Category Archives: Chevrolet Racing

Chevy Racing–Michigan–Qualifying Notes

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
PURE MICHIGAN 400
MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER POST QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
AUGUST 16, 2013
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW RACING/SERTA CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED SECOND
ON HIS QUALIFYING LAP:
“If you’re not running on that edge and somebody is going to find that edge and put it right there. It was a really good lap for us and our Furniture Row guys and the way we picked up speed from practice. I was hoping to get a 35.35 and that’s exactly what we ran and we’ll see where that shakes up.”
 
IN REGARDS TO HIS QUALIFYING LAP AND THE QUICK SPEEDS:
“These Generation- 6 cars are incredible.  Each team has their own way of approaching how to find speed and my Furniture Row guys have found speed week in and week out.  Just real proud of them we gained a lot of speed from practice.  I was hoping to run a 35.35, I don’t know what that does for mile and hour and we ran exactly that.  Some guys might beat us which if fine, but we will get a great starting position from there.  Cloud cover is big today and that is adding to a lot of the speed.   Last time we were here I think we qualified and the track temp was in the hundred and teens.  This time around it is around 105.”
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED THIRD
ONE OF SEVERAL CARS THAT ACTUALLY HAD TO WAIT TO GO TO GET THROUGH TECH FIRST. YOU HAD A LEAKY RIGHT FRONT TIRE AND THEN YOU GOT THROUGH TECH. BUT THE CAR DIDN’T LOOK STABLE AT ALL DURING QUALIFYING:
“Yeah, I guess if you’re in the sport long enough, anything and everything will happen to you. I’ve never had a flat rolling through tech before and we had a flat rolling up on the platform and had to put new tires on this thing and come back (laughs). So, with tech going as slow as it did, it put things behind and they’re still trying to get cars through right now. But we had plenty of time to get the car prepared and ready and we were very fast throughout practice today. I definitely had my hands full on that lap. I wasn’t as efficient I guess as I probably should have been and I think I dragged a little speed out of the car but it was a very good lap. And hopefully it will keep us there I the Top 5 and we’ll go racing on Sunday.”
 
JEFF BURTON, NO. 31 CHEERIOS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED FIFTH
ON HIS QUALIFYING LAP:
“When I got out of my car, somebody said it was a good job for an old guy (laughs) and I wonder what they’re saying to him (Mark Martin).  It was a clean day. We were fast in race trim; we were fast in Q-trim. We didn’t quite have the speed that we needed for the pole. I asked for an adjustment before qualifying and got us a little too further than we needed to go, but nonetheless the car has been great all day. Wherever it ends up, we don’t care. It’s been a good day for us.”
 
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED SIXTH
YOU WERE FAST IN PRACTICE, BUT MAYBE THIS WASN’T THE BEST DRAW FOR YOU TODAY:
“No, and I don’t mind the draw. Going out early is not the end of the world. The problem is I finished my lap and it cools down. I got in the car; the track was 12 degrees hotter than when we first practiced. And I’m like okay, and if I can back it down I’ll be the same lap time as practice and that’s a hell of a job. And we did and look at this. It’s probably cooled down 15 to 20 degrees. But we’ll see. It’s the luck of the draw. It should give us a Top 10 start.”
 
ON THE ANNOUNCEMENT THAT HE WON’T BE BACK WITH THE NO. 42 TEAM NEXT YEAR:
“I don’t know where I’m going to wind up. But I’ve got to thank Target because I’ve had an awesome seven years with them here. Everybody on the team has been really good. Chip (Ganassi) and I have a really good relationship. What I’ve been telling people is whatever I’m going to do; I’d better be in a winning car.”
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED SEVENTH
ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN:
“I over-drove the car in Turn 1 in practice and under-drove it in qualifying and you’ve just got to hit it right on the spot. The car’s got a lot of grip. I think the track is even more abrasive than the first trip here. The cars are carrying a little more speed than they were the first trip here in practice and in qualifying. So, there’s a lot of grip and a lot of comfort out there just trying to really hit the lap perfectly and do all those things just right is kind of difficult. But we’re pretty happy with the car. I’d like to have a little more speed but that’s a good lap and the National Guard Youth Foundation car should be good for the race. We’re going to work on it tomorrow and find out.”
 
AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 14 MOBIL 1/BASS PRO SHOPS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 27TH
ON HIS QUALIFYING LAP AND HOW HE IS FEELING IN THE CAR:
“I’m comfortable in the car.  I tried to get a little too much right there.  I got really tight in (turn) one just over drove the car, but trying to get some. Get a good starting spot, but it pays more on Sunday so we will go out there and have a good run Sunday.”
 
IS QUALIFYING WHEN YOU STEP IN ANOTHER PERSONS CAR MORE STRESSFUL THAN ONCE YOU GET IN AND RACE THE CAR?
“Yeah, it is.  It’s just I’m pretty good at qualifying just struggled today just because I over drove it trying to get a little bit more.  The car was there, the car was good it just didn’t turn good enough.”
 
DANICA PATRICK, NO. 10 GODADDY CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 28TH
HOW DOES THIS GEN 6 CAR COMPARE TO THE LAST TIME YOU WERE HERE?
“Everything feels a lot better. The car feels much more stuck out there, which is good. I feel like Hendrick has done a really good job of improving the engine package as well. So, I didn’t really get what I wanted there. I thought we’d have gone quicker. But it is what it is. We tend to race a lot better than we qualify so, I was just hoping we would do all right in qualifying here because we had a nice practice, but we’ll just have to see where it ends up.”
 
WHERE DID YOU MISS A LITTLE BIT DURING THAT QUALIFYING LAP?
“I don’t know. I felt really good. I was surprised I didn’t go quicker.”
 
JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 ADVIL CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 29TH
ON HIS QUALIFYING RUN: 
“We didn’t take a qualifying run, obviously. We broke an engine earlier and thank goodness we have Advil on our car because everybody had a headache. So take Advil and feel better. The speeds are so quick, the cars are traveling more than ever and we just had the splitter on the ground and you could literally smell it when I went on my get up to speed lap. It’s like wow; it’s going to be a tough lap here. It wasn’t bad. The grip of the car was actually really good, which is encouraging. It just didn’t turn good enough just from the front end being on the ground so much.”
 

Chevy Racing–Michigan–Danica Patrick

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
PURE MICHIGAN 400
MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 16, 2013
 
DANICA PATRICK, NO. 10 GODADDY.COM CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Michigan International Speedway, and discussed the No. 14 car, racing at Michigan and other topics. Full transcript:
 
HAVE YOU TALKED WITH TONY STEWART?
“Not since Ricky (Stenhouse) and I went and saw him in the hospital.  I haven’t talked to him, but have texted with him a little bit.  I’ve heard he’s kind of getting back in the game you know.  He wants to know everything that’s going on.  He wants to be able to hear what we’re doing.  He’s off the meds and back to life again.”
 
ARE YOU HAPPY TO HAVE AUSTIN DILLON IN THE NO. 14 CAR THIS WEEKEND?
“Yeah, it’s nice to have a teammate that you know.  Obviously, running with Austin (Dillon) in the Nationwide Series, I know him.  I love getting other drivers perspectives on the cars and just kind of hearing the way they describe things.  I think it will be good for the team.  He’s young, he’s got fire and he wants to do it.  I think he will be a good addition for however long it works out for.”
 
HOW DOES THE TRACK FEEL TODAY?
“It feels like a smooth track.  We came here earlier in the year and I struggled and didn’t feel very comfortable, but we worked really, really hard on trying to get a car that was more consistent and predictable and felt better.  Actually, we kind of started working towards it here in the race and by the end of the race I felt really good.  We had double-stinted the left sides and it was the best the car had felt.  We made a lot of improvements and have continued to make improvements since we were here last.  When I first went out on the track, I thought, ‘Man, this feels like a whole different car.’  White literally it probably is, it just feels so much better than the last time.”
 
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE SPEEDS?
“I was thinking about that because we were talking about the normal pick up from practice to qualifying and that qualifying pole was slower than what quite a few people have run.  That just means in my head that all the teams have had time to work with this new car, make it better, make improvements and I think that by seeing the speeds come up from the last time, it’s a result of how hard the teams have been working to make the cars better.  We work our butts off and we do a lot of testing and it’s nice when it shows.”
 
DO THESE CARS FEEL FAST TO YOU?
“I think any car that feels comfortable and is good feels like a moderate speed and any car that is not working right and doesn’t feel good, those are the cars that feel like you’re going at warp speed.  I’ve had both in both conditions.  Gosh, I can remember back in the IndyCar days here being so loose one time and feeling like I was doing 160 miles per hour instead of 220 or whatever we were doing.  It all depends on the balance of the car.  It’s all relative.  Let’s face it, a smaller percentage when you’re working up in the 200s.”
 
DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU PICKED UP WHERE YOU LEFT OFF HERE IN JUNE?
“That’s what I was just saying is it feels so much better than when we were here last and that’s just a result of (Tony) Gibson (crew chief) and myself and the engineers working together and finding a setup that’s more comfortable for me right off the bat and then also working on the car itself and making improvements there.  It feels better than when we were here last.”
 
WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES THAT YOUNG DRIVERS MIGHT FACE COMING FROM NATIONWIDE OR OTHER SERIES INTO SPRINT CUP REGARDING EXPECTATIONS?
“I think that it’s always difficult as a driver to say the words like my goal is top-20.  It’s not what it needs to be at some point.  While you’re ultimate goal is to win and if the opportunity presents itself, you’ll be ready, you still have to set realistic goals along the way to keep yourself upbeat and to keep everybody else upbeat.  That’s been something I’ve dealt with this year.  I think coming off of last year I expected to do a little bit better and I let things get me frustrated and I let my spot on the track kind of take me out of my game a little bit I think.  I pushed the limits a little bit too much and we took that week off and I just kind of looked at the season so far and said, ‘Man, every time I try so hard something bad happens and every time I just take whatever the car will give me and whatever the race will give me they are much better days.’  It’s just figuring out you yourself what makes you work and what makes you get the best results possible.  For some it might be to get fired up and for others it might be just relax and let the race come to you.  It’s just figuring that out.  Everybody’s different.”
 
HOW MUCH DOES THAT FRUSTRATION CARRYOVER TO THE REST OF THE TEAM?
“When you’re in the middle of being frustrated and wanting more and having some tough days, you don’t think that you’re making anyone mad, but we were testing at Nashville this weekend and we were just sitting there having lunch and one of my guys said, ‘I don’t know what you’ve been doing the last few weeks, but it’s been a noticeable difference in you and everything seems to be going so much better and everybody notices and appreciates it.’  Let it be a lesson that if you think something is going on, it is.”
 
DID IT SURPRISE YOU THAT THEY SAID THAT?
“No, no.  I think the best relationship you can have is being honest with your guys and with people that you work with.  I don’t think so because being the one in the middle of it, to actually come to the realization that you’re trying too hard probably means you’re trying too hard in a pretty obvious way.  Like I said, you have to figure that out yourself, you can’t tell somebody to relax.  You want someone to push hard so you can’t just tell them to back off.  They have to figure it out themselves.”
 
HOW IMPORTANT ARE TIRES TO RACING?
“It’s the chicken and the egg.  If we didn’t have tires, you can’t go.  They’re very important of course.  Tires are very important and most importantly here at Michigan there’s a lot of strategies to tires here because it’s repave and very smooth and the tires have a lot of longevity.  You can play a lot of different strategies with them, which I think makes the racing more interesting.”
 
WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT BRISTOL?
“I’ve liked Bristol since I went there the first time.  I remember when I stepped foot onto that track, it was the day before, it was load in day and I looked out there and you’re standing on the straightaway, but it sure seems like a corner.  It’s a very cool track and a spectacle for the fans.  I feel like that is always the one that everyone says, ‘I want to come see the Bristol night race.’  I feel like the attendance lately has been great, the coverage has been great of NASCAR and I think we’ll get a lot of people out there.”
 

Chevy Racing–Michigan–Juan Pablo Montoya

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
PURE MICHIGAN 400
MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 16, 2013
 
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media and discussed the recent announcement that he will not be returning to Earnhardt Ganassi Racing in 2014 and other topics.  Full Transcript:
 
HOW DID THIS WHOLE DECISION COME DOWN?  HOW DID YOU FIND OUT?
“Well to be honest with you I think I knew from quite a while ago to be honest with you.  They had an option earlier in the year and they didn’t take it so I kind of knew it was going to be something different next year and that’s it.  They confirmed it this week and that was it.”
 
WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO DO NEXT YEAR?
“I don’t know.  The only thing I said already is I want to be in a winning car.  Whatever else I do, don’t know what I’m going to do, but I want to make sure I’m in a winning car.  It was a fun seven years with the Target car and Chip (Ganassi) and everything. We worked really hard and we had our up’s our down’s, but at the end of the day I want to win races.  He wants to win races and we want to try something different.”
 
COULD IT BE ANYTHING WITH CHIP (GANASSI) IN INDYCAR OR GRAND-AM?
“It could be with Chip it could be with somebody else.  You know with Chip something we said is number one is make sure we keep our friendship.  We are really good friends.  We have a good relationship and that was it.  It’s not that bad.”
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON SAID IT TAKES FIVE YEARS TO LEARN CUP.  AFTER FIVE YEARS IT’S THE MAGIC BETWEEN THE CREW CHIEF AND THE DRIVER.  DO YOU THINK WE WILL LOSE YOU OUT OF NASCAR AND HOW MUCH DO YOU THINK IT WAS LEARNING AND HOW MUCH OF IT’S TEAM?
“A lot of it was learning at the beginning, but I thought I picked it up pretty well.  I run really well.  I made the Chase in my third year.  One of the hardest things and I just said it, it’s the amount of changes.  There was never any consistency and I think that was one of the hardest things.  It wasn’t because they were doing it on purpose they were just trying new things and trying to make things better.  The problem is every time you make changes it makes it harder.”
 
ARE WE GOING TO LOSE YOU OUT OF NASCAR MAYBE?
“I don’t know.  As I said the number one priority for me is trying to be in a winning car.”
 
IS GOING BACK TO INDYCAR IS THAT AN OPTION FOR YOU?
“I don’t know we will see.”
 
HAVE YOU TALKED TO OTHER NASCAR OWNERS YET?
“Oh ages ago.”
 
I KNOW YOU HAD TALKED TO SOME IN THE PAST…
“No I mean ages ago this year as well. I’ve been looking at all my options for a while.  I wanted to make sure we had the door open to stay at Ganassi if the opportunity was here.  I have a really good… a part from the relationship with Target, the relationship with Chevy is really important to me.  It’s good.  Right now it’s actually fun.  As I said yesterday I did an interview yesterday and I said you know I’m really good friends with everybody on this team.  They mean the world to me and we’ve still got 14 races to go.  I mean we still have a lot of racing to go.  Number one thing is to keep enjoying racing and go at it every week.”
 
WHERE DOES YOUR HEART LAY RIGHT NOW WHAT ARE YOU FEELING INSIDE?
“I mean at the beginning I was really disappointed, but we kind of knew it.  From one side you knew it was going to happen, the other side, you know it’s not a bad thing.  We wanted to win races and it hasn’t happened.  We’ve been close this year, but you know what I mean for one reason or another it hasn’t really happened.  I think a change will be good for him. It will be a good change for me.  I think it will be fun.”
 
IN SOME WAYS DOES THIS TAKE SOME PRESSURE OFF FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR TO JUST KIND OF GO OUT AND LET IT HANG OUT NOW?
“Well I kind of do that every week anyway so that doesn’t change.”
 
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR AN INDYCAR RIDE?
“I have talked to a lot of people put it that way.  I don’t want to be specific about anybody.  I know some people are interested and I just want to make sure whatever I do as I told you I have an opportunity to win races.  I grew up winning and I’ve won at everything.  I won some races here, but I miss dominating.”
 
WHAT DO YOU THINK THE CHANCES ARE YOU WILL BE IN THIS GARAGE NEXT YEAR?
“I don’t know we will see.”
 
WHY DO YOU SAY CHANGE IS GOOD FOR YOU?
“Well you know what I mean we have been together for seven years and we had our up’s we had our down’s and I don’t know.  I think if we keep going and the results don’t come we end up hating each other and it could be worse.  We are really good friends.  We respect each other as boss and driver and as friends as well.  I think we want to make sure we keep it that way.”
 
DO YOU UNDERSTAND WHY THE DECISION WAS MADE?
“I mean he has made a lot of changes through the years.  A lot of changes for him were logical for me were not.  It is what it is.  He feels we need to do something different and that’s it.”
 
WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU NEED TO GO TO THE NEXT LEVEL? 
“A winning car.  We had winning cars here a few weeks and I blew some, they blew some and it’s clicked, but it hasn’t clicked as much as it needs to click.”
 
DO YOU HAVE ANY POTENTIAL SPONSORS THAT YOU MIGHT BE ABLE TO TAKE TO A TEAM AT THIS POINT?
“No, you know what I mean at the moment I’m just taking my time looking at the options and I want to make sure I make the right decision.”
 
DO YOU THINK YOU COULD GO TO INDYCAR?  IT’S BEEN SUCH A LONG TIME AND TECHNOLOGY HAS CHANGED.  YOU NEVER EXPRESSED MUCH INTEREST…
“Well I was committed to NASCAR you know what I mean and when you are committed to NASCAR you want to make sure your head is in NASCAR.  My heart always has been in open wheel.  I had a lot of fun in NASCAR and you know we will see.”
 
I JUST WONDER IF THE TECHNOLOGY, IT’S BEEN SUCH A LONG TIME…
“Oh technology in IndyCar is probably not as advanced as it was in Formula 1.  You know what I mean… not to worry.”
 
DO YOU KNOW IF PART OF THIS WAS TARGET OR IF TARGET WAS PART OF THE DECISION?
“I don’t know and I don’t ask you know what I mean.  It’s what it is whether it’s Target or Chip (Ganssi) it is what it is.”
 
WHEN YOU LOOK BACK WILL YOU CONSIDER THIS WHOLE THING A DISAPPOINTMENT?
“Oh no, I had a great seven years.  I learned a lot.  Whether you believe it or not I became a better race car driver.  It’s funny because you know we do the GRAND-AM every year and the more I do this plus my experience in open wheel the better I do.  The wiser you become you know what I mean.  My speed I believe is the same or better and I’m just a lot wiser making decisions.  I think it’s been a good experience.”
 
WITH THE SIZE OF YOUR FAMILY AND THE AGES THE KIDS ARE NOW WOULD A LIGHTER SCHEDULE PERHAPS INDYCAR BE THE WAY TO GO?
“Number one choice winning car then we will worry about the rest.”  

Chevy Racing–Michigan–Jimmie Johnson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
PURE MICHIGAN 400
MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 16, 2013
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS  met with members of the media and discussed the challenge of the Michigan track, what it would mean to win here, success in the Nationwide Series versus the Cup Series, and more. FULL TRANSCRIPT:
 
TALK ABOUT RACING AT MICHIGAN THIS WEEKEND AND THE APPROACHING CHASE:
“Yes, time is going by pretty quick. The Chase is right around the corner. We’re excited to be here. The way the No. 48 ran and all of Hendrick Motorsports ran here in the Spring, we’ve all been excited to come back and hopefully have that pace and lead the race and hopefully get one of the cars in Victory Lane. I certainly want to get the No. 48 to Victory Lane. We’ve tried a lot of years now and have been very close here, but haven’t been able to pull that off. And we had issues that kept all four cars out of great finishes in the Spring race and if we can avoid the varying issues that took place, I think we stand a really good chance of getting into Victory Lane.”
 
BECAUSE YOU’VE NOT HAD TO FOCUS ON TRYING TO GET IN THE CHASE THIS YEAR, AND IN OTHER YEARS, HAVE YOU LEARNED ANYTHING?
“We’ve worked really hard to maintain the same mindset. There was a year where we started some radical testing and concepts with the car and got off base and entered the Chase pretty weak and not up to par where we wanted to be. So, I think we learned that lesson. I wanted to say that was in 2007 or somewhere in there. But, since then, we really want to obviously perform as good as we can week in and week out. I think there’s a lot in that. And the way things are anymore, especially with the new car, you have to bring something new to the track each week and keep evolving. So, the mindset that we started the year with is really where we’re at now. We’re not making a stronger effort to try different things with the race car and the set-up. We are fortunate to have a lot of test sessions left. We just tested in New Hampshire and we’re going to test at Richmond next week. We have a few more out there that we’ll try to use to try to be prepared for the Chase. But, honestly, there hasn’t been a different mindset this year. We’ve had pace. We’re proud of that. We need to execute. We’ve left some wins on the table and we need to not do that. But, we’ve got to keep inching forward. We can’t sit still. And we’ll try to carry that momentum right into the start of the Chase.”
 
THIS TRACK (MIS) HAS BEEN NAMED ‘TRACK OF THE YEAR’ IN TERMS OF FAN EXPERIENCES. WHAT DO THE DRIVERS THINK OF IT?
“This track has always been high on the drivers’ list. The repave brought us back down to a pretty narrow racing groove. And in time, we know that will change and we can start racing around the top of the race track once again. The asphalt is too good these days. They just put down such good stuff that  it doesn’t wear out or age anytime quick and pins us down to a narrower lane. But I love coming here. This track has worked very well with myself and the young fans; we have a package that we do here with them and I go out and spend some time with the kids. So, I’m very proud of what this race track does with the fans.”
 
TALK ABOUT THE WINDWARD DREAM CRUISE YESTERDAY. WHAT WERE YOU DRIVING AND HOW WAS THAT?  ALSO TALK ABOUT GOING TO BRISTOL NEXT WEEK AND THE CHALLENGES OF GETTING AROUND THAT TRACK:
“At Bristol, we run well. We are probably a Top 3 or Top 5 car there in most circumstances. We were able to get a win once and we definitely want to be better. Not that I’m content with running in the Top 3 or Top 5, but from where I started off, in being a lap down 50 laps in and running 20th all the time there (laughs), I now enjoy going to Bristol. I’m excited to go there. For the longest time, I dreaded going there. I loved watching the races there and being a fan, but in the car was pretty tough on me. So, we certainly hope to be better and we want to go to Victory Lane again.
 
“At the Windward Dream Cruise, I drove my ’67 Camaro that I built in ’05. It’s been through a few modifications since then. But it has the LS9 engine in it right now and the C5 suspension under it with the ’67 body on it. So it’s a good driving car. It has lots and lots of power and it also turns and stops. So, it’s a fun car to drive. I was able to lay down a little rubber yesterday and drift the car around a little bit and not get pulled over and get arrested, so that was fun.”
 
THIS IS ABOUT THE ONLY TRACK WHERE YOU’VE BEEN TO MORE THAN A DOZEN TIMES AND HAVEN’T WON. DO YOU KEEP THAT CHECK LIST OF PLACES WHERE YOU HAVE AND HAVEN’T WON? WHAT IS IT ABOUT THIS PLACE THAT HAS KEPT YOU FROM WINNING?
“Yeah, I do pay attention to the tracks I haven’t won at. It’s more on the front side going to the event and building excitement about racing at the track and wanting to win. When the race starts, it doesn’t go through my mind at that point. It has when opportunity slips by, especially here. We’ve been so close that it certainly enters my mind at that point.
 
“But we’ve had varying issues here and those only consistent one, I would say, has been fuel mileage. We’ve worked hard to improve the car. And then I’ve worked real hard on my driving style to get better fuel mileage here. It seems like we’ve covered that gap, but we’ve had a mechanical or two. We blew a tire this last Spring when we were here. So, there have been a lot of reasons why. But I really look forward to the day I’m able to pull into Victory Lane over here.”
 
DO YOU THINK YOU ARE AN ANOMALY BECAUSE YOU’VE HAD SO MUCH MORE SUCCESS AT THE HIGHER CUP LEVEL (MORE THAN AT NATIONWIDE LEVEL). DO YOU REMEMBER WHAT CLICKED FOR YOU WHEN YOU MOVED UP?
“Yeah, probably. I look at (Tony) Stewart’s Nationwide career and I think our paths were kind of similar where we didn’t have great success in Nationwide. For me, when I started in Cup, that was my fifth year ever in a stock car. So I think I was really green in my Nationwide days; not only as a rookie in the sport and the cars and the tracks, but in stock cars in general.  I had two years in ASA prior to my first year of Nationwide. So, I think I was just behind. And the right circumstances came together being with Hendrick and all of that and my maturity level in the car and understanding everything came along and I kind of peaked at the right time. But when I look at the Nationwide Series today, and I haven’t driven one of those cars in a while, there is great benefit in being in the series and to learn the tracks and kind of learn the basics and fundamentals of adjustments on the car. But I think you can get trapped in those cars too long and develop habits that don’t work in the Cup Series. The Cup cars have so much more power. And you have to drive them so differently that I think it can do some damage if you stayed too long in the Nationwide Series.
 
INAUDIBLE:
“I agree. And you don’t know until you get in there. And when you look at Kyle’s background (reference Kyle Larson) and he’s driving cars with far more power than grip, I think the Cup car will suit his style far better than a Nationwide car. But you do need that foundation of knowing these tracks because when we show up, our fastest lap we run all weekend will probably be our first lap right now. And if Kyle Larson wants to go to Cup next year, that’s tough to do. He’s going to need the whole session to get where he needs to and then you’re five or six adjustments behind the fast guys. And that’s when the Nationwide Series is so good. You can learn the tracks and understand some things there. But you’ve just got to be careful to not stay there too long.”
 
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE GEN 6 CAR AND WHY YOU HAVE BEEN SO SUCCESSFUL THIS YEAR? WHAT WOULD A WIN AT MICHIGAN MEAN TO YOU?
“Th
e Gen 6 car, I think Hendrick does a very good job in responding to rules changes or rules that are put out or new cars or whatever it may be. And not always, but most times, we get on top of stuff faster than others. I think that’s been a big benefit to us and plays into the Gen 6 car and the success that we’ve had. A win here would be awesome. It would be a huge victory to win here; especially with how close I’ve been. We’ve had at least five or six that could have happened.”
 
WHAT DO YOU FIND TO BE SO TOUGH AT THIS MICHIGAN TRACK?
“The track is so different than it’s been in the past that you’ve got to maintain track position. That’s really the key. In the Spring race, we didn’t qualify well but we were able to get to the front. And then through pit strategy, we lost track position a few times and were able to recover. But in the end, I ran the right front (tire) off the car and blew a tire and hit the wall (laughs). So, I think the secret to winning here really falls into the hands of the engineer and the crew chief in what decisions they make late in the race to maintain track position. I think that’s where the key is. For the driver, when you’re out there practicing, you’re going so fast around here and you’re usually running by yourself, that it’s easy to set the car up to run in clean air. And you don’t always get that luxury. So being aware, through practice sessions and even trying to run a little bit in traffic to understand the balance shift, is going to be key today and tomorrow.”
 
WERE YOU SURPRISED WHEN YOU HEARD THE JUAN PABLO MONTOYA NEWS THIS WEEK?
“A little bit. Juan has been with Ganassi for so long that it did catch me off guard. I’m used to seeing Ganassi winning races and running up front through the open wheel world and I would imagine there would be a shake-up at Ganassi through the off-season. But that did catch me off-guard. They’ve been through some crew chiefs. If I look at the evolution of things, you usually go through a couple of crew chiefs and a driver change and that’s kind of what’s going on. So, yes; shocked, but the more I think about it I feel like there was some change coming there.”
 
WHAT IS IT THAT IS SO DIFFICULT TO MAKE THE TRANSITION FROM OTHER RACING DISCIPLINES TO THE NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES?
“For me, I feel like you need five years to really know the tracks and the cars and that was really my evolution through the ASA racing through Nationwide and then Cup. So, Juan (Montoya) is at that seven or eight year mark. You kind of get to a spot where you’ve got the experience and there are many reasons why things might not work and I firmly believe in the relationship between the driver and the crew chief is where the magic lies; especially once you’re past that five year mark. One thing that I don’t have first-hand experience with is driving a high downforce car. But in talking with Juan and in talking with Dario (Franchitti) and even Danica (Patrick), it is such a different world in a high-downforce car than in what our vehicles do.
 
“So, there are challenges there that I don’t understand and sensations that I don’t get and understand. And through all that, I’ve been kind of curious to watch the driver go from stock cars into open wheel. Would it be as difficult or would it be easier for a driver to go to a low downforce situation to a high downforce situation and where that would be. But either way I guess my situation isn’t exactly true, but when you race against people that started off thinking sedan-style vehicles at a young age, that’s all they’ve known their whole life, I think there is something in that.
 
“And I say that, and that’s not my situation. But I want to believe there’s something in that too, where running in open wheel vehicles his whole life, and the same for Dario or Danica, there are just thing that are engrained in their habits and the way they drive that may not apply to what a stock car needs.”
 
HOW CAN TESTING THE GEN 6 CAR HELP YOU GET AN ADVANTAGE OVER THE OTHER TEAMS?
“We spend so much time trying to get the cars in an ideal aero situation. The faster the car goes, the more importance aero plays. We are breaking track records everywhere we go. The speeds are up and the aero balance is more and more important. And we’re going to great lengths to get the right attitude in the car and the proper downforce and maximize the downforce that’s available. That’s really where we’re at right now. So as long as we can keep working in those areas, and I think that leads to the troubles that we have on some tracks with passing because you’re so aero-dependant that when you lose the aero assistance and you’re just sitting on the mechanical set-up of the car that’s underneath it, the car isn’t ideal at that point. But that’s the world we live in. Aero is everything.”
 
 

Chevy Racing–Michigan–Kurt Busch

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
PURE MICHIGAN 400
MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 16, 2013
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW RACING/SERTA CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Michigan International Speedway and discussed racing at Michigan this weekend, his potential plans for 2014 and many other topics.  Full Transcript:
 
YOU’VE HAD TWO WINS HERE AND ARE 11TH IN POINTS, HOW ARE YOU FEELING ABOUT THE WEEKEND AND HOPEFULLY GET ANOTHER WIN HERE?
“Yeah, Michigan has been real good or real bad. So, if you go by the law of averages I hope this time around is pretty good. We’ve had some speed in practice; we just haven’t translated that into the race conditions. This time around we hope we can parallel what we did at Pocono a couple weeks ago, which was to improve and find more comfort in the car.”
 
WITH THE NO. 42 BEING OPEN FOR SURE NOW DOES THAT CHANGE AS FAR AS THE PEOPLE THAT YOU’RE TALKING TO ABOUT NEXT YEAR? SHOULD WE COUNT YOU AS A CANDIDATE FOR THAT RIDE?
“It hasn’t changed anything, I’m good friends with Felix Sabates and I know Chip real well and the whole gang, Max Jones, Steve Lauletta. They came up with that decision not based off any of the talks that I’ve had with them but it is a potential opportunity that’s for sure.”
 
ARE YOU ANY CLOSER? HAVE YOU MADE PROGRESS WITH WHAT YOU ARE GOING TO DO NEXT YEAR OR HAVE YOU PUT ALL THAT ON THE BACKBURNER WHILE TRYING TO MAKE THE CHASE?
“Well, the focus is making the chase and we have four weeks to go and we’re in great position. It’s been neat to feel the energy from the team. We spent a week in Colorado meeting with Denver media and they’ve adopted us as like a fifth sports entity for that town. It’s been really neat. They talk Broncos. They talk Rockies. And now they’re talking us. So, it’s cool to have talks with Furniture Row about what we can do in 2014 and beyond. The Ganassi thing came up and other phone calls have happened. Nothing’s going to change. We’re just still really focused on the Chase and what we can do in these next four weeks together.”
 
ANY THOUGHTS ON THE TRACKS IN THE FOUR WEEKS BEFORE THE CHASE START?
“The next four weeks as far as the tracks, I’m really looking forward to Bristol of course. I’ve won it three times at Atlanta. Richmond we did really well there in the spring. So, I look at this one as the toughest out of the next four weeks. This week here at Michigan. If we get through this, then I think we’ve got a really good shot at things.”
 
CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THROWING THE FIRST PITCH AT THE COLORADO ROCKIES THE OTHER DAY? YOU NAILED IT:
“It was fun. It was the first time I went into the stretch position for throwing out the first pitch. I checked the runner over there on first to liven it up a little bit. It was cool. The Rockies have whoever throws out the first pitch do an autograph session afterwards. So a lot of the fans were lined up. A lot of them said, “Good pitch.” And one guy that looked like a full on baseball guy says, ‘You know I’m going to have to call a walk on you. You looked at first base too long. You delayed on your throw.’ I thought that was hilarious to joke around with some of the fans about the first pitch. Yeah, it was a good throw. It was a strike.”
 
WE GO TO BRISTOL NEXT WEEK, HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT GOING THERE AND THE CHALLENGES WE GET AROUND THAT TRACK?
“You know it’s exciting to go to that track. Just as a fan and as a spectator. The team owners get excited, the drivers do. I love that place. It couldn’t come at a better time on the schedule for us.”
 
ELEVEN OF YOUR TOP-10’S HAVE COME AT THE NEXT FOUR TRACKS, DOES THAT GIVE YOU A LOT OF CONFIDENCE AND A BOOST GOING INTO THE LAST STRETCH RIGHT BEFORE THE CHASE?
“Yes and no. It’s all about what you’ve done lately and I haven’t been to Victory Lane in a long while. It’s good to have good tracks coming up. A) For consistency and For trying to break through and get a win. You always want your strong tracks to be when you need them.”

Chevy Racing–Michigan–Austin Dillon

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
PURE MICHIGAN 400
MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 16, 2013
 
AUSTIN DILLON, INTERIM DRIVER FOR TONY STEWART, NO. 14 MOBIL 1/BASS PRO SHOPS CHEVROLET SS AND GREG ZIPADELLI, COMPETITION DIRECTOR AT STEWART-HAAS RACING, met with members of the media at Michigan International Speedway and discussed expectations for the race weekend, updates on Tony Stewart and much more.  Full Transcript:
 
HOW DOES IT FEEL BEING INTRODUCED AS THE DRIVER OF THE NO. 14 MOBIL 1/BASS PRO SHOPS CHEVROLET?
 
AUSTIN DILLON:  “It’s pretty exciting.  We all know who drives it on a regular basis and that’s one of my heroes, Tony Stewart.  I’m super excited to be representing their sponsors, Mobil 1 and Bass Pro Shops and just looking forward to this whole weekend.  We had a good test yesterday with our Nationwide car and I’m really excited to be working with Steve Addington (NSCS crew chief) and Greg (Zipadelli, competition director) and hopefully putting together a great run for both of our teams this weekend.”
 
WHAT IS THE UPDATE FROM STEWART-HAAS RACING AND WHAT IS IT LIKE BEING AT MICHIGAN WITH AUSTIN DILLON THIS WEEKEND?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “Like we said last week, we’re taking one week at a time and trying to do the best we can.  Austin (Dillon) had run here before, ran here in the spring and did a good job.  He was willing to come here today and give us 100 percent because they had the test day yesterday, which kind of really made the difference as far as making this work for us.  With that being said, we’re certainly excited about getting on the race track, getting all this stuff kind of behind us and doing the best we can this weekend.”
 
WOULD IT BE EASIER TO HAVE ONE DRIVER FOR ALL THE RACES TONY STEWART WILL MISS RATHER THAN CHANGING DRIVERS EACH WEEKEND?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “There’s pros and cons to it.  We’re certainly looking at trying probably in the next three to four days, before we get to Bristol everything will be ironed out for the rest of the year.  We’ve had hurdles that we’ve had to get through so we are looking at that and we’re working on that.  It will be two drivers probably the rest of the year just to do exactly what you said and just try to get them guys to try to build some chemistry and get the best finishes we can.  We’re still 11th in owner’s points, that’s a big deal and we can look at that and that’s kind of what we’re focused on right now.  We are working on that, it’s just too early to talk about.”
 
ARE THERE ANY RESTRICTIONS ABOUT TALKING SETUPS BETWEEN RICHARD CHILDRESS RACING AND STEWART-HAAS RACING?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “We did touch on that and it’s very important that we both respect our boundaries from team to team.  Obviously, they’re racing for a championship and we’ve got the 39 (Ryan Newman) that we’re trying to get in the Chase to race for a championship and we have the 14 that like we said we are trying to keep as high as we can in owner’s points.  We’re just going to talk about what he (Austin Dillon) feels in that car and what he needs.  We won’t talk about particulars about what we’re changing and we’re not really going to ask him to divulge things that they did here in the spring.  If he’s got a suggestion and feels like he might want the track bar up or down or wedge in or out then by all means he will communicate that with Steve (Addington, crew chief).  We’ve got to be very respectful of our partners at Hendrick Motorsports and things so I’ve talked with Hendrick Motorsports, I’ve talked with Richard Childress about it and we’ve all agreed that Austin will just get in and give tight/loose and drive the hell out of it.”
 
ARE YOU WORKING UNDER THE ASSUMPTION THAT TONY STEWART WILL BE OUT THE REST OF THE YEAR OR IS THERE A CHANCE HE WILL BE BACK THIS SEASON?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “We don’t know that yet.  I’m working under the assumption that he’s (Tony Stewart) out for the next month or so or longer.  He went to the doctor’s this week, he had a decent visit.  No setbacks.  Basically, very simple instructions, stay in his bed with your leg up over your heart for the next seven days and then come back and see me.  We’ll reevaluate you and tell you what you can do.  That’s what he’s doing.  I saw him Wednesday night, we spent some time together, spent a couple hours together yesterday just kind of filling him in on all the things that we’ve got going on.  He’s in great spirits and they changed some of his medicines and things of that nature.  He’s going through a little bit of a transition period, but like I said the doctor’s appointment went well or as good as it can.  He said the next seven to 14 days will tell a lot of how it heals, how those things take and we’ll certainly continue to update you guys as we can.  It’s going to be a really slow process.”
 
IS AUSTIN DILLON ONE OF THE TWO THAT YOU ARE LOOKING AT FOR MORE RACES GOING FORWARD?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “Yeah, obviously Austin’s (Dillon) done a great job in the Truck Series and Nationwide Series.  He’s got a long-standing relationship with Johnny Morris and Bass Pro Shop so we are talking about more races.  We don’t have anything concreted yet.  We’re looking at that other option and just seeing how many races that they can do.  It looks like one more race at least for Austin through the rest of the year with us.”
 
GREG, WHY WAS AUSTIN DILLON THE RIGHT CHOICE THIS WEEKEND AND AUSTIN, HOW WOULD YOU DEFINE A SUCCESSFUL WEEKEND?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “From our side, like I mentioned earlier, he (Austin Dillon) just ran here and did a great job in the spring race.  Runs well here in the Nationwide.  He’s done some testing in these cars so we could have found a guy in the Truck Series or something like that who doesn’t have a ton of time in these race cars, which I felt was — not that they wouldn’t do a good job, but I think these cars are a little bit different and the biggest thing is that he did a good job here in the spring.  We looked at that, the association with Bass Pro Shop, both sponsors were on board.  That is a big priority to us that our partners are on board with everything we do.  Obviously, we let them down with Tony (Stewart) not being in the car the rest of the year and we need to do the best we can to represent them and they are a big part of our decisions.”
 
HOW ACTIVE IS TONY STEWART WHEN YOU VISIT WITH HIM AND WHAT IS HIS MINDSET?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “His (Tony Stewart) mindset is pretty good.  He’s in a lot of pain at times.  He was in a wheelchair yesterday when we had our meeting with three or four of us over there for a couple hours yesterday going over things at the shop and what we were doing moving forward.  For the most part, like I said, he’s supposed to be in bed for the next seven days with his foot up above his heart I guess is what the doctor said.  It needs to be elevated just to keep the swelling and things of that nature down.”
 
HOW DO YOU PLAN TO GO FROM LAST TO THE TOP-10 AT MID-OHIO AND WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR WHAT YOU DO AT MICHIGAN ON SUNDAY?
 
AUSTIN DILLON:  “A top-10, I want to be able to win hopefully Saturday.  From 43rd to first is something that is tough to do, but I feel like with all the strategy and things that are going to play out during that race — I think it’s going to be a pretty wild race.  Going to the inaugural race for Mid-Ohio and there are some blind corners and some elevation changes and some really slow corners where people are going to make up ground and mistakes are going to be made.  My goal always is
to finish laps in these races and that will always bring positions to you and that answers Marty’s (Smith, ESPN) question earlier about our goal for this weekend in the 14.  I’ve been able to be pretty successful at finishing a lot of laps in my career. I think trying to put ourselves in position at the end of the race to get a top-15 would be great.  We do that by being there at the end.  That’s what I feel like we’ll try to do in the Nationwide race.”
 
WHAT ARE THE LOGISTICS YOU WILL GO THROUGH THIS WEEKEND AND CAN YOU PREVIEW BRISTOL?
 
AUSTIN DILLON:  “I think the logistics are actually not as bad as we all thought it was going to be because the test at Mid-Ohio kind of solved that.  I was able to be there all day yesterday.  We flew in on Wednesday night, I was there yesterday full time and then came over here last night.  Had a good night’s rest and then today I will stay here and even be able to watch the Truck race tonight with Ty (Dillon) in it and stay the night and stay here for a little bit of practice in the morning.  Then helicopter to Mid-Ohio before the race Saturday.”
 
WHAT IS IT LIKE RACING FOR MULTIPLE TEAMS IN THE SPRINT CUP SERIES AND WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER FROM PLAYING IN THE LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES?
 
AUSTIN DILLON:  “This is my third Cup team this year that we’ve run for and it’s pretty special.  I think it’s cool to be able to say that I’ve driven for multiple different people.  The great thing about it is that you learn a lot running with different guys and learning how things are supposed to be done and what it really takes to be a team leader.  I think that’s pretty important.  As far as the Little League World Series, it was a great time.  I thought I was going to be a baseball player for the rest of my life and I’m sitting in the media center for a NASCAR Cup race this weekend.  It was a very special time.  The funny thing was that I ran into a bunch of the players from my team this past weekend after our race and I thought that was cool.  They are very supportive of my career and I still have some of them come around to the races here and there.  It’s a fun time of the year.  I always love watching it and I did see on ESPN that Michigan is playing California today, is that the team?  It’s special.  It’s always a good time for a bunch of 12-year-olds and you get to miss a little school too.”
 
WHAT IS THE TEAM’S MINDSET ABOUT THE REST OF THE SEASON?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “Everybody has been pretty good honestly.  We’ve been so busy trying to work through all these details and seats and seat brackets and all the things that have gone on in the last two weeks that these guys haven’t had time to stop I don’t think really and reflect on what’s going on in the year.  Like I said, we’re 11th in owner’s points and that’s the message that we keep driving to these guys that it is business as usual.  There’s no reason in the world that we can’t be in the top-10 with where we’re at and that’s our goals is to continue fighting as hard as we can, do the best we can to represent our sponsors and keep the boss smiling at home that we did a good job with what we had to work with.”
 
DOES THIS SHOW THE STRENGTH OF THE ORGANIZATION?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “Everybody’s been great.  We’ve all spent a lot of time together, probably more time than we have in the past and maybe we’ve learned that we can do a better job of communicating and spending more time together.  Everybody from Gene (Haas) on his side with his people to Tony (Stewart) and everybody in between have really spent some time together, talked about things and all have come to common ground on what’s best for Stewart-Haas moving forward.  To be part of that, I’m proud of everybody for just not putting themselves forward and just looking at what do we need to do to do the best job we can for Stewart-Haas.  We’ve got the 39 (Ryan Newman) that we need to put as much resources as we can there and obviously there’s been distractions on my side and things of that nature, but Matt (Borland, crew chief) and those guys are doing a great job digging and moving forward and that is the priority right now.”
 
IS TONY STEWART BACK TO BEING FEISTY AGAIN?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  “He was pretty ornery Wednesday night when I left.”

Chevy Racing–Chevrolet GRAND-AM Drivers and Teams Journey to Kansas Speedway for Inaugural SFP Grand Prix

Chevrolet GRAND-AM Drivers and Teams Journey to Kansas Speedway for Inaugural SFP Grand Prix
 
DETROIT –  (August 14, 2013) –  As the 2013 GRAND-AM Road Racing season heads into the final stretch with only three races remaining until champions are crowned, the Team Chevy teams and drivers face a new challenge this weekend on the 2.370-mile speedway road course at Kansas Speedway for the inaugural running of the SFP Grand Prix.
 
The newly-configured road course just east of downtown Kansas City, Kansas will present unique challenges for Chevy teams in both the Rolex Sports Car Series and the Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge with two corners that are extremely technical as well as high-speed oval sections and long straightaways. Each Chevrolet team would like to be the first to hoist the hardware in Victory Lane at Kansas Speedway, but it will take focus, precision and exact execution to emerge victorious in the nighttime event.
 
“It is a short week for the Chevrolet GRAND-AM teams with back-to-back races,” said Jim Lutz, Chevrolet Program Manager, Rolex Sports Car Series. “In fact, many of the teams did their maintenance in the paddock area of Road America before heading for this week’s race at a newly configured road course at Kansas Speedway.  The track is unique in that it utilizes the majority of the 1.5-mile oval, but also has a highly-technical infield section.  The combination of the banked oval turns, and the flat infield section are going to present a challenge to crew chiefs and engineers to get the balance of the car around the entire 2.370-mile course to maximize power and handling around the high-speed oval as well as the tight infield section.  We are looking forward to putting more wins in the Chevrolet column as the season begins to wind down and the championship battles continue.”
 
2013 has been a successful one for Chevrolet teams in both the Daytona Prototype (DP) and Grand Touring (GT) classes.  Heading into this weekend’s race, the Chevrolet Corvette DP teams and drivers have won five of nine races in the DP class and Chevrolet leads the Manufacturer Standings. With only three races remaining to determine a champion, the No. 99 GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Racing team sits third in the standings on the strength of one victory at Circuit of The Americas, and four podium finishes.  Jon Fogarty and Alex Gurney find themselves only nine markers away from the top spot.
 
They are closely followed by fellow Corvette DP teams and driving twosomes of Action Express Racing’s Christian Fittipaldi and Joao Barbosa and Wayne Taylor Racing’s Max Angelelli and Jordan Taylor who also find themselves within striking distance as the championship battle heats up.  This weekend’s race at Kansas Speedway’s new road course could be the final turning point in determining the 2013 team champions.  
 
In the GT class the pairing of John Edward and Robin Liddell piloting the No. 57 Stevenson Motorsports Camaro GT.R have four victories and five podium finishes this season.  The co-drivers sit second in the team standings only seven points away from the top spot.  Solid runs this weekend in the inaugural event at Kansas Speedway could propel Chevrolet teams to the top positions within their respective classes heading into the final two races of the season.
 
 Also competing this weekend at Kansas Speedway will be the drivers and teams in the Continental Tire Series.  After a disappointing weekend at Road America John Edwards and Matt Bell are ready to get back behind the wheel of the No. 9 Camaro GS.R in hopes of claiming their second victory of the season.  They currently sit second in the team point standings, but are hungry for another trophy.  The driving duo of Lawson Aschenbach and Eric Curran are also due for a win, coming ever so close several times this season, the pair are looking for their first podium finish in 2013 as are their teammates Ashley McCalmont and Bob Michaelian piloting the No. 00 CKS Autosport Camaro GS.R.
 
The first race of the SFP Grand Prix weekend will be the Continental Sports Car Challenge 2 hour and 30 minute contest which is scheduled to take the green flag at 4:00 p.m. ET on Saturday, August 17 followed by the start of the Rolex Sports Car Series 2 hour and 45 minute race at 8:00 p.m., ET.
 

Chevy Racing–Nascar Teleconference–Kasey Kahne

KASEY KAHNE, NO. 5 PEPSI MAX CHEVROLET SS, WAS THE GUEST ON THIS WEEK’S NASCAR TELECONFERENCE.
 
BELOW IS THE TRANSCRIPT:
 
 
THE MODERATOR:  Good afternoon, everyone.  Welcome to today’s NASCAR teleconference.  We will start off today with Kasey Kahne, driver of the No. 5 Pepsi Max Chevrolet for HendrickMotorsports in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. Kahne is 12th in the series standings, but sits first in the wild card standings with two wins and nine top‑10 finishes. He has one career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win at Michigan Speedway, which is the site of Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400. Kasey, what is your mindset with four races left to make the Chase with Michigan and Bristol up next, both being tracks you’ve won at?
 
KASEY KAHNE:  I feel really good about making the Chase.  I feel good about getting into the top 10 and racing our way in. I think we’ve been fast at those tracks and good at all the tracks that we have left on the schedule this season.  I’m excited about it.  I think we’re in a good spot.
 
THE MODERATOR:  We’ll now go to the media for questions for today’s guest, Kasey Kahne.
Q.  Kasey, I wanted to ask you a little bit about, I know it looked like you were having fun on Twitter after the race on Sunday.  Talk about that, your thoughts and why you did that.  Secondly, if you could talk about Michigan, review of your stats.  Recently it’s been all good or not so good.
KASEY KAHNE:  Yeah, I think the Michigan deal, we were really fast the first race, had a right front tire go down, blow out, hit the wall hard.  So our day was over.  But we were leading at the time. I feel good about going to Michigan.  Those types of tracks seem to suit us pretty well.  So, yeah, looking forward to that.
 
The ones that have gone bad, that was one of them.  I can’t remember last year real well.  I imagine we hit something there, too.  I don’t know what happened.  But we definitely are fast when we go to Michigan.  Just circumstances haven’t always gone our way.
 
Then the Twitter stuff, I was just frustrated and at the same time trying to make fun of it.  I just tweeted about going down there.  I had a few texts and different people tweeting me back.  It ended up being kind of entertaining and I enjoyed it.
 
I wasn’t happy about Matt crashing me at Watkins Glen at all.  I feel like we had a great car and we were trying to make moves, come up through there.  I don’t know if he had a problem with Ambrose.  He said he didn’t.  Other people around, seemed like he might have.
 
I don’t know what happened.  I just know he missed the corner, wiped me out.  I gave them guys plenty of room.  It was frustrating to get crashed at that point in the race for something like that.
 
The whole Gibbs thing, this is the fourth time this year a Gibbs car has crashed me when I’ve been running.  I mean, that was 11th.  But the others were for first, second, fifth.  We’ve lost tons and tons of points because of those guys.  It doesn’t sit real well with me at all.
Q.  Have you had a chance to speak with Matt or any of them after Watkins Glen?
KASEY KAHNE:  He texted me, I don’t know, five to eight times apologizing, trying to explain what happened, how he felt really bad about how it happened and all that stuff.  I understand and I appreciate the texts.
 
At the same time, we’re trying to get in the Chase.  It hurts when you get wiped out when you’re minding your own business.  It’s happened enough this year that I don’t know what I can do about it, but I definitely am not pleased.  It’s really annoying and upsetting.
Q.  Kasey, I received an email recently from a fan who goes to the Sprint car races at Williams Grove.  He said it was a treat to see you and Tony Stewart race there.  He hasn’t seen you there for two years.  I understand there’s nothing in your contract that prohibits you from racing Sprint cars. Have you just decided not to do it?
KASEY KAHNE:  I don’t know when the last time I raced at the Grove was.  I enjoy racing there.  As far as this year goes, I haven’t raced.  I had to have raced 10 or 12 times last year.  This year I’ve pretty much stuck with the Cup stuff, focused on that.  I have a great team, opportunity there, so I’ve stuck with that.
 
I was with three World of Outlaw teams and one team that races 60 times a year that I get to enjoy the Sprint car racing with.  I was at Knoxville as long as I could be, hung out with those guys, watched those guys kind of do their thing.
 
It’s been good, exciting to be part of that.  When I feel like racing a Sprint car again, I will.  Right now I’ve kind of been focused on trying to do the best I can in the Sprint Cup car.
 
Q.  After what happened with Tony, will that make you think twice about racing the Sprint cars again?
 
KASEY KAHNE:  I think it will all make us look at how it happened to Tony and try to make the cars a little bit safer in those areas, if we can. There’s got to be some ways we can prevent what happened to Tony or try to prevent it.  It just all kind of fell against him in those certain circumstances, got his leg.
 
I think all the teams can learn from that.  I know Tony is going to be a big part of trying to make that better, as well.  I think we’ll try to make our stuff better from what we can learn from Tony’s accident.
 
No, it doesn’t really change myself wanting to race, any of that.  It’s exactly the same as it was before he got in that wreck.
Q.  I wanted to hear about how running is helping with the late‑season grind and whether you’re able to run more or less as the Chase heats up?
KASEY KAHNE:  I’d say I’ve actually run about the same amount.  At times maybe a little less because of testing and things like that.  Just not enough time to get it all in.
 
The nice thing about running is you can do it anywhere.  I’m able to still get out there, get a good sweat in, get some miles each day.  I feel good about that.
 
I really think it helps for the Chase because I feel better at the end of the season.  When it’s all said and done, I still feel motivated, not completely drained and worn out.
 
I remember the first couple years I was in the Cup Series, by the time we got to Homestead at the end of the year, I was so happy for the season to be over.  Probably the last two years really, I’ve been wishing it went a couple more races.  I think a lot of that has to do with running, the physical work that I put in each year.
Q.  Considering what happened at the Glen, how big was the previous win at Pocono as far as keeping y’all calm and confident as far as the Chase goes?
KASEY KAHNE:  Yeah, I think it was really big.  I don’t like not being in the top 10, but I feel a lot more secure.  I feel like our chances are a lot better because of the Pocono win after falling back out of the top 10 because of getting wiped out at the Glen.  It was a big win, it was really good.  It helped all of us out.
 
These next four tracks are good tracks for us.  We want to race our way back in.  We want to get those bonus points to start the Chase.  Hopefully we can start on that this weekend at Michigan.
 
Q.  Is there anything you can do to avoid these things?  Anything you’re going to try to do to change your luck?
 
KASEY KAHNE:  Man, I feel like all you can do to change your luck is work hard, do the right things.  I try to be a good person.  I try to work hard before the races and be as prepared as I can be once I get there.  I race people the way I expect to get raced.  I don’t crash pe
ople.
 
I’ve still gotten wiped out five times this year.  It’s discouraging, but I think I just keep doing what I’m doing.  Hopefully they all figure it out.  I don’t know.  Hopefully it just quits, I guess.
 
I think over time it runs a path and a pattern.  It all kind of comes around eventually.
Q.  Obviously you’re in a lot better situation than a lot of people for the Chase.  When we get to Richmond, you’ve been through that before. What is that like, trying to race your way in, the stress and the pressure?  Is there anything in your career previously that you can relate to what that feeling is like at Richmond, trying to get your way into the Chase?
KASEY KAHNE:  No other feelings that I’ve had like that.  I’ve been in that position a lot over the years.  We just always seem to be right on that verge there, right on the edge of making it or not making it.
 
I’ve went through it.  I kind of enjoy it.  I kind of enjoy the pressure, like to have to be perfect that weekend, things like that.  It’s been good.  It’s worked out for us most of the time.  We’ve been able to make the Chase when we’re in those positions.
 
I feel pretty good about it, don’t mind it.  I’d rather have that pressure late in the season.  We haven’t had it late in the season yet.  We just have to keep working at that.  Hopefully we’ll have a little pressure when Richmond comes, and hopefully we’ll have a little more at the end of the year.
Q.  What does that do for a team in trying to race to get into the Chase and then you have to gear back up to race for a championship?  How do you reset or how does that affect guys?  Does that hurt a team, make it harder to win a championship when you’ve had to scramble to get into the Chase?
KASEY KAHNE:  Yeah, I don’t think it would make it easier by no means because everybody’s putting in the time, the pressure’s on you each week, from the driver to the team to the pit guys on Sundays.  It’s a tough part of the season.
 
But it’s kind of what we’re all here for, too, to step up when times are tough, make it happen.  I know we have a really strong team. I think with the two wins, that helps, takes some of the pressure off.  If we can run strong the next few weeks, I think we’ll be in a really good spot, just try to put those final 10 together.  That’s what it’s all about.
Q.  You’ve talked about your frustration with the run‑ins with the JGR cars this season.  Has there been a time in your career where you’ve been on the other end, where you’ve gotten into somebody or one particular team?  You talk about things kind of come around.  Has that happened to you earlier in your career, and how did you deal with that?
KASEY KAHNE:  It’s never happened to me.  Kind of makes me think I need to start taking cars out.  But it hasn’t happened to me.  I don’t know what it would be like on that side of it.
Q.  Kasey, on this issue with Matt Kenseth, you make it very clear that you’re not somebody who is going to wreck somebody on the racetrack. How do you go about getting the message to Matt, that this has to stop, this isn’t the right way to race?
KASEY KAHNE:  Well, just looking at the incidents with him and Kyle, we’ve always had conversations after the fact.  They’ve explained and felt bad about it.  Truthfully, Kyle races me really good all the time.  It’s not really on my mind when I’m racing with Kyle.
 
Matt has been pretty tough on me a lot this year.  He got me there.  That’s definitely on my mind.  I just kind of see things the way I see it.  I would expect a little difference out of him, but you never know.  We’ll see how it goes.
Q.  Going into Michigan, how important do you think it is for you to get as close as you can to a win or to the win itself and climb into the top 10 in points?
KASEY KAHNE:  I think the most important thing to me is to get into that top 10 and not have to use a wild card.  In order to do that, we need to be consistent.  It would be great to get another win and get some more of them bonus points when the Chase does start.  Michigan is a good track, Bristol, Atlanta, all of them are tracks we won at.  Hopefully we can race hard, take care of it on the track, go that way.
 
But I don’t know.  The only reason we’re in this position isn’t because of my consistency or my team’s consistency, we’ve had that all season long, it’s been other people not being able to control their racecars at times.
 
I feel like mine and my team’s consistency is as good as anybody’s.  If everybody else could control their car in those situations we’ve had, we’d be in the middle of battling for the lead in points.  That’s very easy to see for myself.
 
THE MODERATOR:  Kasey, thank you for joining us today and best of luck this weekend in Michigan.
 
KASEY KAHNE:  Thank you.
 

Chevy Racing–Greg Zipadelli on Tony Stewart Replacement for Michigan

GREG ZIPADELLI, COMPETITION DIRECTOR OF STEWART-HAAS RACING AND AUSTIN DILLON, INTERIM DRIVER FOR THE NO. 14 MOBIL 1/ BASS PRO SHOPS CHEVROLET SS, WERE GUESTS ON THIS WEEK’S NASCAR TELECONFERENCE.
 
BELOW IS THE TRANSCRIPT:
 
 
 JAYME AVRIT:  Thank you.  Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to today’s NASCAR Teleconference.  Our guests today are Greg Zipadelli, competition director for Stewart‑Haas Racing, and Austin Dillon, interim driver of the No. 14, Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet SS at Michigan International Speedway for Stewart‑Haas Racing.  Dillon, the current NASCAR Nationwide Series points leader, has two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts at Michigan including last June when he finished a career best 11th.
 
Greg, you captained an adversity‑filled week with a top 15 finish by Max Papis at Watkins Glen that kept the No. 14 team 11th in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series owner standings.  Now you head to Michigan with another interim driver, Austin Dillon.  Tell us how you selected Austin to drive the No. 14 Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet for the Pure Michigan 400?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI:  Well, we went down through the list and saw who is available and who had track time, who was doing double duty and was willing to try to work out a schedule that would work for both sides.  He has a strong relationship with Bass Pro Shop, and a big part of how we go through this is making sure that our partners are happy with what we’re doing as far as who we’re putting in the car and who will represent their brands in the way they want it represented.
 
Like I said, there is a strong relationship there.  Austin’s done a great job in the past at Michigan.  We kind of felt like it was a good fit for us this week.
 
JAYME AVRIT:  Austin, what are your expectations for your 10th career Sprint Cup Series start this weekend at Michigan?
 
AUSTIN DILLON:  Well, I’m really looking forward to the opportunity that’s presented itself here at Stewart‑Haas.  I just want to thank all the parties at RCR and Stewart‑Haas for giving me this opportunity to let me go out there in a premier ride in the Cup series.  Like I said, we’ve had a great relationship with Bass Pro Shops and looking forward to representing them and Mobil 1 this weekend.
 
It’s a great opportunity for me.  We’re really focused on the Nationwide Championship as well, and we’re going to give both parties a great opportunity at a win this weekend.  We’re going to go out there and try to run strong.
Q.  Greg, I was wondering, are you guys looking at this as being sort of a weekly occurrence until Tony can get back in the car?  Do you have any idea at all when that might be?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  Well, it’s going to be a weekly occurrence here for a little while.  We’ll evaluate each race as it comes and do the best job we can with putting someone in it we feel will do a good job for Stewart‑Haas and all of our partners.
 
We will probably know more next week.  Tony has a doctor’s appointment Wednesday here to just kind of go over things, and at that point we’ll have a lot better idea of what we’re doing.  But for right now it will probably be a week‑by‑week decision as far as who is in the car.
Q.  Austin, I wanted to find out if you planned to drive the Nationwide race at Mid‑Ohio this weekend in the Sprint Cup race?  How will the logistics of that work for you, if you do?  And does it help that they’re within driving distance of each other?
AUSTIN DILLON:  Yeah, we’re working all of that out right now.  We’re going to be running both of them, and the scheduling is pretty tough this weekend, so we’ll be on doing our best to give equal amount of practice time.  The good thing about Mid‑Ohio, we have a full test day there Thursday, so we’ll have plenty of time on the track.  We have lots of sets of tires, and we’ll be using them up on Thursday.
 
Qualifying seems to be the issue for the Nationwide race.  That is the only part that will be tough.  We might have to start in the rear.  But I think we’ve done a good job of trying to work out where each party gets a good amount of practice on both cars.
Q.  Austin, Max Papis just tweeted that he considered you his godson, and that makes him a godfather.  That is kind of a scary thought.  But my question to you is you’ve grown up around RCR.  I imagine you haven’t been in the SHR car, but you might have been at the shop.  I was wondering if you could tell me the things you see similar or do you see anything different at the two shops?
AUSTIN DILLON:  I think both shops strive for excellence, so it’s great to be out here at another organization.  I’ve been around Tony Stewart a lot, and know how much his passion is for racing, and he’s built a great team over here.  That is the biggest thing.  He’s the company that I’ve been able to work with, my grandfather’s and coming over here to Stewart.
 
Today is my first day.  I know the way they like to work, and that is put the best equipment on the track they can.  And that is the greatest thing about this opportunity.  We’re here with a lot of racers, and that’s what I love to do.
Q.  Austin, my question is for you. My first one is obviously this is a great opportunity that I don’t think you could turn down.  But the fact of the matter is you’re in a pretty tight points battle over there in the Nationwide Series.  Do you worry about this with the two races being at different tracks maybe compromising your title hopes for the Nationwide Series?
AUSTIN DILLON:  No, we’re going to win the Nationwide Series.  That is our main goal.  We’ve been fighting for it all year long.  This week at Mid‑Ohio we’ve had a lot of practice time.  The good thing about a road course is the strategies that you’ll be using could actually help us out with the start.  It obviously helps to start up front any race you’re at.
 
But we’ll have a plan.  If there was a better place to do it in the Cup race, Michigan is the place for me because I have a lot of laps there and confidence there.  So we’re going to do our best to come up with a good strategy for both races.  I think we’ll be just fine.
 
Road courses have been not our strong suit, but we’re getting better at them, and the good thing was we were able to test earlier this past year at Mid‑Ohio, so I have some track time.  So I’m familiar with the track.  I really think it’s going to be a wild race in the road course there in my opinion.  It’s a tight road course.  We’ll just do our best and try to work our way up to the front with whatever starting position we get.
Q.  Greg, if I could ask you, for the time that Tony is out of the car, would you rather have the consistency of maybe the same driver in there week‑in and week‑out?  Or would you like maybe the opportunity to have a bunch of different looks at different people in the 14 just to see what you might learn from a vast amount of driving styles?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  No, I think we’d rather have one or two drivers if we can work it out.  I think that will give us some consistency, build some communication between the crew and the driver and that will give us our best chance.  We’re working on some of that stuff now and hopefully we’ll see it.  It may be more than two, maybe three or four.  If that’s the case, we’ll look at each individual racetrack and see who is available that runs good at that racetrack and make the best choice we can.
Q.  Austin, the experience at Michigan having been there earlier this year, how much does that help if you do have to miss some practice time on Saturday at Michigan?
AUSTIN DILLON:  I think it’s really big.  Like I said, I’m very confident at M
ichigan.  It’s one of my favorite tracks.  We led all the laps in the Nationwide race there this year until we had the left rear flat and ran well in the Cup race.  So I’m looking forward to it.  I think it’s a place that we can really go out and have a good run at this weekend.
Q.  Greg, was there any hesitation for the time having an RCR guy in your equipment and Hendrick equipment and maybe what he might learn about what you all have so you might be competing against him down the road?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  We’re going to put a blindfold on him, and right before he backs out of the garage we’ll take it off.  (Laughing). Then he won’t be able to look.
No ‑‑ I mean, yes, it will probably be difficult at times, but I think it’s a one‑shot deal for right here right now.  We’ll see where that goes.  We’ll see how it all works.  We’ve got to be guarded, and the same with him.  He’s got to come over here and trust that we can put something in the car that he can drive.  And same time he can come over here and tell us all the things they’re doing too.
 
So I think on both sides we’ll be respectful of each other, and do the best job we can.  I think it will be fine.  Besides that, he won’t be there that much anyway.  He’s got a lot of flying time.
Q.  Greg, you were talking about this weekend at Watkins Glen just about the challenges of the schedule and saying if you layoff the Nationwide schedule at Mid‑Ohio and the Cup schedule at Michigan, they don’t match up very well.  You said one of the things you could do is find somebody that could run at Michigan or you worried about somebody going back and forth.  And your word was it would be half‑assed.  How is this not going to be in that sense that term that you used or as much the pleasing of partners and that’s what makes this work this weekend, based off of what you said on Friday?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  Well, obviously, they have a test day on Thursday.  We sat down with Austin.  He’s able to give us all day Friday.  So he’s given a lot because they’ve got the test day and things.  So it’s certainly different as we’ve laid it out.  A lot different than it was last week because Thursday would be a disaster.  But with the way we’re doing it, he’s going to get a full test day with a ton of tires and a lot of time on the racetrack Thursday.  We’re going to get all day Friday where we’ve got no interruptions on our side.  I didn’t think that was an option last week.  So it is this week, and we’re going to take advantage of it.
Q.  Austin, how many races have you scheduled yourself for to run at the Sprint Cup level this year?  How protective do you have to be if, in fact, you are going to run for Rookie of the Year at the Sprint Cup level next year?
AUSTIN DILLON:  They changed the rule this past year that as long as you designate a series, you can run for Rookie of the Year next year.  So I can actually run as many Cup races as I want as long as I have a designated series as the Nationwide.
Q.  Knowing that Tony was involved in this choice, how much do you feel like Austin’s victory at Eldora helped him with what he’s able to do there?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  Well, I don’t know if it had anything to do with it other than if you look at his record in the Truck Series and the job he’s done in the Nationwide.  That’s kind of what we’re basing it off of.  He runs good at Michigan.  He’s got a good record there.  He’s young, and you know, ready to rock and roll there.  We’re ready to see what we can accomplish this weekend.  Hopefully, that dirt track experience doesn’t come into any play this weekend as far as Michigan goes, because it wouldn’t be very good.
Q.  Just to clarify, when you’re talking about how you’re going to handle the substitutions going forward, is there a chance if Austin does really well at Michigan, could he merge as the guy?  I know you’re saying you’re looking at each individual racetrack and how people perform.  But if Austin’s impressive at Michigan, could he become the guy you want to keep in that seat until Tony comes back?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  Absolutely.  We’re talking about other races.  We just kind of want to get through this week here and then plan ahead.  Like I said, things are a little slow.  We’ve got a little bit more time this week.  We’ll be able to plan weeks out here once we get this Michigan stuff done.  Last week was kind of a short week, and we just really focused and concentrated on Watkins Glen and doing the best we could there.  Like I said, the next couple days we’ll be able to probably layout the whole schedule for everybody.
 Q.  Since you talked to Tony after the race on Sunday, can you tell me what he said it was like for him watching the race and seeing somebody else in his car?  And what is the earliest you have for him possibly coming back right now?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  I did see Tony.  I was over there this morning for a while.  He’s doing well.  As far as when he’ll be back, like I said, I think we’ll know mid week a little bit more on his schedule.  He was, you know, he was doing as good as he could.  We did talk about what we had for plans there, and he was all on board and felt like we had made good choices.  So that was important.  I don’t remember the other question.
Q.  Are you looking down in two or three weeks of possibly letting him get in the car for a lap or so just to get the points to remain possibly viable if you could go to Richmond and try to win Richmond and somehow make the Chase with two wins or something?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  Honestly, if the doctor said we could do that, we’d probably do it.  We’re going to do everything that they say, because we want him back a hundred percent and don’t want to ‑‑ you know, sometimes you can do things sooner than you’re supposed to and make your healing process longer.  So we’ll follow on with what the doctor says.  If the doctor says in four weeks or six weeks he can do that, then we’ll probably look at those options and do what we can do.
Q.  How hard will it be to adjust from the road course in Mid‑Ohio back to Michigan which is a pretty speed track in Michigan?
AUSTIN DILLON:  I’ve been able to race a lot of dirt and asphalt and doing a lot of different things.  So adapting is something that you have to do as a driver.  I think as soon as I land, I’ll be tuned into what I’m doing on each track and just switch your mindset so when you get there of what you’re doing. We’ll be using a lot more break at one of them and none at the other.
Q.  Mr. Zipadelli, what are your expectations for Austin this weekend in this 14 car?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  I think we’re going to go there and run all the laps and try to stay 15th or 20th, and just see from there where we go.  We’re going to be setting our goals very obtainable and stay out of trouble.  Most important thing is running as many laps as we can.  We need to finish the race.
 
By his track record there in the past, we should do better than those.  But you just never know the circumstances, and hopefully we can get him something that he’s comfortable in, and we can go out and race and hopefully do better than that.
 Q.  I’m curious, will you use this opportunity to do any sort of testing of any parts or pieces or something you’d want to look at for 400 miles that maybe you wouldn’t if you had a car and a guy racing where points are maybe more valuable?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  We haven’t had time to think that direction quite yet.  Right now we’re still fighting for all the owner points we can get.  So finishing these races is very important, and representing our sponsors and doing that in the best way that we can would be by finishing the races, running all the laps and get
ting the best finish we can.  I’m not saying it won’t change, but right now, it’s no different than if Tony was in here.  We’re not treating it any different.
Q.  Can you say how many calls and texts did you get from prospective drivers?  Were there 20 people lobbying for this ride, 30 people, 40 people?  Did they wait for you to call them?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  I would say it was more in the 50 range.  There’s been people that I didn’t even know raced called.  And we appreciateeverybody reaching out and willing to help.  But it’s been interesting, let’s leave it at that.
Q.  Greg, has there ever been a point in your career where you’ve been in this similar position, or are you kind of like a rookie right now learning everything with each step of the process?
GREG ZIPADELLI:  You mean as far as the drivers and replacing a driver and going through all this stuff?
Q.  Yes.
GREG ZIPADELLI:  Yeah, I mean, the only time I’ve really experienced it was at Dover when we had to put Ricky Rudd in for Tony, and that was for one race.  So I don’t know.  I don’t know.  It’s just business as usual.  We need a driver, so we picked the best one we can.  We put a seat in there and get them comfortable, and try to build some communication and go to the racetrack.  That’s pretty much as cut and dry as we can keep it, and that’s what we’re going to try to do.
 
 JAYME AVRIT:  Wanted to thank you both, Greg and Austin, for joining us today, and I wish you all the best this weekend in Michigan.
 

Chevy Racing–Corvette Racing–Road America

CORVETTE RACING AT ROAD AMERICA: A Pair of Podium Finishes
Second and third for Compuware Corvettes; Gavin and Milner regain drivers’ title lead
 
ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (Aug. 11, 2013) – Corvette Racing scored two podium finishes Sunday at Road America in the Orion Energy Systems 245. The No. 3 Compuware Corvette C6.R of Antonio Garcia and Jan Magnussen placed second in the sixth round of the American Le Mans Series. Oliver Gavin and Tommy Milner, driving the No. 4 Compuware Corvette, finished third.
 
The race, shown to a nationwide audience live on ABC, marked the first time this season that the two Corvettes finished on the podium in the same race. Even more importantly, the results provided a major boost for the drivers, Corvette Racing and Chevrolet in the ALMS GT championships.
 
Gavin and Milner, defending GT champions, moved back into the lead in the driver standings. Garcia and Magnussen unofficially are third but only six points out of the championship lead.
 
Chevrolet solidified its lead in the manufacturer standings, as did Corvette Racing in the team championship.
 
“The Corvette Racing drivers and team exhibited terrific teamwork on the track and in the pits, and with race strategy to claim two podium positions in the American Le Mans Series at Road America,” said Jim Campbell, U.S. Vice President, Performance Vehicles and Motorsports.  “The team’s never-give-up approach will bode well as we go into the final races of the season. It was a great points day for Tommy Milner and Oliver Gavin as they reclaimed the lead in the ALMS GT driver standings. Jan Magnussen and Antonio Garcia also improved their standing, as well.”
 
Endurance racing is a true team sport, and that played out again Sunday. The Corvette Racing pit crew executed two perfect stops during the race’s penultimate full-course caution period. The two Corvettes entered the pits running seventh and eighth in class. with 90 minutes remaining but left pitlane first and third.
 
The race began on a wet track with Magnussen in the No. 3 Corvette and Milner in the No. 4. Both Corvettes, like the rest of the field, began on wet tires. Both Magnussen and Milner ran aggressive yet cautious stints in the beginning before both cars went to slick tires at the 40-minute mark. From that point, strategy and some of the best pit work in the ALMS took over.
 
Corvette Racing’s next event is the Grand Prix of Baltimore on Aug. 30-31 from the Baltimore Inner Harbor street circuit. Gavin and Milner placed second there last season, and Gavin and Magnussen teamed for a third-place finish in 2011.
 
EDITORS: High-resolution images of Corvette Racing are available on the Team Chevy media site for editorial use only.
 
Grand Prix of Baltimore (all times ET)
·         Practice 1: 8:50 a.m., Friday, Aug. 30
·         Practice 2: 12:05 p.m., Friday, Aug. 30
·         GT Qualifying: 4:50 p.m., Friday, Aug. 30
·         Warmup: 10:10 a.m., Saturday, Aug. 31
·         Race: 3:45 p.m., Saturday Aug. 31
 
Road America: Watch It!
Friday, Aug. 30-Saturday, Aug. 31 (all times ET)
·         Qualifying: 4:20 p.m., Friday, Aug. 30 (ESPN3)  
·         Race (Web): 3:30 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 31 (ESPN3)
·         Race (TV): Noon, Sunday, Sept. 1 (ABC)
 
ANTONIO GARCIA, NO. 3 COMPUWARE CORVETTE C6.R
HOW MUCH DID YOU FEEL LIKE YOU COULD PUSH IN THAT LAST STINT: ” I had a really good restart and was making a lot of gap to the guys. When I saw the Viper coming, I held him off for like four or five laps and I was thinking, ‘no problem’. But the problem was right when he was catching me, my engineers were telling me I need to save fuel. I said ‘All right’, so I was saving fuel but going fast. I was kind of trying to guess how much fuel I needed to save. At some point Marc (Goossens) got a really good run out of Turn 3, and at some point I was asking on the radio should I defend or should I just let him go by. That’s what I did basically. They told me it was more important to save fuel than to keep the position. And then it was a matter of just holding back, just trying to save as much fuel as possible. I knew that Ollie (Oliver Gavin) was under pressure from the Porsches as well, so we were managing that gap too. I was really aggressive on the brakes in the traffic just trying to make a gap. Then as soon as we had a gap, went just went back toward them again. I think that is what we could do. I don’t know exactly if we were good or not (on fuel at the end); I think we were right on. The thing is that I wouldn’t risk it. I think we were probably better than the Viper, but I believed I should have kept that result. I preferred to keep Corvette two-three and in good position for the championship.”
HOW SURPRISED WERE YOU TO COME OFF PIT LANE IN P1 FROM THAT STOP? “I knew after all the pit stops came that we were the guys changing four slicks the latest, and we were almost leading the guys that came in the previous time the latest so I knew we had some advantage and fuel there. We needed just to do 13-14 seconds of fuel plus the tires, so we really needed to be sure that driver change was good. Everything went smooth. Fuel, tire change was perfect and I just remember launching myself out of the pits seeing the Ferrari just come in, and I just a half of a car ahead, or something like. So that put us into one-three at the moment. I was like…that is what I said yesterday after qualifying: When it comes to race time, Corvette Racing is the best that a driver can ever have. So, that is the thing.”
 
JAN MAGNUSSEN, NO. 3 COMPUWARE CORVETTE C6.R
ON THE CHALLENGE OF THE FIRST HOUR: “It was a difficult beginning of the race with the wet track. But it was not super wet so I don’t think the wets (tires) really got up to working 100 percent. The balance of the car wasn’t great or right to begin with. Everybody was pulling away from us quite a bit. Then it seemed like the car and the tires came in, and we were doing pretty well for ourselves. But making the decision to go to slicks was really hard for me to make because the wets which don’t give you a good feel for what is going on. You can feel the grip is improving, but is it improving enough for slicks? And also just looking at the track, it wasn’t clear-cut dry or not dry, so you really have to rely on other people making the decision for you. Fortunately some guys down the back made the first move – it was wrong. So good thing we didn’t follow those guys. But when we did make the move for slicks, it was definitely the right time. So that worked out well.  There was a lot of pressure from Tommy (Milner) throughout the stint when we were on the slicks.
“Then there was one absolutely fantastic pit stop from the Corvette guys! We came in seventh and eighth, and out one-three. That is unbelievable. So fantastic… absolutely fantastic. After that, Antonio drove under extreme pressure – saving fuel; trying to go fast… two things that are really, really hard to do at the same time. Overall it was a fantastic job for the whole team.
“I don’t know had we not had that yellow at the end what would have happened. We were very, very close on fuel. I have a feeling the Vipers were even closer. So who knows? But when the safety car came out right there at the end, there was a big sigh of relief from the whole team. It was ‘OK, now we have second’. I am sure we would have gone for it (if the race had restarted), but would we have won doing it or blown it?”
 
OLIVER GAVIN, NO. 4 COMPUWARE CORVETTE C6.R
ON THE RACE: “The race today was pretty hard. First of all Tommy (Milner) came in and we were seventh and eighth, and the guys just did a fab
ulous job with the tire stop, the fuel and everything. We went in eighth position, and came out third, and our sister car (No. 3 Compuware Corvette C6.R) came out in the lead! That is just a spectacular job by the guys. Just amazing that pit stop. At the restart, the (No. 62) Ferrari was pretty racy into Turn 1 and he tried to squeeze me as we came off. We just rubbed all the way down to Turn 3; I got by him and then I was up behind Antonio (Garcia) but the (No. 91) Viper was coming. It was quick. It just had a bit too much pace for us today.
“I was being told, ‘Save fuel, save fuel, save fuel.’ I was doing the best I could. The Porsche was catching us and catching us. They’ve got super straight-line speed so that was tough. In the end there, I think we were good to go with the fuel. I was wondering if everybody else was going to be in the same spot or not. I know we could have gone to the end, but I don’t know if the Viper could, whether the Porsche could or anybody else. We had done our job in doing that. The guys were fantastic in the pits. Tommy did a spectacular job of getting it through in very tricky conditions in the wet weather. So all-in-all it was a great team effort by everybody here at Corvette Racing.”
ON BEING TOLD TO SAVE FUEL: “You have to figure out your routine on how to do it and the way you are going to go about doing it. Where you are going to lift, where you are going to brake and how you are going to do it. I was working really hard with (engineer) Chuck (Houghton). It was frustrating, and a couple of times we were adjusting the engine map, and the Porsche was catching us, and Chuck was telling me, ‘Go back! Go back!’ The Porsche was so close. It was just one of those ones where it was nail-biting every single lap. You could not take your attention away, or ever think ‘We’ve got this now; we’ve got everything under control’, because everything was just in flux; right on the limit, and right on the balance the whole race. Sometimes that’s the way it is, and everybody on the team worked so hard.”
ON REGAINING DRIVER CHAMPIONSHIP LEAD: “That is just fantastic. Of all the things that could have happened today, to get the points lead back, and to extend our lead in the manufacturers’ championship, that is spectacular. This is a huge win-win… we didn’t win the race, but in terms of the actual bigger picture, it’s been a great day for us.”
 
TOMMY MILNER, NO. 4 COMPUWARE CORVETTE C6.R
ON THE RACE: “We knew that the race would be dry toward the end. We didn’t do anything to the car to try to help it in the wet, so we actually struggled early on. It made it very difficult to keep the car underneath me. It was very loose the entire time in the wet conditions. It is tough here to tell when this track dries up; it is not very easy to see when the lines are drying and when they are still wet. So on that (first) yellow flag, we probably could have switched it to dry tires right then, but I wasn’t too sure, and didn’t want to gamble on that and then throw the race away. So we stayed out which hurt us a little bit there for awhile. But the car was really, really good on slicks in the dry again. I knew if we could just get Oliver in the car and get that last pit stop out of the way, we would be in good shape.
“I could have never imagined to go from basically eighth place to third place in the pits. Oliver did a great job on the restart and got second. So really, today’s result is thanks to Corvette Racing, the pit stops and the strategy that was played to perfection. The Viper definitely was quick today. Congrats to them. They’ve done an awesome job all year long so far. They’ve been right there, and they put one together. I know what that feels like; it is obviously very exciting for them. We’ve got a race on our hands for the rest of the year. They are quick, and we are quick. Porsche is quick; BMW is quick. It is going to be a big fight to the end.”
ON BEING THE POINTS LEAD – IS IT BETTER TO LEAD OR BE CHASING WITH A FEW RACES TO GO? “It can go either way. I think we all kind of approach each weekend as its own separate championship. We want to win that race, and if we can’t win, we want to finish as high as we possibly can. If you just focus on one race at a time, the championship takes care of itself. All we did today was not get too worried about the fact we were in seventh and eighth at the back. We were more focused on how do we make the best out of our race today. What is our best strategy. We did that. Here we are in third place, points lead. Everything is going the way it should right now.”
 
DOUG FEHAN, CORVETTE RACING PROGRAM MANAGER
“This race marks the middle of our 15th season in the American Le Mans Series. In those 14½ years, I don’t remember an event where a pair of pit stops had the impact on the outcome that it did today. The 3 and 4 car came in seventh and eighth, and they went out first and third. That’s all-world, and that’s what we do at Corvette Racing.”
 

Chevy Racing–MONTOYA TAKES TOP FIVE FINISH FOR TEAM CHEVY

MONTOYA TAKES TOP FIVE FINISH FOR TEAM CHEVY
Johnson Maintains NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Point Lead
 
WATKINS GLEN, NY – Aug. 11, 2013 – The Cheez-It 355 NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Watkins Glen International featured plenty of cautions and a lengthy red flag delay, but that didn’t deter Juan Pablo Montoya, driver of the No. 42 Target Chevrolet SS from posting a strong top-five finish – his third top-five finish of 2013.  
 
“It was fun it’s just not enough laps,” Montoya said after exiting his No. 42 Target Chevrolet SS.   “It’s hard to pass.  These cars, you know, guys that run up front are pretty good here.  Our Target Chevy was really good all day.  To be honest with you we didn’t think we could make it in two (pit stops) all weekend.  We got so many cautions and I felt, you know they told me to save and I started saving a ton of gas and even saving gas we were pretty good.”
 
On the challenging 11-Turn, 2.45-mile road course, where passing is difficult, five-time series champion, Jimmie Johnson, ran a solid race in his No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet SS to finish eighth overall from his 18-place starting position. Johnson maintained the series point lead on the strength of 15 top-10 finishes this season and now has a 75-point advantage over second place.
 
Kurt Busch brought his No. 78 Furniture Row/Denver Mattress Chevy SS home in ninth, his 10th top-10 finish in 22 races completed this season.
 
Montoya and Busch were joined by four other Team Chevy drivers all recording top-15 finishes.  Jamie McMurray driving the No. 1 McDonald’s/Monopoly Chevrolet SS finished 11th followed by Kevin Harvick, No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet SS in 13th.
 
Ryan Newman brought his No. 39 Haas Automation 30th Anniversary Chevrolet SS home in the 14th position followed by his Stewart-Haas Racing interim teammate, filling in for the injured Tony Stewart, Max Papis piloting the No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Mobil 1 Chevrolet SS.
 
Kyle Busch (Toyota) was the race winner, Brad Keselowski (Ford) was second, Martin Truex, Jr. (Toyota) finished third, and Carl Edwards (Ford) was fourth to round out the top-five.
 
The next race on the tour will be Sunday, August 18, 2013 at Michigan International Speedway.
 
POST RACE QUOTE:
 
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED FIFTH
TAKE US THROUGH THOSE LAST COUPLE OF LAPS.  THAT LOOKED LIKE FUN:
“It was fun it’s just not enough laps.  It’s hard to pass.  These cars, you know, guys that run up front are pretty good here.  Our Target Chevy was really good all day.  To be honest with you we didn’t think we could make it in two (pit stops) all weekend.  We got so many cautions and I felt, you know they told me to save and I started saving a ton of gas and even saving gas we were pretty good.”
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW RACING/DENVER MATTRESS CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED NINTH
ON HIS RUN:
“It wasn’t one of my best efforts.  I felt like I was just off rhythm but the team did their job and we had great execution on pit strategy and we were able to gain some track position then.  Everybody it seems like is fast.  I think there is a group of us though in the top 10 that broke away most of the day.  We were right on the tail end of that group.  So I got up as high as fifth and I just couldn’t clear (Clint) Bowyer.  I think if I could have cleared Bowyer I would have hung on to a top five, but we just got out muscled at the end.  I wasn’t quite on my ‘A’ game today.”
 
MAX PAPIS, NO. 14 RUSH TRUCK CENTERS/MOBIL 1 CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED 15TH
ON HIS RUN:
“I felt that we were definitely in bound to have a top 10 finish.  Really glad that Greg Biffle came over and apologized when he turned me around he said it was totally his mistake.  I think that really cost us a solid top 10. Beside this I drove the wheels off the car every lap.  Super proud of keeping the seat of Smoke (Tony Stewart) as warm as I could.  I felt I did a pretty good job and I’m proud of myself.”
 
WHAT HAPPENED LATE IN THE RACE WITH THE NO. 9?
“I don’t know.  The guy was sideways going up the hill.  I mean I’m going up the hill.  I touched him I turned him, not on purpose obviously.  I think that something broke in the back of his car. I guess.  Pretty weird deal.  It was not a good thing.”
 
ALL THINGS CONSIDERED ‘A’ DAY, ‘B’ DAY, HOW DO YOU LOOK AT IT?
“A+”
 
DANICA PATRICK, NO. 10 GODADDY CHEVROLET SS – FINISHED 20TH
IS IT MORE ABOUT SURVIVAL TODAY?
“Yeah and I think at the end of the day there was a lot going on especially at the end.  Really just trying to finish and really just trying to not get frustrated no matter what is going on out there and just taking what the car will give you.  So I just tried to stay calm and stay focused on not making any mistakes.  It was really easy to make mistakes out there and we worked on the car and I feel like we have a direction for next time.  I’m not sure.  We didn’t nail it today that is for sure, but I think we made gains for sure from the beginning of practice until the end of the race.  It’s just a matter of using that for next time and getting better.”
 
DALE EARNHARDT, JR., NO. 88 NATIONAL GUARD CHEVROLET SS – INVOLVED IN AN ACCIDENT ON LAP 82 AND FINISHED 30TH
ON WHAT HAPPENED IN THE ACCIDENT:
“I’m fine.  The No. 18 was going after the No. 9 and tried to wreck the No. 9 and ended up hitting the No. 5, not the No. 18, but the No. 20. The No. 20 was going after the No. 9 and missed him or got him a little bit.  I don’t know if the No. 9 ended up wrecking or not, but ended up knocking the No. 5 out of the race and knocked ourselves out of the race and a couple of other guys.”
 
KASEY KAHNE, NO. 5 FARMERS INSURANCE CHEVROLET SS – INVOLVED IN AN ACCIDENT ON LAP 82 AND FINISHED 34TH
ON WHAT HAPPENED IN THE ACCIDENT:
“I’m fine.  I thought we had a pretty good Farmers Insurance Chevy.  I was trying to just get through there.  There were some openings there.  I’m not sure what happened.  I know I got hit in the left-rear.  I know the No. 9 was there and the No. 20.  I don’t know how it all happened because I haven’t seen it.  I felt like I was kind of over on my side of the road, but I would have to see it to know for sure.”
 
JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET SS – INVOLVED IN A CRASH ON LAP 13 – FINISHED THE RACE IN THE 38TH POSITION
IN REGARDS TO THE ACCIDENT WHICH OCCURRED ON LAP 13:
“It’s unfortunate. I had a big run on the No. 11 and I got up on him and the nose just completely took off and put me in the wall. We’ll get it fixed and go out there and ride around. That’s the penalty for making a mistake like that, you have to drive something like I’m getting ready to drive out there all days and we pay the price in points. It’s on to next week.”
 
WHERE DO YOU GO FROM HERE?
“Fight hard.  Just keep working to go to the next race and qualify better, execute better and not make mistakes.  That was my mistake that was on me today.  We can’t have stuff like that happen.”

Chevy Racing–Two Podium Finishes for Action Express Racing Corvette Daytona Prototypes

Two Podium Finishes for Action Express Racing Corvette Daytona Prototypes
at Road America
Chevrolet solidifies lead in Rolex Series’ DP engine manufacturer championship
 
ELKHART LAKE, Wisc. (Aug. 10, 2013) – Action Express Racing’s two Corvette Daytona Prototypes (DP) placed second and third at Road America in Saturday’s VisitFlorida.com Sports Car 250, the ninth round of the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series. Christian Fittipaldi and Joao Barbosa were runner-ups in the No. 5 Corvette DP, and teammates Brian Frisselle and Burt Frisselle were third in the No. 9 Corvette DP.
 
The finish enabled Chevrolet to maintain its lead in the engine manufacturer championship in the DP class. The No. 5 Action Express entry was one of three Chevrolet-powered entries to lead during the two-hour, 45-minute race.
 
GAINSCO/Bob Stallings’ Racing’s pairing of Jon Fogarty and Alex Gurney closed to within four points of the DP driver’s championship and stand second. The No. 99 Corvette DP squad remained third in the team standings with three rounds left in the season.
 
“Today was another exciting day of Rolex Sports Car Series racing at Road America,” said Jim Campbell, Chevrolet U.S. Vice President, Performance Vehicles and Motorsports. “Congratulations to the No. 5 Action Express Racing Corvette DP driven by Christian Fittipaldi and Joao Barbosa, and the No. 9 Action Express Racing Corvette DP driven by Brian and Burt Frisselle on their podium finishes. Their efforts along with the other Corvette DP teams helped Chevrolet gain valuable points in the Rolex Series DP engine manufacturer standings.”
 
In GT, the No. 57 Stevenson Motorsports’ Camaro GT.R of Robin Liddell and John Edwards placed eighth in a tough GT fight. Liddell and Edwards maintained their second-place position in the class’ driver’s championship with Stevenson Motorsports second in the team standings. Chevrolet is third in the GT manufacturers’ race.
 
Saturday’s Rolex Series race was the first half of a historic sports car doubleheader at Road America that also features the American Le Mans Series. The Rolex Series and ALMS will merge for 2014 to create United SportsCar Racing and a single, premier North American sports car racing championship.
“It is fantastic to see so many road racing fans here at Road America to watch the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series and the American Le Mans Series this weekend,” Campbell said. “Attendance is up as the fans staked their favorite place around the four-mile track. You can feel the excitement of the fans as they get a preview of road racing in 2014 and the United SportsCar Racing series.”
 
The next round of the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series is the SFP Grand Prix on Saturday, Aug. 17 from Kansas Speedway.
 
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER POST RACE QUOTES:
 
JOAO BARBOSA, NO. 5 ACTION EXPRESS CORVETTE DP – FINISHED 2ND: “It all comes down to execution. Action Express did a tremendous job coming back from a little hiccup. They gave us a great car; the Corvette (Daytona Prototype) drove awesome today. We didn’t have the fastest car today. But that is why we keep telling is we have to execute, and we have to be consistent. We have to bring podiums and we have to bring points. This was a great points day, and I am really proud of all the Action Express people for a second and third place today. I am happy for Brian and Burt Frisselle on their third place finish today, they did a tremendous job. That’s a big statement to the team.”
 
CHRISTIAN FITTIPALDI, NO. 5 ACTION EXPRESS RACING CORVETTE DP – FINISHED 2ND: “Unfortunately I flat-spotted the tire and we had to come in a little bit early, but still at that point we were in the race. We enough fuel to do the same amount of stops as all of the other guys. When it recycled, I was running P2. We were in the race. On my first stop, for some reason, the fuel didn’t come in the car, so I had to stop about six laps earlier than what we were planning. That definitely messed us up. But the yellows helped us today. It goes both ways; today we got helped by the yellow flags, but the same way he have been hindered in the past, at the end of the day, luck evens out. We’ll just keep on trying. Today was a good points day for us. We are solid in the championship and we are going to continue trying our very best.”
 
BRIAN FRISSELLE, NO. 9 ACTION EXPRESS RACING CORVETTE DP – FINISHED 3RD: “The difference today was things kind of broke our way there at the end with the yellow. We’ve had some bad breaks, but this team has just been awesome all year. The No. 5 and the 9 both, the Action Express guys have been rocking. The Corvette Coyotes have been rocking. We finally got some track position at the end and were able to use it.”
 
BURT FRISSELLE, NO. 5 ACTION EXPRESS RACING CORVETTE DP – FINISHED 3RD: “I definitely threw a curve ball at Elton (Sawyer, team manager) and Brian when I flat-spotted that tire with at minutes into the race. Elton took that curve ball, and hit is out of the park getting Brian the track position he needed. Brian drove a brilliant last stint, so I feel lucky to have gotten away a little error. These guys gave us such a good car underneath us. That Coyote Corvette was a joy to drive”

Chevy Racing–Corvette Racing–Road America

CORVETTE RACING AT ROAD AMERICA: Solid Starts for Compuware Corvettes
Garcia qualifies second in No. 3 Compuware Corvette; Gavin fourth in No. 4 entry
 
ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (Aug. 10, 2013) – Corvette Racing’s two Compuware Corvette C6.Rs qualified second and fourth in class Saturday for the Orion Energy Systems 245 at Road America. That means the two velocity yellow Corvettes will roll off the grid one behind the other for Sunday’s sixth round of the American Le Mans Series. Antonio Garcia was second-quickest in the GT class with a 2:04.212 in the No. 3 Corvette he shares with Jan Magnussen.
 
Oliver Gavin qualified fourth in the No. 4 Corvette at 2:04.277 that he drives with Tommy Milner. The defending ALMS GT champions stand second in this year’s championship. Garcia and Magnussen are third. Corvette Racing and Chevrolet lead the team and manufacturer standings, respectively.
 
“I am very happy with the way we performed,” said Garcia, who made his Road America debut in 2012. “We got 100 percent out of the car. I believe everything will be even better for the race. We can use both cars to fight at the front.”
 
The Road America round begins at 3 p.m. ET with live coverage on ABC.
 
Saturday’s qualifying session was another tight one in the class. Only 0.699 seconds separated Garcia from the ninth-place qualifier. The pole-winning time was a 2:03.410. The Corvettes have a strong history at Road America with six class victories since its first race here in 2002.
 
So far in 2013, Corvette Racing has won three times in ALMS competition. Gavin and Milner won the most recent round at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park and opened the season with a victory at Sebring alongside Richard Westbrook. Garcia and Magnussen were winners at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca.
 

Chevy Racing–Watkins Glen Qualifying–Jamie Mc Murray

JAMIE MCMURRAY LEADS TEAM CHEVY IN QUALIFYING AT WATKINS GLEN
 
WATKINS GLEN, NY – August 10, 2013 – For the 12th time this season the drivers in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series set a new track record. Ten drivers broke through the old threshold with speeds toping 128 mph.  Those breaking the old record included Jamie McMurray, No. 1 McDonald’s/Monopoly Chevrolet SS and Paul Menard, No. 27 Menards/Splash Chevrolet SS who placed their Chevys in the Top 10 for Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at Watkins Glen International.  Drivers will take on the twists and turns of the 2.45-mile course as they compete in round 22 of the 36-race season.  With only five races until the field is set for the Chase, a solid run at ‘The Glen’ this weekend is crucial for the Bowtie teams.
 
McMurray will roll off the starting grid in the sixth position in his No. 1 Chevrolet.  He was the road course pole sitter earlier this year at Sonoma Raceway.  Menard will follow McMurray in his No. 27 Chevy SS starting from the seventh position.   This marks the fifth time this season Menard will start inside the top 10.
 
Other Team Chevy members starting in the top-20 are: Juan Pablo Montoya, No. 42 Target Chevrolet SS – 11th, Kurt Busch, No. 78 Furniture Row Racing/Denver Mattress Chevrolet SS – 13th, Ryan Newman, No. 39 Haas Automation 30th Anniversary Chevrolet SS – 14th, Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet SS – 18th and Kasey Kahne, No. 5 Farmers Insurance Chevrolet SS – 19th.
 
Marcos Ambrose (Ford) was the pole winner, Clint Bowyer (Toyota) was second, Martin Truex, Jr. (Toyota) was third, AJ Allmendinger (Toyota) was fourth and Kyle Busch (Toyota) was fifth to round out the Top 5.
 
The Cheez-It 355 at The Glen takes the green flag on Sunday, August 11th at 1:00 p.m. ET, and will be aired live on ESPN.
 
 
JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 MCDONALD’S/MONOPOLY CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED SIXTH
ON HIS RUN:
“Well, our McDonald’s/Monopoly Chevy just didn’t have the grip. I went into Turn 1 the second lap and I could just tell I didn’t have the grip I did the previous lap. And so, it was somewhat of a waste of time to run through the remainder of the lap knowing that you’re going to go slower. It was a pretty good lap. I gave up quite a bit through the esses. The track had a fair bit more grip than what it had yesterday. And where the water was in the bottom of Turn 2, I had never run against that curb. And today there wasn’t water. So I got the car low enough, but I just couldn’t get turned back to the left. I was a little bit loose and it doesn’t look like it on TV, but that is one of the most thrilling corners I feel like we have on our whole circuit because you’re sliding off towards that guardrail. The car is hung out and it takes a lot of courage to run through there flat-out. I just couldn’t get pulled back to the left enough. But it was a good lap. We qualified on the pole at Sonoma, so I felt like we would qualify well here. Our race pace is a little bit off but we’re going to work on it tonight and hopefully get a good, solid run tomorrow.”
 
PAUL MENARD, NO. 27 MENARDS/SPLASH CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED SEVENTH
YOU MADE YOUR SPRINT CUP DEBUT HERE IS IT KIND OF LIKE COMING HOME?
“Yeah, man 10 years go by fast.  Our first time was 10 years ago.  The car is really good.  We unloaded pretty happy with it yesterday, maybe lacked the speed of a lot of guys, but drove really good.  I feel like a longer run 10 laps into a run we might be okay.  That was a good little pick up there we will see how it stacks up.”
 
CAN YOU EXPLAIN WHAT KIND OF FEEL YOU ARE LOOKING FOR ON A ROAD COURSE VERSUS AN OVAL?
“A place like this you just need it to stay under you.  I mean you are in the gas so hard out of these corners that you start burning rear tires off.  Same as Sonoma and any of these road courses, you start burning rear tires off it just keeps getting worse and worse.  You need a car that is pretty well balanced even if the speed is not quite there.  I feel like our car is really balanced and it will be good on a long run.”
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW RACING/DENVER MATTRESS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 13TH
ON HIS QUALIFYING LAP:
“Just trying to get a read on our front tires and we didn’t quite carry enough speed through each of the corners.  So when you add up all the corners and you are off a little bit in each corner you are going to add up to an awful lot that you are off on lap time.” 
 
RYAN NEWMAN, NO. 39 HAAS AUTOMATION 30TH ANNIVERSARY CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 14TH
ON HIS LAP:
“It was a good lap. I obviously went out in an earlier group. We’ve just been struggling a little bit for speed. Hopefully we have a better long run car than a short run car. It’s been a bit of a speed struggle, I would say. Being P2 in your group isn’t bad, but that’s better than what is was in practice; let’s put it that way.”

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 18TH
ON HIS QUALIFYING LAP:
“It didn’t go as planned.  It was a lot harder to get around the track than I expected from what we had yesterday.”

KASEY KAHNE, NO. 5 FARMERS INSURANCE CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 19TH
HOW WOULD YOU ASSESS THAT QUALIFYING SESSION?
“I thought it was all right. It was pretty loose to the right on corner exits; I didn’t get down any of the straightaways real well. It screwed us up a little bit for time. But I thought the car felt really pretty balanced and something that will be nice to race tomorrow. So, this is a tough track for me, but I don’t think we’re as far off as it might look.”
 
WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU CAN TAKE FROM RUNNING IN THE NATIONWIDE SERIES RACE THIS AFTERNOON TO THE CUP RACE TOMORROW?
“I think just practice. Just running this track and working on braking and just trying to get speed in every corner; a little bit here and a little bit there, and you can get some pretty good times. I did that year. I thought it helped for Sunday’s race. So we’ll see how today goes and try to help it for tomorrow.”
 
MAX PAPIS, NO. 14 RUSH TRUCK CENTERS/MOBIL 1 CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 29TH
TALK ABOUT YOUR LAP:
“The biggest obstacle for me was definitely going to be qualifying because I don’t do this very often.  I got a little too greedy in turn two.  I definitely got it better on the third lap, but the tires were gone.  I have really good confidence.  I improved my speed every time.  Definitely qualifying I left something on the table.  Maybe is not as much as it felt.”
 
DID YOU DO A QUALIFYING RUN IN PRACTICE YESTERDAY?
“No qualifying run.  Obviously that is something for someone like me who doesn’t have a chance to do this every time it’s much more than a hurdle.  I’m proud of my effort and I’m proud of how much better we made the car.  I really feel we can do something special from where we are going to start.”
 
DANICA PATRICK, NO. 10 GODADDY CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 35TH
ON HER LAP:
“The car turned a lot better than yesterday. It was loose, but improved from yesterday for sure. I think we’ve made good gains with the GoDaddy Chevy. I’m ready for tomorrow. It should be a good race.”

Chevy Racing–Road America

Jordan Taylor Puts No. 10 Corvette Daytona Prototype on the Front Row at Road America
 
ELKHART LAKE, Wisc. (August 9, 2013) – Jordan Taylor put the No. 10 Velocity Worldwide Wayne Taylor Racing Corvette Daytona Prototype (DP) on the outside of the front row for tomorrow’s VisitFlorida.com Sports Car 250, Round 9 of 12 for the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series (Rolex). This is the fifth consecutive race that Taylor and co-driver Max Angelelli have captured front row starting positions.
 
In total, seven Corvette DPs qualified for the 2.75-hour race Saturday around the 14-turn/4.048-mile Wisconsin road course.  Sebastien Bourdais qualified the No. 4 8Star Motorsports Corvette DP in the fourth starting position on the grid. Christian Fittapaldi was fifth fastest in the No. 5 Action Express Corvette DP.
 
The No. 99 GAINSCO/Bob Stallings Corvette DP will start sixth; the No. 90 Spirit of Daytona Corvette DP set the ninth fastest time; in the 10th starting position is the No. 9 Action Express Racing Corvette DP and the No. 3 8Star Motorsports Corvette DP will roll off 11th.
 
In Rolex Grand Touring (GT), the No. 31 Marsh Racing Corvette GT.R will start 10th in-class. The No. 57 Stevenson Motorsports Camaro GT.R will occupy the final grid position following failing post-qualifying technical inspection.
 
The No. 9 Stevenson Camaro GS.R was fastest for Team Chevy in qualifying for the 2.5-hour Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge race by posting the eighth quickest time.  The No. 01 CKS Autosport Camaro GS.R was ninth in the final qualifying order.
The first race of the weekend, the CTSCC Road America Sports Car Challenge 2.5-hour contest,  is scheduled to take the green flag at 12:30 p.m. CT on Saturday, August 10. It will be followed by the start of the 2.75-hour VisitFlorida.com Sports Car Challenge for the Rolex Series at 4:00 p.m. CT (5:00 p.m. ET) with live television coverage on SPEED TV.  MRN Radio will also broadcast the race live on GRAND-AM.com live timing and scoring.

Chevy Racing–Watkins Glen–Jeff Gordon

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CHEEZ-IT 355 AT THE GLEN
WATKINS GLEN INTERNATIONAL
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 9, 2013
 
JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Watkins Glen International, and discussed racing at Watkins Glen, Tony Stewart’s injuries and other topics. Full transcript:
 
DO YOU FEEL THERE ARE MORE DRIVERS THAT CAN CONTEND ON ROAD COURSES NOW THAN THERE USED TO BE WHEN YOU STARTED DRIVING IN NASCAR?
“I still think there are a handful of guys that are the real big threats, the guys like Juan (Pablo Montoya) and Marcos (Ambrose), but there’s a bunch of other guys that are holding their own and putting up good laps, qualifying well and maintaining pace during the race, which makes it just more challenging than it’s ever been.  The cars are as competitive against one another as they’ve ever been as well.  It’s evolved and changed a lot over the years, but still love coming here.  It’s so much fun, fast race track, challenging race track and looking forward to enjoying our final road course of the year.”
 
DO YOU FEEL ENERGY BUILDING TO BE IN YOUR BEST POSITION IN SEVERAL YEARS FOR THE CHASE?
“Wow, how things change in one week.  Last week it was, do you have a shot at making the Chase?  I think that right now, what love about the Chase is that it offers just that, what you’re talking about.  You can be off the pace or not having things go your way early in the season and you can get it turned around and get that momentum and find the speed and do the things that you need to do as a team to get yourself geared up and if you make it in that Chase then you really could be a threat at winning it.  I think that this point, I don’t think that we’re considering ourselves the contender for the championship, but I think we’re a real serious contender in the wild card and that ninth and 10th position.  I’ve always been a big believer that you have to walk before you can run.  These next five or six weeks will decide whether we’re going to solidify that and if we can become a real threat for the championship.  We’ve got a little work to do yet.  More runs like last week and I will say yes.”
 
HOW WILD IS IT TO NOW HAVE TONY STEWART IN THE FIELD THIS WEEKEND?
“Yeah, I don’t think it’s quite sunk in yet.  I was in Knoxville (Iowa) this week with our ‘Kick it for Kids Cancer’ program there and they’re doing the kickball tournament today, which it’s been such a great relationship to be on Shane Stewart’s car at Knoxville, but to go there and be in that environment of sprint car racing and around the people that are feeling the impact of that and now here I come this weekend to this race where the impact is being felt here as well.  Tony (Stewart) is such an influential person in motorsports as a driver and just as a supporter of racing that it’s tough.  I was looking all over those cars trying to understand what happened and you’re there and you’re in awe of these awesome beasts of race cars.  930 horsepower, 1400 pound cars, tons of downforce.  They just fly and they impress you and it makes me want to get behind the wheel of one so I totally understand the appeal and then you look at Tony and his talents and to go out there and want to be as competitive as he is.  He has a shot at winning these races, which is unbelievable.  He’s racing against guys that do this every single weekend.  They are somewhat, compared to the space cowboys of the NASA program several years ago where they’re sitting on top of a rocket and without a lot of protection.  I hope that this can actually be a great benefit and influence on the sprint car community to make these cars safer.  There are some areas that could be improved.  These cars are lightweight and they’re fast and they’re cool and awesome, but we’ve seen a lot in seat technology in that series, but I think that we’re seeing this type of injury that’s happening from time to time with that torque tube and driveshaft being so exposed and the lightweight components.  I hope to see something like this advance that.  Yeah, we’re missing Tony and haven’t had a chance to speak to him yet, but can’t wait for him to get back as soon as possible.”
 
HOW HAS ROAD COURSE RACING CHANGED SINCE YOU STARTED BEING REALLY GOOD AT IT?
“Again, I go back to that I feel like we put a good amount of effort into our road course package, improving the brakes and the cooling and dialing in the transmission gearing and just like the cars on the ovals where you used to be able to do more things to the cars to have an edge over the competition because how they inspected the cars, there was just more gray area.  We would also take advantage of that on the road courses.  I think that not everybody looked at the road courses, they kind of looked at road courses as throw away races in some cases.  That’s just not the case now.  Everybody takes these races very serious, the cars can’t be manipulated as much, everybody has good brakes and everybody has all the equipment that you need to go be competitive so then it just comes down to the driver pushing the limits of the car and the team engineering finding the right package to go fast at those tracks.”
 
WHAT IS MAKING YOU BETTER THESE LAST SIX RACES?
“We haven’t been on pit road when the caution came out or getting ready to make our pit stop when the caution came out.  We had the ability to get much better results earlier in the year that we didn’t and the frustration was kicking in.  I think that right now we’re seeing an improvement in performance as well as things going our way a little bit better.  Sometimes those things kind of happen together.  If your cars are fast and you’re getting yourself in good position then it allows you to make a little different choices and decisions that sometimes just put you in a more solid position to get good results.  I think there were times where I think we were pulling at straws and just swinging for the fences and that was putting ourselves into some risky positions that cost us those good results.  I’m hoping that will continue and we’re certainly on a good streak.  You just feel the energy in the team and that confidence in crucial.  This is a people business more than just cars.  The cars are obviously important, but if the people around you don’t believe in you or you don’t believe in them then there is no confidence in what you’re doing and you’re telling them that you need this to go faster and they’re questioning it.  You don’t want people to question, you want absolute yes, that’s what we need to do to make the car go faster.  Yes, that’s what our driver needs to do to get the speed out of it.  It just starts building on one another.  It can build for the good or it can build for the bad.”
 
DO YOU FEEL THE CRITICISM OF TONY STEWART RACING SPRINT CARS IS UNWARRANTED?
“I absolutely agree with that.  When the conversation is on the flip side about who is a real racer in this garage area, who’s got the most talent, who’s out there doing the most for motorsports then Tony Stewart rises to the top of that list of the great things that he’s doing.  Then as soon as he gets injured then you say, ‘Oh boy, maybe he shouldn’t have been doing that.’  It’s certainly up for debate and it’s been talked about and bringing a lot of interest on the subject.  For me, I say yes that’s Tony and I tell him all the time when he goes and runs the sprint car races and wins or is competitive, I’m like, ‘Man, that’s awesome and that’s unbelievable.’  That’s because I couldn’t do that and I don’t choose to do that because of just different things that are happening in my life and the choice that I make, but I applau
d him and definitely support him in that effort.  It’s just unfortunate that  this has happened.”
 
WOULD YOU LIKE TO DRIVE IN THE BOOT SECTION OF THE RACE TRACK?
“Absolutely.  For years I always said put more turns in and I think we’ll have a better chance at better results.  I think for our fans watching at home as well as watching here, I think that the course we run is probably a little bit better and more laps, more suited to our cars.  I don’t know what would creep up if we went that direction.  Would we have brake issues?  I don’t know all the ins and outs because I’ve never driven it.  I like road courses and I like challenges so I at least would like to give it a shot one time.”
 
HOW DID THE GO KART RACE COME ABOUT WITH TONY STEWART?
“Through our ‘Kick it’ program and that sponsorship, Tony (Stewart) has been a great supporter of the kickball tournaments and obviously with his involvement with sprint car racing and that whole community has been so supportive and we always said this was a grassroots program, what better way to get it going and have some fun than a grassroots racing program and dirt tracks racers and the fans and the competitors.  Today we’re having a kickball tournament and it is on the fairgrounds property in Knoxville (Iowa) and there’s drivers that are on teams, wives and girlfriends that are on teams, fans that are on teams — it’s pretty cool.  Tony is a giving guy and has a big heart so he’s been involved in that as well as somehow this came along as far as doing a go-kart event and so I worked out my schedule so I could go there earlier to be a part of that.  He obviously really was a big influence on the whole thing coming together with sponsors and getting fans out there.  There is this really cool place called Slideways, it’s a sprint car slick track, go-kart track oval that’s out there and it’s a blast.  He had a pretty good feeling in Kyle Larson who would end up winning the event or finishing second.  It was a blast.  We raised, this small little go-kart event ended up raising like $25,000.  Hopefully it’s something we can build on and do more of and obviously would love to have Tony back at it again next year.  It was tough because he wasn’t there, but we also understand how big of an impact he played in that event happening and being a part of it.  I was excited about it, especially racing with him and we made the best out of it that we could.”
 
WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT HOW QUICKLY CLINT BOWYER HAS BECOME A ROAD COURSE RACER?
“I would say (Brad) Keselowski as well; he was real strong here last year.  Kurt Busch is fast on the road courses.  I separate Sonoma from here so people that were quick in Sonoma doesn’t necessarily mean they are going to be quick here.  I think Clint (Bowyer), yeah he’s another one of those guys that is just a solid race car driver everywhere you go and I think his diversity with his dirt track experience and different types of cars shows his talents and he’s a very talented race car driver.  It also shows by Martin’s (Truex Jr.) victory out in Sonoma and Clint’s strong finish here last year that their road course program is improving as well.  You take talented drivers, good race cars and an effort towards road course racing and you’re going to see results.  I look for them to be strong again this weekend.”
 
DID YOU GET THE FEELING WHEN YOU WERE IN KNOXVILLE THAT SOME SAFETY CHANGES MIGHT BE CONSIDERED OR DO THEY FEEL THEY ARE JUST IN A BAD STRETCH?
“I would like to have talked to, I never really talked to World of Outlaw officials and the people are the big influencers on making those decisions so I really don’t have a good answer for that one.  I talked to the guys on the teams earlier and they were like, ‘This is what we have and this is what we do and here’s what we’re doing, just go along business as usual and it happens.’  Nobody wants to give up an advantage in performance and these guys, like I said, I compare them to space cowboys, that’s what makes them awesome and that’s what makes the cars incredible, that’s what makes their fan base as loyal as it is, they understand that these cars are rocket ships and that there’s danger involved.  Me as a competitor and seeing what has happened in our sport and what has influenced change for the good in safety, I’m hoping that those with World of Outlaws and those that are the influencers, maybe the chassis builders.  I don’t know where it really begins that they would be willing to step it up.  They’ve made slight changes and improvements in this area and I don’t know all the details in Tony’s (Stewart) cars, I heard that there were things on this car that were maybe different from some of the rest that are intended to be safer.  Obviously, it’s not enough.”
 
DO YOU KNOW ENOUGH ABOUT THE NEW ZONE TREAD TIRES FROM GOODYEAR AND IF THEY WILL BE A GOOD IDEA MOVING FORWARD?
“I have heard about it, understand the concept and it sounds really interesting and that it has great potential.  I did see Kasey (Kahne), but we weren’t talking about any testing at Atlanta, it was all sprint car stuff that we were talking about.  I am interested.  I know they made a lot of laps so I’m interested to find out more about it.  I’m hoping that’s something that works for us to give a shot at the next Atlanta race and I think that’s a step towards finding ways — I’m a big believer that it’s not a tire thing, it’s the weight distribution of the car, total weight in general, downforce, our cars are very difficult on tires.  It’s not just, ‘Hey Goodyear, you have to build a better tire.’  It’s everybody has to work together to allow them the ability to make tires that have some fall off and that can wear and don’t just build a lot of heat and blister.  Maybe this is a nice compromise for that.”
 
IS THERE ANY FEELING OF NOW NOT HAVING TO WORRY ABOUT TONY STEWART IN THE CHASE OR IN MAKING THE CHASE?
“That’s certainly not our initial thoughts.  Anytime one of our competitors is injured, we’re going to think about them and their health first, but there is no doubt that Tony (Stewart) plays a huge influence in the Chase and in the championship.  We saw him squeak into the Chase just a couple years ago and win the championship.  You never count them out.  Their cars are running really good right now and so I looked to him to being one of the biggest threats for the position that we’re in.”
 
HOW DOES HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS SHAKE OFF THE JUNE RACE AT MICHIGAN TO RETURN NEXT WEEKEND?
“I don’t think there is any organization out there better than Hendrick to analyze a situation, that race, take everything, all the information we could gather from each of the cars and find ways to improve that and make sure those things don’t happen in the future.  For me, it was qualifying as poorly as I did, being in that position to get caught up in a wreck.  It wasn’t, I don’t look at that as just bad luck.  We shouldn’t have been in that position to begin with and we’ve got to improve the qualifying effort at Michigan.  I like the things that we’ve learned lately that I think can really help our performance qualifying as well as in the race. I think we’re going to be pretty good in the race, I was pretty happy when they dropped the green with what my car felt like.  As far as some of the other things, there’s only so much that is in my control and in my hands.  I know when it comes to engines, there is nobody better than the Hendrick engine group at making sure we have good power and reliability going back.  I’m not sure on the tire issues, but we’re certainly, we’ve gathered all that information and I’ve got complete faith in Alan (Gustafson, crew chief) and the team to make t
he right calls to when it comes to what’s going to allow us to have the best speed, but also reliability when it comes to the setup and the tires as well.”
 
WHAT WILL IT TAKE TO PUT AN END TO MARCOS AMBROSE’S REIGN AT WATKINS GLEN? “What makes him so good, not to mention his road racing experience over the years is his aggressiveness.  He’s just so aggressive.  While I think sometimes that holds him back on the ovals, it pays off big time here.  That’s going to be tough to beat.  I think it was interesting because we were at Sonoma and he doesn’t do as well at Sonoma as he does here because this track, it loves aggressiveness.  Sonoma does not like aggressiveness.  I think you’re going to see him be extremely fast this weekend.  He was fast at Sonoma, but just the fall off was pretty big there where here that’s not the case.  I think he’s going to be very, very difficult to beat.  I’m definitely hungry, but again you have to walk before you can run and we have not been as strong here the last couple years.  I know that if we hit on something that we’re going to be very strong and hopefully we can go compete with those guys.  We had a shot to finish eighth or ninth here last time we were here and I think we need to be shooting for that or better.  I think that we had a slow start to the weekend last time we were here because we just didn’t get on top of it soon enough, but halfway through the race we really did and we just try to learn from that and apply that earlier in the weekend.  Hopefully we get some laps today that would help.”
 
WHY HAS THERE NOT BEEN A DROP IN ATTENDANCE AT WATKINS GLEN?
“There’s just something about the atmosphere of this place.  You go into the campground and there’s just people that love being here and love being a part of the event.  They’re having a good time and it’s not just about coming and watching a race, it’s a lot more than that and I think that’s just part of the appeal.  There’s a lot of very avid fans around this area too that don’t maybe get a chance to get to NASCAR races or they are just a little more road racing enthusiasts, hard to say.  We love it and we love coming here and the crowd that we get here is an avid one and fun to hear them having a lot of fun here in the infield all weekend long and see how excited they get on race day.”
 

Chevy Racing–Watkins Glen–Danica Patrick

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CHEEZ-IT 355 AT THE GLEN
WATKINS GLEN INTERNATIONAL
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 9, 2013
 
DANICA PATRICK, NO. 10 GODADDY CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Watkins Glen International and discussed visiting Tony Stewart in the hospital this week, her outlook for the race this weekend at Watkins Glen and other topics.  Full Transcript:
 
TALK ABOUT YOUR OUTLOOK FOR THIS WEEKEND AT THIS ROAD COURSE:
“Sonoma didn’t go as well as I thought it would, but that is definitely a challenging track as I’ve found myself and heard a lot since then.  We went and tested at Road Atlanta a week or two ago and felt really good.  This place has a lot more grip than Sonoma so I’m hoping that translates and that we have a better weekend.”
 
IF YOU COULD JUST TALK ABOUT YOUR REACTION TO WHAT HAPPENED WITH TONY (STEWART), HOW DID YOU FIND OUT AND HAVE YOU SPOKEN TO HIM SINCE TO GET AN IDEA OF HOW HIS SPIRITS ARE RIGHT NOW?
“Well, I didn’t know until, well I guess I found out late that night that it happened, Ricky (Stenhouse) watches all those races.  It’s the most exciting time of the year for them; it’s on every night for 10 days or so.  He said that he crashed.  Well his team is Jason Johnson I think he was running like third or second so they were both doing really well and he said he crashed and he was airlifted.  Later on I had woken up because I can’t stay up that late and he said that he had broken his leg.  We talked to Eddie (Jarvis) the next day and just kind of kept up with how he was doing.  We went and saw him in the hospital.  He’s in typical Tony spirits. He’s hassling the nurses and everything you could imagine Tony is.  He has pretty good spirits, but it’s one of those things, it happens.”
 
IN TERMS OF TEAM HE IS OBVIOUSLY OWNER AND LEADER OF THE TEAM.  WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO MISS THIS WEEKEND IN TERMS OF TONY NOT BEING THERE?
“Well he is like one of the masters of this track.  I called him the master.  He’s won here a lot and so before we left I asked for all of his speed secrets.  We will see if they work (laughs).  You know he just he has a good spirit about him and everybody that works around him or doesn’t to be honest, loves Tony.  He will just be missed from a presence and a morale stand point.  I said I would do my best to keep everybody on the up and up and the season well.”
 
WE SAW YOU WERE UP AT ROCHESTER FOR THE PGA YESTERDAY.  DID YOU HAVE FUN UP THERE AND WHAT CAN YOU KIND OF OBSERVE FROM OTHER PROFESSIONAL ATHLETES THAT YOU CAN APPLY TO YOUR DRIVING?
“That us race car drivers are pretty cool and casual before we have to get out there and do our job and that we are very fan and sponsor oriented.  So many other sports they get to just kind of keep their head down.  Whether they go from practice to the course or whatever watching them practice every sport is incredibly difficult and it takes a lot to get to the top of any of them.  I have played golf a few times lately and I’m just happy if I make contact with the ball and get it above the ground by any measure at all as opposed to rolling it.  They are very good at what they do and dang they are good at putting.  They make those 10-15 foot putts look easy.”
 
DO YOU FEEL A RESPONSIBILITY OF ANY KIND TO LITTLE GIRLS WHO WATCH YOU RACE?
“I mean I think it starts off as you just race.  I think I’m kind of getting a little bit older now and recognizing how honored I am to be in a position to be looked up to and to have them want to grow up to be like me or to just purely cheer for me.  There are a lot of choices out there.  There are a lot of different sports to look at.  I do what I can to kind of nurture that or take care of it and spend time with kids.  If I’m ever running about and don’t have a lot of time, but I have a little bit I always try and make sure I pick out the kids and take time for them.  I guess I do.  I do feel some sort of responsibility to be someone that they want to look up to and a good role model for them.  Mostly just not break their heart.  I feel like one of the hardest things when you are young is you have this idea of your idols or your role models and it’s so high.  It’s hard to not disappoint because they have built you up so much.  I do my best to just not let them down and that if I have a second I at least say hello or waive.
 
“There was a little girl at the golf course yesterday.  She wasn’t little, she was maybe 10 (years old) and her Dad was telling her who I was as I was walking by.  I could hear it all happening you know it’s right behind me.  He had said ‘hello’ and so as I kind of turned off to walk another way I looked over just to waive at her.  It would be easy enough for me to just keep walking and they didn’t say anything to me.  They didn’t try and say hello again or take a picture or anything, but I thought you know what I can tell that she figured out who I was and she thought that was cool.  So I just turned around to waive at her.  She will have that story now as opposed to me walking away.  Just little stuff like that.”
 
HOW DO YOU THINK IT WILL AFFECT TONY TO WATCH SOMEONE ELSE DRIVE HIS CAR?
“I mean I don’t know, but I think that he understands what happened and he is where he is.  I mean essentially he watches people drive his cars a lot. He owns a team and he has his sprint car stuff and so he watches and he has his own drivers already.  I don’t know if that kind of dampens it a little bit just because of his position of being an owner of a lot of cars, but I mean he really was getting on a roll this season.  Especially being at a track that you’ve done really well at as a driver I’m sure it’s a little bit harder to take that one.  He’s on the road to recovery and he is just going to have to keep his head down and get well.  Like I said he was in good spirits so I’m sure it won’t be easy, but I think it probably helps that he owns cars already.”
 
HOW MUCH TIME DO YOU SPEND ANALYZING AN ACCIDENT LIKE WHAT HAPPENED LAST WEEK TO LEARN FROM IT?  HAVE YOU SPOKEN TO TRAVIS (KVAPIL) AT ALL?
“I definitely think about it.  I don’t want to make more mistakes and I know that at least coming off of Loudon for sure into our break that I just said to myself I was just going to run my own races and I wasn’t going to let anything get to me.  It just is what it is and I have better days when I don’t think about, when I don’t get bothered by anything.  Honestly that was how I went into Pocono and I didn’t let anything bother me if someone was catching me, if they passed me, fine.  If I couldn’t get by someone that was just what was happening.  I really felt very calm in that race.  I did.  I did call him and did talk to him.  I felt like it was time to do that.  It was a good conversation and hopefully we don’t have any more issues in the future.  It’s not good to crash cars so I don’t want to be in that position.  I don’t want to be in the position to take anyone with me.”
 
GREG ZIPADELLI INDICATED THAT TONY FELT BAD BECAUSE HE FELT LIKE HE LET THE TEAM DOWN AND HE LET PEOPLE DOWN BY HIS BEING INJURED.  JIMMIE JOHNSON AND DALE EARNHARDT, JR. HAVE SAID HIM GOING OUT AND RACING IN THESE SPRINT CAR RACES IS WHAT MAKES HIM TONY.  IT HELPS THE SPORT.  IT’S A GOOD THING.  WHERE DO YOU KIND OF FALL ON THAT?
“Well, I mean it’s not a mystery he loves racing sprint cars. He has a team; he races them all the time.  When we were there saying hello obviously you get a lot of people on both sides of the fence about the safety of sprint car racing, but I said ‘beep’ happens.  It just does.  N
obody at the team is mad or upset we feel bad for him.  We all want him around.  At the end of the day those are the most important people are the people around you.  None of us are mad whatsoever we just feel bad for him.”
 
 

Chevy Racing–Watkins Glen–Kurt Busch

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CHEEZ-IT 355 AT THE GLEN
WATKINS GLEN INTERNATIONAL
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 9, 2013
 
KURT BUSCH, NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW RACING/DENVER MATTRESS CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at Watkins Glen International and discussed racing on road courses, making the Chase, the progress of the No. 78 Chevrolet SS team and other topics.  Full Transcript:
 
WE’RE BACK AT A ROAD COURSE; YOU GUYS DID WELL AT SONOMA. WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS COMING BACK TO THE GLEN?
“The Glen has been a little tougher for me over the years and when we came and tested a couple weeks back it really opened up my eyes as to why this road course is so much different than most road courses. It’s the fact that there’s such high speed braking zones and a good quantity of them, that it burns up the front brakes. And so over the years, not to get into too much detail, but I ended up glazing over my brakes a lot. The Nationwide race is a lot shorter here and I’ve won it two times and the Cup race I’ve only gotten one top-five because the brakes are such a big concern the second half of the race. So, I feel like this is the best that I’ve ever been prepared coming into Watkins Glen.”
 
BECAUSE OF SOME OF THE STUFF YOU JUST MENTIONED, DO YOU HAVE TO SIGNIFICANTLY CHANGE YOUR SETUP FOR THIS RACE AS OPPOSED TO WHAT YOU NEED THE CAR TO DO AT SAY SONOMA?
“The setup I’ve always understood was a little bit different. And now it’s gone into much more detail. The team and me testing here, we just opened up a lot of new things for each other to look at. The years I ran for Roush here were so-so, Penske we had that really good year in 2010 and finished second to Montoya, and since then the 2 car has done really well. So I feel like we’ve got the baseline close now I hope I’m opening a new chapter of finding the exact combination that it takes to win at a track. There’s times when you have good runs like at Bristol for years in a row but you have to change from that program in advance. It’s a good chance for us to again go to a track, test and then find good results from that. We’ve been on a good *** of testing lately. Kind of funny, I was just talking to the guys that they’re all excited to stay home next week in Colorado and mow their lawns, sit on their couches, and just kind of take it easy because we’ve done all our work to prepare our car to be the best that we can be for these next few weeks.”
 
HERE AT ROAD COURSE RACES THE SETUP IS LESS OF A FACTOR IN THE SUCCESS OF A TEAM THAN JUST THE DRIVER’S ABILITY. THE DRIVER REALLY HAS THE ABILITY TO SHINE WHEN HE HAS THE SKILLS AT A ROAD COURSE RACE VERSUS AN OVAL. DO YOU FEEL THAT EXTRA PRESSURE OR OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU AS A DRIVER TO RISE ABOVE THE PACK HERE AT A ROAD COURSE RACE?
“Yeah, I think short tracks demand different things than intermediate tracks, intermediates are different from superspeedways, just as road courses are different. We can say the percentage that a driver has on the equation is larger at a road course. And so, there’s more that’s in the driver’s hands. Maybe it’s 60% of the equation. Whereas at restrictor plate racing 95% of it is luck and 5% is the driver or crew or preparation. At a short track you got to have all the combinations. At intermediate tracks you got to have pit stops that are going to get you out in front of guys but you have to have the down force. So, road courses yeah you could say the driver has more of the equation than anything else. And for us, we lost Sonoma this year because of the driver. I was speeding on pit road and it’s just a stupid mistake that’ll take you out of the running.”
 
WHEN YOU TALK ABOUT BRAKES, HOW MUCH OF IT IS THE PACKAGE FOR YOU TO BE ABLE TO USE THEM AND HOW MUCH OF IT IS UP TO YOU TO KIND OF FINESSE YOUR WAY THROUGH?
“I’m going to try to explain this the right way. At all the testing we’ve done this year and me compared to the RCR cars, I’m the easiest guy on brakes. We came here to Watkins Glen and I’m the hardest on brakes. And we were confused on why that was. I mean we saw the spikes in the data, we saw the temperature in the rotors and it’s really odd. And I had no explanation for them. So, we had to go to work. We had to find out why my style of driving was so different here than at other tracks. I think we’ve done our homework. We’ve got a different combination on the car. And we’ll see if it gives us the results that we need. It just showed that I was aggressive on the pedal. I’ve won Nationwide races here but I haven’t crossed over the threshold to win a Cup race. Hopefully this is that last ingredient.”
 
SO DID THEY SET IT UP SO YOU CAN KEEP BREAKING THE WAY YOU WERE?
“Yes. Yeah, they tailored it to me. I’m like, “I’m confused guys I want to change but when I do change my lap times really suffer.” So, we tried to keep going with my lap times but tried to find the durability in the brakes.”
 
WHAT WOULD IT MEAN TO GET A WIN HERE NOW WITH TONY OUT WHICH OPENS UP ANOTHER WILD CARD POSITION?
“The Tony thing is a different subject but since he’s got a win he’s in that win column group. If we do win then we’re ahead of him and we’re ahead of other guys that have won as well. But if we don’t win we still jump up a spot. And there’s less guys running for those top-10 spots. It’s an interesting dynamic. With Tony’s injury, I won’t get into that. But the way that we just need to keep running consistent, even if we won we still need to stay ahead of guys that have that one win.”
 
HOW SIGNIFICANT IS IT AT THIS POINT IN THE SEASON TO LOSE A CHASE COMPETITOR? “That’s where we just need to focus on our 78 car. We just need to worry about what we have to do to get our points and to not have bad things happen in the race. It would be the same as Tony spinning and wrecking on Lap 1 in a sense on Sunday. He’s just not going to get any good points.  We now have that forecast to know that that’s going to happen before the race even starts. We just need to stick to our game plan now and just stay focused on the 78 car.”
 
YOU PROVED AGAIN LAST WEEK THE POTENTIAL THIS TEAM HAS. HOW DO YOU STAND NOW AS COMPARED TO WHAT YOU MIGHT HAVE EXPECTED BACK IN FEBRUARY WHEN ALL THIS CRANKED UP?
“I was hoping I’d get to answer some of that today. I feel like the team is at its peak right now. We’re going back to tracks for our second time. We know all of the mistakes we made at some of the tracks the first time around. We’ve been able to get stronger as the season has progressed but now we have exact notes together on what I did, what the team did, was the pit crew a little slow this race, was it the shock setup that we ran this race. Yeah, it’s Watkins Glen this weekend but we’ve already been to a road course and we know exactly what we did wrong. The team, like last week, first time going back to a track, second time at Pocono we delivered a top-three finish, ran top-five all day and it was one of our most genuine runs. So, I feel like we’re way beyond where we were in February. We’re way beyond where we were in May. And this is the best the team has been. And right now we’re in this Chase mix, which is a great feeling. I thought we could get to this point. I didn’t know when it would happen but I think all of the science has shown that we have matured and we’ve progressed and we’re now at a point to capitalize on being together the second half of the year.”
 
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON TONY’S INJURY? YOU’RE A TOP DRIVER THAT RUNS IN OTHER SERIES. WHAT GOES THROUGH YOUR MIND ABOUT RUNNING IN A DIFFERENT SERIES AND GETTING AN INJURY WHERE YOU CAN’T COMPETE?
“There’s always that risk. We’re always on that edge when you’re racing. No matter if it’s a Cup car or a Sprint car. And when you’re out there, like Tony is, leading your crusade for short track racing, he was out there continuing to do what he has been doing a
ll along. He does it for many reasons. One is to keep himself busy and it’s his outlet to enjoy life at a level that’s fun for him. And I’ve been through the ups and the downs of finding fun in racing versus doing the daily/weekly grind. And for him, he’s been leading a crusade for short track racing. We all commend him for doing such. You look at it, he brought the truck series to El Dora and that was the feel-good story a few weeks ago. So for Tony, that’s just the next step of what he wants to do for short track racing. This won’t set him back from doing that anymore. He’ll get back in the car, he’ll keep running those Sprint Car races and he’ll be back in the Cup car. It’s just a bigger speed bump than we all expected. But as drivers they know that there’s a danger and there’s a fear of when things can happen. I mean I’ve run Grand-AM Rolex races, jumped in an Indy car at Indianapolis to drive around in an open cock-pit at 218 miles an hour. It’s a whole different experience and I’m hoping I’m making the right steps in transitioning to run an Indy race that if I do, to do it the right way. But tony, he is the most experienced racer there is, especially in Sprint cars, in jumping in them and jumping out of them. A freak deal happened. I mean I saw video of it and it was freak deal. It wasn’t anything he induced to put himself in a bad position. That’s the code I’ve always lived by. Don’t put yourself in a bad position to wreck.”
 
HAVE YOU EVER HAD A SPONSOR OR AN OWNER SAY, ‘WE DON’T WANT YOU RUN ANY KIND OF RACES BESIDES CUP’?
“I’ve never had a sponsor restrict me from doing any extracurricular racing or an owner. They’ve just always said, “You’re 100% responsible if something does go wrong.” Now Tony doesn’t have many people to answer to, being that he’s the owner of the Sprint Cup car. It’s a risk that you take. It’s the fulfillment of life that you’re trying to enjoy. At the end of the day who are we to judge what Tony is enjoying for life versus what he should be doing? It’s the battle I’ve been going through the last two or three years as well.”
 
WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR THE AVERAGE DRIVER OR THE AVERAGE TEAM, ‘YOU’RE 100% RESPONSIBLE’? WHAT WOULD THE REPERCUSSIONS BE IF A DRIVER GOES OUT AND GETS HURT?
“You said the key word if. I don’t like to play what-if. Each and everybody is responsible for their own situation. And for Tony, none of us are going to look at him any different. He’s out there doing what Tony does best. And a freak deal happened. It’s unfortunate and there’s side effects that come with it.”
 
HAS IT IN ANY WAY CHANGED YOUR IDEAS ABOUT THE INDYCAR DEAL AND STILL TRYING TO MAYBE RACE SOME NEXT YEAR?
“It’s making me think about how I can pattern and channel more things to look at and more things to put my mind at ease and to be better prepared for when I go and if I go.”
 
INAUDIBLE:
“I don’t want to get into a battle of what the media writes versus my actual feelings. It’s as if you guys were saying, “Well he didn’t find the success on track therefore he’s not happy.” I’m very happy at what I was doing and to win races with Kyle’s team last year and to get Phoenix Racing to victory lane, albeit in a Nationwide car, it was something happy. It was something fun and exciting and different. But then you read that, “He’s just not happy because he’s not getting the same results.” And those are the types of things. How can we judge Tony for what’s going to be the side effects versus what happiness he gets out of running Sprint Car races?”
 
WHAT IS A PARTICULAR AREA ON THE TRACK YOU FEEL LIKE YOU HAVE TO BE YOUR BEST AT?
“The year I did really well here to finish second I was good in the braking zones. There’s three big heavy braking zones. Getting into the bus stop, I call it Turn 10 and in Turn 1. But the most important part of the track, to your question, is Turn 2. I think Turn 2 leads into the longer straight-away and that’s where you can make big time passes if you get a run on somebody going into the bus stop. It starts at Turn 2.
 
HOW DO YOU SET SOMEBODY UP IN THAT AREA?
“Turn 2 is a focal point to make sure you’re not too tight or too loose and you get the car as best you can there I think. You take some other side effects from the rest of the track to not be as good there.”
 
CERTAINLY STRATEGY CAN PLAY A BIG ROLE AT THIS TRACK.  HOW MUCH ARE YOU INVOLVED IN THAT?  HOW MUCH ARE YOU THINKING ABOUT THAT OR DO YOU PREFER JUST TO TAKE THE WHEEL AND LET TODD (BERRIER, CREW CHIEF) FIGURE THAT STUFF OUT?
“It’s Todd and the guys understanding the pace of the race, I can’t see that. It’s also them understanding fuel mileage, I can’t see that. And so when they tell me, “We’re two laps shy.” Hopefully they tell me early enough in the run and I can make a difference and add to the strategy.”
 

Chevy Racing–Watkins Glen–Max Papis, Greg Zipadelli

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CHEEZ-IT 355 AT THE GLEN
WATKINS GLEN INTERNATIONAL
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 9, 2013
 
MAX PAPIS, INTERIM DRIVER FOR TONY STEWART, NO. 14 RUSH TRUCK CENTERS/MOBIL 1 CHEVROLET SS AND GREG ZIPADELLI, COMPETITION DIRECTOR AT STEWART-HAAS RACING, met with members of the media at Watkins Glen International and discussed Tony Stewart’s status after his second surgery, this weekend’s race at Watkins Glen with Max driving, the future of who will be in the No. 14 Chevrolet SS and much more.  Full Transcript:
 
GREG CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE PLANS FOR STEWART-HAAS RACING AT LEAST THIS WEEKEND AND MAX JUST FOLLOW UP ON THE OPPORTUNITY THAT YOU HAVE HERE TODAY:
 
GREG ZIPADELLI: “Obviously with the circumstances we are dealing with Tony (Stewart) out of the car Max (Papis) is here for us this weekend. He had done some road course testing recently, about two weeks ago, in the No. 14 car.  There was a little bit of a database built.  A little communication had already been started and we felt like that was our best option for this weekend.  Max has a lot of experience here and its road racing.  Obviously difficult situation for everybody at Stewart-Haas this weekend, but it’s the situation we are in and we will do our best.”
 
GREG ALLUDED TO IT YOU HAVE A SPORTS CAR WIN HERE NOT TOO LONG AGO.  TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT THE OPPORTUNITY WITH THE NO. 14 CAR AND THE HISTORY HERE AT ‘THE GLEN’:
 
MAX PAPIS: “First of all it’s great to be here with all of you guys.  I hope that Tony will be back soon because that is actually his car.  It’s just an honor to be able to be called by an organization like Stewart-Haas and fill the shoes of Tony.  It was not really a dream come true, but it was more like recognition towards all the work that I’ve done so far in my career.  I feel that I have a lot of confidence to go out there and give them solid results.  Obviously, if I would have been maybe 25 years old I would have been maybe sitting on the toilet for how nervous I was, but I guess now I’m 30 plus 12 so I feel pretty good about it.”
 
DO YOU HAVE ANY MORE OF AN UPDATE ON TONY SINCE HAVING THE SECOND SURGERY AND HAVE YOU SPOKEN TO HIM?  IF YOU COULD JUST GIVE US A LITTLE BIT OF YOUR INTERACTION WITH HIM:
 
GREG ZIPADELLI: “I saw him Wednesday night before his surgery.  I talked to him, texted, yesterday after everything went well.  As good as could be expected.  It’s going to be a day by day situation right now just with infections and things of that nature.  Hopefully, it will turn into a week by week here probably Sunday or Monday we will know a lot more.  Right now it’s a week by week deal.  We will see what doctors have to say at the beginning of the week and we will go from there.  Obviously Michigan, Bristol and those things we are looking right now for who is going to be in the car and trying to work those things out.  As far as that goes he was in great spirits.  As good of spirits as he could be in, he’s a little bit down.  He felt like he has let a lot of people down, the world, his fans, so I know all the support that he has gotten from the fans and the racers here I know has helped him a lot.  We talked about that and it’s cool the outreach that this area has given him.”
 
MAX, WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE BEEN DOING THIS WEEKEND IF YOU WEREN’T HERE RACING AND COULD YOU TALK ABOUT THIS BEING A VERY HIGH PROFILE RIDE FOR YOU?

MAX PAPIS: “I think it is more sensational for you guys.  For me I love the opportunity.  I love that you guys talk about it.  I would have been in Elkhart Lake racing the Ferrari and actually that was going to be the plan to do both.  At the end Remo Ferri Racing decided that it would have been better just for me to stay focused on this deal here and not flying around.  Thanks to them as well for that.  Even if I thought there would have been a pretty cool deal to run both.  I kind of feel a little bit like an old style generation guy in a way.  For me I admire people like Mario Andretti, people like A.J. Foyt, people like Tony Stewart that can drive anything any day.  I text Tony a few times, obviously he is doing his own deal he is trying to recover, but I can tell you guys this watching and listening how much love there is for this guy in the sport it’s really overwhelming.  Everyone really loves him for real.  At the same time I feel that love has been spread around towards me driving as well.  I felt really good about it.  Like people were excited about me being in the car and everyone said just go out there and represent him the best way you can.  That is kind of what I feel like.  I’m going to go out there and do the best I can.  I have a lot of confidence in my own abilities.  You’re asking me if this is something that is going to change my career.  I am 42 years old.  I don’t think too many things change your career anymore.  It’s more just the satisfaction in a way.  I woke up this morning and I told my kids ‘guys Poppy is going to go out there and drive for Tony Stewart’.  That is something we are going to talk about in the year to come. 
 
OBVIOUSLY THERE IS A LOT OF SPECULATION ABOUT WHO MIGHT BE IN THE CAR AND THAT WILL BE LIKE WILD FIRE UNTIL YOU ACTUALLY ANNOUNCE IT.  ARE YOU GETTING CLOSER TO BEING ABLE TO SAY WEATHER IT IS GOING TO BE A ROTATING CAST OF PEOPLE AND CAN YOU TALK ABOUT SOME OF THE CHALLENGES WITH RACES JUST A WEEK AWAY AND WHAT YOU ARE GOING TO DO?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI: “We would love to put somebody in the car until Tony comes back.  The problem we are faced with next week is if you look at the schedules and you lay out the Nationwide schedule at Mid-Ohio and us in Michigan they don’t match up very well.  Somebody would do two half-assed jobs or we can try and find somebody that is out of the norm and put them in the car and try to go to Michigan and do the best we can.  Then hopefully maybe Bristol we could pick up with one person that maybe able to do the rest of it and obviously it would be a Nationwide driver.  There are a couple of really good people that we have talked to.  There are an awful lot of people that have reached out and obviously a lot of people would love to get in that car.  Right now we are taking it slow; we spent a lot of time on this week.  Obviously we had a lot of stuff with our sponsors and we are trying to keep them as involved as we can.  They are very important partners to Stewart-Haas and our future.  We are trying to weed out, give them some options and get their input.  Just try and do everything in the right way.”
 
ASIDE FROM RACING THE CAR HOW SOON DO YOU SEE TONY STEPPING IN TO HELP MAKE DECISIONS AND RUN THE SHIP FROM WHERE HE IS AT BEING THE LEADER OF THE GROUP?

GREG ZIPADELLI: “He has been involved.  He was in and out Tuesday/Wednesday, but we shot him a text and I talked to him about Max and a couple of our options.  He was all about Max getting in and doing it, didn’t question it.  He actually sounded pretty excited about it.  In all honesty to answer your question we are waiting for him to kind of, I’m thinking tonight/tomorrow I will be able to spend a little more time talking to him and get his input as well.  We have got a little bit of time before we need to make that decision.  I feel like before we leave here Sunday/Monday morning we need to know what we are doing when we get home.  I will probably take all of that time to make sure we make the right decision and move forward from there.”
 
WHAT DO YOU THINK TONY’S MENTALITY IS GOING TO BE OR HOW DO YOU THINK IT IS GOING TO BE FOR HIM SUNDAY WHEN HE IS THERE WATCHING THE RACE ON TV?  HOW DIFFICULT IS THAT GOING T
O BE FOR HIM?

GREG ZIPADELLI: “I think that is a really difficult moment for anybody that has been in the sport and has raced.  I think his personality and as much of a racer that he is I think it will be harder on him than anybody else.  When you look at the consecutive starts that he has had over here and how many races he has run and now he can’t get in his car.  I imagine that would be really tough on him.  We will all be there and support him.  It’s still his car he’s just out for you know a temporary spell so we will do the best we can with trying to keep him cheered up as a group.  It is what it is.  He loves racing and knows and we all know that this day could be here.  It’s here now we are just going to do the best we can to navigate through the obstructions that we have one day at a time.  Before you know it we will be talking about him getting back in it and be business as usual.”
 
MAX PAPIS: “I can tell you from the drivers stand point.  You are definitely not happy.  I have been in this situation and you can picture it as you want.  You don’t want nobody to put his butt in your car, nobody.  Knowing Tony for over 20 years I just can tell you guys that I really feel that something like this that happen to him he is going to be back with a lot more aggression that he has ever had.  Because I think that being out of the car sometimes opens up your eyes on a lot of little things.  Sometimes God makes things happen for a reason.  You never know.”
 
WHAT WAS THE RANGE OF EMOTIONS FOR YOU FROM I’M GUESSING YOU GOT A CALL IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT.  THEN YOU IMMEDIATELY HAVE TO GO INTO WHAT NOW MODE WHILE SIMULTANEOUSLY DEALING WITH ONE OF YOUR BEST FRIENDS INJURY:

GREG ZIPADELLI: “Yeah, we were in Atlanta I was sleeping.  Obviously we went down for a tire test he was supposed to meet us there in the morning.  The phone started going off about 12:42 (pm) or so and hasn’t stopped since.  I don’t know my emotions obviously my biggest concern was he okay, was he going to be okay.  Then the reason I’m there is to try and deal with whatever circumstances get thrown at us.  Other than obviously feeling bad for him and wanting to know where he was at I haven’t had a whole lot of emotions through this whole thing to be honest with you.  I have just kind of just tried to stay as focused and as level as I can and do the best job that I can for him and Stewart-Haas Racing.”
 
IS THERE ANY THOUGHT WHEN YOU ARE FOCUSING ON WHO TO TAKE OVER FOR THE NEXT RACES ON KEEPING THE NO. 14 IN THE OWNERS CHASE?

GREG ZIPADELLI: “Yeah, if we have anything to fight for right now is owner’s points and representing our sponsors the best we can and getting that car to perform at the highest level that it can for our sponsors is first and foremost.  We owe that to them.  Obviously finishing these races and collecting owner’s points is obviously a very big deal.”
 
THE LAST TIME TONY HAD A SERIOUS INJURY WAS 2006 AND YOU WERE HIS CREW CHIEF.  YOU WERE CREW CHIEF AND HE WAS THE DRIVER FOR AN ORGANIZATION. YOU ARE NOW COMPETITION DIRECTOR FOR A MULTI-CAR TEAM HE IS THE TEAM CO-OWNER AND DRIVER.  HOW IS THIS EXPERIENCE BEEN DIFFERENT AND HOW IS IT DIFFERENT ADDRESSING ONE TEAM COMPARED TO HAVING TO DEAL WITH ISSUES REGARDING A WHOLE ORGANIZATION?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI: “Yeah I mean there is a little bit obviously when you are a crew chief you are… I always said this that I was paid to be selfish for the No. 20 car for all those years and just do whatever I felt was best for that group.  Now it’s different, it’s three teams, from the sponsors from the people at the shop to everybody involved.  There is different roles and responsibilities at the end of the day it’s still to do your best job and do what you can to make the situation just to get through the situation as best as we can.  Can’t lose focus on the other two teams there is still responsibility there.  There is still make sure the No. 39 has everything that they need to try and make this Chase and for Danica (Patrick) to continue to make progress.  It’s a little bit different.  Obviously a lot of focus has been spent here the last couple of days and over time I think it will weed back out to be over the whole organization.”
 
YOU HAVE TALKED ABOUT YOU KNOW TONY WILL BE OUT AT LEAST A FEW WEEKS BUT NO REAL TIMETABLE.  IS THERE ANY HOPE HE COULD BE BACK AT ATLANTA OR RICHMOND? IF HE DID THERE THEORETICALLY WOULD BE A CHANCE HE COULD STILL MAKE THE CHASE:
 
GREG ZIPADELLI: “I mean I think it’s real early to hope for that.  Obviously that would be best case scenario.  I don’t know honestly without getting into a whole lot of details.  It’s going to be a few weeks before we can even look at that and talk about it.  Right now it will be a week to week prognosis on him.  It will be week to week for us as a team to try and put the best candidate we can in it at that race track and we will go from there.”
 
YOU SAID YOU ARE NOT OPPOSED TO HAVING A VARIETY OF DRIVERS IN THERE.  COULD YOU KIND OF CUSTOM TAILOR A DRIVER TO A TRACK?  OBVIOUSLY YOU WANT CONSISTENCY, MAX HAD CONSISTENCY SINCE HE TESTED WITH YOU GUYS LAST WEEK? WOULD YOU BE OPPOSED A LOT OF PEOPLE HAVE SAID KYLE LARSON, BUT IS HE TOO YOUNG TO TAKE OVER A ROLE OF THAT MAGNITUDE THIS EARLY IN HIS CAREER?

GREG ZIPADELLI: “Kyle Larson is obviously an awesome race car driver.  I think we are only seeing the beginnings of what he has to offer to the sport.  I think he is at a really crucial spot in his career of learning everything he can and not getting ‘fed to the wolves’ too soon would you say.  I think I would prefer to put from this point on put one person in that we felt was capable of doing a good solid job and trying to build some chemistry with the crew and the crew chief.  There are a lot of those little details that make up for a good day on Sunday.  Pit stops and how the driver gets in and out of the box, on and off pit road, all those things you take into account so the longer you get to work with someone the better you get to know them.  I feel like the better chance we have of having some consistent results.  I don’t know that we will honestly be able to do that just with drivers.  The drivers that we would like to put they are all racing for a championship and we need to be respectful of their position.  Make sure we don’t hinder them in the position that they are in.”
 
DO YOU PUT THE FOCUS ON THE NO. 39 SO YOU AT LEAST HAVE ONE STEWART-HAAS RACING CAR IN THE CHASE?
 
GREG ZIPADELLI: “Absolutely, I mean we will put as much focus on them as we can.  We will do the best we can with the No. 14 to maintain its owner’s point’s. That is basically what we can do and we will do the best we can at it.”
 

Chevy Racing–Watkins Glen–Jimmie Johnson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CHEEZ-IT 355 AT THE GLEN
WATKINS GLEN INTERNATIONAL
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
AUGUST 9, 2013
 
JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS met with media and discussed Tony Stewart’s injury, sponsor approval process to race other vehicles, his expectations at Watkins Glen this weekend, Max Papis filling-in for Stewart, and more.  FULL TRANSCRIPT:
 
WATKINS GLEN IS ONE OF THE FEW TRACKS WHERE YOU HAVEN’T WON. THAT COULD CHANGE VERY QUICKLY. TALK ABOUT YOUR PROGRESSION AS A ROAD COURSE DRIVER:
“The road course tracks, this one came a little easier to me than Sonoma. We ran the Nationwide cars here, which certainly helped.  But I seemed to be up to speed right away when we got here with the Nationwide program. In the Cup car, I’ve been competitive. I think I’ve been a Top 3 or Top 5 car. If you run long enough in the Top 3 or Top 5, you’ll have your chances to win. But I just haven’t been that race-winning car or maybe the car’s been there, I just haven’t been the race-winning driver yet here. I look forward to another opportunity this year. It’s a very fun race track to drive around. I had the pleasure of racing the GRAND-AM car here and went through the boot and really enjoyed that experience. So, all in all, I love the area and I love the track. We’re generally pretty competitive and hope to be more competitive this weekend.”
 
AFTER LAST WEEK, DID IT EVER STRIKE YOU AS HOW CRAZY IT SEEMED TO LOSE A TIRE, HIT THE WALL, HAVE ISSUES ON PIT ROAD, AND GAIN GROUND IN THE POINTS?
“The last restart, I saw where the No. 15 (Clint Bowyer) was and I thought, okay, I’m not going to lose many points to him. And it wasn’t a lap later when he and I were close to one another and then I got to the outside of him I think off of (Turn) 1 and then we raced side-by-side through (Turn) 3 to the Finish Line. I knew it was close, but either way I knew I wasn’t going to lose a lot of the points lead. I lost some to the field, but not many to second place. So that was pretty cool to come back and I was shocked that it took over a day for Clint to send me a text, a very colorful text. I expected one much sooner from him but it took a day and then I got it.”
 
HAVE YOU BEEN ABLE TO WRAP YOUR MIND AROUND WHAT HAPPENED TO TONY STEWART ON MONDAY AND ALSO THE PROSPECTS OF A CHAMPIONSHIP BATTLE WITHOUT HIM BEING A PART OF IT?
“Yeah, it’s a big loss for our sport and certainly I know that Tony is feeling bad about being injured and the affect that it has on his Cup team. It’s crazy to think that he won’t be a player in the Chase. It’s not something that I would have ever thought, as the year got started. But, you know, I look at the coverage and opinions that are flying around and it’s troubled me some to see people giving him a hard time about his decisions to race other vehicles. We always praise him for his contributions to the motorsports world and his ability to drive and race anything and to own all these different types of vehicles. And then you look at the race tracks that he owns and his involvement with. The guy has done so much for our sport and of course we don’t want to see him injured, but I’ve been disappointed that people have given him a hard time over it.
 
“I personally praise him for all that he does for our sport, including driving sprint cars Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. It’s unfortunate he got hurt but at the end of the day, the opinions that matter the most are Gene Haas’s and his sponsors. And they all knew what was going on and the risks that come with racing a sprint car. And there are some. There are some in any form of auto racing. But, again, I hate he is injured but I would be bummed if he didn’t continue to race all during the week as he has, once he is healed up from his injury because that’s the Smoke we know and love and they guy we all praise. Again, it’s just kind of a bummer to see some people giving him a hard time over it.”
 
HAVE ANY SPONSORS OR OWNERS EVER TOLD YOU NOT TO RACE IN OTHER SERIES? ALSO, JOEY LOGANO IS DRIVING A NO. 48 CAR IN THE NATIONWIDE RACE. WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THAT?
“I didn’t know (laughs). I didn’t know about that. You know, every driver has an approval process that he has to go to, to compete in any other form of racing. First you go to your sponsor. In some cases, you need to go to your manufacturer to get approval. And you always go to the sponsor to get their approval. So, any and every driver has approval before they can climb into another vehicle. Our Cup contract supersedes anything else that’s out there. And you need to have approval and everybody sign off before you enter another event.”
 
THEY ARE PROJECTING ONE OF THE LARGEST CROWDS EVER AT THE GLEN THIS WEEKEND. WHY DO YOU THINK THIS TRACK HASN’T SEEN THE DROP-OFF IN ATTENDANCE THAT OTHER TRACKS HAVE?
“I think there’s great racing history here and people really love coming out here. If you go back to the Formula 1 days and IndyCar and GRAND-AM and NASCAR’s presence here, the fans here know and understand road course racing. And they appreciate it and love it. I think that’s really the reason why. They are familiar with road course racing and enjoy watching the Cup cars go around here.”
 
WHAT DO YOU EXPECT AT A TRACK LIKE THIS, AGGRESSION-WISE, FROM OTHER DRIVERS?
“It seems that we’ll start the race playing the ‘give and take’ game. And then as someone has something taken from the, they’re angry and then that take and take. And before you know it, the whole field is busy taking and no one is giving. The speeds are a lot higher here (than Sonoma). There’s really one area to be extremely greedy, which is Turn 1. Into the Bus Stop, you can try to be brave, but there are big penalties if you don’t make it. And I think out of (Turn) 10 into (Turn) 11, some guys can be greedy there; but again, the speeds are high and there is so much to lose if it goes wrong. Whereas when you go to Sonoma, the top speed is much lower and the majority of the braking zones are a lot slower, you can be brave. You can run into people; knock people out of the way and not lose as much. I don’t think we’ll see as much action as we did in Sonoma. But road course racing, especially any type of green-white-checkered at the end, you’d rather use someone up than be used up. I think that’s everybody’s philosophy when you get to a green-white-checkered.”
 
INAUDIBLE:
“The position we’re in, we can be aggressive; maybe not from running people over. That’s not in my wheelhouse to start with, but we can be aggressive from fuel strategy or tire strategy because of where we are in the points. When you get to the end of the race and it’s those short runs, if there is a caution, being aggressive usually pays off, it seems like to some degree. You do have to go race these guys next week. At least I think about that. I know some don’t, but I do.”
 
YOU ARE POSSIBLY ABLE TO CLINCH A SPOT IN THE CHASE. CAN YOU COMMENT ON THAT AND ALSO DISCUSS WHERE YOU NEED TO FINISH AND WHERE OTHER DRIVERS NEED TO FINISH FOR YOU TO CLINCH?
“Yeah, from the way I understand it leaving Pocono, Tony (Stewart) is in that position for us to clinch. It’s not the way I want to clinch, by any means with him not being here at the race track, but in my mind I’ve felt like our four wins have had us locked-in anyway. I’ve had great comfort and ease feeling like I’m locked in. So, if we do lock in mathematically, that’s great; but certainly not under the circumstances that I’d want it to happen.”
 
YOU’VE KNOWN MAX PAPIS FOR 100 YEARS. WHAT DO YOU EXPECT OUT OF HIM THIS WEEKEND IN THAT KIND OF EQUIPMENT (SUB FOR TONY STEWART IN NO. 14 CHEVY SS)? AND, WHAT IS A SUCCESSFUL WEEKEND FOR HIM?
“First of all I’m excited because his mom is here and she can cook one heck of a meal (laughter)! So, I’m going to sneak over to the Papis bus. And Max an
d (wife) Tatiana can cook anything as well. So there’s good food floating around. I think Max has shown us all (his) love of our sport and we all enjoy being around him and experiencing his passion for the sport. I think the ovals have been a challenge for him to understand and learn, which it has been for a lot of open-wheel guys that come into our sport. But I wish he was still out there in that situation. But in a road course environment, he does an amazing job. And his has history with Hendrick. I think he tested the No. 14 car prior to Tony’s injury. His personality and enthusiasm is contagious. People want him around. I know he’ll do a great job on the race track. He’s been in position to run well, if not win, in the Nationwide Series; and guys have just used him up late. So hopefully with the No.14 on the door and the respect people have for that No. 14 car and the team, they won’t use him up when he’s having a good day on Sunday.”
 
REGARDLESS OF WHAT PEOPLE THINK ABOUT EXTRACURRICULAR RACING, FROM A SPONSOR’S POINT OF VIEW DO YOU THINK WHAT HAPPENED TO TONY STEWART MAY CAUSE A MORE RESTRICTED CLIMATE IN TERMS OF WHAT SPONSORS IN GENERAL REQUIRE FROM CUP DRIVERS?
“It might. You have an opportunity to evaluate after you go through a situation like this and I’ll be interested, like all, to see what Tony’s sponsors say and then clearly, Gene Haas’s opinion on it all. But again, they knew the risks going into it on the front side. So, I wouldn’t expect a huge change and I really hope there wouldn’t be. On my side, my sponsor has been very supportive of other series that I’ve wanted to race and it’s really been my decision to not race other events. Just (due to) family time and to be around and to experience that stuff and not be racing all the time.
 
“But, we’ll have to see as time goes. I don’t think it’s going to change the environment for other drivers and sponsors because we have an approval process that we’ve always had to go through. I mean this doesn’t open up something new that hasn’t been discussed or thought about amongst driver/owner contracts or driver/sponsor contracts. Any time we want to run another vehicle, we have to go through the process and get approval. So, I don’t think it’s going to change that. Tony’s role might change a little bit. I hope it doesn’t, again. But that would be really just their team looking at it.”
 
YOU MENTIONED ‘THE BOOT’ HERE AT THE GLEN AND YOU’VE RACED IT IN GRAND-AM. DO YOU EVER SEE NASCAR DOING THE BOOT (INCLUDING IN CONFIGURATION)?
“I would love them to run us down through there. I don’t know the Turn number, but the first corner would be exciting in one of our race cars. You can crest the hill and have a blind entry into that left-hander. I could see us having some big problems there would be my only concern (laughs); but we’re professionals. We understand the risks and I think it would be worth the risk to run us through there. It is a very, very fun experience down through ‘the boot’.”
 
DO SEE ROOM, EVER, FOR A ROAD COURSE IN THE CHASE FORMAT?
“It wouldn’t hurt my feelings, but there are others much higher up the food chain than myself, that make those decisions. You’d probably have a mixed opinion from drivers as to who would want it and who would not. I think a factor to consider would be attendance and viewership; and for whatever reason, we seem to slip a little in viewership and attendance when we get to a road course event.
 
“The ovals seem to be stronger in what our core fans like to see and experience. So, I think the decision is more inside of that than anything. But if it was on personal opinion, I wouldn’t have a problem with it at all.”
 
YOU HAVE BEEN SAVING YOUR TESTS AS YOU RAMP-UP FOR THE CHASE. IN YOUR POSITION, EVERY RACE TO SOME DEGREE IS RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT FOR THE CHASE. BUT WITH THIS WEEKEND PLUS MICHIGAN AND BRISTOL, THOSE TRACKS DON’T REALLY COMPARE, SO WHAT DO YOU TAKE AWAY FROM THESE TRACKS WHERE THERE’S REALLY NOT A DIRECT COMPARISON THAT YOU ARE GOING TO VISIT THAT HELPS YOU GET READY FOR THAT CHAMPIONSHIP RUN?
“We can learn a little at Michigan, I think, to carry over. But you’re right with Bristol and here. It doesn’t apply to anywhere. But they are great race tracks and trophies to go get. Both would be very meaningful to me; all three would. I have not won here before and I would love to scratch this track off the list. Michigan, I’ve been close six, eight, or 10 times and haven’t been able to close the deal there and would love that opportunity. And then the Bristol night race is just awesome, and I again, would like to win that race. So, there may not be Chase set-up implications through these three races, but they certainly are on (my) personal agenda and would do great things for the team (in) boosting morale, and bonus points to go get. So, there’s still a lot on the line and we’ll be aggressive to try to go out there and win.”
 
HAVE YOU SPOKEN WITH TONY STEWART SINCE HIS ACCIDENT?
“I have not. He was never good at answering his phone to start with (laughter) and now it’s an even more difficult time to touch base. I’ve certainly tried. I’ve been in touch with Eddie (Jarvis) quite a bit and I’m going to try to go see him next week. We’ll go see him and track him down because he’s terrible at answering his phone (laughs).”