Chevy Racing–New Hampshire–

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CAMPING WORLD RV SALES 301
NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JULY 13, 2014

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS – SIDELINED ON LAP 11 DUE TO TIRE ISSUES

WHAT HAPPENED?: 
“The first one (tire) I was able to drive the car all the way through Turns 1 and 2.  I knew I had a flat and then got down the back and came in.  The other one just blew on the straight as soon as I hit the brakes.  I’m not sure what caused it.  I’m sure there will be a lot of speculation and I’m sure finger pointing back to the teams or our team.  But we saw some issues here especially with that particular tire the last couple of days.  We will try to dig in and learn more, but I can promise you one thing is wasn’t low tire pressure.  I’ve been out here for two days running around and haven’t had a flat.”

Continue reading Chevy Racing–New Hampshire–

World of Outlaws–Eldora Speedway Crowns King Kerry the 31st at Kings Royal

Eldora Speedway Crowns King Kerry the 31st at Kings Royal
Kerry Madsen scores his first Kings Royal victory, his seventh podium finish in a row and his fourth win of the season

ROSSBURG, Ohio – July 12, 2014 – Kerry Madsen did something Saturday night few before him have ever done – he won the Kings Royal, one of the most coveted prizes on the World of Outlaws STP Sprint Car Series schedule, and the right to be called ‘King.’

Continue reading World of Outlaws–Eldora Speedway Crowns King Kerry the 31st at Kings Royal

Extreme Speed Motorsports–Front Row Start for ESM Patrón at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park

Front Row Start for ESM Patrón at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park
Dalziel qualifies No. 1 second; No. 2 qualifies fourth

BOWMANVILLE, Ontario, Canada – July 12, 2014 – In an intense 15-minute qualifying session on Saturday, Extreme Speed Motorsports (ESM) traded barbs with the competition for pole position. Among those swapping the lead for the top spot was ESM’s Ryan Dalziel in the No. 1 Tequila Patrón Honda Performance Development (HPD) ARX-03b. At the end of the session, Dalziel settled for the second starting spot at 1:09.456 (127.453 mph), less than three-tenths behind the pole-winning car.

Continue reading Extreme Speed Motorsports–Front Row Start for ESM Patrón at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park

Chevy Racing–CORVETTE RACING IN CANADA: Garcia Second in GTLM to Lead Qualifying Efforts

CORVETTE RACING IN CANADA: Garcia Second in GTLM to Lead Qualifying Efforts
Gavin fourth in GTLM; Westbrook third in Prototype qualifying

·         Garcia, Magnussen on GTLM front-row for shot at fourth straight win

·         Westbrook third overall in Spirit of Daytona Corvette DP

·         Chevrolet leads both Prototype, GTLM manufacturer championships

Continue reading Chevy Racing–CORVETTE RACING IN CANADA: Garcia Second in GTLM to Lead Qualifying Efforts

Chevy Racing–CAMARO Z.28.R AT CTMP: Bell, Lally Score Tough GS Victory for Stevenson Motorsports

CAMARO Z.28.R AT CTMP: Bell, Lally Score Tough GS Victory for Stevenson Motorsports
Chevrolet grows lead in Grand Sport manufacturer championship

·         Second consecutive and season’s third victory for Camaro Z/28.R

·         Call for two tires on last stop proves to be difference for No. 9 duo

·         Four Camaros finish in top-seven in lone Canadian stop

BOWMANVILLE, Ontario, Canada (July 12, 2014) – Matt Bell and Andy Lally made the Chevrolet Camaro Z/28.R a winner again Saturday with a victory for Stevenson Motorsports at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in the seventh round of the Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge. Lally led the final 46 minutes to take the first win of the year for he and Bell by 1.014 seconds in the No. 9 Camaro Z/28.R.

The No. 9 Stevenson crew opted to take two tires on its last stop just before a full-course caution period. Lally left in fifth but moved back into first for good minutes later when the leaders pitted under yellow.

“Congratulations to Andy, Matt, John Stevenson and everyone at Stevenson Motorsports on an outstanding effort and victory today at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park,” said Mark Kent, Chevrolet Director of Racing. “The performance of the Camaro Z/28.R was very solid with all four of them competing today placing in the top-seven of the race. This win was also important as it increased Chevrolet’s lead in the manufacturer championship standings.”

The Camaros were strong from the start. Andrew Davis in the No. 6 Stevenson Camaro qualified on pole and led the first 35 laps. Eric Curran set the fastest race lap in the No. 01 CKS Autosport Camaro. Saturday’s victory was the third for the Z/28.R in its first season of competition. Liddell and Davis were winners at Sebring and Watkins Glen – the championship’s previous round.

“It was a great day for all four of our Camaro Z/28.Rs,” said Lisa Talarico, Chevrolet Program Manager for the Continental Tire Sports Car Championship. “The No. 9 Stevenson Motorsports team ran a near-perfect race with a great call on the last stop for two tires. Both Matt and Andy did exactly what they needed to do to deliver the third win for the Camaro Z/28.R.”

The Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge next races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Friday, July 25.

ANDY LALLY, NO. 9 STEVENSON MOTORSPORTS CHEVROLET CAMARO Z/28.R – RACE WINNER
ON THAT FINAL LAP WHEN YOU GOT TO TRAFFIC, WHAT WAS GOING THROUGH YOUR MIND?
“That was tough because we hit traffic in a couple of difficult spots. There were some guys that tried to do the right thing, but unfortunately didn’t judge the gap right and it really hurt our gap. Matt (Bell) was talking about tire conservation, but I tell you this is a 3,500-pound car. We beat the heck out of these Continental tires and they took it all day and pulled away from the competition.  I’m really thrilled with the Stevenson Motorsports team and Team Chevy… the Camaro Z/28.R is awesome. I really have to give a shout out, Mike (Johnson, team manager) and I haven’t won a race together in 10 years. This is Matt and I’s first race (win) together after I raced against Stevenson Motorsports for all these years. Finally getting a win with them is really cool… Especially at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park. This is a special place; everybody knows this is a driver’s track. I knew I had some good cars behind me to hold off. It was fun race.”

MATT BELL, NO. 9 STEVENSON MOTORSPORTS CHEVROLET CAMARO Z/28.R – RACE WINNER
YOU DROVE THE OPENING STINT AND A LOT OF PEOPLE WOULD SAY THAT IS THE MORE DIFFICULT STINT. CONSERVING TIRES IN THE BEGINNING AND MAKING SURE YOU HAD A CAR TO HAND OVER… HOW DIFFICULT WAS THAT?
“It is tough. This is the greasiest we’ve seen this track all week. It was the hottest. Coming out of (Turn) 5 with this much torque, you are not full throttle until it feels like you are halfway down the straight and you actually roll all the way into it. It’s very tempting just to light them up and come off the corner, but when you take a look at the big picture you’ve got to take it easy. I know I was trying to save the car for Andy (Lally). I didn’t know how long I was going to stay in the car. We did a full-fuel stint so it was good that I saved my tires. The guys setup this Camaro Z/28.R perfect. We were taking not big swings, but it felt like big swings; we kind of fine-tuned it a little bit.  It was just what I needed… just a little bit of understeer in and a little bit of oversteer out. Andy did an awesome job. He was just running the same lap time all day long. I believe one of his faster laps was one toward the end. He killed it.”

Honda Racing–Munoz Leads Honda Qualifiers in Iowa

• Seventh top-10 qualifying performance of 2014

• First “short oval”round of 2014 IndyCar Series

• Second Saturday night event of the season

For the second consecutive Verizon IndyCar Series race weekend, rookie points leader Carlos Munoz led Honda qualifiers Friday at Iowa Speedway, posting the fifth-fastest speed in his Andretti Autosport Honda.  Today’s result follows his third-place qualifying effort last week at the 2.5-mile Pocono Raceway oval in Pennsylvania.Munoz currently holds a 77-point lead in the Rookie of the Year standings – over fellow Honda driver Mikhail Aleshin – and is ranked sixth in the overall Drivers’ Championship standings.

Munoz and teammate Marco Andretti were the only Honda-powered entries to record top-10 qualifying runs on the banked 7/8ths mile Iowa oval, as changing track conditions – brought about by intermittent rain showers throughout the day and NASCAR Truck Series qualifying immediately prior to the IndyCar session, caught out several teams and drivers.Saturday night’s 300-lap run, the first of two “short oval” races in the 2014 Verizon IndyCar Series, begins with live network television coverage at 8 p.m. EDTon the NBC Sports network.

Carlos Munoz(#34 Andretti Autosport Honda) 5thfastest in qualifying:  “Today the teammates’ help was totally different than the help I had at Pocono, because I was almost the last to qualify [at Pocono], and we were almost back-to-back to qualify today in Iowa.  For sure, it’s always helpful [to have teammates] because you have an idea of what the track will be like. It was an okay qualifying. I think everyone gets better as the session goes on.  More important is the race tomorrow – it is 300 laps, a long race. We’ll see what happens.”

World of Outlaws–Sammy Swindell Overcomes Recent Bad Luck, Wins Knight Before the Kings Royal

Sammy Swindell Overcomes Recent Bad Luck, Wins Knight Before the Kings Royal
Earns 294th career win and second of the season; bests non-Outlaw Tim Shaffer

ROSSBURG, Ohio – July 11, 2014 – After a string of near wins and some bad luck, three-time champion Sammy Swindell forged ahead Friday night, pushing back a challenge from non-Outlaw Tim Shaffer and winning the Knight Before the Kings Royal, his second World of Outlaws STP Sprint Car Series win of the season.

“It’s great – after the year we’ve had… We’ve been right there the last few races, just couldn’t pull it off at the end and tonight the car just got better and better,” Swindell said. “The Big Game Treestands car and team did an awesome job.”

Swindell has led at least part of three of the last four races – including the last Outlaws event at the Brad Doty Classic at Limaland Motorsports Park, where he dominated early but fell off toward the end of the event. At the first night of the Boot Hill Showdown in Dodge City, Kan., Swindell picked up the pole for the A main, but had his night ended in the first turn of the first lap, after Paul McMahan made contact with him and Swindell flipped.

Friday night at Eldora, Swindell put all of that behind him.

Shaffer, who sat on the pole, jumped out to an early and dominate lead after a short battle with Swindell to begin the A main.

“We were a little bit too tight at the start, let Shaffer get away,” Swindell said.

By lap five, Shaffer hit the first lapped traffic in his Canton Electric car but pushed through undeterred. Swindell however was in hot pursuit and by lap 13 had caught Shaffer. Swindell made the pass in his Big Game Treestands car through turns three and four and drag raced Shaffer into one and two. By the time the two cars hit the backstretch, Swindell firmly had the lead.

“Once I got in the front I was just trying to pace myself,” Swindell said. “I didn’t hear anybody or see anybody – I was just running some nice laps and then trying to keep the car under me.”

The first yellow flag in what would become a series in the middle of the feature fell on lap 16 after Joey Saldana’s right rear tire shredded. Once the green flag again flew, only two laps passed before contact between fourth-place Kerry Madsen and fifth-place David Gravel left Gravel at the bottom of the front stretch. Another short green with 18 complete, ended before the first lap could be completed with Brandon Wimmer on his roof after flipping.

The green flag flew for the final time with 18 complete. The final 12 laps saw battles between Kerry Madsen and Jac Haudenschild, and Madsen and Pittman, as Shaffer looked for one last chance.

Swindell took the checkered flag, scoring his 36th all-time win at Eldora.

“It was really awesome here tonight… Everything fell in place,” Swindell said. “If we can keep that up, we might win a couple more.”

Shaffer, who was pulling double duty Friday night, competing with the Outlaws and in a separate 360 sprint car, said running as well as he did felt great.

“I screwed up in lapped traffic,” Shaffer said. “I got there and I got my timing wrong. I was trying too early and I know better. Hopefully we learned a few things for tomorrow. It feels great to be up there in second.”

In victory lane, Swindell thanked his supporters.

“I’ve just got to thank everyone that’s been helping me and been behind me – all the guys, Pete and Tony; my wife Amy,” Swindell said. “Everybody knows that helps me.”

In the midst of all the excitement, two people Swindell forgot to thank were his longtime team owners Tod and Lisa Quiring. Swindell often credits the Quirings as his biggest and most strident supporters.

Swindell heads into the Kings Royal on Saturday night as a three-time winner of the event and looks to become the first winner of both the ‘Knight Before’ and the Kings Royal since 20-time champion Steve Kinser did it in 2003.

Kerry Madsen drove his American Racing Custom Wheels car to a third place finish – his sixth podium finish in a row. He said he had a really good car all night, but struggled on the restarts. Tempers flared on track and off between Madsen and Gravel, and Madsen and Pittman in the closing laps as the three drivers battled for position.

“There at the end of that run I had a quicker car than the two cars ahead but there really wasn’t much I could do unless they made a mistake in front,” Madsen said. “And then when someone made a mistake you had to commit to it and go for it – that’s part of racing at Eldora.”

“Just trying to bring it home every night – that was a tough battle.”

The battle for the championship continues to tighten as Donny Schatz’s points lead shrunk again over Pittman to 66. Paul McMahan remains in third, 85 points out of the lead.

The World of Outlaws STP Sprint Car Series returns to Eldora Speedway Saturday night for the Kings Royal. The Outlaws return to Pennsylvania next week for a four race swing that will take them to Lernerville Speedway, Lincoln Speedway and Williams Grove Speedway.

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Iowa Qualifying Release

CHEVROLET RACING
VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
IOWA CORN INDY 300 PRESENTED BY DEKALB
IOWA SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER POST QUALIFYING RELEASE AND TRANSCRIPT
JULY 11, 2014

Scott Dixon Puts Chevrolet IndyCar V6 Power on the Pole at Iowa
Chip Ganassi Racing Teammate Tony Kanaan will Start Second
Chevrolet Sweeps First Two Rows of Starting Grid of Iowa Corn Indy 300

NEWTON, Iowa (July 11, 2014) – It will be an all Chevrolet powered Target Chip Ganassi Racing front row as Scott Dixon put the No. 9 Target Chevrolet on the pole, and teammate Tony Kanaan, No. 10 TNT Energy Drink Chevrolet posted the second fastest time to lock down the front row for the Iowa Corn Indy 300 at Iowa Speedway.

It is the first pole of the 2014 season for the Verizon IndyCar Series defending champion, and the 21st of the three-time champion’s career.  It is Dixon’s second pole at the .0875-mile oval track.

“Congratulations to Scott Dixon and the whole Chip Ganassi Racing Team for securing the pole as well as the front row with teammate Tony Kanaan,” said Chris Berube, Chevrolet Racing Program Manager, Verizon IndyCar Series. “Team Chevy carried the momentum from Pocono into Iowa tonight with a very strong qualifying result and all four of the Chevy teams represented in the top 10.   The intermittent wet weather today demanded some flexibility from our teams and technical partners but we worked together to put up an impressive result.  We are looking forward to racing under the lights tomorrow night in Iowa.”

Team Penske’s Helio Castroneves will start the No. 3 Hitachi Chevrolet in third, and Ryan Briscoe put the No. 8 NTT Data Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet in the fourth starting position to give the Bowtie Brand sole possession to the front two rows for the 12th race of the season.

In total, eight drivers powered by the Chevrolet V6 2.2 liter direct injected twin turbocharged engine will start in the top-10 of the 300-lap/262.5-mile race:  Sebastien Bourdais, No. 11 Mistic E-Cig KVSH Chevrolet  – 6th;  Charlie Kimball, No. 83 Levemir® FlexTouch® Chevrolet – 7th;  Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet – 9th and Ed Carpenter, No. 20 Fuzzy’s Ultra Premium Vodka Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet – 10th.

Carlos Munoz (Honda) completed the top-five qualifiers.

Live television coverage of the Iowa Corn Indy 300 is set to start on Saturday, July 12 at 8:00 ET on NBC Sports Network. Live radio coverage will be on IMS Radio broadcast on XM Radio Channel 209 and Sirius Satellite Radio Channel 213. In addition, IndyCar live timing and scoring with the radio broadcast can be found at www.indy.car.com.

An interview with:

TONY KANAAN
SCOTT DIXON

THE MODERATOR:  We’ll get started with our post qualifying press conference.  We’re joined again today by Tony Kanaan.  Tony Kanaan was the winner here at Iowa Speedway in 2010 and finished on podium in the last four seasons, qualifying second for tomorrow night’s race.
Tony, we were talking this morning about how with different teams in different situations you never know if you’re going to come back and have the same strong results you’ve had before.  But obviously a great result for tomorrow night’s race.
TONY KANAAN:  Yes, it’s part of the job.  The result will be tomorrow.  But obviously a great qualifying effort from the team.  Four cars in the top seven, that’s pretty good.  The two Target cars in the front row, that makes Chip happy, makes Target happy.
I’m pleased with the car.  The way the qualifying draw works, which is by luck, you just got to draw your number.  Drawing an early number hurt us just a little bit.  But front row, it’s all right.

THE MODERATOR:  With all of the rain today and also different rubbers on the track, what were track conditions like for qualifying?
TONY KANAAN:  Track was fine.  The truck rubber plays a little bit of a fact, but I don’t want to make that as an excuse why I’m not on the pole.  We got an early draw.  Scott had the opportunity to change his car a little bit according to my run.  That’s what we do for each other.
I told him next time if he gets an early draw, he’s going to pay me back (laughter).
I think the truck rubber was a little bit of an effect.  It will be much bigger tomorrow.  If they race tonight and it doesn’t rain all day tomorrow, the first two stops during the race definitely, you know, going to have to adjust the car.

THE MODERATOR:  Questions for Tony.
Q.        When it comes to Chip Ganassi Racing, do you feel in some ways the sleeping giant has been woken up a little bit the last couple of weeks?
TONY KANAAN:  I think Chip would never want the giant to sleep, I have to say.
So, yeah, I think we’re coming along.  We’re doing a lot of hard work.  We did a lot of tests in the past few weeks.  That’s the nature of that team.  They’re here to win.  They proved that the past 25 years.  So it’s not going to be any different.
I think if people count us out just because we were struggling in the beginning of the year, that’s a big mistake.  We’re going to come back and we’re going to try to do our thing, minimize our mistakes, keep the level that Chip and Target expect us to be, which is winning races.

Q.        You just mentioned you struggled in the beginning of the season.  What was the weakest area, chassis or…
TONY KANAAN:  It’s tough to point it out.  I can’t get into much details.  I think we took a direction with our setups that probably wasn’t the right one.  We thought it was the right one.  It cost us a little bit in the beginning of the year.
As a team we have a lot of capable people.  Me and Scott work really hard.  People don’t realize how the chemistry of the team has changed since we lost Dario.  It was a big change.  It was an unexpected change.  For me to try to work with Scott, it took a little bit.
I think the more that we spend time and test together, we kind of find out what those cars need.  We’re keeping on making it better.
I can’t single out one thing why we struggled.  The reality was we were struggling.  I don’t know.  I can’t say we’re completely out of the hole yet.  I mean, we had good results the past three weekends, with some unfortunate mistakes not by the setup of the car.
Hopefully we’ll keep at the same level we are right now and ramp it up and we’ll fight for this championship.

THE MODERATOR:  Tony, good luck in tomorrow night’s race.
TONY KANAAN:  Thank you.

THE MODERATOR:  We’re also joined by the pole winner, Scott Dixon, with Target Chip Ganassi Racing.  Scott started on pole here in 2007.  Also started first in 2008 when the field was set by points.  With this pole, Scott ties Gil de Ferran for 13th career all-time list for pole wins.  Also Scott’s 21st pole.  He also has won one pole for the last eight consecutive seasons in his career.
Scott, a great qualifying finish for you and the team.  Tell us about your qualifying run.
SCOTT DIXON:  I think we had a bit of a tough test here a few weeks ago with the setting on the car that we missed all day.
Coming back and having the car set properly has been a dream to drive.  I think it’s been a lot of different things.  I think with new people on the team, new engineers, teammates, I think we’ve changed some of the short track oval setups that we’ve maybe had in the past.
It’s kind of been eye opening and a lot of fun to drive something different.  But, yeah, this weekend the car rolled off the truck really well.  The first session we didn’t do a (indiscernible).  The second one we kind of missed on the balance and had to lift quite a bit.  But we still had the fifth quickest time so we knew that we had some good speed in the car.
With my qualifying going 14th and T.K. and Ryan having to go before me, we were able to translate how the track was.  It seemed like the track had a bit of understeer, so we were able to put some front wing in and the car balance was pretty good.
The qualifying I think for all of us went very smooth.  It’s great to see all four Ganassi cars in the top seven.

THE MODERATOR:  Questions for Scott.
Q.        Tony said earlier four cars in the top seven.  I think you share all of the information, setup.  Is it fair to say you have nearly identical setups or totally different from driver to driver?
SCOTT DIXON:  You know, I think the past two weekends actually we’ve been fairly close.  The dampers can be kind of one thing.  I think a couple of the cars were on the same dampers.  I know Charlie went a little bit more conservative in qualifying.  He could have been probably a little bit further up on their side of the team.
But, yeah, it’s hard when you get a lot of different people into the room for the first year.  For us, all four cars are run out of one truck which definitely changes the dynamic.  Trying to get all of us to agree on the same thing is pretty tough and most of the time it is unrealistic.  But the cars are fairly close this weekend.

THE MODERATOR:  Tony was just in here saying because he went before you, he gave you some advice before you went out and next time you go before him, you will have to return the favor.  Will you be willing to do that?
SCOTT DIXON:  Yeah, absolutely.  I think I had to do that at Pocono, but my speed was so slow, I don’t think he even listened to me.  So we’ll see.

THE MODERATOR:  Thank you, Scott.
SCOTT DIXON:  Thank you.

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Iowa Speedway Qualifying

CHEVROLET RACING
VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
IOWA CORN INDY 300 PRESENTED BY DEKALB
IOWA SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
JULY 11, 2014

SCOTT DIXON, NO. 9 TARGET CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET – POLE WINNER
WILL THIS CAR RACE AS WELL TOMORROW AS IT QUALIFIED TONIGHT?
“Well let’s hope so.  It’s obviously a great day.  I think to have all four Ganassi cars in the top seven it’s incredible.  Especially for me it’s been a little while since we’ve been on the pole, especially on an oval.  We have been close, but all the credit goes to the team.  We have been in a bit of a rut right now, but thanks to all my teammates and everybody at Target Chip Ganassi Racing for having a strong run.  Tomorrow is what counts.  We are starting obviously on the pole and we are going to try to stay there and get a victory for this team.  We are winless right now so we have a little bit of work to do.  Hopefully we will put on a great show for everyone.”

DO YOU FEEL PRETTY OPTIMISTIC ABOUT YOUR CHANCES TOMORROW GIVEN THIS POLE WIN TODAY?
“Yeah it’s a nice feeling and it’s been a little while which is unfortunate especially for a team like this and still winless.  I don’t want to be a downer right now we are sitting on the pole.  We are starting at the right end of the field.  We haven’t really been in this part.  I’m excited for the race.  Iowa is a fun track and we have never really had good luck here.  We’ve had some great cars and had some great finishes, but hopefully we can put on a fantastic race for the fans tomorrow that is number one on the priority list and obviously try and win it for us.”

YOUR TEAMMATE TONY KANAAN GAVE YOU SOME INFORMATION HE THOUGHT WOULD HELP YOU GET POLE WHAT DID HE SAY?
“Both TK and Ryan (Briscoe) luckily went before us out there.  They thought the track had a fair bit of understeer so we were able to make some wing changes to the car obviously to get it to turn a little bit better and it worked out perfectly for us.  You never really know sometimes how your car is going to be compared to theirs.  Putting more front wing sitting in the qualifying line is not always something you want to hear because it just makes the car looser, but it was definitely the right call.  Huge credit to team Target just excited.”

TONY KANAAN, NO. 10 TNT ENERGY DRINK CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 2ND
ARE YOU HAPPY WITH YOUR RUN?
“Yeah we took what we had and with the Trucks running before us the track is going to get quicker so hopefully we end up up-front.  I’ve got to thank my team they did a great job setting up the car.  That is the fastest we’ve ever went here.  I’m happy let’s see what is going to happen.”

TO PUT THE RUN DOWN YOU DID EARLY IN QUALIFYING ONLY SHOWS HOW STRONG YOUR CAR IS:
“For sure it was a great effort by the Target team to go 1-2.  We have even (Ryan) Briscoe at fourth and Charlie (Kimball) at seventh.  Great effort.  We jeopardized that run a little bit by going early but that is the luck of the draw.  When I got out of the car I told (Scott) Dixie that I think it would take a little bit more front wing and he did and ended up beating me.  If I’m going to get beat I would rather be beat by my teammate.”

YOU ARE DUE FOR SOME LUCK:
“I wouldn’t call it luck.  I think we are due to some focusing on doing our job right.  We haven’t delivered yet so tomorrow will be the opportunity to redeem what happened last week.”

HELIO CASTRONEVES, NO. 3 HITACHI TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 3RD
HOW WAS YOUR RUN?
“I was fine in Turn 4.  I was having issue with Turn 1.  Thanks for the Hitachi boys they did a great job again.  It was just the first lap unfortunately because it was really good.  You’ve got to do two laps here, not only one.  Still so far if you are starting up there it is not that bad.”

THAT TURNED OUT TO BE A FANTASTIC SECOND LAP FOR YOU DID YOU MAKE CHANGES IN THE CAR?
“I just trusted the car was tough this morning.  The first lap was I was loose like my teammates and the second lap I did some adjustment and went for it.  It was a very tough one.  Hopefully it pays off in the end.”

RYAN BRISCOE, NO. 8 NTT DATA CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 4TH
HAPPY WITH YOUR RUN?
“Yeah, very happy that is the quickest I’ve ever gone around this place.  It was a solid run.  We struggled a little bit in practice earlier so we made some changes coming into qualifying.  With a little bit of information from TK (Tony Kanaan) it sort of helped us out moving into our run there.  Really happy so hopefully we can get all four Ganassi cars up front.”

SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS, NO. 11 MISTIC KVSH RACING CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 6TH
ON HIS QUALIFYING EFFORT:
“Pretty good; pretty good.  Very happy. We didn’t come and test here. It was a bit of a compromise trying to keep the guys fresh, and keep some money for this winter as well, a little bit. So it was a bit of a gamble because it is only my second time here. Jimmy (Vasser) was confident that the car would be good, so I said okay, your call.  We struggled a little bit this morning (in practice), and made some changes in the afternoon and it kind of all worked out in the end.  I’m happy for the Mistic crew and the whole KVSH organization. The track just warmed up as the session was going down. Pretty sure it picked up understeer.  I was very understeer on my run. We might have been a bit conservative, but we didn’t get any kind of read on the qualie sim (qualifying simulated lap) we did this afternoon because we had the front wing collapse.  So we left and said ‘Okay, poker face. Let’s go out now’.  A lot of Chevys at the front, so you guys did a good job again.”

CHARLIE KIMBALL, NO. 83 LEVEMIR FLEXTOUCH CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 7TH
WALK US THROUGH YOUR RUN:
“We had to work on some mileage for the engine earlier in the day and with the rain we didn’t have a lot of time to do a qualifying simulation.  Following what our teammates did and the whole Chip Ganassi Racing team we had a really good test here.  We knew we were going to have a good car we just had to see what the No. 83 Levemir Flextouch car could do.”

WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 9TH
“I was a little too loose coming to the green I had a big moment on that lap.  I was worried is the car going to stick for me.  Made some adjustments and the second lap was not bad.  It’s as good as I think we can expect.  Hopefully we end up in the top 10 that would be nice.”

ON HIS RUN:
“Coming to the green I had a big wiggle so I didn’t know what to expect into (Turn) 1 so I lifted and adjusted the car.  By the second one I was definitely had another moment coming to the checker, but not bad.  It was all I could deal with as the car was being the first one out.”

ED CARPENTER, NO. 20 FUZZY’S VODKA/ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 10TH
“It’s not a bad run for here but the car did get a little loose on the second lap or we would have had better starting spot.  You always want a better speed when you aren’t on the pole.  But it has been a tricky day with the weather conditions.  Waiting out the rain and the drying of the track is always tough.   I think we have a good car for the race.  We’ll have to see how the conditions go after the rubber from the truck race and possible rain.  We were fast last year here and I feel like our race setup will be good.  The 50 extra laps could prove to be a factor towards the finish.  The track could really change throughout the race and you have to be able to adjust to that element.”

SEBASTIAN SAAVEDRA, NO. 17 AUTOMATIC FIRE SPRINKLERS KV AFS CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 17TH
“We went in to qualifying blind as we weren’t able to do a qualifying simulation during the final practice session. That of course influenced the small lift I had during my run, which really killed the speed at a track where you need to be running flat the whole time. The Automatic Fire Sprinklers, Inc. – KV AFS Racing car feels great in race mode, very fun to drive and we made a lot of passes during the practice session, it’s just unfortunate that we’re not starting a little further up. We will move forward to tomorrow and with the combination of a good strategy from the team and great pit stops, I’m confident we will have a good result.”

JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 2 PPG TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – QUALIFIED 19TH
“I just made some changes and I think we went a little far.  We have been struggling a little bit with the unpredictability of the car.  The PPG Chevy has been pretty good we just tried a little hard.  I went for it and it just wasn’t there.  It stepped out and I thought ‘oh this is going to hurt’ and I was happy it came back to be honest.”

Chevy Racing–Loudon Qualifying

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CAMPING WORLD RV SALES 301
NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING NOTES AND QUOTES
JULY 11, 2014

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 2ND
YOU MISSED THE POLE BY JUST A COUPLE THOUSANDTHS OF A SECOND:
“It’s so tough to get a good lap around here.  The first outing put up a decent time fastest of the day for ourselves still knew that we had to go faster and to come out for the second session on older tires and improve by over two tenths is something to be proud of.  Of course we want to get the pole, want to be faster, but Kyle (Busch) found a little bit more out there than us.  We feel really good about our Lowe’s Chevrolet.  We did some race runs to start practice off.  The car was right where we wanted it based on our test session here a month ago and q-trim went really well too.  This helps make the weekend so much easier to race.  You get a good pit stall pick, good track position and you can fine tune from here.  Hopefully we will be able to fine tune and make a race winning car.”

JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 MCDONALD’S CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 5TH
“We had a good session. So that was nice. It’s always frustrating to not back up what you do in practice, but it was really good. It’s a really hard race track I think, for everybody. I don’t know anyone that says Loudon is easy. It’s hard to pass on. It’s hard to be fast here. It’s hard to have your car right.

“Our McDonald’s Chevy is good in race trim, we’ll get a good pit stall; it takes a lot of things to get a good result here so, we’ve got a lot of things going our way.”

HOW’S THE CAR FOR RACE DAY?
“It’s so hard to practice here because we’re not on ‘our’ rubber. We’re on the Modified rubber a lot. So on Friday, you don’t really get to work on your car because you’re on the wrong rubber and you’re working on qualifying trim. But we tested here. So I think we have a really good notebook of what we need to do. The race, I think, this is all about having good pit stops and the crew chief being on the right strategy because you can take a really good car here and put it in the back and it’s not a very good car; or you can take a bad car here and put it in the front and it’s pretty fast all of a sudden. So, track position will be massive.”

MARTIN TRUEX, JR., NO. 78 FURNITURE ROW CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 9TH
“The guys did a great job from practice to qualifying to find a bunch of speed. I am proud of their effort because the starting position is important here. It gives you a good feeling going to bed and getting ready for two practice sessions tomorrow. We learned a lot today that can help us on Sunday. New Hampshire is a special track for me and the Truex family and it would mean a lot to me to run well here.
So far this is a solid start to the second half of the season.”

JEFF GORDON, NO. 24 DRIVE TO END HUNGER CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 11TH
HOW DIFFICULT IS IT TO MANAGE THE CAT AND MOUSE GAME THAT HAPPENS OUT THERE WITH KNOCK-OUT STYLE QUALIFYING?
“Well I don’t know.  I think sometimes if you have a shot at the pole then there is cat and mouse if you are trying to make it in the top 12 some of that.  But most of the time we just focus on what we are doing trying to get the best clean lap and best track conditions and me trying to hit my marks and get a good solid lap and today that was a real challenge. We just missed it a little bit with our Drive to End Chevrolet.  We were just really struggling trying to put both ends together.  We felt fortunate to make it in the top 12.  Unfortunately there at the end we just didn’t have anything left after all the laps we put on the tires.”

KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 13TH
WAS THERE A PARTICULAR AREA OF THE RACE TRACK OR YOUR RACE CAR THAT YOU WANTED A LITTLE BIT MORE TO GET MORE SPEED?
“I guess looking back I wish we would have run two laps the first time out on the track.  In practice our first lap was fastest.  We thought we would just run one and come in.  But it seemed like a lot of the people went faster on their second lap.  Maybe if we had done that we could have made it to the final round.  We tried really hard.  We were close, just missed it by a little bit.  Not too bad.  We had a pretty good day for the Target Chevy.  We were pretty good in practice in race trim.  We still have some work to do there, but we will figure it out tomorrow and hopefully have a good run on Sunday.”

AJ ALLMENDINGER, NO. 47 KINGSFORD CHARCOAL CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 20TH
“It is so close here. I’m proud of the guys because in the first run we were a little bit loose and in the second run we picked up almost two tenths. Lap times were so close, there. You can nitpick everything and think oh, I could have found a half a tenth here or there. I think with the new rules package it makes it tough to get around this place. Overall, I’d always like to be a little bit better but it’s a good start for tomorrow.”

WHY IS IT SO TOUGH TO GET AROUND HERE?
“Well, it’s just flat. Last year I only did one of the two races. So I’m trying to figure out whether it’s the ride heights or that the track has gotten a little bit bumpier. It seems like there are more cracks and seams in the race track. I’m just trying to figure that out and get the car stable to get in the corner and make sure you roll around the center and get off the corner.”

AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 DOW CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 23RD
TALK ABOUT YOUR QUALIFYING RUN AND WHAT YOU HAVE TO WORK ON TOMORROW:
“Disappointed with our qualifying run.  I think we will figure it out tomorrow in race trim.  We have put ourselves behind all year qualifying truthfully.  I don’t know what it is, what we are lacking, air pressure or what, but we just have to do a better job at qualifying.”

JUSTIN ALLGAIER, NO. 51 ACCUDOC SOLUTIONS CHEVROLET SS – QUALIFIED 25TH
“Our Chevy is pretty good. We feel like we learned a lot in race trim today. We tried a couple of things that we learned in race trim and unfortunately in Q-trim it just didn’t seem to have quite the speed we were looking for. We fought grip a little bit there. But, it is a solid starting spot for where we were when we started qualifying and I think we can keep working on it tomorrow and get to where we need to be.”

Chevy Racing–IndyCar–Iowa Speedway

CHEVROLET RACING
VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
IOWA CORN INDY 300 PRESENTED BY DEKALB
IOWA SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JULY 5, 2014

TONY KANAAN, NO. 10 TNT ENERGY DRINK CHIP GANASSI RACING CHEVROLET,  met with members of the media at Iowa Speedway and discussed his success at Iowa Speedway, being with Chip Ganassi Racing and other topics.  Partial transcript:

ON WEATHER ISSUES: “First of all, we’d like to have more track time. Hopefully the weather works out. Iowa (Speedway) has been a good track for me. I’ve actually finished on the podium the last four years in a row. We’re hoping for a much better weekend than last weekend for sure and try to get our first win of the season here.”

ABOUT CONSISTENT PODIUM FINISHES IMPROVING CONFIDENCE:“It does help, but it’s a different year. The weather and some other things are different. So you can’t say that just because we had such good results in the past four years that we’ll have a good year again this year. It doesn’t relate to it, but this has been a track where I’ve done well.” “The biggest thing is how fast you can come up to speed during qualifying since it’s such a short track. It’s green second time by which usually happens very fast. This track feels the quickest as far as speed. It’s not as quick as Indy or Pocono or Texas, but because it’s so short and so fast, the speed feels much quicker.”

ABOUT LONGER RACE AT IOWA: “It’s a longer race. It will add one more stop to the race and that’s pretty much it.”

ABOUT THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN DAY AND NIGHT RACES: “Night races are cooler. The track is completely different. We never have a chance to test at night for a night race. The track will change a lot between practice and the race. It’s a bigger challenge, an extra thing we have to think about, how the track will change and come up to you.”

 

JUAN PABLO MONTOYA, NO. 2 PPG TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at Iowa Speedway and discussed his thoughts on Iowa Speedway so far, winning last weekend at Pocono, his current position of fourth in the point standings and many other topics.  Full Transcript:

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM THIS TRACK SO FAR?
“We tested here and it’s weird because it’s very different this morning.  I don’t know if it is because of the NASCAR rubber, but it was a handful this morning.  Like when we tested it was nice, predictable, fun to drive and this morning it was like ‘oh really’ how many more?  We don’t want to be that unstable.  It looks like we will be okay for practice.  We will see whatever it brings.”

YOUR ONLY EXPERIENCE HERE WAS VERY DIFFERENT IT WAS EIGHT YEARS AGO IT WAS AN ARCA RACE.  YOU WERE TRYING TO FIGURE OUT STOCK CARS.  CAN YOU TAKE ANYTHING FROM THAT EXPERIENCE?
“The track when I came here the track was brand-new there were no bumps.  It was really smooth.  There is a big bump in the tunnel.  [Turns] Three and four is still pretty smooth, but now you run pretty close to wide open.  Some people actually do run wide open all the way around.”

IS THIS THE FIRST TIME YOU’VE DONE A COMBO RACE LIKE THIS WHERE THE RUBBER IS SO DIFFERENT?
“No the only difference is the first time I’m going to race a short oval with high wings.  Back in the day we used to run the little wings, superspeedway wings on the road courses.”

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE?
“We have the bigger wings we will have twice as much downforce in the car.”

HOW MUCH IS HAVING A VICTORY NOW PUT A LITTLE MORE SPRING IN YOUR STEP?
“People are happy because a lot of people are still around from back in the day so they are happy for me.  That is pretty cool.  I still try not to get overly excited about it.  It’s fun.  I had a great time, the guys loved it.  It was really good for Verizon and PPG and Hook Performance, everybody that supports us, Chevy as well.  I mean we still have to come here and get the job done.  I think it does build a lot of momentum.  It gives a lot of confidence that you can get it done.”

300 LAPS TOMORROW IT GETS TO BE A TRAFFIC JAM AT TIMES WHAT DO YOU THINK THAT IS GOING TO BE LIKE?
“Learning, it’s going to be harder because it’s all about learning again. I’ve got to figure out, okay I know with the superspeedway wings how close you can run to cars and how you’ve got to run.  This is a little bit of a mix of like oval and road course with the road course wings.  I’ve got to figure out how close you can run.  Are you comfortable running the second groove and you’ve got to experiment, but you’ve got to experiment carefully because if you get it wrong you are out.  Right now we just really need to be smart about how we do things.”

IS IT BETTER TO BE AGGRESSIVE OR A LITTLE MORE PATIENT ON THE SHORT TRACK?
“I mean if you are leading there is not a lot of rush because you are going to get to traffic in 150 laps, but if you extend that a little bit it’s not a bad deal.  It doesn’t matter how easy you are going to take it you are still going to get to traffic.  I think managing traffic is going to be really important.  If you are not leading keeping up with the leaders is going to be key.”

SEVEN RACES TO GO YOU ARE UP TO FOURTH IN POINTS TWO RACES NEXT WEEKEND AND THEN A DOUBLE POINTS ONE AT THE END OF THE YEAR. YOU ARE RIGHT THERE HOW DO YOU LOOK AT THE REST OF THE SEASON?
“I think we have been doing a good job we have been smart about how we run races.  We just have to keep doing what we are doing.  I told the guys this week it’s great that we won, but one thing is getting there the other thing is staying there and to stay there we are going to have to really step it up.”

WITH WILL IN FIRST, HELIO IN SECOND AND YOU IN FOURTH IN THE STANDINGS WHAT IS THE FEELING AROUND THIS TEAM RIGHT NOW? YOU HAVE TO REALLY FEEL LIKE THINGS ARE ROLLING.
“We have but we have been in this position before.  The last few years they haven’t won so we just have to make sure and we talked about it as a team.  We’ve got to be smart about how we race against each other and then we can seal the deal.”

HELIO CASTRONEVES, NO. 3 HITACHI TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, met with member of the media at Iowa Speedway and discussed his outlook on this weekend’s race, the challenge of different rubber on the track and many other topics.  Full Transcript:

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THIS 300 LAP SHORT TRACK EVENT?
“It’s always good to stay in the front.  I don’t think it’s an advantage in terms of to win the race especially now that they have added 50 more laps.  But like I said it’s always good to start at the front.  At least it’s one less problem, especially if the leaders are really fast.  If you are in the back of the pack you could be facing issues with set-up because of the lack of time you are practicing so it’s always good to start up front.”

WE ARE AT THE HEIGHT OF THE SEASON WITH THIS RACE AND GOING TO A DOUBLE- HEADER AT TORONTO YOU HAVE BEEN IN THIS SITUATION BEFORE BUT YOU KNOW HOW TO TAKE IT IN STRIDE:
“Any type of double-header is always a tough one.  I haven’t thought ahead much right now I’m thinking Iowa first and so we are just hoping that we come out of here with a good result as well so we can continue fighting.”

WHEN ARE YOU GOING TO GET A WIN AT IOWA?
“We keep working.  Now they have added 50 more laps so we keep trying to make sure that we know what we need to do. We led a lot of laps before in the past, but we want to lead the last lap.  But it’s just the name of the game.  The competitors learn from it as well and we learn from them so it’s both scenarios.”

WHAT WOULD BE MORE IMPRESSIVE TO FINISH 1-2-3 TODAY OR TO HAVE DONE IT BACK IN 1994 WHEN TEAM PENSKE ACCOMPLISHED THAT FEAT?
“Today not taking anything from the past, but because everybody has most of the same chassis, same tire and most of the engines it certainly a different phase.  It would be amazing to finish 1-2-3.  Hopefully it would be one (point’s at himself), two and three with whatever happens with my teammates.  That is the goal that we always go and try to reach every weekend.  That is what we are going to try to do here at Iowa.”

HAVE YOU EVER HAD A RACE AT WENT AS POORLY AS THE BRAZIL VS. GERMANY GAME IN THE WORLD CUP?
“Oh I have had several races that I wish ‘okay let’s pack and go home’.  I just hope it will not be this one.  For sure things get out of hand sometimes.  It happens. It’s tough when it’s a team because to get 11 players to get in that same rhythm it’s hard.  I guess it happens.”

WHEN YOU DID TALK TO WILL (POWER) WHAT DID HE SAY? (IN REFERENCE TO LAST WEEK’S FINAL LAP BLOCKING INCIDENT)
“In that terms when I spoke with him it was right after he was still kind of like not knowing what happened.  You know what it doesn’t make sense to bring it up and try to understand because first I don’t think he did in terms of purpose like some people try to take in a negative way.  I just think it’s a reaction as a driver you are trying to protect the position.  I think we already talked to the team and make sure that we want to bring this championship to the team and that is our goal and we are going to do whatever it takes.”

IS RACING AGAINST YOUR TEAMMATE FOR POINTS MORE DIFFICULT THAN WITH SOMEONE ON ANOTHER TEAM?
“Oh no it is as you said.  The one goal here is to bring the championship and when you are fighting with your teammate that had the same chance how are you going to do that?  Because not only he has the same equipment, the same set-up and you are on the same team.  I dealt with this scenario before.  This is not my first rodeo, which is a good problem to have.”

WILL (POWER) HAS SAID REPEATEDLY HE IS NOT WORRIED ABOUT CHAMPIONSHIP POINTS HE JUST WANTS TO GO OUT AND WIN RACES.  DO YOU THINK THAT MENTALITY HAS MADE HIM MORE RECKLESS THIS YEAR?
“I don’t know.  Certainly I don’t think the mentality of not looking for the points changes the way you drive.  In the mind maybe subconscious maybe, but I don’t know.  It’s a good question.  I just think things happens and unfortunately one season one year you learn from your own mistakes, but at this point I don’t think just because he says he is not paying attention to the championship that he is in this position.  He already in the past he was in the position before.  I think it’s just the way of putting your mind set to get to where he wants.”

WITH THE NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES HERE AND THE RAIN IS IT HARDER TO ADJUST TO A GREEN RACE TRACK OR THE DIFFERENT RUBBER?
“I think the track is going to start with the different rubber no matter what.  But it happens before like that.  Probably the rain is cleaning the Truck rubber and I think it will be better in those conditions.  If it is raining nobody can run.  We just have to wait and see.  If we complete qualifying great if not hopefully we have dry weather for the race.”

HOW MUCH DOES IT CHANGE YOUR APPROACH EITHER HANDLING OR DRIVING WITH THE DIFFERENT KIND OF RUBBER ON THE TRACK?
“Well you’ve got to adjust the tools that you have in the car.  Remember the toughest thing here we are talking about 17 second lap times.  You don’t have much of a luxury if the first stint your car is not very good to set-up on the next one.  Here it’s going to be extremely important to at least have a decent start.”

ED CARPENTER, NO. 20 FUZZY’S ULTRA PREMIUM VODKA ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, met with members of the media at Iowa Speedway and discussed Iowa Speedway, difference in tracks and other topics .  Partial transcript:
ON BEING AT IOWA SPEEDWAY: “I enjoy short-track racing. This is the most unique short-track we go to because short-track and high-downforce racing. At the same time it’s fast racing, multiple lanes, so it’s a lot of fun wheel-to-wheel action. I like the type of racing that’s close and fast and multiple lanes. It’s always nice when the high line develops, which usually can here. It’s fun.”
ON TRANSITIONING BETWEEN DRIVER AND TEAM OWNER “As awkward as it can be going back and forth, it’s become more natural, knowing when and how to transition between different mindsets. So it’s become a little easier, but I don’t know if it’s easier being out of the car. I still enjoy my time in the car as much as anything, but at the same time (being a team owner) is a different type of challenge working with Mike (Conway) on the stand outside of things. I enjoy the challenge of it, but I’d be lying if I told you I was having as much fun doing that as when I’m driving.”
ON DIFFERENCES IN SETUP BETWEEN SHORT OVAL AND SPEEDWAYS: “It is a totally different package with the short oval – high downforce package makes the car feel entirely different than it does in speedway trim.  But when I look at a place like this it is similar to like how Kentucky used to be when we raced there. It is a very bumpy place. Very bumpy through turns one and two. I like that element, and the challenge that that adds to getting the balance right on the car, and managing those bumps and getting your car to work on multiple lines.  But you’ve got to have good rear grip, which is something I think you  have to have at Indy as well. It’s a different type of car. A different mindset, so not a whole lot crosses over.”

Ross Hoek Motorsports–NBC Sports Brings All the TORC Action From Bark River, Crandon to Viewers This Weekend

NBC Sports Brings All the TORC Action From Bark River, Crandon to Viewers This Weekend
Irvine, Calif. – With the 2014 TORC: The Off-Road Championship Presented by AMSOIL season at its halfway point, the NBC Sports Network, the official television home for TORC, is getting fans up to speed on the year so far with three hours of programing this weekend.

The action kicks off Saturday at 5 p.m. EST when NBC airs the Throwdown at the UP from Bark River (Mich.) International Raceway. Father’s Day weekend in Bark River is always a good time and the Monster camp represented by Johnny Greaves and CJ Greaves and the Traxxas team of Jeff Kincaid and Keegan Kincaid, a father-son tandem is a strong possibility.

The race at Bark River also saw Steve Barlow’s return to the front of the pack. After missing the race in Primm, Caterpillar stepped up to sponsor Barlow’s PRO 2 and saw immediate results. After strong runs at the Husqvarna Showdown in Charlotte, Barlow came on strong in a tough field.

Starting Sunday at 6:30 p.m. EST, viewers will be treated to TORC racing at The Big House in Crandon, Wis. The first hour focuses on the Battle at the Big House, where Johnny Greaves and Mark Jenkins battled for the lead throughout the race. It was also a race for the underdog as Nitto Tires driver, Ross Hoek, continued his quest his first-ever PRO 4 podium finish. In the PRO Light class, a field of 20+ trucks raced all out all weekend with everything left on the track, including sheet metal.

At 7:30, NBC Sports airs the Crandon Cup (Chairman’s Cup), an all-star-like race featuring both the PRO 2 and PRO 4 racers on the same track at the same time with all the drama and action one would expect from seeing some of the best off-road trucks in the world together.

Chevy Racing–Loudon–Jimmie Johnson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CAMPING WORLD RV SALES 301
NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JULY 11, 2014

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S CHEVROLET SS, met with media and discussed racing at New Hampshire, testing for future Chase races, the upcoming off-weekend, the newly-formed RTA, and more. Full Transcript:

YOU HAVE THREE WINS HERE AT NEW HAMPSHIRE. TELL US ABOUT HOW YOU FEEL THIS WEEKEND
“We’ve had great cars and things have been building through the course of the year and we’ve got a lot of speed in our race cars. And so, I’m happy to have so many top 10’s and three wins (here). Coming to a track that’s really important, obviously, this track is in the Chase, we felt it was important enough for Hendrick Motorsports and we came up here and tested. We’re definitely excited to be here and hope that the things we learned through our test session up here, although we did have some weather up here that we were dealing with, that we are able to advance and have fast race cars right off the truck today.”

IN LIGHT OF LAST WEEK’S RACE AT DAYTONA, TWO OF THE THREE ELIMINATION RACES IN THE CHASE ARE AT TRACKS THAT DO NOT HAVE LIGHTS. DOES NASCAR NEED TO LOOK AT PUTTING MORE EMPHASIS ON TRYING TO FINISH A CHASE RACE OR AN ILLUMINATION RACE REGARDLESS OF HOW LONG IT TAKES? OR, ONCE IT REACHES HALFWAY, THAT’S FINE BECAUSE EVERYBODY KNOWS WHAT THE RULE IS?
“I was already in North Carolina so I don’t know how things looked at the end of that race (laughter). But  my memory is saying that rained-out events that I have been a part of when we all knew it was going to keep raining and we’ve all fought the battle for days and there wasn’t an opportunity to go back racing. I don’t know if that was what happened in Daytona or not, but NASCAR of anybody, understands the importance of letting the racing take care of itself and letting a race win or a championship happen on the race track and not due to weather. So, my reaction has been they’ve always fought hard to get the race in and to do the right thing at each moment.”

GOING BACK TO THAT TEST HERE, WHAT WAS THE HENDRICK MOTIVATION TO BURN A TEST HERE? IS THERE STUFF YOU CAN LEARN HERE THAT CAN TRANSLATE TO OTHER TRACKS? WHAT WAS THE THINKING ABOUT NOT SAVING ALL FOUR TESTS FOR THE CHASE SINCE YOU ALREADY HAVE THREE CARS IN THE CHAMPIONSHIP?
“It really was Chase-focused. I think there are multiple factors a team looks at in picking the tracks you go to. If you lock-in early, that helps your strategy and you can look more toward the end of the year. But something teams also look at is where we are the weakest as an organization. Where do the four crew chiefs and drivers get the most frustrated? For Chase-related race tracks, this is one of them for us. That’s why the decision was made as a group. All four drivers and crew chiefs agreed; yeah, let’s go do Loudon. We need to work there. What we do work on and learn here can apply to Phoenix, if you’re looking at Chase-related tracks. Sometimes, what you learn here can help you at Richmond; which can also help us in the regular season with another event there. So, it was more about the group collectively saying that out of the Chase tracks, this is our weakest Chase track.”

GIVEN THAT YOU HAVE THREE WINS AND GIVEN THAT THIS WILL BE THE SECOND RACE IN THE CHASE WHEN YOU COME BACK, WHAT DO YOU LOOK TO ACCOMPLISH ON SUNDAY? IS IT DIFFERENT BECAUSE OF THOSE FACTS?
“For us, we hope that we work through all the little details and when we get on the track today that we’re able to be in the top 5 in speed and qualify in the top 5 and have track position working on our side from the start of the race. This is a short event. If you can have track position at the start, and maintain it, it can set you up for a little different fuel strategy and tire strategy and just make life so much easier. Honestly, in the afternoon today, we’ll know if things went well and if we’re setting up how we want for the rest of the weekend.”

ARE YOU MORE FOCUSED ON SEPTEMBER THAN YOU NORMALLY WOULD BE FOR A RACE LET’S SAY, LIKE, MICHIGAN THIS WEEKEND?
“From that perspective, absolutely; notes and understanding what the track does and all of that, yeah. We work hard at all of them, but when you compete at event that you know is in the Chase, there seems to be an extra little step-up in paying attention to the fine details.”

HOW WAS IT THAT YOU LEARNED THIS TRACK? THIS IS A TRICKY TRACK. CAN YOU DESCRIBE HOW YOUR LEARNED IT?
“There are points in time when I feel like I’ve had this track under control and other times that I don’t. I think it speaks to the car set-up and how important it is here. You just can’t say it’s the car’s fault because the driver and crew chief are responsible for how the car acts and responds, but there are times that we have just had it. When you have a good driving car here, you can make stuff happen. And that’s what makes this place fun. On the flip side, if you’re off, it’s a flat track and it’s a small track. You’re in the way. It can be such a frustrating track if you’re off. And I think we won one year back-to-back here and I had so much fun around here (laughs).  So, the opportunity is there to have a lot of fun.”

AT THE BEGINNING OF THE SEASON, EVERYBODY WAS TALKING ABOUT THAT THE NO. 48 WASN’T WINNING. THAT OBVIOUSLY CHANGED. MATT KENSETH IS STILL IN THAT SITUATION. WHAT ADVICE WOULD YOU GIVE HIM TO GET THROUGH HIS SITUATION LIKE YOU GUYS GOT THROUGH YOURS?
“I don’t know if I want to give Matt any advice (laughter). He’s pretty damned good. Just generally speaking, it doesn’t take much for it to shift and change. I can say that the No. 20 has been on the right side of the computer sheet and the monitors that we look at on the left side. They’ve had speed. They’ve been up front. It’s coming. And it doesn’t take much just to have that crossover center and have it work for them. I think our team was proof of that earlier this year. I’m not counting them out. Even though they haven’t been to Victory Lane yet, I feel that they are going to make it into the Chase. With the Chase being ten weeks long, it’s still a long, long period of time to find your way and get going. So, I’m not counting those guys out.”

OFF-WEEKEND IS COMING UP. IS IT ONE YOU WANT TO SEE OR NOT WANT TO SEE BECAUSE YOU GUYS HAVE BEEN SO GOOD LATELY?
“I’m happy to see it.  I think we could use six or seven more of them.  I think everybody in the room would agree.  Get down to a 25-race schedule or something with more weekends off would be awesome.  I’m excited.  Even if we were winning and didn’t want it to stop from that momentum stand point, I can’t wait to chill out with family and relax.”

WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO?  DO YOU HAVE PLANS?
“As little as possible.”

THERE WAS A LOT OF SURPRISE THROUGH THE NASCAR WORLD WHEN IT WAS ANNOUNCED ABOUT THE RACE TEAM ALLIANCE (RTA) EARLIER THIS WEEK.  WERE YOU SURPRISED?  WHAT IS JIMMIE JOHNSON’S REACTION TO THIS?
“I’m excited for the teams and the opportunity they have to work together and hopefully drive costs down. And have a more clear and concise voice in the industry on a variety of aspects, not only to NASCAR, but across the board.  We will see how things go.  It’s obviously very new, but I’m happy that they teams are working together to drive costs down.  It’s a very expensive sport and I’m fortunate to drive at Hendrick Motorsports and have the best of any situation and it’s still tough and it’s still lean.  Hopefully we are able to have all of the stakeholders strengthen their positions and make our sport stronger.”

LAST YEAR AT THIS RACE BRIAN VICKERS WON AND YOU AND SEVERAL OTHER DRIVERS TALKED A LOT ABOUT BEING EXCITED ABOUT THAT JUST BECAUSE OF WHAT HE’S GONE THROUGH.  CAN YOU TAKE US BACK THROUGH THAT, AND THE EMOTION OF THAT WEEKEND?
“Brain (Vickers) has overcome a lot of issues that many drivers never will go through.  To have to step out of the seat due to injury for a long period of time and then try to come back into the sport, find your way, find a team, find a sponsor and get it going again.  It’s so difficult and knowing him as I do I think it has helped him see the world in a different light.  See our industry in a different light and have a stronger passion for our sport.  When he went to Victory Lane last year I know that it meant far more to him than a traditional win would.  From climbing the mountain and he has been up that mountain a couple of times now.  So he’s done a nice job with that.”

DID RICK (HENDRICK) TELL YOU OR GIVE YOU A HEADS UP, YOU AND THE OTHER DRIVERS, ABOUT THE RTA?  IS IT SOMETHING THAT YOU GUYS WILL BE MONITORING IN THE FUTURE?
“No everybody is paying attention for sure.  We were briefed on it at the beginning of the week that the announcement would be coming out.  That was the first that I had heard of it.  Absolutely, I think there are a lot of people; it doesn’t matter if you are an owner or a driver, NASCAR, or a fan, everybody wants to see this sport succeed and grow.  Everybody is paying attention to whatever alliances maybe put together or opinions that someone may have or the direction NASCAR wants to take things in.  Absolutely, I love this sport and want the best for it and paying attention to what others do that care for this sport as well.”

THERE WILL BE THOSE PEOPLE WHO WILL BE WORRIED THAT THE RTA COULD CREATE A SPLIT.  WHY SHOULD OR WHY SHOULD PEOPLE NOT BE WORRIED ABOUT THIS CREATING DIVISION?
“I just think it is human nature for some to worry.  It doesn’t matter what the topic is.  A third probably care, a third don’t care and a third are mad, it doesn’t matter what the topic is. I just don’t see any downside in the owner’s working closer together in sharing what is important to them, what is important to them to run their business, to run a successful business and to be able to put a race car in the field each week.  I don’t see anything wrong with that.  That environment is there today it is a far looser structure than it has been and now hopefully it’s going in a direction where there could be a more calm and clear voice.  If it is within our own industry from a team owner’s side, if it’s directed toward NASCAR, directed towards license merchandising, a variety of angles this could be beneficial in a lot of ways to have a clear voice.  Instead of well I was over at Hendrick and I heard this and I was at Roush and I heard that and I was at Penske and heard something altogether different.  For everybody to be together on all topics I don’t think there is any down side in being organized.”

DOES THAT MEAN THE DRIVERS SHOULD BE NEXT?
“That opportunity is definitely there.  I don’t know where others stand and feel with it.  I haven’t put any thought into it myself.  I guess in some ways Pandora’s Box has been opened with this topic and discussion.  We will see where it leads.  Again, the way I see this is everybody cares for our sport and people are trying to be more organized to help lead and direct our sport in all ways.  We will see what the future holds and I feel like there is a positive outcome. This is a good thing.  I don’t feel like this is going to drive separation or a split.  And I don’t even know where that separation or split would take place.  The things that have been discussed through the RTA, it’s all about saving costs.  It’s all about driving costs down I don’t see how that’s a bad thing.  I know the conversation is owners against NASCAR, but NASCAR is trying to help bring costs down. So is the RTA.  I think everybody is working the same direction.”

LOOKING AHEAD TO INDIANAPOLIS DO YOU CIRCLE THAT ON THE CALENDAR STILL AS A MUST WIN NO MATTER WHAT YOUR CIRCUMSTANCES ARE CHASE WISE?  WHAT KIND OF RACE DO YOU EXPECT THIS YEAR?
“For sure, Daytona and Indy everybody is going to risk it all for those two events.  I’m excited because for a long stretch now we have been able to go there and get it right and be competitive.  For the longest time the responsibility and the fault fell on my shoulders.  I wouldn’t drive the car right until we got in the race, spent two or three days of setting the car up and drive it wrong.  Get in the race and I’m like ‘oh wow’ man I’ve been doing it wrong.  We need to go behind pit wall and change spring and all kinds of other things to get this thing right for the race.  So now I unload there and I understand how to drive the track and I’m able to get us in that window to be competitive.”

Chevy Racing–Loudon–Kyle Larson

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
CAMPING WORLD RV SALES 301
NEW HAMPSHIRE MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JULY 11, 2014

KYLE LARSON, NO. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET SS, met with members of the media at New Hampshire Motor Speedway and discussed his outlook for this weekend at New Hampshire, recent testing at the track, his Chase hopes and many other topics.  Full Transcript:

TALK ABOUT YOUR OUTLOOK FOR THIS WEEKEND:
“I always kind of like coming to New Hampshire.  It’s a pretty neat race track.  It’s the only one on the circuit quite like this.  It reminds me a little bit of IRP (Indianapolis Raceway Park) in Indiana.  I enjoy it.  We got to come here and test a few weeks ago and I thought that went pretty well. We learned a lot of stuff.  Then we learned even some things at Richmond the other day that I think might help us here too.  Excited to get on the track for practice and hoping for good things this weekend because we have had some bad luck the last three weeks.  We’ve got to get back to finishing races and get back up in the points because now we have fallen out of being in the Chase.”

CAN YOU TALK A LITTLE BIT MORE ABOUT TESTING:
“It went pretty good.  We were here with the Hendrick (Motorsports) cars and I thought they were a little bit better than us, but at the midway point of the test I thought we were pretty good.  We just kept testing different things and slowed down a little bit.  The conditions that day were a lot cooler than what they will be this weekend.  It’s hard to judge off that, but I thought it was a decent test.  Anytime you test you are learning a lot.  It was good to get here to New Hampshire a place where I haven’t raced a Cup car yet and get some laps.”

THERE WERE FOUR TEAMS THAT TESTED, ALL TEAMS THAT ARE LOOKING TO GET DRIVERS IN THE CHASE.  DO YOU THINK THE STRATEGY WAS IF YOU TEST MAYBE THIS IS A PLACE YOU OR JAMIE (MCMURRAY) COULD GET THAT COULD GET YOU IN THE CHASE?
“I don’t know.  I don’t know if they struggled here last year is why they came or what.  I don’t seem to do particularly well on short tracks or tracks you have to use a lot of braking.  That might be a reason we came here.  I don’t know if there is any strategy for the Chase to come here and test or not.”

YOU GUYS DIDN’T REALLY DISCUSS THAT? I MEAN YOU ONLY GET FOUR TESTS…
“I’m sure when you only get four any test they use is to get yourself in a better position for the Chase.  I would say so.”

DO YOU FEEL BETTER COMING HERE AFTER THE TEST?  DOES THAT GIVE YOU SOME CONFIDENCE NOW THINKING MAYBE YOU COULD BE A FACTOR ON SUNDAY?
“Yeah I think so.  I feel like anytime we’ve gone to a track to test we usually race pretty good.  At Pocono we went there and tested and ran fifth.  I’m not quite sure where else we tested.  You look at last year they tested at Dover and almost won that.  Anytime you go to test somewhere you gain some confidence going back because you know your car is going to be better than had you not spent 300 laps on the track already.  I know the team loves testing because they get to learn as much as they can and it always helps them at other race track too.  Like I said I think we learned a lot at Richmond probably that will help us here too.  I’m definitely excited because I think our car will be pretty fast.”

WHAT IS YOUR PERCEPTION AS WE APPROACH KIND OF THE CRUNCH TIME  IN RELATION TO THE CHASE OF WHERE YOU STAND AND WHAT YOUR CHANCES ARE IN THESE FINAL RACES LEADING UP TO THE CUT OFF?
“Our chances were really good up until three weeks ago. Then we lost power steering at Sonoma and finished in the high 20’s.  Kentucky we were pretty fast and blew a right-front tire and then at Daytona we got caught up in a typical Daytona crash and got a 36th-place finish or something like that.  I think we went from being tied for seventh to eighteenth in points over three weeks.  It was looking great up until now.  It makes you stress out a little bit just because each week it gets closer and closer to the Chase.  Now we have fallen to where we have to fight really hard again.  It makes it nerve racking, but we are all pretty close.  I think there are six or so guys that are pretty close in points.  I have to have a couple of good runs and hopefully get back up there.  It would be nice to get a win soon for sure.”

YOU GOT OFF TO SUCH A STRONG START FOR A ROOKIE HOW HUMBLING HAS IT BEEN ALL OF A SUDDEN TO HAVE THESE THREE WEEKS IN A ROW?
“I knew at some point with how well we were running everybody is going to run into some bad luck.  I was just hoping it wouldn’t be three weeks in a row worth of bad luck.  I figured we may have some bad luck one week or two weeks in a row not three.  It makes you stress out coming here to New Hampshire hoping that you get a good finish.  You can’t have four bad finishes in a row.  I mean I understand the whole luck factor so it was humbling, but didn’t surprise me.”

HOW DO YOU VIEW THE ROOKIE OF THE YEAR BATTLE BETWEEN YOU AND AUSTIN DILLON RIGHT NOW?
“I mean I feel like we have been a little bit stronger than Austin (Dillon) mostly so I think once we get back to finishing some races hopefully we can pad that gap between him and myself in the rookie points.  I’m not really even sure how the whole rookie thing works. I don’t know if they base off points or votes or what.”

MEDIA INTERJECTS – A LITTLE OF BOTH:
“Yeah, so hopefully we have a big gap in points.  But I mean it sucks the last few weeks I think he’s been the highest finishing rookie, but I feel like our stats have been a little bit better than his so far this season.  Just got to keep sticking with it and trying to set it as a goal to beat him every weekend as well as get top 10’s.”

TALK ABOUT HOW YOU LIKE THE NEW QUALIFYING FORMAT CONSIDERING A TRACK LIKE THIS WHERE TRACK POSITION IS SO IMPORTANT:
“I like the new qualifying format.  It’s not like there are a ton of cars out on the track, it’s not like all 43 of us are out on the track at the same time qualifying.  We kind of all respect each other and maybe there are five or six cars out at a time and you are evenly spaced.  You are not getting messed up by the guy in front of you.  Where the qualifying format sucks is the superspeedways where you have to have a bunch of buddies or get lucky.  I guess in the Cup Series nobody wants to be the lead pack because everybody is getting a draft off you.  So like last week we saw where we roll around there at 20 mph that makes it really frustrating and probably not fun for the fans either.  It would be nice if they could tweak the superspeedway qualifying format a little bit, but I’ve enjoyed it everywhere else.”

HOW DO YOU DO OR LIKE FLAT TRACKS LIKE THIS?
“I would say they are probably my biggest weakness.  I feel like I’ve struggled at most flat tracks where you have to use a lot of braking.  Phoenix, Martinsville, Richmond and here last year in the Nationwide Series it is definitely a style of track I’ve got to get better at.  I’m sure that will come with time.  It’s a lot different than kind of the sort of style or racing I grew up doing.  Nothing I ever did you were hard on the brakes almost coming to a stop and making a U-turn and going the other way.  I think that is why I have struggled so far on flat tracks.”

Follow A Dream Norwalk Report

Jay Blake’s Permatex/Follow A Dream team overcame early qualifying trouble at the Summit Racing Nationals at Norwalk for a semifinal finish, knocking out two of the top teams in the country and climbing to seventh place in the national standings in the process.
Stranded at the Philadelphia airport by weather, crewmen Scott Osborn and Mark Reardon had to rent a car for the long drive out to Ohio and arrived right after the second of three qualifying sessions. Electrical gremlins kept the car from firing in the first session, and tireshake held driver Todd Veney to a backpedaling 6.00 in the second session. On the bump and facing the very real prospect of a dreaded DNQ in last-shot qualifying, the team responded with a 5.62 to move all the way up to the No. 5 qualifying position.
In the first round, Veney drew the hottest driver in the country, John Lombardo Jr., who had swept both the Allstars race and the Route 66 Nationals a week earlier in Chicago. He advanced with a 5.61, one of the quickest runs of the entire round, and a speed of 258 mph, the team’s best of the season. A 5.64 in the quarterfinals was just enough to cover former world champ Tony Bartone, the winningest active driver in Top Alcohol Funny Car, who was just 12-thousandths of a second behind at the finish line with an almost identical 5.65.
In the semi’s, Veney slipped to a 5.81 and lost to No. 1 qualifier and eventual winner Steve Harker’s 5.65. “The car was carrying the front end and headed toward the wall, and when I blipped the throttle to get the front end down he got around me,” Veney said. “I never saw him until the end. It was still a good weekend, though. Beating guys like Lombardo and Bartone was huge.”
“It was a total team effort,” Blake said. “What Mark and Ozzie went through to make it to the race is what the Permatex/Follow A Dream is all about.”

World of Outlaws–Paul McMahan Wins Emotional Brad Doty Classic after Pitched Battle with Sammy Swindell

Paul McMahan Wins Emotional Brad Doty Classic after Pitched Battle with Sammy Swindell
Earns third World of Outlaws STP Sprint Car Series win of the season and the 21st of his career

ELIDA, Ohio – July 9, 2014 – Paul McMahan won an emotional World of Outlaws STP Sprint Car Series victory at Limaland Motorsports Park’s annual Brad Doty Classic Wednesday night after a pitched battle with three-time champion Sammy Swindell that lasted much of the 40-lap feature.

McMahan, who earlier in the night talked about what Brad Doty has meant to him as he developed as a driver and person through the years, said this win means a lot to him.

“I tell you what, it took me a little bit to collect my thoughts before I got out of this racecar because this just means the world to me,” McMahan said. “Brad Doty, like I said, is my hero and I’ve come here many times and never been able to get a win. It’s a normal win, but this is the Brad Doty Classic. This takes every win I’ve ever won away and this is right up top.

“Man, I won the Brad Doty Classic… I can’t believe this, this is the greatest.”

Sammy Swindell started on the front row with Shane Stewart and dominated early. McMahan, who started in fourth, found his way around third place Kerry Madsen early and began working on Shane Stewart. The two battled in the opening laps with McMahan taking the second position by lap two.

Following a caution with two laps complete, Madsen drove his American Racing Custom Wheels car around Stewart and moved into the third position.

For the next thirty laps, Swindell and McMahan battled back and forth for the lead. Swindell ran high as McMahan tried both the low line and the high line, riding the cushion until it went away midway through the race. The two even traded position on lap 12 with McMahan taking over the lead briefly.

Farther back, Daryn Pittman was working his way forward in his Great Clips car after starting in the ninth position and Donny Schatz was doing the same after he was forced to use a provisional and started in the back. By lap 25, Pittman had moved to fifth while Schatz worked his way up to the ninth position.

With less than 10 to go, McMahan got the opportunity with his CJB Motorsports car he had been looking for to get around Swindell.

“I was following Sam and I was just kind of staying with him, I wasn’t getting nowhere,” McMahan said. “So I saw some lapped cars down there that were hard to lap and I just said, what the heck, I’ll give it a shot and the thing stuck and I just drove off.”

McMahan got around Swindell on the low side in the middle of turn one and two.

“I was a little nervous there at the end if I would get the lapped cars, whether I needed to be at the top or the bottom,” McMahan said. “But I know if I would have hesitated, Sammy would have pounced on me.”

With much of his family in attendance, McMahan scored his third win of the season and the 21st win of his career. He sits just 91 points out of the championship lead in third place.

Swindell fell back in the closing laps. He finished the race in seventh.

For second place finishing Madsen, this was his 22nd top-five of the year and his fifth podium finish in a row.

“Great car, we had a good run,” Madsen said. “I felt like in the middle stages we had opportunities but the yellows would keep coming out. We had a great run. We had our chance – we didn’t take advantage of it but a great second place.

“It’s always an exciting race at Lima and I’m sure tonight was no different. I feel a little disappointed but we’re still really, really pleased with a second place run.”

Pittman, who closed out his night in third after advancing six positions from the start, credited his team, his car and a little positive thought for the success his team has had this season. He said tonight he just did not find the right line early enough.

“Early in the race, the top was fast, I probably just didn’t do a good enough job hustling the car and running it as hard as I needed to up on the fence,” Pittman said. “Just stuck with the middle and the bottom early and that wasn’t very fast and the top finally slowed down and we got going pretty good there at the end. I just need to do a better job trusting my car.”

“All and all it was a good night, you just want to win… We’ll think about it and move on to Friday and hopefully we’ll get a little better.”

Schatz, who finished fourth, took the KSE Hard Charger Award after advancing his STP/Armor All car 21 positions through the field.

In addition to McMahan closing the gap on Schatz, so did second place Pittman who is now just 70 points away from the five-time champion in the race for the 2014 championship.

The legendary Eldora Speedway hosts the World of Outlaws STP Sprint Car Series on Friday, July 11 and Saturday, July 12 for the Knight Before the Kings Royal and the Kings Royal. Following that, the Outlaws swing through Pennsylvania with stops at Lernerville Speedway, Lincoln Speedway and Williams Grove Speedway.

Honda Racing–HPD Announces Collegiate SAE Program

• Student SAE programs now eligible to join the Honda Racing Line

• Includes Formula SAE, Baja SAE and other SAE university programs

• Provides access to Honda Racing Line products and services

SANTA CLARITA, Calif. (July 9, 2014) –Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) collegiate-level programs will now be able to join the Honda Racing Line, giving them access to products and services offered by Honda Performance Development.

Universities operating SAE-affiliated programs, such as Formula SAE and Baja SAE can now apply for membership in the Honda Racing Line, gaining direct access to HPD-developed racing products, original equipment replacement parts and support specifically tailored to the motorsports competitor.

“We are delighted to be offering memberships in the Honda Racing Line to universities involved with collegiate-level SAE programs,” said Jeff Barrow, HPD Manager of Commercial Motorsports.

“Both HPD and our parent company, American Honda, have long been associated with the SAE and the organization’s student competitions.  Many current HPD associates participated in Formula SAE and similar programs during their university years,” Barrow added.  “Now these programs will have access to our performance product lines as well as our talented technical support.”

To join the Honda Racing Line, a university SAE program administrator can contact HPD to obtain an HPD Collegiate SAE Program Racing Product Purchase Agreement.  Once completed and returned to HPD, the university program will be assigned a membership number providing access to HPD products and services.

Chevy Racing–CORVETTE DPs AT CTMP: New Challenge North of the Border

CORVETTE DPs AT CTMP: New Challenge North of the Border
Championship-leading Corvette DPs to run for first time at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park

·        New stop for contingent of Corvette Daytona Prototypes
·        Spirit of Daytona Racing, Action Express Racing coming off strong showing at Watkins Glen
·        Chevrolet, Wayne Taylor Racing remain out front in Prototype championships

DETROIT (July 8, 2014) – A new stop beckons for Chevrolet’s Corvette Daytona Prototypes as the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship hits its stride for its summer schedule. Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (CTMP) is one of Canada’s oldest permanent road-racing venues and was the site of the first Formula One Canadian Grand Prix in 1967. It holds its first TUDOR Championship race this weekend – the Mobil 1 SportsCar Grand Prix presented by Hawk Performance.

The circuit played host to the American Le Mans Series (ALMS) from 1999-2013. With the advent of the TUDOR Championship – a merger of the ALMS and GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series – a new age of sports car racing is set to make its mark at the track. The Corvette DPs will be at the forefront and look for a third straight victory in the TUDOR Championship. Richard Westbrook and Michael Valiante won the last round at Watkins Glen International for Spirit of Daytona Racing. Heading to Canada, Chevrolet continues to lead the Prototype engine manufacturer championship lead with three wins on the season.

Jordan Taylor and Ricky Taylor lead the driver’s championship in their No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing Corvette DP, which also is up front in the team standings. Action Express Racing’s Joao Barbosa and Christian Fittipaldi – winners of the Rolex 24 At Daytona to start the season – moved into second-place following a third-place showing at Watkins Glen.

Marsh Racing’s Corvette DP of Eric Curran and Boris Said finished sixth in class at Watkins Glen to tie its best result of the year. Of all the teams in the Corvette DP camp, the Whelen Engineering group has the most experience at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park with a number of races and victories there in SCCA World Challenge competition with a Corvette GT car; Curran won back-to-back races in 2007 and 2008.

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park – still known as Mosport to many – is a classic track and one of the fastest in North America. It has a number of medium- to high-speed corners that can amplify mistakes. Those sections also should favor the lighter P2 cars in the Prototype class.

“Our Corvette DP teams carry a tremendous amount of momentum to our only stop in Canada,” said Jim Lutz, Chevrolet’s Corvette Daytona Prototype Program Manager. “We have shown good pace and reliability with our Chevrolet V-8 power. We are faced with a new challenge at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, which should be a thrill for our drivers and fans alike. It is one of the fastest tracks we run with huge amounts of elevation change and long, sweeping corners. The lighter P2 cars may have a slight advantage in those areas, but overall the performances of all the cars in the Prototype class appear to be good. It should make for a great race Sunday.”

Camaro Z/28.R Continuing Strong Debut Season
Chevrolet also had a bountiful weekend at Watkins Glen in the Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge thanks to a second victory for the new Camaro Z/28.R of Stevenson Motorsports’ Robin Liddell and Andrew Davis. The duo’s victory moved Chevrolet into the manufacturer championship lead of the series’ Grand Sport (GS) class.
CKS Autosport’s Eric Curran added to the history-making weekend with the first pole for the Z/28.R. Camaros ran 1-2-3 for much of the race, a testament to the amount of development by the teams, Chevrolet engineers and GM’s Powertrain group.

Stevenson Motorsports and CKS Autosport each will have two Camaros for the race. CKS’ Ashley McCalmont, driving this weekend with Mike Skeen, will race at her home track for the first time in the Continental series.

“Watkins Glen was a bit of a dream weekend for Chevrolet and the Camaro Z/28.R,” said Lisa Talarico, Chevrolet’s Camaro Z/28.R Program Manager. “Gaining the lead in manufacturer points is a huge accomplishment for everyone involved with this program. Keeping it will prove just as difficult. This will be the first time for the Continental Sports Car Challenge at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, so every minute on the track will be a learning experience.”

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