Chevy Racing–Sonoma Post Qualifying

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES
TOYOTA/SAVE MART 350
SONOMA RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST QUALIFYING PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
JUNE 22, 2013
 
 
MCMURRAY CAPTURES POLE FOR SUNDAY’S ROAD COURSE RACE AT SONOMA
SEVEN TEAM CHEVY DRIVERS WILL START IN TOP 15
 
SONOMA, CA – June 22, 2013 – Jamie McMurray took advantage of the new qualifying format at Sonoma Raceway to put his No. 1 Cessna Chevrolet SS on the pole with a fast speed of 94.986 mph for Sunday’s Save Mart 350 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race. It was McMurray’s ninth Cup career pole, and the first of the 2013 season. He was also the pole winner at Sonoma in 2007.
 
The new qualifying format for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, used previously in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, featured eight groups of five or six cars each; and the drivers had five minutes to post their best lap around the 1.99-mile road course. McMurray was in the eighth group.
 
“It was all-around really good and our car has been good,” said McMurray. “Speed for this team really hasn’t been an issue. We’ve had plenty of speed; it’s just been about the last ten percent of the races and getting that finish. But hopefully we can get our bad luck out of the way and have a really good result this weekend. The truth is, I don’t really care if I lead the first lap tomorrow. I want to be there at the end. And this race, a lot of times comes down to the last restart and not getting in trouble. So, we’ll just dig and fight all day and I think our car will have enough speed. It will just be about not making any mistakes.”
 
Starting behind McMurray on Sunday will be six Team Chevy drivers in the Top-15 positions of the 43-car field.  Kurt Busch, No. 78 Furniture Row Racing/Sealy Chevrolet SS – 7th, Jeff Gordon, No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevy SS – 10th, Tony Stewart, No. 14 Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet SS – 11th, Kevin Harvick, No. 29 Rheem Chevy SS – 12th, Juan Pablo Montoya, No. 42 Target Chevrolet SS – 13th, and Kasey Kahne, No. 5 Farmers Insurance Chevy SS will start 15th.
 
Rounding out the top five starters, Marcos Ambrose (Ford) qualified second; Carl Edwards (Ford) qualified third, Greg Biffle (Ford) will start fourth, and Clint Bowyer (Toyota) qualified fifth.
 
The Save-Mart 350 will take the green flag on Sunday, June 23rd at 3:00 p.m. ET (12:00 noon, PT) and will be aired live on TNT.
 
 
JAMIE MCMURRAY, NO. 1 CESSNA CHEVROLET SS – POLE WINNER

TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT THE NEW QUALIFYING FORMAT AND YOUR THOUGHTS OUT THERE ON HOW TODAY WENT:
“I thought the qualifying format was really good.  Sonoma has always been a place that you would go down the drag strip and then come out half way down the backstretch.  Whatever they put on the drag strip everybody would always talk about it.  It seemed like it made the tires greasy for the first couple of corners.  I thought it was good that we got to pull out just like we do in practice.  You gap yourself with the guys in front of you, take it pretty easy and it was very similar to practice which I thought was good.  Sitting down there as a fan listening to the commentator getting to have five cars on the track, six cars on the track, I thought it was good.  It made it a little more interesting.  It wasn’t just one guy and the guy trying to commentate about one person on the track.  I thought it was good.  It was cool how people would bump each other off.  It was a good format.”
 
BACK AT RICHMOND YOU MENTIONED THIS TRACK IS ONE OF THE ONES THAT YOU WERE REALLY LOOKING FORWARD TO IN TALKING ABOUT HOW THE SEASON HAS BEEN IMPROVING.  BY STATS ON I THINK YOUR FINISHING AVERAGE IS 17.1, BUT YOU DID FINISH SECOND ONCE.  WHY WERE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO COMING HERE?
“Well, this has always been performance wise a really good track for me in qualifying.  I’ve qualified well here a lot.  I feel like I’ve raced really well here.  For me the last restarts have always got me.  Whether it is someone dive bombing you in turn seven and wiping you out.  I’ve made a mistake on the last lap here and lost a lot of spots.  When they have a restart at this track guys go from the top-five to 30th in a matter of about 20 seconds.  It can be a track that if they have a caution at the end you can lose a lot.  I just have always looked forward to Sonoma.  It’s one of the funnier tracks that we come to.  I don’t know that the road racers like this as much as they do Watkins Glen.  I really enjoy coming here.”
 
TALK ABOUT THE GEN-6 CAR AND THE FIRST TIME AT THIS TRACK, WHAT ARE YOU FEELING ARE THE DIFFERENCES ARE, WHAT IS BETTER, WHAT IS NOT?
“I expected the times to be quite a bit quicker coming here.  The tire that we are on this year when we did our testing this tire was a fait bit faster than the tire we ran last year.  This car is quite a bit quicker than the car from last year.  It feels better here.  The slow corners aren’t much different, but the faster high speed esses.  The car has a lot more grip, feels a lot more balanced.  I don’t know why the times aren’t any quicker.  Overall I think if we didn’t do lap times everyone would tell you that we are going quite a bit quicker.  Just the track must be worn out quite a bit more than last year.  The car is really good.  When we did our testing at VIR (Virginia International Raceway) we ran significantly faster than we did with last year’s car testing.  The car is really good.  The car has been good at every track we have been to so far.”
 
WHAT WEAR DO YOU THINK ARE ON THE TIRES WITH THIS CAR AND HOW DO YOU THINK THE STRATEGY IS GOING TO BE FOR NUMBER OF PIT STOPS?
“I remember sitting on the pole here last time and not sleeping the whole night worried about pit strategy and what we were going to do.  I got to turn one and I ran off the track and I came out about 35th or 40th and it didn’t matter.  Honestly, my answer to you would be that I don’t know and I’m not going to worry about it.  I’m going to let everyone else worry about it and I’m just going to do what they tell me.”
 
CARL (EDWARDS) TALKED ABOUT MISSING A FEW POINTS DURING HIS LAP.  MARCOS (AMBROSE) CAME IN AND SAID HIS ENGINE STALLED.  WAS THAT LAP THE BEST YOU COULD HAVE POSSIBLY DONE?
“No, when you go to oval tracks there are a lot of times you come in and you say ‘that is just it that is all I had.’  Here every corner there is a little bit that you can improve. When I sat on the pole here in 2009 I think, 2010, I remember when the lap was over thinking ‘I didn’t drive hard enough.  I should have driven harder.’  It ended up being the pole.  So when my lap started today as I was waiting on the No. 56, had an oil leak or something.  As that car was sitting there, you run through, especially at a road course for me, I run through the lap and my shifting points and what I needed to do. It’s a little bit harder this year because we didn’t just end practice and then get to do qualifying.  You haven’t been in the car until your lap starts.  I was like I remember that and I’m just going to go out and take whatever this car will give me.  I’m not going to push it to the very edge, because the trying to gain the every little bit can cost you a half second if you drop a tire off or if you get loose.  I drove at about 95 percent and I just kept it on the track.  I just had it all put together.”
 
EIGHT WINNERS THE LAST EIGHT YEARS OUT HERE, DOES THAT INSPIRE YOU AT ALL?  ARE YOU THINKING MAYBE THIS COULD BE YOUR YEAR?
“Yeah, when you look at this race it seems like every year out here somebody wins that you didn’t feel like was a good road racer.  All of a sudden you are like that guy is a good road racer because he has won.&
nbsp; This track has produced a lot of guys that I think historically haven’t run well on road courses.  Tomorrow it will be about the No. 9 and No. 42.  I think the No. 15 was really good in practice, but the race is long enough and there is usually a little bit of drama at this track.  It’s really about kind of being in position and if it is your day it will work out.  If it’s not, there is not a lot you can do about it.  Yeah, I feel really good about our car for tomorrow.  I think our pace was a fourth to eighth place car.  I think that is all you really have to have in order to put yourself in a position to win.”
 
DO YOU CONSIDER YOURSELF UNDER RATED AS A ROAD RACER?  WHAT DOES THIS SAY ABOUT THE PROGRESS THAT EARNHARDT GANASSI RACING IS MAKING THIS YEAR?
“Yeah, I don’t consider anything with my ability versus someone else’s. It just is what it is.  Certainly that is just someone’s opinion.  What I will tell you about our race team is I remember sitting in here a year ago with Juan (Pablo Montoya) when we made the announcement we were going to run the Indy GRAND-AM race.  We talked about everything that was going on with making our cars better. They have just done an amazing job.  Juan and I were talking about it yesterday between practices about the cars don’t necessarily feel better on the track, but the times are better in relation to everybody.  Coming out here I was really confident because every track we have been to we have had really good speed and we have run really well.  We haven’t been able to necessarily get the finishes in the last 10 percent of the race, but it hasn’t really been anything that we have done wrong.  Feel really good about our cars and really just about any track that we go to now.”
 
LAST TIME YOU WERE ON THE POLE YOU FINISHED 37TH.  WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO TO AVOID A SIMILAR FATE THIS TIME?
“The last time I was on the pole I remember not only worrying about pit strategy, but staying up all night wanting to lead the first lap.  I think Robby Gordon was second.  Robby would be really aggressive on the start.  I believe I ran off in the first corner and came off the first corner in last.  Then when I got to turn seven they had a wreck and I ripped the fenders off my car.  You know what I’m not worried about it.  It’s just about getting through that last pit stop hoping that your fuel mileage is good enough.  This is a fuel mileage race always.  I’m not really thinking back to the last time we were on the pole.  It’s really just about the last few races and kind of the way it’s played out.”
 
DO YOU STILL FEEL LIKE THE ORGANIZATION IS MAKING FORWARD PROGRESS AS WE GET DEEPER AND DEEPER INTO THE SEASON?
“Yeah, absolutely, when we went to Richmond and I think that is what you are referring to the conversations we had there.  We were running 10th with two laps to go and felt really good about that because that historically hasn’t been a good track for us.  A top 10 would have been great.  Cautions came out because of where I was pitted we elected to stay out on the race track which ended up being a horrible decision.  We went from 10th with a couple of laps to go to being second on the green-white-checkered to finishing 25th.  Charlotte we were running 10th and had a radiator break and it ripped a hole in the oil line which is I don’t know 40 laps to go. I think we ended up finishing 18th out of that, just because of the other cars that had broken.  At Dover we were running in the top-10 had something fall off another car go through the radiator.  Last week we were running I don’t know eighth or ninth and blew a right-front tire with a few laps to go.  So since Richmond I’ve run better than I did before Richmond, I just haven’t finished.  I told my wife after Dover.  We got on the airplane to come home I said ‘Christy, I don’t believe in luck, I believe you make your own luck, but when something falls off someone else’s car and it goes through your radiator, that is bad luck’.   When you blow a right-front tire and you don’t feel like you did anything wrong that is just bad luck.  I feel like we have been really unlucky, but our cars have been really good.  I tell you that because the morale on our team, not just the No. 1 team, but the No. 42 team, everybody is very excited about what we have going on right now.  We feel like performance wise we are really good.  I think we are better than we were in 2010 when we were able to win all the races. If we are able to put it all together we will win more races this year.” 
 
INAUDIBLE:
“We are definitely better than what we were at Richmond.  The thing that is so good about us this year is that we have been good on superspeedways, we’ve been good on short-tracks, we’ve been good at road courses, and we’ve been good at every kind of race track that we have been to.  Slick tracks, tracks with a lot of grip.  That is what we didn’t have in 2010 was we were good at certain tracks.  We performed extremely well at those, but I think it was the short tracks in 2010 we were terrible at them.  So this year it just all around our performance has been better.”
 
WITH THIS DIFFERENT QUALIFYING FORMAT DID YOU SEE THE CAR IN FRONT OF YOU OR THE CAR BEHIND YOU AT ALL?
“I was fairly fortunate because I was the last car to go out in my group and when I left the pits I asked them where Marcos (Ambrose) was he was the first car.  They said he was just now in turn seven.  So, I rode around, I don’t know, 20 seconds off the pace just take it easy.  When I got to turn seven they said Marcos was just now to the start/finish line, so no I never saw a car the whole time.  I think the qualifying format was a huge success.  I don’t know about the perspective on TV, but from the drivers perspective that was a huge success.”