good weekend.  To be able to go out there and unload quickly, second in qualifying practice, to be able to qualify on the pole, fantastic.  Something we’ve struggled with here as of late.
            Then to be very fast in both practice sessions on Saturday during the day.  We worked hard with Jimmie and the engineers, tried to understand what the track was going to do with the temperature changes.
            It was pretty good.  We had to make some pretty big swings at it, but all in all it was a great weekend.
            KERRY THARP:  Rick, certainly Jimmie shows again the No. 48 team, the strength of this team.  Now you have three of your four drivers bound for the Chase.  Talk about this victory and how big it is for your entire team.
            RICK HENDRICK:  I think, number one, Charlotte is kind of home.  Won my first NASCAR race here with Sr. in ’83 in the Nationwide or Busch Series.  It’s a special place, all the families here.
            Winning a race, Jimmie and Chad have been so close this year, and several situations got away.  To get this one behind us is great.
            This is a tough race to win with the adjustments you have to make, just the endurance of this race itself.  We’re just glad to get another 600 victory.  Glad to see these guys get the win so we can go to Dover and relax.
            KERRY THARP:  We’ll take questions.
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I kind of have a question.  What the hell are you all going to write about now?  We won.  Anybody (smiling)?
 
            Q.  Chad, you mentioned that you pilfered from notes from your teammates.  How often does that happen?  Did it help you tonight?
            CHAD KNAUS:  Yeah, it helped a hell of a lot.  I do it as often as we need it.  That’s the beauty of what we’ve got at Hendrick Motorsports.  If we need help, we’re not getting the result that we need, we’ve
got three other teams we can definitely bounce ideas off of and get direction from.
            This year has been a bit of a struggle for the 48 from an understanding of what the new rules are, what the car wants, even from Jimmie understanding what he feels he needs.  We’re all still trying to understand that.
            I don’t think we’re where we need to be 100% yet.  We’re definitely going in the right direction.  I think Dover and Pocono are going to be a good telltale of where the 48 is.
            We use whoever we can.  I don’t care who comes up with it.  If it’s fast, I’ll steal it.  That’s how we work.
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  They’ve stolen plenty from you (smiling).
 
            Q.  Did you remember how to get to Victory Lane since it’s been so long since you’ve been there?
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  12 long races (smiling).  I guess we’ve created this environment for ourselves.  I honestly wasn’t stressing.  The fact that 12 races created that much buzz just means we’ve done a lot of great things over the years, so I’ll turn it into a compliment.
 
            Q.  You dominated at Charlotte/Lowe’s before they did the repaving.  We heard that the character’s coming back.  Is that an indication this is playing into your hands?  Chad, the other two guys, Danica and Kurt, had engine problems.  Did that cause you any trepidation?
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  We’re getting closer to the old track.  I still think we’re probably three to five years away from it really getting there.
            But the track’s rough.  They’ve started to put tar strips down and we have the seams developing.  There’s other patchwork done on the track.  It’s coming around.
            Whatever this asphalt mixture is, it’s pretty rock solid.  It’s taken a long time to get there.  We’re getting into a sweet spot with the track, I believe.
            CHAD KNAUS:  ‘Trepidation’ is a great word.  I was surprised to hear it out of this gallery (laughter).
            KERRY THARP:  This marks the 14th time in the last 26 Coca‑Cola 600s that a first‑time season winner has won the race.  That’s a big deal this year with the new Chase format.
 
            Q.  Was there any point in the beginning of the season up until now that you started to panic because you hadn’t had a win?  Was there any extra added pressure coming into tonight?
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  No.  I mean, the first goal is to make the Chase.  You want to win races at the end of the season.  You have to win races at the end of the season to be the champions.
            Of course, we want to win early and often.  But we were holding steady in the championship points.  In my opinion, I don’t believe there will be 16 different winners.  I felt like a strong championship points position would get us into the first phase of the Chase.
            Granted, tonight simplifies things.  We’ll take it, move on.  We really want to heat up and win races later in the season, especially before the Chase starts.
            More than anything, I just got tired of answering the question.  There wasn’t a lot of frustration due to pressure of winning.  There was frustration in not having fast racecars, but that’s a different situation.
            We hold ourselves to a high standard.  I think we’re onto some good things and have a good direction to go with our racecars.
 
            Q.  Jimmie, you said after you won the pole that you wanted folks in the garage to fear the 48 team again.  You thought a couple wins would be necessary for that to happen.  Do you feel like that may be starting to happen or do you need to win at Dover as well?
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  We’re off to a good start.  Multiple wins do that.  If we can take advantage of the next few tracks that are great tracks for us, it would be great momentum.
            Ideally you’d love to do it before the Chase gets started and carry that right into the start of the Chase.  But you never know when you’re going to peak and when everything’s going to be just right.
            We’ll hopefully peak at the right time.
 
            Q.  Rick, do you have any idea what the diagnosis is on the two engines that failed?
            RICK HENDRICK:  I think they were probably valve related.  Probably a spring broke first, then we swallowed a valve.  That’s the weakest part of the valve train.
            I know I talked to the engine guys a little while ago.  They’re going to diagnose it and see what they can find.  But usually that’s what happens, it’s a valve spring.
 
            Q.  Was there any concern when Junior had his issues, that you might be looking at three engines?  Did the 48, the 5 or 24 have any concerns either?
            RICK HENDRICK:  I definitely had a lot of concerns after the first one went.  Junior didn’t have an engine problem, that was probably a brake problem.  Vibration, thought it was something else.
            Anytime you break one, I guess that’s the part of the racing that I fear the most, is a part failure.  When you break one, it’s bad.  When you break two, it’s really bad.  They’re all just alike, so…
            A lot of uneasy feelings for me till it was over.
 
            Q.  Since you’ve accomplished what you’ve been able to, will certainly leave a huge mark in the history of motorsports, touch on what Kurt Busch was able to accomplish today at Indy.
            RICK HENDRICK:  I think it was an amazing job.  I think it speaks highly of the talent that’s in this garage, in this sport, to be able to go up there, never having been in the car before.  To finish sixth, he showed a lot of talent.
            I think it’s nice to see the fans recognize him for what he had done.  I think it was outstanding.
            Jimmie, you and Chad can voice your opinions.  But that was an amazing job, I thought.
   
         JIMMIE JOHNSON:  Yeah, I completely agree.  He did an awesome job.  Made us all really proud in the garage area watching.  Hats off to him.
            CHAD KNAUS:  Yeah, I agree 100%.  It’s pretty spectacular.  I think Juan Pablo had a lot of motivation to try to finish ahead of him today.
            Kurt did a great job.  The thing that really amazes me, is we all talk about communication.  To be able to go and put himself in that world, begin to try to communicate with those guys that have a completely different vocabulary than what we do on the Cup side, it’s spectacular to go through that.  Showed a lot of maturity on his part, a lot of desire.  I thought that was pretty awesome.
 
            Q.  You’ve been fairly open in the weeks leading up to this about how you were still looking for the handle on the car, the feel for this new rules package.  Chad, you said tonight that you feel like you still have work to do.  I’m wondering how that is.  Looks like you went out there and waxed everybody in one of the biggest races of the year.  What else do you need to prove?  How far do you think you’re still off?
            CHAD KNAUS:  I think we’re off a lot.  I think we’re more than capable of going out there and winning a race if everything goes right.  I think tonight we had a really good racecar and I think Jimmie did a fantastic job.
            But I think if things didn’t go our way, we wouldn’t have.  Quite honestly, I think we need to get back to the form of the 48 car to where we make it go our way.  That’s my goal.  I think we’re a little bit away from that.
            But once we get there, it will be the 48 of old and we’ll be able to go out there and win races like we’re supposed to.
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I agree.  I think the 4 car can make stuff happen to Chad’s point.  We had a great night, took advantage of the opportunity.  There’s still some room to go, for sure.  Luckily we have time on our side.
            Q.  Chad, does the win give you an opportunity to take some chances?  Jimmie talked about putting wins together.  What risks can you take going forward now that you’re secure?
            CHAD KNAUS:  That’s a great point.  We hadn’t been in that position yet to really explore that.
            The thing that’s on our side is that we’ve got, like Jimmie said, a little bit of time to really get an understanding of what’s going on.
            The other thing we’ve got on our side is we’re going to Dover, Delaware, which is by far one of Jimmie’s favorite racetracks.  Then we’re going to Pocono, which is one of my favorite racetracks.  Doesn’t hurt.  So I think over the next couple of weeks we’re going to be in pretty good shape.
            Q.  Rick, typically when Jimmie wins a championship, sometimes they come out a little bit slow because many teams had been working on the next year.  Did you see this as the typical post‑championship start for this team?
            RICK HENDRICK:  You know, I’m probably not the guy to answer that question.
            But, you know, I think the new rule package, like they said, fell into maybe Jeff’s driving style and Junior’s more than it did Jimmie and Kasey.  I think the 5 and the 48 have a little bit more work to do than the 88 and the 24.  That’s just a matter of getting Jimmie what he wants and Chad understanding the car.
            There have been races that we have been so fast, like California.  Jeff had a good long‑run car, he’s had it all year.  One thing I’ve learned watching these guys, what works in the 24 doesn’t necessarily work in the 48.  Jimmie maybe doesn’t like it or it doesn’t work for him.
            So we have the information to look at, but that gives you a baseline, but it doesn’t guarantee that he can go out and win with it.
            Q.  Jeff Gordon, talking about his back, he said, Me staying in the car going through what we went through is only going to earn me more respect with this team.  What world does Jeff Gordon live in that he feels like he needs to earn any more respect with his team?
            RICK HENDRICK:  I think he probably said that without really thinking of maybe what he said because that team respects him so much.
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  He’s just a humble guy.
            RICK HENDRICK:  I know he was in a lot of pain.  I was worried he would get in the car.  Allen and I’ve talked and the team’s talked about it.  It looks like the Jeff Gordon of 20 years ago.  He’s fired up.  He’s up there every week.
            I think that was just something he said because that team respects him.  I think he’s got the entire garage talking about the kind of year he’s having right now.
            Q.  Chad, Jeff’s comments were respect with regards to toughness.  He said, Maybe they don’t understand the toughness.  You’ve been with him through the years.  Do those guys understand the toughness of him?  What does it mean, since you’ve been a crew guy, to see a driver do something like that when you’re a crew guy working 120 hours a week, go through something like that for you?
            CHAD KNAUS:  I was listening to that question before.  I completely understand because as a crew guy sometimes you think that the drivers, they have it pretty easy.  They fly around in big, fancy jets, they show up at 3:00, race, go home, show up again on Friday, do it Saturday, Sunday.
            I think what Jeff was trying to say is he understands what his team does, what they go through to build the racecars, how this pit crew is there at 7:00every morning to practice pit stops, start working out, what they go through setting up the pits when it’s 120 degrees outside and waiting five hours to start.  He gets that.
            I think that’s what he was trying to say.  He was trying to prove to his guys that he was going to do his just work every day.
            Q.  Does a crew guy need to see that from time to time?
            CHAD KNAUS:  Yes, absolutely.  Yeah, for sure.  They have the utmost respect, just like we have the utmost respect for Jimmie.  When a crew guy sees something like that, it knocks you up to the next level.  I’ve seen what Jeff has done over the years.  I’ve se
en what Jimmie has done over the years.
            When you’re ingrained with them, you see the pain, the desire, what it is they put into it, man, you get it.  You really get it.
            I think what he said is actually true.  I think his guys will now ‑ not that they didn’t respect him before ‑ but they have a new appreciation for what it is that he does.
            KERRY THARP:  This is Rick Hendrick’s 11th Coca‑Cola 600 win.
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  That’s awesome.
            Q.  Jimmie, I remember you talking last year about your first start ever at Charlotte in the Sprint Cup Series, how it was a humbling experience for you.  Now you have more wins than anybody else here.  What does that mean to you now?  Rick, what does it mean to you to have Jimmie with that record?
            JIMMIE JOHNSON:  I’ll never forget that first start here.  That week was a tough week.  I lost one of my closest friends on the front straightaway, Blaise Alexander.  Looked at his skid marks every lap I went through with Cup and Nationwide practice, something tough to overcome.
            We qualified well, made the show.  The other Lowe’s car didn’t.  That was a huge feather in our cap.  Then I remember spinning.  As I’m sliding into the wall, I see Jeff coming for my door getting ready to run into the side of me.  He’s running for the championship.  I’m thinking, Please don’t let him hit me.  I’ll have my first and last race all at once.
            To have things fast forward to where it is today, to be able to be the winningest driver here, says a ton.  I mean, this track means so much to the racing community.  There’s some tracks that have a bigger awareness to fans and media and others outside of racing.  But this track, when you come here and run well, there’s just something about it with it being in the backyard of all the race teams.  There’s a lot of proud out of running well here.
            I have that pride.  Having the most wins here takes it to the next level, for sure.
            RICK HENDRICK:  For me, Charlotte is home, too.  Been friends with Bruton for a long time.  We kid him all the time about taking his money.  The fact that it’s here and the shop is only a mile away, my first NASCAR win was with Robert in ’83 in the Busch Series.
            So this is a special place for me.  I mean, it ranks up there with Daytona and Indianapolis.  To win in Charlotte is really special.  It’s home.
            Anytime we can accomplish something that someone else hasn’t, it’s rewarding to the organization.
            Q.  Rick, you’ve watched these two for a long time.  Tonight Jimmie added a few more numbers.  All‑time points leader here.  Is there any time that you sit back and look at these two and are amazed at what they’ve accomplished?
            RICK HENDRICK:  All the time.  I think about Jimmie riding with me, with my son to the Nationwide races, waiting for him, buying him a burger.  But these two, what they’ve accomplished…
            When you put them together, you have no idea it’s going to be anything like this.  It’s like Ray and Jeff.  You just never know.
            What they’ve been able to accomplish together, it’s been amazing.  I always say I’m just glad I don’t have to race against them.  I’ve been amazed for years at what they’ve been able to accomplish.
            The thing that amazes me the most is they are always digging to be better.  No matter how good they are, how many races they win, they strive to take it up another notch.
            KERRY THARP:  Congratulations to the No. 48 team.  Big win here this weekend.  Enjoy it.  We’ll see you at Dover.
KEVIN HARVICK, NO. 4 BUDWEISER FOLDS OF HONOR CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED 2ND
POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:
 
KERRY THARP:  Let’s roll into our post race for tonight’s 55th annual Coca‑Cola 600, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.  Our race runner‑up is Kevin Harvick.
Kevin certainly had a strong car throughout the weekend.  Just came up a little short trying to defend that championship.
 
KEVIN HARVICK:  Yeah.  We had a fast car all night.  Just kind of fumbled again on pit road.  Got behind, got a lap down.  We needed a 700‑mile race to get back to where we needed to be.
All in all, they’re doing a great job of putting cars up on the track. We just have to clean up on pit road.
 
KERRY THARP:  Questions for Kevin Harvick.
 
Q.  I suppose y’all figured Jimmie (Johnson) was going to get one (win) sooner or later.  Do you look at that team and say, they’re back?
 
KEVIN HARVICK:  I look at it as we let them slip one in front of us by shooting ourselves in the foot.
You knew that was going to come.  They’ve won championships and done a great job through the years.  They were solid all weekend, didn’t make any mistakes, kept themselves up front all night and won the race.
 
In the end you’re going to have to beat them in all ways, shapes or forms, just not on speed.
 
Q.  Can you elaborate as far as shooting yourself in the foot.  You also said if this was a 700‑mile race, talk about that.
 
KEVIN HARVICK:  We needed longer to pass the car in front of us, and we had a loose wheel.
 
KERRY THARP:  Kevin, thank you and good luck next weekend at Dover.
    

Chevy Racing–Coca Cola 600–Jimmie Johnson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
COCA-COLA 600
CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST RACE NOTES AND QUOTES
MAY 25, 2014
 
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S PATRIOTIC CHEVROLET SS – WINNER
 
WELCOME BACK TO VICTORY LANE THE LONG NIGHTMARE IS OVER:
“There are more people fretting about things than myself.  I mean what 12 races?  Give me a break.  Obviously it’s great to win and we are very happy to win here especially in the backyard of Hendrick Motorsports, Lowe’s headquarters is just up the road as well.  A huge night, all the executives from Lowe’s are here.  I can’t wait to have a cold beverage with those guys.  Just stoked for the night.  Very good race car.  We raced up front all night long and that last restart let us bunch up to those guys on two (tires) and our four (tires) were able to prevail.”
 
WAS THERE A POINT YOU WERE CONCERNED YOU WOULD NOT BE ABLE TO CATCH (MATT) KENSETH?
“I wasn’t sure what was going to happen.  Chad (Knaus) made me think I could get to the No. 24, but the No. 99 was up there and that is who he was afraid on the radio I wouldn’t be able to run down.  Sure enough we were able to catch a caution and I think the No. 27 and No. 99 had to pit.  When the No. 20 got away I thought ‘man I’m not going to be able to run him down.’  I saw him missing the bottom tight in (Turns) 3 and 4 and I thought ‘okay I’ve got a little something for him.’ And was able to get by with a few laps to go.”
 
YOU NOW HAVE MORE CUP WINS AT CHARLOTTE THAN ANYBODY ELSE – 7 – HOW ABOUT THAT?
“That is amazing.  That is very cool.  This is no easy race track to get around and to beat the greats that were before me I’m very proud of that.”
 
ON HIS RACE:
“It’s great to win, but believe me – and I promise you – all the hype and all the concern and worry, that was elsewhere. That wasn’t in my head; there are plenty of voices in my head, I’m not going to lie! We’ve had great races and we’ve had opportunities there in front us and had stuff taken away. And we’ve had bad races; I have to be honest about that too. I’m so proud of this Hendrick Motorsports-prepared race car, Chad Knaus and the leadership of this race team, and the great, great support from Lowe’s and KOBALT Tools. And do this on Memorial Day… just thank you to all the men and women who served our country.”
 
WHAT WAS THE KEY TONIGHT?
“It was such a long race and so many things going on. The track went in a little bit different direction than I thought it would from a handling setup. Once we got on top of that, we were real competitive. I really think clean air on those restarts were key. I was happy to get by the No. 24 and then the No. 20. I wasn’t sure I was going to get by both of them, but I did and brought this baby home.”
 
WILL PEOPLE START TO FEAR THE NO. 48 AGAIN?
“Yeah, they know we’re awake. In winning, it doesn’t matter who you are. The No. 4 car has had that momentum this year. They’ve been able to go out and execute and show a lot of speed and win. Hopefully this 48 is heading that way and we can get those other people thinking about us.”
 

Chevy Racing–Coca-Cola 600–Kurt Busch

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
COCA-COLA 600
CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER RACE NOTES AND QUOTES
MAY 25, 2014
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 41 HAAS AUTOMATION MADE IN AMERICA CHEVROLET SS – Sidelined with engine issue on Lap 230. Completed a total of 906 laps in his effort to run the Indy 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day.
 
WE KNOW YOU DIDN’T WANT THIS DAY TO END LIKE THIS. WHAT HAPPENED?
“The motor blew. It acted like it swallowed three cylinders all at once, so it was real slow. It’s kind of a shame. It almost symbolizes how tough it’s been on the Haas Automation team. We give it our all, and the way we were clawing our way up there and got a lucky break with the caution one time… I thought we were making good gains on the car.  It was great to race in traffic and to feel the stock car right after driving an IndyCar was a day I’ll never forget. I can’t let the mood here with the car dampen what happened up in Indy today. That was very special and it takes a big team; it takes a team everywhere. Andretti Autosport gave me a top-five car to try to win the Indy 500 with and Stewart-Haas guys gave me a good car today and the motor just went. Sometimes that happens. All in all, I’m very satisfied. I gave it my all. I trained very hard. I had a lot of people helping out. Thanks to Gene Haas, Tony Stewart, Michael Andretti and this whole group. Everyone worked hard on both sides.”
 
TELL US ABOUT YOUR DAY AND WHAT WENT WRONG HERE.
“It was really a lot of fun. A lot of preparation, a lot of hard work and a lot of team involvement on the Andretti side and the Stewart-Haas side. It was a dream come true to run at Indy and post a really good finish there. I can’t let what happened down here dampen the mood. I’m still really in awe of how well we ran at Indy. Those Andretti guys gave me a good car to do it with. Tonight, we were clawing our way up. We got a lucky break with one of the yellows. It was nice to run in the packs and side-by-side and feel that NASCAR on the same day as an IndyCar. The motor just expired. It’s a tough break. It takes a team if you’re going to do 1,100 miles. It’s not just one individual. We came up just short. It really means a lot.”
 
“Our Cup car was running okay. We clawed our way up there and caught a lucky break with one of the yellows. We worked on the car and I thought we were actually you know, right in the mix. Those top 15 guys seemed to separate themselves. We were going to start cracking on the top ten if we could get one more adjustment done to the car. And then we had a problem on pit road. A car came at me perpendicular on pit road and it broke the left rear shock. And so we were hanging on. We were going to muscle it out. And then it’s like the car just swallowed three cylinders all at once. So, the engine let go. Those things happen in motorsports.
 
“It was a good battle though. I was hoping to do 1100 miles today. I can’t let what happened here dampen the mood on what happened up in Indianapolis. But it’s not just one individual. It takes a team. Andretti Autosport guys put me in a good car. Stewart-Haas gives me a great car every week. We just had a monkey on our back down here in running NASCAR this year. That kind of motor failure symbolizes some of the struggles we’ve had.
 
HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE TODAY?
“Today is a memory I’ll have forever. It was a challenge I put forth for myself. I enjoyed it. I soaked it all in up North. I loved racing up in Indy in front of all the Indiana natives and the Hoosiers. They love their speedway up there. That speedway loves them. That’s what I really saw out of that track today. There was a grand stage to stand on and represent NASCAR. We brought her home in sixth place. I didn’t think I had anything for those top five guys. They were racing hard. And those were the top five in that series. They’re strong. They’re tough.
 
“The mood down here we’re not going to let it dampen things. There is still wind in our sails and we’ll still sail on off into the sunset after today.”
 
HOW ARE YOU FEELING?
“I’m feeling good, actually. They way that this race was coming to us, the cooler conditions tonight; you know, my hands are a little sore. My feet are a little sore just from working it. And overall, I can stand here with a smile knowing I gave it my all for six months trying to get to this point.”
 
WOULD YOU DO IT AGAIN?
“I’d love to do it again. And at the same time, you’ve got to do it with quality teams. The teams really can make the big difference in all of this. And I have to thank Andretti and I have to thank Stewart-Haas.
 
 

Chevy Racing–Helio Castroneves Finishes in Second Place to Pace Chevrolet in the 98th Indianapolis 500

Helio Castroneves Finishes in Second Place to Pace Chevrolet in the 98th Indianapolis 500
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (May 25, 2014) – In the second-closest finish in the history the Indianapolis 500, Helio Castroneves just missed becoming only the fourth four-time winner of The Greatest Spectacle in Racing. Castroneves finished in second place – by a mere 0.0600 seconds – to lead six Team Chevy drivers in the top 10 in the 98th Indianapolis 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Sunday.
Castroneves, driver of the No. 3 Pennzoil Ultra Team Penske Chevrolet, led 38 of the 200 laps and was in the lead with just over a lap to go, but was passed by eventual race winner Ryan Hunter-Reay as the two approached the start-finish line to take the white flag for the final lap around the 2½-mile speedway.
“It’s a shame it was so close, but today is Ryan Hunter-Reay’s day,” said Castroneves, who won the Indianapolis 500 in 2001, ’02 and ’09. “I do not take for granted.  I’m extremely happy with the result.  The car worked really well during the race.  The team did a great job during the pit stops.  It was the first time having Roger on the radio.  It was kind of awesome.  We dodged, avoided a few issues out there, incidents, were able to put ourselves in a great position to win.  Unfortunately it wasn’t our day.”
“What a solid effort by Helio Castroneves and Team Penske to come up short by six-hundredths of a second in the Indy 500 today,” said Chris Berube, Chevrolet Racing Program Manager, Verizon IndyCar Series. “Congratulations to Ryan Hunter-Reay for a strong showing and his first Indy 500 win. Team Chevy put up a tremendous battle, but misfortune caught too many Chevy-powered cars. Our focus shifts to next weekend at Detroit where we have two opportunities to redeem ourselves.”
Juan Pablo Montoya (No. 2 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet), returned to the Indianapolis 500 for the first time since winning the event in 2000 and overcame an early pit-road penalty to finish in fifth place. He also registered the fastest lap (225.191 mph on lap 182) of the race.
“Unfortunately, I made a mistake on one of the pit stops when I was resetting the fuel. I pressed the wrong button. We got a penalty for that but we came back,” Montoya said. “I was proud of the way we fought. I don’t think we had anything for the Hunter-Reay or Helio. But I was happy with the Verizon Chevy and it was good to be back in Indy. It was cool to watch them swap the lead back and forth of the final laps. I had a good seat for it; I just wish we were in the middle of it, but we just had too much understeer at the end.”
Sebastien Bourdais (No. 11 Hydroxycut/Mistic KVSH Racing Chevrolet, seventh), Will Power (No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, eighth), Sage Karam (No. 22 Comfort Revolution/Brantley Gilbert Chevrolet, ninth) and JR Hildebrand (No. 21 Preferred Freezer Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet, 10th) also finished in the top 10 for Team Chevy.
Other Chevrolet drivers to finish on the lead lap: Sebastian Saavedra (No. 17 KV AFS Racing Chevrolet), 15th; James Davison (KVRT Always Evolving Racing Chevrolet), 16th; and Ryan Briscoe (NTT Data Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet), 18th.
 
The race was caution-free for the first 149 laps – the longest uninterrupted run in the event since 1976 – but a series of incidents over the final 51 laps eliminated contending Chevrolet drivers, including pole-sitter Ed Carpenter (No. 20 Fuzzy’s Vodka Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet) and former winner Scott Dixon (No. 9 Target Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet). Carpenter was running in the top five when he got caught up in a wreck shortly after a re-start on lap 175. Dixon was running fifth when he spun into the wall on lap 166. Townsend Bell  (No. 6 Robert Graham KV Racing Technology) was also in fifth place when he wrecked with just 10 laps remaining.
The next race on the Verizon IndyCar Series circuit is the Dual in Detroit Chevrolet Belle Isle Detroit Grand Prix weekend on June 2 and 3.
CASTRONEVES POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT:
 
 
An interview with:
 
HELIO CASTRONEVES, NO. 3 PENNZOIL ULTRA PLATINUM CHEVROLET – FINISHED 2ND:
 
 
THE MODERATOR:  We saw the shot of you in the car after the event.  I was reflecting that I saw you in the hotel in Texas after you’d been nipped for the championship a few years ago.  This one looked like one that really stung a great deal.  Tell us about it.
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  First of all, I want to thank Shell-Pennzoil for a great way to start and launch a new product.  I appreciate that.  I want to thank again Roger and Team Penske with all the sponsors.
Great race.  Second place, it’s interesting when second place kind of sucks.  But certainly taking the positive out of this, it was a great race.  I think you guys had a good time.
Second thing, congrats to Andretti Autosports.  Ryan Hunter-Reay, great race.  He did everything he could.  I did everything I could obviously to try to stop.  Definitely unbelievable.
The reason that I was down there, I didn’t know you were watching, to be honest, I was just trying to collect my thoughts and make sure I say the right things (laughter).
I’m glad I did that because, as I said, it’s frustrating to be so close to something that only a few guys did.
But I do not take for granted.  I’m extremely happy with the result.  The car worked really well during the race.  The team did a great job during the pit stops.  It was the first time having Roger on the radio.  It was kind of awesome.
We dodged, avoided a few issues out there, incidents, were able to put ourselves in a great position to win.  Unfortunately, as I said, it wasn’t our day.  It was great to see an American driver winning.
 
THE MODERATOR:  You made a great move on the inside.  Ryan in some ways returned the favors.  Did you show him a move you wish you wouldn’t have shown him?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Now that you say it, I wouldn’t have done it, because the results didn’t show up.
Several battles I had out there.  I guess I show my cards.  I was able to keep them behind.  Ryan, maybe we didn’t have that kind of a battle, and maybe in the end we show it.
But no matter what, coming on the front straight he was able to have a very good run.  I was trying to do everything I could, like I said, guys.  The car, the way it’s designed, is very difficult to keep the guy behind.
I thought it was a very good race.  We did exactly what we needed to do to make it happen.
 
THE MODERATOR:  Questions for Helio Castroneves.
Q.        You said it was frustrating.  To come that close, are you replaying moves that you could have made?  What’s going through your brain?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  To be honest, this is the first time I kind of think through in terms of making the pass.  I didn’t think they going to go for the outside obviously.  That’s why I was really hugging the inside lane.  But, like I said, didn’t have much of a choice.
Like I said, it was a great race.  I tried man, trust me.  I really tried.  We tried to find answers, like I said.  You can’t question destiny.  Today I did everything, my team did everything we possibly could have done to win this race.  So close to win four.
But this is not going to knock us down.  The opposite, it’s going to make us move on to the championship.  This is a great day for championship points.
 
Q.        You said it was great to see an American win.  Is that diplomacy speaking or do you think there’s a benefit to having an American win here?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  No, why would I just say something I haven’t mean it?
It’s great because for several years the series was a f
oreigner up front.  It’s great to see American drivers succeed.  Third was Andretti.  You see the top two are American drivers.  IndyCar Series is showing it’s the right way to go, as well.  I say that in a positive way, and I mean it.
 
Q.        Ryan Hunter-Reay got you on the backstretch.  Seemed like his car went into the grass.  What went through your mind?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  I tried to not leave any room, but he was able to find some room there.  Once you put the nose inside, nothing you can do in terms of blocking, trust me.
I use every inch.  I think both of us used every inch of the track to make sure that both of us — I mean, at the end of the day there is stupid and then there’s bravery.  I think we’re right there on the edge, both of us, really trying.
I’m glad we both come out in a good way.  I’m sad it did not come out the way I wanted.
 
Q.        The decision by IndyCar to red flag the race to ensure a green flag finish, did that catch you by surprise?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  It did.  I believe the amount of debris that was out there, it would probably be a green and white and checkered flag.  I believe it was the right decision, to be honest.  It break the rhythm, but it give everybody a good, clean race.  I think that was definitely the right choice to do.
 
Q.        (No microphone.)
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  That spot, yes (laughter).  I’m back there, no.
Q.        In all your races in the past, have you ever had a race that came down to five or six laps of one guy passing the other back and forth like that?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Oh, man, I did.  I won’t say I didn’t.  I did have some races like that.  Pikes Peak with Gil de Ferran.  I think I had the same thing in Milwaukee.  I did have some races, but nothing for the Indy 500, such an important race.
I think, like I said, it hurts a little bit more than the others because it’s such a big race and you want to win as bad as anybody.
 
In the end of the day, like I said, I’m very happy with the performance of the team.
Q.        Ryan Hunter-Reay said at the end of the race you were using lines you hadn’t used all month.  Can you embellish that a little bit?  You said you left him a little room when you thought you didn’t.
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  I thought I didn’t leave any room, but he found it.  You said it.  We trying to do stuff that normally over 220 miles an hour you don’t do it.  It was a great testament that the car was able to hold on in those type of circumstances.
When you have two experienced drivers battling that, it was a great show.  I thought it was awesome.  I had a great time.  Like I said, I did everything I could to stop Hunter-Reay.
Great job.  Some of the lines out there we never used, and now we know.
 
Q.        Both your teammates at one point were penalized for pit speed violations.  Were you alerted there might be a concern for you on that?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Yeah, they did tell me that.  Like I said, this race is about making less mistakes.  That’s what we did.  Even though you lose a little bit of the time, I was always trying to make sure that I don’t cut that close.
They were able to go back in the top 10 and show that all three cars are looking really strong.
 
Q.        Rick Mears got into a duel with Gordon Johncock in the day, but lost.
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Rick was very happy for me on the radio, and that is worth a lot.  Everyone was excited for a great result.  They saw it.  We were fighting really hard as a group, as a team, the entire race.  We were driving smart, trying to make sure we put ourselves in that position.
It’s amazing, when Rick comes and says something like that, it makes you feel really good.
Now we move on for the next one.
 
Q.        You were so young when you won the first two times.
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  What you talking about, man (laughter)?
 
Q.        Younger than you are today.
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Okay.
 
Q.        The third win was emotional and special for a different set of reasons.  When you come as close as you did today, do you feel maybe you appreciate those wins a little bit more, the fact you were able to win three times?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  I always appreciate those wins.  I never took it for granted.  Like I said, they happened at the right time, at the right moment.
Rick already had those kind of battles as well.  He could have won five, but he won four.
Right now, at this point, I feel that the team, myself, the entire group is eager to make it happen and win another as soon as possible.  That’s just a testament to the series the way it is, because the cars are so close, giving an opportunity for everyone.
At this point it just give me more fuel, literally Shell fuel, to come back here and make it happen.
 
Q.        It seemed like you were having to react a lot to Marco’s advances on you.  Did that play in the back of your mind and prevent you from making a move on Ryan?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Well, the thing is, Marco was doing an extremely good job, especially in the lead.  Sometimes I was trying to send a message like, Take it easy.  But he didn’t want to do it.  I’m like, Okay, man, if you’re not going to do it, not going to play with you anymore – but in a good way, obviously.
You push the button of someone until the guy is desperate.  I thought he was going that way.  But in the end of the race, he knew my line was similar to his.  Hunter-Reay was able to run a different lane.  That’s why we were able to back and forth, back and forth.
That was the only time actually Hunter-Reay and myself were battling for a lead because before I was trying to save a little bit of fuel because I know that saving fuel was more important than anything else.
 
Q.        Was there ever a point on the last lap where you thought you might have him?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Yeah.  I said, I’m going to get him on turn four and this is going to be great.  But suddenly my car wasn’t pulling enough.  Especially because I noticed the wind, I was going against it.  I’m like, Go, go, go.  As soon as I passed the pit entrance, I’m like, This is going to be close.  It was close (laughter).
 
Q.        Does it make the race any more difficult when it starts with so many green flag laps, 115 laps?  Does it make it any more difficult?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Yeah, I mean, especially when we just finished the pits I think.  Yeah, I think we just had the pits.
No, actually, I’m sorry.  It was perfect because we have only a few gallons on the car, so we were able to pit and come back again.  It didn’t affect us.
The one that actually affect a little bit was 170 to go which we still had kind of like half tank in the car.  That was the one that I was kind of upset, start creating some type of mess, because that’s when people get anxious and really trying as hard as they can.
For us it was good.
 
Q.        During the break before the last eight laps, what were you thinking about sitting in the car?  Was it a hard time?  Did it disrupt what you had planned?
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  That’s a very good question.  I wa
s thinking, What am I going to do?  Where I’m going to pass?  How am I going to push?
Again, it wasn’t pulling.  That was my biggest advantage comparing to them.  I did everything I could to have a good start.  Marco came on the outside.  Instead of looking at the guy in the front, I’m trying to deal with Marco, and he was very aggressive.
As soon as I was able to take care of him, now the next target was Hunter-Reay.  I’m like, Okay, man, I’m coming.
THE MODERATOR:  Helio, thank you very much for coming in.
HELIO CASTRONEVES:  Thank you, everyone.  This is a treat.  For us, we’ll move onto the next.
 

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Indianapolis 500

CHEVROLET INDYCAR V6
VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
INDIANAPOLIS 500
POST RACE DRIVER QUOTES
NOTES AND QUOTES
INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
 
INDIANAPOLIS (May 25, 2014)
 
 
DRIVER QUOTES – TEAM CHEVY DRIVERS POST RACE QUOTES:
 
HELIO CASTRONEVES, NO. 3 PENNZOIL ULTRA PLATINUM TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET,  FINISHED 2ND:  TELL US ABOUT THE END THERE : “With all the emotions flowing, I want to say something, but say the right thing.  Finishing second doesn’t take away from the performance that we had.  I wanted to give this to Roger so bad and I was pushing extremely hard and it was a great fight.  I tell you guys what, it was great for TV and I was having a great time, and unfortunately second is good, but it sucks.”
 
HOW DOES IT FEEL TO GO BACK AND FORTH AND NOT GET IT? “So close but so far.  The boys did a great job.  Shell-Pennzoil, AAA, Verizon – just everybody.   We had outstanding pit stops and everything was working well, just the good news is that second sucks but its good points.  So hopefully it wasn’t that bad of a deal.  I think I feel like Marco in 2006.  He lost in the last straightaway and I lost in the last lap.  Congrats to Ryan Hunter-Reay and Andretti Autosport.  They did a great job and I am so upset that I didn’t get the 16th win for Roger.”
 
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 2 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 5TH:  “Unfortunately I made a mistake on one of the pit stops when I was resetting the fuel. I pressed the wrong button. We got a penalty for that but we came back. I was proud of the way we fought. I don’t think we had anything for the (Ryan) Hunter-Reay or Helio (Castroneves). But I was happy with the Verizon Chevy and it was good to be back in Indy. It was cool to watch them swap the lead back and forth of the final laps. I had a good seat for it. I just wish we were in the middle of it, but we just had too much understeer at the end.”
 
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS, NO. 11 HYDROXYCUT/MISTIC E-CIGS – KVSH RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 7TH: “Not a great day, but a good day. I am really happy for the Hydroxycut/Mistic E-Cigs crew. We struggled a bit with the car the whole month, but we stuck with it and got the best out of it today. We didn’t start in the front so it was a challenge to get there.  Overall it was a strong performance, a good result and we got double points. Now we move on to Detroit.”
 
SAGE KARAM, NO. 22 COMFORT REVOLUTION/BRANTLEY GILBERT  DREYER & REINBOLD KINGDOM RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 9TH: Hats off to my team. They did an awesome job. The Dreyer & Reinbold Kingdom boys gave me an awesome car. It was stable all day and I was able to come from the back and get a top 10 – I will take it! 150 laps straight of green-flag racing takes a toll on you. My foot even hurts from the vibrations of keeping it flat for so long. Now I know why they say this is the hardest race to win in the world.  We were looking good, we were running in eighth when a yellow flag came out right when I pitted. We ended up going a lap down and had to get the wave around and go to the back of the filed. It messed up our strategy, if we were out for another lap or so I belie we could have been in the top five. They team did awesome. I had so much fun out there. I am so grateful and blessed to have just run in the Indy 500.”
 
JR HILDEBRAND, NO. 21 PREFERRED FREEZER ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 10TH: “Any day that you are not sitting in victory lane and drinking the milk, it’s a disappointment.  For us, the Preferred Freezer Service Chevy team, it’s frustrating because we had a really good car.  We had an issue with a tire that got us out of the pit sequence.  The car got bad with the tire issue.  I had to pit or I was going to crash. But the car was fast.  We passed a ton of guys today including in the end.  It was nice earlier when we jumped from ninth to third and I was running with Ed. I’m happy for Ryan (Hunter-Reay) and it’s a bummer for Ed.  We had really good cars today.  It was fun to drive the ECR car.  In those first few stints, the car was just a pleasure to drive.  I’m happy the car is in one piece and I think we showed we had some speed today.  We had the pace of the leaders and I ran with all of the those guys at one time today.  As the track got hotter, the other guys were sliding around so much.  So I felt without that early pit stop, we would have been right there too.  We got caught out a little by the late yellow flag.  I had to come back and pass a lot of cars.  To run up front, you need a great equipment and level head on your shoulders.  Frankly, I’m disappointed with tenth.  We had a stronger car.  It was fun to race with the ECR guys.  I would love to get into a full-time deal with this team.  This team is very good.”     
 
SEBASTIAN SAAVEDRA, NO. 17 AFS KV-AFS RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 15TH:
“15th place is very welcomed after a very long day out there. I am very proud of my KV AFS Racing boys because they never gave up. We didn’t have the best car, but we kept fighting and even with a broken wing at the end we still never gave up.  We were able to pick up some great points today, which will help us towards the championship. We will come back stronger next year but from where we started in 32nd, survive and finish 15th was a huge accomplishment.”
 
TOWNSEND BELL, NO. 6 ROBERT GRAHAM – KV RACING TECHNOLOGY CHEVROLET, FINISHED 25TH – CONTACT: “I got hit in that three-wide on the restart in the left rear and earlier in the race with (Tony) Kanaan when I was inside of him and he was squeezing me, I clipped the wall with the left rear. It just knocked it too much out of toe. It was loose all race and then in the end, I was just trying to go for it to see if we could get to the front. You don’t get those chances very often, but unfortunately the left rear just took too much pounding during the day to make it work and it got away from me. I hate to end that way. That was a pretty good hit. I’ll be pretty sore.”
 
ON THE THREE-WIDE RESTART WITH CARPENTER AND HINCHCLIFFE THAT DAMAGED HIS CAR “I thought I was side-by-side with just Ed (Carpenter) in turn one. I didn’t realize someone else, I think it was Hinch maybe, had forced three-wide, which is pretty optimistic. I haven’t seen a replay but I would guess Ed didn’t have anywhere to go. I was giving him room for one car, I didn’t know there was a third one that had ducked in. Nonetheless, I thought we would just hang on there in the top five. We didn’t really have anything to charge to the front, given the way the toe was knocked out.”
 
WHAT’S IT LIKE WATCHING THE END OF THE RACE FROM THE MEDICAL CENTER?
“It just sucks. Should be out there racing with those guys.”
 
TONY KANAAN, NO. 10 TARGET CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 26TH:
“It’s tough really. Our day was pretty much over before it started with the issues we had on pit lane.  When you go that many laps down you simply cannot recover.  I always say this place chooses the winner and unfortunately today she didn’t chose us.”
 
ED CARPENTER, NO. 20 FUZZY’S ULTRA PREMIUM VODKA ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 27TH – CONTACT: “Hinch (James Hinchcliffe) tried to make three wide in turn one with 25 laps to go.  Not a smart move.  It wrecked both of our races.  I told him if he didn’t have a concussion last week that I would have punched in the face.  It wasn’t a green-white-checkered situation.  Of all of the guys out there, I wouldn’t have thought it would be Hinch.  I am pretty good friends with him and those guys at Andretti.  I think he just didn’t use his head right then.
 
SCOTT DIXON, NO. 9 TARGET CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 29TH – CONTACT:&nb
sp; “I just lost it. All of a sudden the car just started sliding and that was it.  I’m just bummed for Chip and all the of the people that work so hard at Team Target. It just wasn’t our day today.”
 
BUDDY LAZIER, NO. 91 WYNN INSTITUTE FOR VISION RESEARCH CHEVROLET, FINISHED 32ND – MECHANICAL:  “The Wynn Vision Research car was really good. We had to make some adjustments like everybody. It seemed like at the end of a run, when tires got worn out, the car came back to us. I was really strong at the end of runs. We were making just slight adjustments that were making the car very happy.  On our first stop, I couldn’t engage the clutch, which also made it tough coming through the gears coming in to the pit. It would stick in each gear. It was eventually the clutch line that put us out. What was really impressive though, back up to speed, the car was strong. We were really able to suck up to the pack ahead of us. So, it hurts that much more when you know the car had potential, and the Wynn Vision Research car had potential.”

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Media Day

CHEVROLET INDYCAR V6
VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
MEDIA DAY QUOTES
INDIANAPOLIS 500
INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
MAY 23, 2014
 
SELECTED QUOTES FROM TEAM CHEVY DRIVERS AT INDIANAPOLIS 500 MEDIA AVAILABILITY:
          
ED CARPENTER, NO. 20 FUZZY’S VODKA ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 1ST
“If anything I’m a little more relaxed this year than last year last – having gone through this last year and having been in this position and the pressure that comes with that, because there is some. That’s probably the biggest thing – being more prepared to manage the whole week leading up to it. For the race, I feel like we are more prepared than last year. Some that is going through this whole thing and having a car that is capable of winning. You learn things through that process. So yeah, I feel prepared but it’s a 500-mile race and a lot of things happen.”

HOW’S YOUR MINDSET COMING IN AND YOUR GUT FEELING KNOWING HOW WELL THIS MONTH HAS GONE?
“There are moments where I feel crazy confident and feel like it is our year. But maybe there’s only been two years here where I didn’t feel like it was my year. Then there were other days where you’re thinking the month has gone really well; something bad must be about to happen. Overall, I feel good and feel pretty relaxed. I think that’s because I’m prepared and my team is prepared. It’s about going out, doing the job and executing and doing it better than 32 others.”

WHERE DO YOU WANT TO BE ON THE LAST LAP?
“I think you have to be in the front. You can certainly win it from elsewhere but odds are you have a better chance of winning from the lead. There is less risk there but a lot of it depends on the day. Last year that may not have been the case but I don’t know if this year’s race will be like that one.”

IS THERE ONE TEAM OR ONE DRIVER YOU’RE LOOKING AT AND SAYING YOU KNOW YOU HAVE TO BEAT THEM?
“I mean Helio is going for his fourth, and it’s a big deal for him. Roger (Penske) and that whole team is hard to beat here, and the Ganassi guys are pros. Andretti’s cars are great. And you can’t count out guys like Josef Newgarden who has been fast. It’s really an amazingly competitive field. It will take a perfect race from someone to get it done, in my opinion.”
 
WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, STARTS 3RD
“To be sure, we’re focused on all the things you have to do right during the race with this particular car. It’s different than it used to be. For one, you have to understand the car in traffic and know that you can attack when the time comes. With 50 to go, you want to be in the top-five. With 20 to go, you want to be in the top-three. With 10 to go, you want to be leading or doing the switch-back with the guy who is second. It’s a big deal to understand where you can run and when.”

IS THE OUTSIDE TOUGHER THAN THE MIDDLE? DOES IT MATTER WHEN YOU GO INTO TURN 1?
“It depends on what happens behind you and with the two guys on the inside of you. If you’re clear on the inside then you’re fine; you just slot in there in place. But you have to be ready to go. When Ed goes, that’s when we can go.”
 
HELIO CASTRONEVES, NO. 3 PENNZOIL ULTRA TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, STARTS 4TH
“This is the biggest race of the season for us. It’s the only race that everyone says, ‘If I can only win one race, this is it.’ I try to embrace it as much as I can. I’m thinking about what we can do. We’ve pretty much at the end of setting up the car. I know the team has done the best job possible. Hopefully it ends well for us Sunday. You’re thinking about a win no matter if it’s four or five and we keep going. A number is part of history. But I’m all the time thinking of what I can do to win this race. Last year it wasn’t enough. Was it strategy or setup or pit stops. We all analyzed a lot of things after last year. Now with the design of this car, we are looking for details that I never saw before. Hopefully those details will make the difference Sunday.”

WHERE DO YOU WANT TO BE ON THE LAST LAP?
“That’s a good question. With this car, I don’t know. I probably will want to make a pass on the last lap. Then trust me, my car is going to be really wide going into the last corners.”

WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM YOUR ROOKIE EXPERIENCE THAT COULD HELP THE FIRST-TIMERS THIS YEAR?
“You have to be patient. It’s not a sprint race; it’s a marathon. To finish, you have to be there in the end otherwise you won’t win. When you make a decision, you have to be certain with your decisions.”

DOES IT GET HARDER EACH YEAR TRYING TO WIN NUMBER FOUR?
“It’s always hard to win, no matter the number. I feel right now that things are so competitive. I also feel that we’ve taken care of ourselves and are prepared better. Every step of the way seems to be going well. I have the best guys and strategists that have won races. I guess our chances should be very high. We’ve put ourselves in good positions in the past but I think the cars have changed so much that it took me time. In 2012, we had some issues but in 2013 we were right there.”
 
JR HILDEBRAND, NO. 21 PREFERRED FREEZER ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 9TH
“This year, I feel more prepared as it is in general. We’ve not been quite as aggressive with the car setup. We both have cars that are capable of losing time on a lousy pit stop, falling back to 20th but working our way back up through the field. I think for Ed, finishing 10th after starting on the pole and having so much speed was majorly disappointing. We’ve focused a lot more on being good on raceday and being able to deal with a variety of possible circumstances.”

HOW IS THE PREPARATION DIFFERENT THIS YEAR?
We’ve worked really hard at finding mechanical grip whereas in years past, we’ve wondered how little downforce can we run and still make it to 30 laps. This year has been more focused on having the best cars for a variety of situations.”
 
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 2 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, STARTS 10TH
“My confidence it OK. We have decent cars. I don’t know what to expect. Things are so close. People are complaining about the same thing. Whoever does the best job on race day will take the trophy home. I don’t think that I’ve won it before. You have to focus on what to do today. I’m looking at videos of the race, how people pass, how they got passed, what worked and what didn’t. If I thought I had the best car, I wouldn’t be working on it. And if I don’t have the best car, I’ll work the hell out of it to make sure I do. I want to win it, and to do that I have to give myself the best chance.”

HAS HELIO BEEN HELPFUL?
“All the information is there. We drive different race lines. I think Rick (Mears) has been a big help. He has a really good eye and understanding. The whole thing about Rick is that he isn’t trying to tell you how to do it. He tells you what he thinks and you can decide whether or not you want to do it or not. But it’s good to have someone you can lean on for support.”
 
SCOTT DIXON, NO. 9 TARGET CHIP GANASSI CHEVROLET, STARTS 11TH
“It’s about track position, for sure. You can’t just lay back. You need to work hard to make sure you maintain in order to be in the top six or eight. But then it gets down to strategy and figuring out what you need to do fuel-wise, who your strongest competitors are and what your car needs – whether you need to trim out or whether you need more downforce. If you leave that stuff too late, you’re going to get waxed at the end.”

WHAT CAN WE TAKE FROM HOW YOU RAN SUNDAY?
“Unfortunately our bad day was Sunday. Generally we found the speed. The race cars have been good, and I think we concentrated too much on the race cars and then when we made the switch to qualifying, we had to back up on a lot of things to get a lot of the speed of it. I feel very comfortabl
e in the car and the team looks pretty good.”
 
TONY KANAAN, NO. 10 TARGET CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 16TH
“I had fooled myself for a couple of years by saying that I’d be OK with the fact that I might not win this race in my career. It changed everything when I crossed the finish line last year. I’m so glad I did. It’s still overwhelming and it’s still really special.”

HOW DO YOU SIZE UP YOUR CHANCES GIVEN HOW QUALIFYING WENT?
“I’m starting with no pressure, which is kind of the way I like it. It’s not an excuse. We had a poor qualifying day. I like my chances. I think the field this year is even tougher than last year. Last year you had nine guys in the field that could win. This year I think it’s double.”

HAVING WON LAST YEAR, WHAT IS YOUR MOTIVATION FOR THIS YEAR?
“My biggest motivation is that I’m driving a car that won this race a few times. Three of my best friends have driven this car – (Alex) Zanardi, Dan (Wheldon) and Dario (Franchitti). Chip (Ganassi) gave me an opportunity this late in my career that doesn’t come around very often. That’s all the motivation I need.”
 
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS, NO. 11 HYDROXYCUT MISTIC KVSH RACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 17TH
“This is my fourth year here. There is a little more pressure. I don’t drive for people so I don’t put pressure on myself because they expect me to do well. For sure, I have pretty big shoes to fill with TK (Tony Kanaan) winning last year and me being in his car from last year. But it is what it is. I feel less pressure because I think we are well-prepared. We’re not where we want to be. We have one more hour of practice but it’s not where you want to approach the race from, but it’s better than not knowing what you’re going to get. Last year we had a good car that was pretty decent in traffic. It wasn’t perfect but we still were capable of being a contender toward the end. Hopefully we can make a little better decision and work our way toward the front. If we can do that, I think we have as good a shot as anyone. The field is so tight and there is no obvious (favorite) that pops out.”
TOWNSEND BELL, NO. 6 ROBERT GRAHAM KV RACING TECHNOLOGY CHEVROLET, STARTS 25TH
“It feels really normal. (Wednesday) I was in Watkins Glen testing a Ferrari and the two are so different that it really doesn’t compare. I did my first 230 mph lap this year, which was a nice milestone. I was supposed to run in clean air and wasn’t looking for a draft but had someone come out of the pits in front of me on a qualifying sim, and I was thinking that I don’t get this chance every day. It was the perfect distance to throw up a big number. I just laid into it, and it was fun to see that number come up.”

WHAT BRINGS YOU BACK EACH YEAR?
“This is the biggest, best and most important thing I do all year. For me, my calendar is defined by the Indy 500, and it’s been that way for several years. Everything I do during the year is a build-up to or a reaction from Indianapolis. I’m thrilled to be back for an eighth Indy 500. We’re starting further back that we would like but we feel very comfortable that we can be competitive Sunday.”
 
CHARLIE KIMBALL, NO. 83 NOVO NORDISK CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 26TH
 
DO YOU EXPECT THE RACE TO BE LIKE LAST YEAR WHERE NOBODY WANTS TO BE IN FRONT FOR TOO LONG?
“You know I’m happy being in front especially lap 200.  That is kind of the goal.  I think we will see how it develops.  No one really knows what the Honda twin turbo is going to be like on mileage.  No one really knows at this boost level what the 2014 Team Chevy is like so it will be interesting to see how those races evolve the fuel mileage races or elements of the fuel mileage race evolves.  But other than that I think the racing itself will be very good.”
 
DOES DETROIT PRESENT ANY UNIQUE CHALLENGES?
“I think Detroit is always a unique challenge especially being in the sort of heart and home of Chevrolet and GM.  Representing Team Chevy it’s an important one a big highlight on the calendar especially coming off the Indianapolis 500.  It’s the only race where you come from a three week event going into it.  To reset and refocus heading into that race itself is very different.  The other thing is the track itself is quite challenging.  It’s fairly low grip, pretty rough, passing areas are better with the track adjustment they made last year – the layout adjustment.  But the race itself is always a very close fought thing.  It’s one of the better races we go to for sure.  It’s one of our highlights.  I’ve gotten a couple of good results there and hopefully we can go back and get a couple of great ones.”
 
TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT TIRE DEGRADATION AND DOWNFORCE LEVELS AT TEXAS AND THE CHALLENGES THAT RACE PRESENTS:
“The Texas Motor Speedway race is always interesting especially the last couple of years with downforce levels the way that the tires, the speed has fallen off throughout the run based on the car sliding around a little more.  If you find a little bit of mechanical grip and have that addition of some downforce I think you are in really good shape.  At the beginning of the run you will be able to run flat and side-by-side with guys, but then you will see the stronger cars come to the front getting in clear air and making the most of that.”
 
JAMES DAVISON, NO. 33 KVRT ALWAYS EVOLVING RACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 28TH
 
DID YOU HAVE AN INDY 500 DRIVER THAT WAS A HERO TO YOU?  DO YOU HAVE A FAVORITE INDY 500 MOMENT?
“I mean Juan Montoya I was a big fan of him when I was younger.  Growing up in Melbourne going both the Grand Prix and then going to the Surface Paradise Champ Car race, Montoya was a big name in my upbringing for sure.  I think favorite Indy 500 moment I think 2012 with (Takumo) Sato going for glory and it ending in a spectacular unexpected way was huge for the race.  It would have been cool to see the first Japanese winner, but at the same time he took a risk he had to take.”
 
WHAT IS THE BEST PIECE OF ADVICE SOMEONE HAS GIVEN YOU ABOUT RUNNING YOUR FIRST INDY 500?
“I would say Townsend Bell has told me just about getting up to speed.  I’ve got to treat it like an airplane.  If anything is not quite right just land the plane and bring it back into the pits. And maybe Rick Mears he said you’ve got to drive the first 100 laps to set yourself up for the second 100 laps something like that.  Very much I’ve got that in my head I’ve got to survive the first 100 laps to be there for the second 100.”
 
WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST CONCERN FOR RACE DAY AS A ROOKIE HERE?
“Probably the marbles just either pushing in dirty air into them or snapping loose.  Either way if you have one of those moments that puts you in there I think that is probably the biggest killer for a rookie race is my thought.  Hopefully it’s not, but I would say the marbles it’s an element that I’ve never experienced in an oval race before having done Indy Lights.  You look at the final after the Freedom 100 last year they are three-wide through Turn 4 relative to the final lap of the 2011 Indy 500 they barely went two-wide and the leader ended up in the wall. I guess that is the ultimate example of the differences between the Freedom 100 and the Indy 500.”
 
WHAT ARE YOUR EXPECTATIONS FOR RACE DAY?
“At minimum it is to finish.  I would love to finish in the top 15 and a top 10 would be like a win for us.  We are the shortest program out of all 33 cars.  I guess me and Buddy Lazier both started on the same day, we both started on Thursday.  Yeah, that would be huge for us to get a top 10.”
 
WHAT WAS THE KEY FOR YOU GETTING HERE TO RUN THIS RACE?
“I did Indy Light back in 2009 and finished runner-up in the championship.  I did it that year with (Jame
s) Hinchcliffe), (Charlie) Kimball and (Sebastian) Saavedra, but I never had that crucial backing to move up.  I persevered I was out of a ride for the last four years and managed to get my first opportunity to run Mid-Ohio and Sonoma last year with Dale Coyne which went very well.  Then once I had some momentum behind me the doors opened up and the biggest part of this deal happening was my sponsor Always Evolving supporting my Indy 500 ride; stepping up their commitment level in motorsports from the World Challenge Series to the Indy 500.”
 
 
RYAN BRISCOE, NO. 8 NTT DATA CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 30TH
 
YOU HAVE ACCOMPLISHED A LOT AND WON A LOT OF RACES DO YOU EVER THINK ABOUT WHAT IT WOULD BE LIKE TO WIN THE INDY 500?
“Yeah definitely I tell you what in all the years I’ve done this race and then someone else wins it and you see them drinking the milk I’ve never been so jealous.  You know in that moment right when you are watching that guy drinking the milk you are just like ‘God I wish that was me.’ I just want it so bad.  Hopefully one day, hopefully this year, hopefully this Sunday, but hopefully I have a few more shots at it too.”
 
TALK ABOUT THE RELATIONSHIP YOU HAVE WITH YOUR TEAMMATES ESPECIALLY WITH TONY (KANAAN):
“With Tony it’s definitely a new relationship and it’s been fun.  He’s extremely fun to work with and open.  I feel like me and Tony both being new on the team we have both had a lot of discussions together about what we are learning and what we have been having to pick up and adapt to.  I feel like we have a lot of common area between the two of us at the moment.  It’s been good bonding time with TK and he’s a lot of fun to have around.”
 
AT WHAT POINT DURING THIS WEEK ARE YOU JUST READY TO DRIVE THE CAR?
“Oh well I always want to drive the car.  I’m looking forward to Carb Day and final practice tomorrow at 11 o’clock.  We have got a lot to get through for that one hour session.  We’ve got plenty of tires.  It’s going to be busy out there.  We had a good run Monday, but we didn’t’ get as much running as we wanted.  When (Kurt) Busch crashed we got a lot of extensive damage to our car running through the debris and that put us down for two hours.  We still had a lot to accomplish and I’m looking forward to getting back out there for that final one hour and really getting the car dialed in.”
 
EXPLAIN THE WEATHER AND ALL THE THINGS YOU HAVE HAD TO DEAL WITH OVER THE COURSE OF THESE 10 DAYS.  DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU ARE A LITTLE BEHIND AT THIS POINT?
“No, you can only compare to who has been on the track around you and it’s the same for everybody.  I feel like we only lost one day with all the rain.  We only lost one day and it wasn’t that bad.  I felt unprepared going into qualifying because we were counting on that Fast Friday to really do our qualifying runs.  We hadn’t done any qualify runs to that point.  Then Friday got rained out and it was Saturday morning for qualifying and I hadn’t done a qualifying run yet.  So if I had any regrets throughout last week it would have been nice to give ourselves a bit better preparation on Thursday for qualifying.  We have ourselves in a bit of a sticky situation starting at the back of the grid for the race.  On the flip side of that we did work a ton with our race set-up.  It’s the best car I’ve ever felt around this place.”
 
SAGE KARAM, NO. 22 COMFORT REVOLUTION/BRANTLEY GILBERT CHEVROLET, STARTS 31ST
 
SAY YOU GO OUT OF THE RACE; OF THE 32 OTHER DRIVERS WHO WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE WIN THIS YEAR?
“Obviously I would love to see one of my teammates pull through like Dixon or Kanaan again.  I think Kanaan is a huge crowd favorite and people would love to see another repeat, but if they can’t definitely my hometown buddy Marco. That would be cool to see a kid from Nazareth (Pennsylvania) win.”
 
HOW HAS YOUR MONTH GOING?
“It’s really good.  It’s been a dream so far.  It’s been really cool, exciting, stressful, a lot of emotions thrown into one.  Just counting down the days now.”
 
YOU MISSED YOUR PROM?
“I did I missed my senior prom at high school back in Nazareth Pennsylvania, but I have an awesome team and they threw one for me yesterday in Garage B1.”
 
WHAT EXACTLY DID THEY DO?
“I had no idea.  My girlfriend she was texting a few people and she was being kind of fishy about it.  I knew something was going on, but I didn’t know what.  Then I came to the track and I walked through the garage and there were a bunch of people there.  I guess it was Hawaiian themed.  A bunch of Hawaiian stuff all over the place and there was a Miss Indiana girl came over and put a crown on me and stuff.  I looked down and I figured out ‘oh this is my prom I guess.’ Then my girlfriend was there in a pretty dress and I actually did my first ever slow dance yesterday in front of news cameras and stuff. It was kind of an under pressure circumstance to slow dance, but I think I killed it.”
 
ARE YOU NERVOUS ABOUT SUNDAY OR EXCITED OR BOTH?
“I’m not nervous right now I’m more excited, but come race day I will be nervous.  Once I get in here to the track and I see the people I will get nervous.  I remember how nervous I was last year for the Freedom (100).  That is going to be magnified by 10 so I’m going to be nervous that day, but right now I’m just taking it all in and excited.”
 
HAVE YOU TAKEN THE TIME TO SIT AND THINK ABOUT HOW SIGNIFICATION THIS IS?
“A little bit not too much I’ve just been so busy doing stuff this month.  It’s not really much time to think.  I’ve been doing things on and off track and just really worried about getting the car ready for the race.  I’m sure once the race is over I will sit back and watch.  I will probably watch it on TV after the race ends and I will reminisce about it for sure.”
 
WHO HAS GIVEN YOU THE MOST ADVICE?
“Dario Franchitti he has been my go to guy of helping me out.  He’s been great so far, just the little things I would never have known if I didn’t have him.  Big hats off to Dario.”
 
SEBASTIAN SAAVEDRA, NO. 17 KV AFSRACING CHEVROLET, STARTS 32ND
 
HOW LONG DID IT TAKE FOR YOU TO GET OVER WHAT HAPPENED AT THE GRAND PRIX AND GET INTO INDY 500 MODE?
“15 minutes.  I’m the kind of guy that it happens, okay what’s next? You cannot let something stick in your head for any longer because if not you won’t be able to get in the car.  It took two days to rebuild the car and I was just eager to get out there.  I just wanted to test the car.  I wanted to see what kind of things we needed to develop to continue making progress.  When you are in this sport you realize that is the kind of job you are into.  It’s not the first and it’s not going to be the last.”
 
DO YOU EXPECT TO SEE DRAFTING BEING AS IMPORTANT AN ASPECT OF THIS RACE AS IT WAS LAST YEAR?
“I’m pretty sure it’s going to be very close to the same if not even better.  Having hotter climate is going to make it even harder just because I think tires are going to degrade quicker.  Engines might fail more, many things that we have not been able to test even because we have been testing on rainy days and very cold days.  The race is going to come into a very new time for all 33 cars.  So it’s going to be very interesting what is going to happen and people are going to enjoy that.”
 
HOW DO YOU PLAN BEING WHERE YOU QUALIFIED?
“It is rough at the same time funny to see how this sport works.  You can be on the top of the world one day and be below it the next.  It’s something as a driver you need to accept it.  As I said be
fore it’s not the first or the last time.  But you just approach it the most professional way.  Focus on what can you keep developing in your car and what you can keep developing in yourself.  It’s a very long race.  We knew that qualifying was not going to be our strength after the big crash that we had. The car was not going to be at its optimal level. I’m very happy with the race car that we have been able to build.  It’s not aerodynamically efficient just because the 80 hours of the other body was destroyed.  Once we are behind people we can start passing very good.”
 
BUDDY LAZIER, NO. 91 WYNN INSTITUTE FOR VISION RESEARCH CHEVROLET, STARTS 33RD
 
TALK ABOUT HOW YOUR PREPARATIONS HAVE BEEN GOING.  YOU GOT A LITTLE BIT OF A LATE START, BUT IT LOOKS LIKE YOU ARE CATCHING UP:
“We did get a late start, but we are catching up.  We are really actually, given our set-backs, we are pretty pleased with the way the progress has taken off.  Our car was never intended to qualify to the front given the late start.  We have been focusing on the race so I think we have actually a pretty clever race set-up.  We are going to do maybe a little more work tomorrow than some other teams because we still are catching up a little bit.  But at this moment I think we are a lot better than our starting position would show.”
 
ARE THE CREW MEMBERS YOU ARE WORKING WITH ARE THEY PEOPLE YOU HAVE WORKED WITH BEFORE? DO YOU HAVE JUST A SMALL CORE GROUP AND YOU BRING OTHERS IN?
“A small core group and we bring others in.  We have a really good engineer this year with David Cripps.  It’s been a really fine addition. The frustrating part is given the nature of some of the other challenges we have had this year we haven’t been able to maximize our potential.  I know our car is capable of so much more and our team is.  We are still in progress.  We are really all about how it goes on race day, but it’s a good crew.  It’s a crew that is capable of so much better than where we are starting, which is exciting for our future.  Our owners that are involved in the race car and our sponsors these are all every one of them new to racing.  That is pretty unusual when you have some 15/16 entities that have never been around the sport.  There are challenges to growing a team like that, but also there is a lot of potential.  We are kind of looking forward to the process.”
 
IS THIS RACE THE GREAT EQUALIZER WHERE THE SMALLER TEAM HAS THE SAME ADVANTAGE AS A BIGGER ONE?
“I would say given the nature of the rules of IndyCar today the cars are remarkably similar and a small team can get it right.  You can have a small team that has success no question about it.  But it is also a bit of a set-back because you don’t have teammates to share information or to work with on practice.  But come race day I mean everybody is out there for themselves and I don’t know that team work on race day is worth anything.  Yeah, I think a small team can succeed and even the little time that we have run as sort of a smaller but smart effort has already shown that you can do this.  We are looking to continue to improve this program and it’s a four or five year program and we are just in the second year.  We are certainly learning from our mistakes and we will certainly get better.”